About Me

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No Fixed Abode, Home Counties, United Kingdom
I’m a 60-year-old Aspergic gardening CAD-Monkey. Sardonic, cynical and with the political leanings of a social reformer, I’m also a toy and model figure collector, particularly interested in the history of plastics and plastic toys. Other interests are history, current affairs, modern art, and architecture, gardening and natural history. I love plain chocolate, fireworks and trees, but I don’t hug them, I do hug kittens. I hate ignorance, when it can be avoided, so I hate the 'educational' establishment and pity the millions they’ve failed with teaching-to-test and rote 'learning' and I hate the short-sighted stupidity of the entire ruling/industrial elite, with their planet destroying fascism and added “buy-one-get-one-free”. Likewise, I also have no time for fools and little time for the false crap we're all supposed to pretend we haven't noticed, or the games we're supposed to play. I will 'bite the hand that feeds', to remind it why it feeds.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

E is for Erudite Editions and Ephemera

Let's get the boring ones out of the way first, then we can get into the proper polymer plunder! There was a new book, a new facsimile catalogue, a - now - quite old book and some other ephemera in the PW show loot, and that's what we're looking at today!

Barney Brown had these two on his stall, and I dare say you can get them from him at;
 
 
The Timpo facsimile is a new one I think, being a scanned reprint of an old Timpo plastic solids catalogue, from the time between the hollow-cast era and the full-on Swoppets, and while it's mostly black & white, there is an opening colour page, with the cowboys, Indians, FFL and Arabs fully illustrated. It also includes a copy of a letter signed by Ally Gee, head of Model Toys.
 
I haven't managed to read the Swoppet tome yet, it's a sister publication to the one on knights, which I passed-on a while ago, I just didn't believe there was that much to say on less than two-dozen figures! But, this has four sections, covering all the other Swoppet lines (although you could argue the Eyes Right were only the parade/ceremonial Swoppet lines!), with a less fastidious, shall we say, attention to the minutiae of each range, so it will be a better general read.
 
Not than I'm knocking the first volume, if it was for you, I know how obsessive some people are on Swoppet Knights! And hell, I can get bogged down in the small, precise, or trivial details of far more esoteric stuff, than this 'mainstream' interest material, but it wasn't for me.
 
Also, I think it's a similar format to the other works on Britains plastics by Barney and Peter Cole, published in association with Plastic Warrior, so will sit well with them, at the 'landscape' end of your bookshelf!
 
This is a fun one . . . I've been waiting thirteen years to get this, I knew I would; it was just a case of waiting for somebody to die, at the right time for his copy to end up at a show I was attending, when or where that might be, and while I don't know if that's the case, in this case, but anyway, here it is.
 
And the first thing I'll say, is, it's bloody heavy! I reckon it's about the same as eight bags of sugar, 8kg's or about sixteen pounds (I haven't actually weighed it), or a large bag of potatoes, but that's where the parallels with potatoes start and finish, this is a fantastic work, and I won't hear a word against it.
 
It covers in some detail, everything the non-Spanish collector might need to know on Spanish toy soldiers and model figures, and while I think I might have a Sobre brand or two, not in here, and seem to have more Credeco elephants, than are listed, that's just the eclectic nature of my own collecting, and there's a ton here, I knew nothing about, at all, including both Credeco and Sobres!
 
But why the thirteen-year wait Hugh? Well, therein lies a pretty tale! Which goes back further than the 2013 publishing date of the volume before you. I originally saw it advertised on one of the Spanish or Portuguese Blogs, which pre-dated mine, and were among the first Blogs I linked to in my sidebar features here at Small Scale World, but upon expressing an interest in getting what was the earlier, self-published version, was warned-off, by one of the Spanish collectors (the thread's still there), due to, shall we say irregularities in the book's arrival and/or repayments?
 
So, when a while later, someone waxed lyrical over it, in a UK magazine, I thought it was right and proper to warn others of what was being reported, by the Spaniards, as I was still, technically, at the time, a 'consultant editor' to the publication here. And that was all I did, I repeated the warning, as clearly second-hand, from the Spanish.
 
Mr. Hermida managed - understandably (no one likes criticism) - to take a certain chagrin to that, and rather over-personalised his response, in a subsequent addition of the magazine in question, during which he seemed to admit that there had been problems, but that they were all sorted [however I've since been approached by a major German collector, who is still owed several hundred Euro's for his copies, which never arrived], and a slightly catty repost from me ended that particular long-distance, printed conversation.
 
In the months (or years?) following that exchange, it was announced that Andrea Press, the publishing arm of the very well-know Andrea Miniatures, would be taking over the project, for the second, enlarged edition, and that there would be an English language volume, which was good news for everyone!
 
Except there then followed a long series of publishing dates, new publishing dates, rumours of plan changes, and press releases, explaining last minute updates, hiccups, and so on, to the point where some thought it would never actually happen!
 
But, in time for Christmas 2013, if memory serves, it was finally published! I believe there are 300 in English and maybe a 1000 in Spanish? I don't know, but mine is numbered 'of 300', so I assume that's the English-language 'limited edition' total?
 
Obviously, given what had happened, I wasn't contemplating sending off to the author for a copy! But this was back when I wasn't active as a consumer on that there Wibbly Wobbly Way either, so ordering a copy from Andrea wasn't likely to happen, and while I did hint to family members who were online in that fashion, that it might make the best Christmas present ever, for anyone they might know, who collected toy soldiers, the hints fell on shallow ground, and that might have been the year I got three copies of 'Tailgunner's repetitive second/third/forth (?) effort! Well, it was piled-high and sold cheap in The Works!
 
Now I hold Mr. Hermida no ill-will over the correspondence through media, all those years ago, and have only raked it all up here, to A) explain why it's taken so long to get one, and to get it on to the blog, and B) as a cautionary tale for anyone thinking of writing/producing a 'grand opus' . . . it's not easy!
 
In fact it's bloody hard, especially if you are planning a large format, or lots of data/tables of information and/or many illustrations, or any combination of them, and even more so, if your target audience is probably no more than a couple of thousand dedicated collectors nation world-wide, in a small hobby, where not everyone can throw four ponies at the wall, in short-order!
 
I know what publishing the two Farming in Miniature books involved, or have a fair idea of some of it, and it was years of dedication by three authors who had regular meeting with each-other in pairs or threesomes, getting up to monthly or more frequent, as publishing-day loomed, meetings with the publishers, travelling all over the country, thousands of eMails, emergency updates of images, re-writes of paragraphs, whole pages or entire entries! Discussions on fonts, typefaces, pagination (how you number the pages!), layout and cover-designs, it's an endless headache, which I've avoided by just throwing it up here willy-nilly in a voice which changes with my mood!*
 
And, ignoring the problems associated with its gestation, 'Made in Spain' is a superb work, and Mr. Hermida is, along with Andrea Press, to be congratulated for getting it to those of us who have been lucky enough to get a copy. If you haven't, and you're a younger member of the hobby, I'll be dead soon enough, and you can enjoy my copy!
 
I will do a proper book-review of it, once I've read it a couple more times, I've really only leafed through it a few times, since last weekend . . . OK, I've dipped into it every day, alright! But there's so much to take in!
 
* And they still had to put the third volume online, and that, after a publisher change between the first two volumes! You can see it here;
 
  
 
I also picked-up these, I wasn't sure on the PW-20, but if it's a duplicate, it will make a useful swap for some of the earlier ones I still need (I think I'm still two or three issues short of a full run), while the PFPC has Marx Miniature Masterpiece stuff in, which I still have a soft spot for. The German (Strenger, Berlin) retail store catalogue is a box-ticker of limited use, but adds to the whole, and likewise the John Sanders/Treforest Mouldings thing, which is heavily annotated by a past owner. I think I actually have the full catalogues, by nation, from the James Chase collection?
 
Interestingly, the Strenger catalogue refers to the tanks as 'tanks' (kletter tank 'clatter' and Feuernder tank 'firing' or sparking), so panzer seems to have come later, with Nazism - there's a small sample of Elastolin SA, so the catalogue would appear to be 1933/34 maybe? 
 
While this site;
 
 
Seems to indicate that the use of panzer was a deliberate act, sometime in 1939, what did Guderian call them in his seminal work? Could it be something the Nazi's came up with (from armour or mail), because those pesky Jew-loving Churchillian's over the Channel invented 'tank'? It's the sort of thing Trump does, with his Gulf of Fuckwit, Museum of Grifter, Peace Prize of Bum-Chums and Arse of Mouth.
 
A few other bits of ephemera which made it into this year's plunder-pile, mostly old Britains leaflets, a Timpo tick-list of medieval movie-character models, and a Skybirds packers card, by the looks of it. All grist to the mill of research!!
 
So, now we're into the plunder proper, I must thank, in alphabetical order, by Christian name this year, because I've forgotten, or not got several surnames; Adrian Little, Brian Carrick, Colin Penn, Isaac, Matt Murphy, Martin Fahie, Michael Mordant-Smith, Paul, Peter Evans and Trevor Rudkin.

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