Bit of a surprise when these turned-up, as they looked familiar, but, err . . . better! Obviously I knew of Minikins, they are in Garratt, where he both spelt them wrong, and was pretty disparaging! O'Brian gives them quite a write-up, but mentions he's omitted the HO set (singular), so these should be new to most and new to the Internet, but I think we did look at them briefly in a show report, so they're not new to Blog!
Minikin or Minikins as they are sometimes dubbed, also, really nice presentation boxes for a make better known for dowdy or 'transport' packaging, but they may have been given this packaging at their destination, International Models Inc., of New York?
As Minikins were known for copies and derivatives, these would appear to be piracies of BJ Ward's Wardie Mastermodels? Except, as we shall see, they are better, so a new question mark present's itself? One set of station-staff and line workers, the other of passengers, they are reasonably painted, but just far-cleaner castings than Mastermodels.
The thing is, I never knew of them, so I've never looked that closely at my Wardie's, and with quality, scale and base-style (among other details) differing across the Mastermodels output, I may well have a few Minikins in there already, but these are probably the only two sets, so we may have them all on view here?
Now, they are not all Mastermodels sculpts the three railway employees for instance, and the central pair on the bottom row are questionable, Wardie did a version of the lady, but she's not quite the same. However, neither are they Comet-Authenticast sculpts, which would be the obvious direction to go in if these were repackaged AHI (see below). They are closer to the Hornby Dublo actually, aren't they?
A couple of seated figures, are they Mastermodels sculpts, or cleaned up Comet? They don't seem to be either, which points to original sculpts, and if two are, the rest could be, especially with the question-mark over the station staff?
Obviously the tied-in ones are the Minikins and the three loose ones are Kemlows' finest, except that next to the Japanese production, they aren't that fine at all, are they? Rougher finished, with huge release-pin marks, heavier tool-handles and a marginally greater 'woodeness'? It's as if the Ward stuff are the copies?
In the Brooke's book 'The Illustrated Kemlows Story' these marks are credited to AHI (note above), but I suspect that was because he was familiar with AHI imports, of which these bear a remarkable resemblance - to wit; being the same!
But AHI (Azrak-Hamway International) were a US jobber (importer), Minikin was a Japanese brand, and (through work on the Khaki Infantry, not my non-existent knowledge of most 'BMSS' subject-matter!) I've always thought the better AHI stuff may have been or had a cross-over with Minikins, so the first thing to suggest, is that AHI's imported 'HO' railway figures, were Minikins product. And it would make the correcting of me on the ACW stuff more problematic for the corrector, as AHI had to be getting them from somewhere!
While dates give us the next clue, and with Minikins operating in the late 1940's and Kemlow's helping Ward with Mastermodels after 1951, it has to be suggested that Wardie are the copier here?
Also, because we will be looking at other arms of this tree in the next few days, it would mean that those copies of the Merit driving-game figures (themselves copied from Wardie) which come out of Hong Kong with a petrol-pump (a'la Blue Box) may have come straight from these?
Anyway, it's all only thoughts on new evidence, and if anyone would like to throw their tuppence-worth into the mix they're welcome! I'm just asking who made who? And I'm not looking to denegrate Garratt, O'Brian or the Brook's, they are the sources I turn-to for the earlier work on the puzzle, before adding my own tuppence-worth!
3 comments:
Very interesting,
This prompted me to look up the dates of some other wardiealikes, I have found adverts for Slaters Huminiatures from December 1950, before Kemlows were established, so it appears that Wardie were copyists there too, these would be the moulds eventually went to Merit.
Wardie's station staff was clearly based on the Britains for Trix set, I assumed this was legitimate subcontracting from Britains moulds, in the same way as the Kemlow sheep, but I could well be mistaken there, were Britains particularly hot on their copyright then?
The dates shed a whole new light on the Wardie range!
J
Absolutely Jon, it's one of my better discoveries! I think Slaters still use their own tools (I mean it's all Guagemaster/PPP now for Slaters, Peco & Model Scene), while photographing them for the forthcoming post, it's clear that as well as better paint than Merit, they are finer sculpts, and possibly a little smaller. But by the time of the 1990 pinwheels, they were getting a bit flashy and looked more like Merit!
The story I heard, from Paul Brookes, is that Merit were using the Wardie tools, as when he went bust, everyone was laid off at the start of the shift, without pay, and they marched 'across the road' (one suspects across the industrial estate, or across Potters Bar?) to Merit?
I'll check the book and see what he said there! And check the addresses of the two plants?
And the station personnel in the Minikins set (and those two standing civilians) are 'like' Dublo, but not full lifts, now the Japanses are great railways modellers, so they would have seen the 2 Dublo sets, pre-war maybe? But it looks very much like minikins were first, with the duplicated poses?
H
Sorry Jon, you meant the Merit ones, 'cos Slaters are still around! Yes, that's how I heard it.
H
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