This little lot came in the other day, courtesy of Peter Evans, and as I'd captioned it for publishing elsewhere, it might as well be blurb-lite after the above waffle, so in short-order with notes . . .
Unpacking; the fishy-fish will be saved for a future round-up, in a Rack Toy Month probably, we've now seen the dino'set and there were some blister-carded 'Army Men' (close-up below) which will also be saved for an RTM. Apparently someone has since ID'd these as Blue Box, they are definitely not the quality of any Blue Box production and while I haven't seen the comment, so won't name him, he's probably making it up as he goes along?'Nuff said!
(that's a bit of bubble-wrap stuck to his armpit I think?)
(that's a bit of bubble-wrap stuck to his armpit I think?)
The relief!
Late-production Britains
swivel troops, not the best, but . . . Toy soldier! We looked at the 'chocolate
drops' here. This is the slightly more realistic colourway.That hidden blister!
I think this is a re-issue of a Charbens piece, I have a vintage painted
white one somewhere (sans sails) which I always thought was theirs, but the Toy Soldier Co. don't list it and
they have stock of both farm and scenic reissues? Anyway, it's sort of chunky
but it's semi-flat!
Very, very small, and not clear what it is,
but certainly Hong Kong rack toy/gum-ball fodder.
Not Marx/MPC
and not Phidal, but copy of the
former and similar to the latter!
We did fishermen in a couple of posts a
year or two ago, one on mine, one on Mr Smith's, and this is a fine addition to
that sub-branch of the pile, it's a magnetic novelty, possibly a tourist thing
(destination sticker missing) or cake decoration.
A couple of new to me and newish looking
die-cast vehicle accessories.
Also new on me, but with a bit of age, not
as old as the accumulated fluff might suggest, early Safari or K&M? If not
another die-cast vehicle/play-set accessory.
Many thanks to Peter for an eclectic mix of
odd, unusual, new or fun figures. And apologies to those who saw these
elsewhere a week or so ago, but the nature of the Internet as a place of
duplication is - to a certain extent - its present I'm afraid, and yes, I know it represents a fragmenting and dilution of the canon, but that's why it will all, always come back here in the end.
2 comments:
That is the Charbens windmill, re-issue.
Cheers Paul, I was sure it was, but I couldn't find it anywhere to compare, and kept finding the hollow-cast one which is a huge, round, hollow lump of lead! My vintage one has a nail in it which may have contributed to the loss of the sails!
H
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