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.
Showing posts with label 1:35. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1:35. Show all posts

Monday, June 22, 2026

T is for Two - Tanks!

Hard to believe, but we don't seem to have had that title before! I managed to pick up two rather nice tanks at Sandown Park's last show, nice for different reasons, and a possible 'sublime to ridiculous' scenario, but which is which, depends upon the personal loyalties of the viewer!
 



This would be an antique toy enthusiast's ridiculous, but the sublime of a 'plastic warrior', being the large scale donor for a whole generation of pretty inaccurate US 'Patton' tanks (sometimes wearing German stickers), in various scales, materials and finishes. We looked at its own little brother here;
 
 
Where it's found with three different muzzle-breaks, I don't know if the same will prove true for the larger one, but it's a nice box-ticking of a near-mint, boxed example, with friction motor!
 



While the antique guy thinks this is sublime, while a plastic warrior thinks it's a ridiculous novelty 'what tank IS that?' I think they both have their merits, and the beauty of this is it still has both tracks! A bit saggy and perished, and there is one break, out of sight, but getting these with tracks is hard, you see many examples of both Japanese and German tanks with their shiny, or surface-rusty wheels, but tracks are rarer, and while you do find modern replacement tracks, they are too new!
 
I guess it wants to be a Renault F17 or similar, and Japan took various early tank designs to China, before the World War was a 'world' war, so given the yellow-dun shade, I'm also guessing that's where this particular "Foreign" import came from, rather than Germany, where grey or 3-colour camouflage were the norm.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

A is for Available in Any Colour, as Long as it's Fast!

I seemed to do quite well in the racing-car department, at Sandown, I rarely go to Sandown with anything like a shopping list, it's a question of what's there (and cheap) on the day! And, a month or so ago, it was racing cars, apparently?

Rather highfalutin instructions, and blurb, bigging-up a basic mechanism in this Maserati, which had been known to aficionados of balsa flying machines for several decades before this was issued? And the addition of a crown and bevel makes the 'starting handle' a harder wind than the propeller usually employed for the winding of rubber-band models!
 
To be honest, and given the quality of some more obvious 'facsimile' boxes I've seen recently, I have my doubts over the authenticity of this box, it's just too good, too clean? But the jeweller's loupe seems to suggest it's litho- or screen-printed onto an absorbent card, and shop stock stuff does turn-up, from time to time, but I'm not confident, either way?
 
This is my second FROG (Flies Right Off [the] Ground) Penguin (flightless bird), but is very different, the previously-found jeep being a heavy, vulcanised rubber, almost composition in consistency and weight, while this is a lightweight, plastic (early 'styrene?) and tin, novelty.
 
A future post (currently in storage) will be two of these helmets, one of which, in silver, is identical to the one depicted on this driver figure (the reason vehicles started to gain traction in the collection), with the set-forward or stand-off, drop-down perspex sheet, mounted around the front of a rigid visor.
 
They both came from 'Old Mr. Bening' (might be Benny or Benning), who was a silversmith, in a little shop/workshop, I think at the T-junction of the B3004 (Forge Road) and A325, just shy of Bordon, Hampshire, although the premises seem to have gone in a junction remodelling over the 50-odd years since he died, and we last visited him.
 
It may have been somewhere else, nearby, the memories are weak, and Google is no help with everyday, local historical stuff, there might as well have been no world prior to 1997! But he had been a racer in his younger days, and gave us a couple of his old helmets.
 
Ingap large scale Porsche F1, my first larger Ingap, and another in that classic fifties or sixties metallic blue plastic! I don't know if the box is original (packing from a larger carton?), or fashioned by a previous owner, but it fits well, and keeps the car protected, so I'll hang on to it! Both the above are about 1:43rd/48th scale.
 
Not a racing car, and closer to 1:35th/32nd, but just for fun, it was one of the items missing from my flood-damaged set, which we looked at prior to my discarding the packaging as beyond saveable a few years ago;
 
 
And given the price Greek sellers on evilBay want, for everything, it was a bargain! I guess it's trying to be a VW Carmen Ghia, or early Porsche Carrera? Bonnet's not right for either! Equally, the Greek Hellas sports-car, might fit (after a quick Google!), but whatever it wants to be, it's still, a nice find.

Monday, January 12, 2026

I is for If I Have To!

Not really in the mood, so expect an intermittent service in January! In case anyone else hasn't noticed, the World's going to hell in a hand-cart, and there's no sword-based baby to save us. And who had Putler turning out to be the mere Mussolini to Trump's Hitler, on the card for 2026?
 
Happy New Year!

I know from my job, this was generally, a crap Christmas, the most telling sign of which, was that all the fairy-light shit and illuminated/inflated, technicolour bollocks in peoples front gardens (hey, you can do it tastefully, or you can do it as half-arsed shit, or OTT classless excess, most chose one of the latter two options!) had gone by the 5th. Last year many were up through the second week of Jan', and we weren't swamped, at work, like last year.
 
Anyway, plenty more to say, and I'll keep saying it; those who pretend it's not happening deserve everything that's coming, for never getting involved! Getting back into the saddle with a simple box-ticker, this is from the UPC scans folder, and follows-up, or follows-on from the previous posts on the subject - Monograms many copyists.
 
I was promised a load of stuff on the subject back when we looked at them on one of the other occasions, but I've heard nothing more, and suspect Covid may have changed those plans? We looked at them, in no particular order, here:
 
 
 
 
 
Hong Kong's finest! Still needs a lot of work, but this was a reasonable primer! https://smallscaleworld.blogspot.com/2016/08/m-is-for-monograms-men-made-much_10.html
 
You'll also find Past the Post and ABC, and others, on the Monogram Tag, but this is the UPC supporting stuff:
 
Box art from the HO set (3034), copied from Roco.
 
Rather dodgy early photocopy of the instruction sheet from the James Chase collection. 

Catalogue image, 1968/9.

From the same catalogue, the image (and box art?) for the "1:40"th set (5149), actually the same vaguely 1:35th of all the other versions which aren't reduced to HO/OO.

An instruction sheet I happen to have, and which may sort the question over some of my polystyrene samples, which seems to hint at an alternate box-art, closer to the Revell 'convoy ambush' artwork, of one of the larger sets. In fact, that's a clue as to Roco's being copies of Revell, as the Patton Figure was only in that large 4-kit set, he being the Sherman tank commander?!
 
That's it, just a box ticker!

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

H is for Holy Self-Signed Toy, Batman!

I bought this at Sandown Park, I won't tell you what it cost, but suffice to say it wasn't cheap as chips, and I was initially a little disappointed by it, suspecting a mug had been seen coming, a little buyer's remorse crept in, but, like last night's cartoon, that's something which often accompanies the post show sort-out!
 
Holy boxed battle-taxi, Batman!

First, it was sold to me as AHI (Azrak Hamway International) when it's not, it's the later Australian reissue from Len Hunter Trading, and dating from 1989 (AHI carried this in 1977), and that it was signed, which I quickly convinced myself was a bit dodgy? However, having seen the prices of a few unsigned ones, and enough samples of Adam West's signature to be slightly more convinced by its sloppiness, I'm much happier about the purchase now!
 


 Holy facsimile figurines, Batman!
 
The main body of the Batmobile is all-plastic, so it ticks one box, and has two figures, of The Batman and pesky Robin, The Boy Wonder, so it ticks another box there, and is clearly a scaled-up copy of the Corgi die-cast, where that was 1:43rd, this is closer to 1:35th/32nd scale.
 

Holy Batbath brum-brum, Batman!
 
The boat is the same, and while I initially though they were blow-moulds; so many of the bootlegs and knock-off's have been, it is actually a couple of lumps of polystyrene, the frangibility of which means they are far worse survivors, than the original Corgi die-casts.
 

Holy crime-fighting combination, Batman! 
 
I think the figures can be used in the Batboat, but the seats are closer together, so maybe only one at a time? I noticed, before purchase, the blister had been off at one point, and not replaced brilliantly, so there's an option to remove it again, in the future, photograph the combination in close-up, re-set the Batboat in it's trailer properly, and try resetting the blister a little better?
 
Does the fact that the autograph is 'To Robin' from Adam West, give it a little extra caché? And, as I said to the seller, with all its faults or potential faults, when was I going to see another one? Holy philosophical fuckwittery, Batman!

Monday, September 30, 2024

B is for Bristol Bloodhound

Managed to tick-off a smaller 'grail' at Sandown a month ago, with the purchase of this beast, I knew it existed, I can't remember when or where I saw it, but I had seen one, some years ago I think, anyway, I recognised the box and bought it quickly without checking the contents! I've also managed to shoot it twice, with some of the following 'seen elsewhere' soon after the purchase, so a few more images than usual, and no collaging!
 



The box; exactly the sort of thing I remember from Webb's The Newsagents in Hartley Wintney when I was a kid, colourful, but basic three-colour screen-printed on low quality card, reminiscent of early, cheap, post-war wallpaper like our grandparent's bathroom ducks! It leaves little doubt as to the contents and includes simple graphical instructions in the drawings.
 




Components; there's approximately 30+ pieces, all factory assembled in both polystyrene and polyethylene, with a couple of metal parts. Several small, plastic pivots/axle-pins allow for elevation/depression of the whole launcher, which also revolves on its baseplate, and a separate Bloodhound Missile with spring-firing mechanism can be locked in.
 








Ready to fire; The trigger is slightly damaged, so while I can set it up for a photograph, I can't fire it, and that's probably a good thing, as making such a model in frangible 'styrene was not a wise move, as far as longevity is concerned, and it's a bit of a miracle it's still this complete. And that white button on the back may have had a function, which I haven't yet worked-out!
 
When I first posted it elsewhere, I suggested in might be scaled-up from the Corgi die-cast, but rapidly came to the conclusion it's more likely to be based on the Frog kit, which will give my crew-figures, from that aforementioned kit, something useful to do! It's around 1:35th scale, or maybe a little smaller, I'll have to get the Frog kit, I've never previously been after, to compare! And obviously, no maker, or any clue to same!

Sunday, December 8, 2019

C is for Catch-up - Sandown Park - November

And so to the most recent show, about a month ago, I was actually trying to be frugal (Christmas is coming and I knew I had parcels to post (all done now - phew!)), but managed to grab a big bag for a fiver at clearing-up time from one of the die-cast guys.

"Blue-Box" Toys; 1:35th Scale Toy Soldiers; Blow Mould Chicken; Blue Box; BTR152; Cherilea 60mm Knights; Cherilea 60mm Soldiers; Composition Toy Marx Figures; Hong Kong Chariot; Jean Hoefler; Jean Indians; Jean Wild West; Knights Horse; Manurba Coaches; Manurba Heinerle; Manurba Wagons; Roco Churchill; Roco De Gaulle; Roco Eisenhower; Roco Göring; Roco Hitler; Roco Minitanks; Roco Mussolini; Roco Rommel; Roco-Minitanks; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thomas Toys Chariot; Timpo Solid Cowboys; Timpo Solid Indians; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant; VW Beetle; Wooden Cutlery; Wooden Fork; Wooden Knife; Xandria - Holland;
The bag's top right and explored below, but among the other things was another Tula Cartridge Works AFV, a BTR152 (I think?) 6x6 wheeled carrier, a boat-trailer which looks very Thomas/Poplar but still needs to be checked against the tractors and their equipment to see if any of the wheels match, I'll also have to find the right boat and a tower! I also picked-up a small VW-Beetle type from Hong Kong which may be Blue Box, or may be one of several imitators - although they were all copying Matchbox or similar. Then there's the WHS's I've already Blogged as a follow-up.

There were also a few Blue Box small scale Wild West including a wagon, less one horse, Magic Roundabout Ermentrude and Gladiator premiums, Marx HK lifeguard, the composition Guards and a few other things. I got the Cherilea Sheikh from Steve Vickers, I always have a look at his table as he always has such lovely stuff, but it's often a bit beyond my budget (high-end plastic, quality hollow-cast and the odd bit of European composition), so I was well-pleased to find something.

My big mistake was the Xandria Holland key-ring, the seller had at least five (and they weren't cheap!); I instantly recognised Brains clutching his model spaceship and Lady Penelope with her mauve costume-jewellery, there was a Parker (I think - don't remember seeing the mafia violin-case) and a darker blue Tracy boy I thought I had, but I couldn't remember any of mine having a radio, so thought I'd found a sixth pose and bought this one. needless to say I do have it and then imagined I'd seen three Tracy's and left the 'wrong' one, but I think that's wishful thinking, and the seller had the same group as me? So this one is available with a straight swap for an equally interesting thing, if anyone wants him!

The thing second-down from the left is a blow-moulded chicken with tin-legs, and why not!

"Blue-Box" Toys; 1:35th Scale Toy Soldiers; Blow Mould Chicken; Blue Box; BTR152; Cherilea 60mm Knights; Cherilea 60mm Soldiers; Composition Toy Marx Figures; Hong Kong Chariot; Jean Hoefler; Jean Indians; Jean Wild West; Knights Horse; Manurba Coaches; Manurba Heinerle; Manurba Wagons; Roco Churchill; Roco De Gaulle; Roco Eisenhower; Roco Göring; Roco Hitler; Roco Minitanks; Roco Mussolini; Roco Rommel; Roco-Minitanks; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thomas Toys Chariot; Timpo Solid Cowboys; Timpo Solid Indians; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant; VW Beetle; Wooden Cutlery; Wooden Fork; Wooden Knife; Xandria - Holland;
I bought the bag of Wild West for these chaps; dead common in oxide brown or an off white (the two at the bottom), but less common in these bright colours. They are good quality Hong Kong copies of the Jean figures from Germany and I rather like them!

"Blue-Box" Toys; 1:35th Scale Toy Soldiers; Blow Mould Chicken; Blue Box; BTR152; Cherilea 60mm Knights; Cherilea 60mm Soldiers; Composition Toy Marx Figures; Hong Kong Chariot; Jean Hoefler; Jean Indians; Jean Wild West; Knights Horse; Manurba Coaches; Manurba Heinerle; Manurba Wagons; Roco Churchill; Roco De Gaulle; Roco Eisenhower; Roco Göring; Roco Hitler; Roco Minitanks; Roco Mussolini; Roco Rommel; Roco-Minitanks; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thomas Toys Chariot; Timpo Solid Cowboys; Timpo Solid Indians; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant; VW Beetle; Wooden Cutlery; Wooden Fork; Wooden Knife; Xandria - Holland;
The bag also contained a mix of British plastic and Hong Kong figures, and in each shot the upper row were 'keeps', the lower row was in the recycling by midday on the Sunday! Except the Timpo Indians, where I decided to keep the two middle figures, until I've checked them against my box of bits, where I may or may not have them, if I need them I'll glue them.
"Blue-Box" Toys; 1:35th Scale Toy Soldiers; Blow Mould Chicken; Blue Box; BTR152; Cherilea 60mm Knights; Cherilea 60mm Soldiers; Composition Toy Marx Figures; Hong Kong Chariot; Jean Hoefler; Jean Indians; Jean Wild West; Knights Horse; Manurba Coaches; Manurba Heinerle; Manurba Wagons; Roco Churchill; Roco De Gaulle; Roco Eisenhower; Roco Göring; Roco Hitler; Roco Minitanks; Roco Mussolini; Roco Rommel; Roco-Minitanks; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thomas Toys Chariot; Timpo Solid Cowboys; Timpo Solid Indians; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant; VW Beetle; Wooden Cutlery; Wooden Fork; Wooden Knife; Xandria - Holland;
I know - I've already posted a bigger shot! But Adrian had put these to one side for me, and it was in the collageing of these, here, that I got the idea for the other 'eye-candy' shot! All W. Germany-marked, four with integral wheels and five with separate wheels and . . . I can't get enough of them!

"Blue-Box" Toys; 1:35th Scale Toy Soldiers; Blow Mould Chicken; Blue Box; BTR152; Cherilea 60mm Knights; Cherilea 60mm Soldiers; Composition Toy Marx Figures; Hong Kong Chariot; Jean Hoefler; Jean Indians; Jean Wild West; Knights Horse; Manurba Coaches; Manurba Heinerle; Manurba Wagons; Roco Churchill; Roco De Gaulle; Roco Eisenhower; Roco Göring; Roco Hitler; Roco Minitanks; Roco Mussolini; Roco Rommel; Roco-Minitanks; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thomas Toys Chariot; Timpo Solid Cowboys; Timpo Solid Indians; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant; VW Beetle; Wooden Cutlery; Wooden Fork; Wooden Knife; Xandria - Holland;
Adrian had also put the chariot aside for me, we have looked at one, which I debagged due to its having already broken-free, but this bag looks to be holding-up well, so will remain as a 'minter' although the bag is getting the fogging of a million micro-folds!

John Begg (PTS52 on eBay) managed to find me the WWII leaders, not in time for the posts earlier this year, but that was only because I'm an impatient git, there is another post on the Monogram legacy, on the way at some point, and I'll do these closer then.

"Blue-Box" Toys; 1:35th Scale Toy Soldiers; Blow Mould Chicken; Blue Box; BTR152; Cherilea 60mm Knights; Cherilea 60mm Soldiers; Composition Toy Marx Figures; Hong Kong Chariot; Jean Hoefler; Jean Indians; Jean Wild West; Knights Horse; Manurba Coaches; Manurba Heinerle; Manurba Wagons; Roco Churchill; Roco De Gaulle; Roco Eisenhower; Roco Göring; Roco Hitler; Roco Minitanks; Roco Mussolini; Roco Rommel; Roco-Minitanks; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thomas Toys Chariot; Timpo Solid Cowboys; Timpo Solid Indians; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant; VW Beetle; Wooden Cutlery; Wooden Fork; Wooden Knife; Xandria - Holland;
Finally and for something completely different, with the Earth dying an'all that pink-monkey related shit, it was nice to see the plastic cutlery being replaced by wooden alternatives - I can report that the knife was bloody good and dealt with proper bacon - no problem - but the fork was a bit less successful and split after the first prod! It's probably steam-shaped and that weakens the grain?

Also - a big thanks to the management at Sandown Park for getting back to a full breakfast with drink (tea or coffee) for a fiver, it's been creeping up to seven or eight quid plus for the two this last year or so, and I began to wonder if the 'Saturday crew' knew what they were doing, let's hope it now stays back at a fiver-with-drink for a while?

So four shows, four posts, filled a weekend if nothing else! Some of it we've already seen in close-up, some of it we won't see again for years, like that trailer, for instance - I really will have to find the boat and the towing vehicle before it can be Blogged properly; right now I don't now whether to put it with the unknown boats & ships, or with the 'Car Ferry' farm sets!

It's all grist to the mill - more tomorrow, if I remember!