Well, I don't think it's technically a 'Follow-up' and it's not really a 'More On' (far too much input from morons this week as it is!), so addendum will do! Just a couple of pieces from Picasa which add to things said in other posts this week.
We saw these in a show-report back in 2018, when I bought a few from the seller at the Plastic Warrior show in Wilton/Twickenham, SE London, now as it happens when I got them home, they'd been mucked about with, so I don't have all the correct contents of all the boxes, and while I said - at the time - they'd get their own post, they never did!
But I'd forgotten I'd shot the rest, on the seller's stall, in case the five boxes weren't 'all of them', so here's a perfect example of the Italian output of Food Premium style novelty mini-kits. If I recall correctly, they had no branding; packaging or product.
But they are not R&L, they are not Rubenstein, they are not Tatra, they are not DS Plastics, or Siku, or Manurba, they are Italian. I think a fair few of us are familiar with the CGGC motorcycles (and the lovely figures - some of which would end-up in Kinder-eggs a decade later), also from Italy, and I have seen lovely N-gauge train kits in smaller boxes (something like 'Eppi', but I forget the actual name), one of which is very similar to the R&L animal wagon.
The frames are relatively unique and assemble into a fancy base after you've made up the kit, and they are manufactured in a dense polymer which is a nylon/rayon type or possibly a hybrid propylene of some kind, sold two kits to a box.
While this is the rather poor rendition of what I suspect is meant to be a Douglas F4D Skyray, from Montaplex of Spain, it's in a different league, being soft polyethylene, chunky and simplified, it just reminds us of the breadth covered by these mini-kits as an oeuvre!
It was sold in larger multi-sets with three other kits, in little single envelopes (early iteration, I think) and as an accompaniment/accessory to some of the figure sets, pretty randomly in the latter case!
On the box lid is a red Junkers 87 Stuka with it's wings on backwards just to add spice to life!
ReplyDeleteYeah! If I remember rightly Terra', the seller did say they were wonky contents, so I took one each of the artworks for future use and shot his display for exactly this moment! In fact, while the made up kits are mostly common/popular fighters, there are several smaller-scale airliners in the boxes . . . I will post them one day!
ReplyDeleteIn fact, in a year or two I'll redo the post with your Penny-Farthing tacked on the end, as a mini-season and look at them all, as I do have most of the Kellogg's/R&L ones somewhere as well, and there's the other Rubenstein sets to look at . . . I must try and track down one or two Italian railway ones and a sample of the Aurora!
H
Hi Hugh,
ReplyDeleteNot to mention (but I will..) the Spitfire on the box art is suspiciously like the Airfix 1/24th scale kit first boxing (but steal from the best eh?)
Absolutely Steve! But then some claim the Airfix kit was itself stolen from Aurora!
ReplyDeleteH