Chris Smith sent me a few shots as a
follow-up to something posted here about a year and a half ago (the
Russian/Soviet mini-season?), and I never got round top posting them at the
time, in part because I'd had a thought on them. Some of the shots he sent are
still waiting for another day, and a full follow-up on something-esle, but
these were the others.
Now, it happens that maybe none of them are
actually Russian, the four red ones have the look of Progress's flats about them which could make them Bulgarian or East
German, who both had a Progress
factory, but who either copied the Russian originals (Bulgarian factory's
October Revolution cavalry flats, seen here passim) or made original designs
(E. German factory's AFV's)?
While the two MG-gunners, have the same
bases as Wild West and ancient Roman flats attributed to an - as yet - unknown
Hungarian manufacturer, those distinctive 'Zulu shield' bases having been
linked to Hungary by several commentators in the hobby, and most commonly found
in the stock of Hungarian ebayer's? Although a Latvian seller on feeBay often has the same pointy-based figures? I think - size wise - these tie-in with the blue sailor set we've seen here from Rasnoexport at around 65mm, which would make them Russian.
So, the above could all be non-Russian
production, in the meantime the thought I'd had on them was that "I've got
some of those red ones somewhere?" . . .
. . . . except that when I'd dug them out a
few weeks later, they (my sample, here) were clearly different, and while they
can be called WWII Russian Infantry, have some of the signatures of Polish
production; heavy bases and a more demi-ronde than flat sculpting, so
may not be Russian at all!
At the time of writing (August 2020) there are two sets of these on feebleBay, both in a lovely shade best described as 'pastel heliotrope' or 'raspberry yogurt' , and both lot's consisting of the same four poses, so this may be a complete set? They are also both rather pricey, so clearly this would appear to be a 'rated' set back in the former USSR?
Which leaves the silver guy we've seen
before who happened to be left in Picasa for some reason . . . his flag reads
3rd October Revolution (I think?), and some have attributed his whole set to
Poland, but they do fit the same 8-figure carriers as the Russian Napoleonics, which
we know are Russian because the have the prices in kopeks and rubles marked on
them in Cyrillic script! So he may be the only Russian in the post!
A size comparison with my may-be-Polish and
a close-up of Chris's probably-Hungarian machine-gunner finish this brief look
at a regular here - 'Soviet era' flats and semi-flats! To be fair, I really suspect the two MG's of being Hungarien, the rest probably are Russian in Origin!
A few days later - many thanks to Theo van der Weerden's wife for translating the flag, it actually reads -
"за власть советовъ" = 'For the power of the Soviets'.
A few days later - many thanks to Theo van der Weerden's wife for translating the flag, it actually reads -
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