I'm not sure if Triang's game should be quite as sun-yellowed as this example, it seems a little too subdued for attraction on a shelf, and with some water damage, may also be suffering from non-art-room sun damage too! They don't turn-up on evilBay that often but when they do the sky is bluer! Quality Assurance Inspection; the production values of putting this together must have be enormous, bigger people; rivals, like Waddington's here and Milton Bradley in the 'States had been throwing everything in placky-bags set in 'styrene trays, for a while by the time this hit the shops, and pairing-up all those figures and setting them in three different, die-cut holding devices must have taken someone forever, even once the operator was practiced.
Almost certainly done by women, possibly out-workers, but I think you'd need to do this in-house with stillage-bins of draughtsmen, bins of figures and the quite huge box - I couldn't scan the board as it's over A3 on a side and the box is bigger! Plus; all that was after they had all been run in one of two colours of polymer and hand painted with between three and five colours!
A reminder of the four figure poses, where these differ over the half-dozen other iterations of the figures (2 other games, window box, cake-decoration bags, shop-stock counter boxes etc...) is that they have added studs which connect with a hole in the draughtsman, the fit is tight and the figures are a frangible polystyrene, so damage would have occurred from first play on Christmas Day!They are lovely figures, but that frangibility means finding them intact is hard, the six-shooter being the one most likely to survive, the tomahawk being the least likely to be found still attached!
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