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 7th Cav.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 7th Cav.. Show all posts

Monday, April 1, 2024

B is for Blue Shirts!

I found this cutting in the Blue Box folder, real not digital, so scanned it, then it could be in the digital folder too! Taken from issue 12 of Military Modelling magazine from 2000, I think that was when they were trying to get-out 16 issues a year, so these were probably launched in time for the Christmas market?

We've briefly looked at the knights/fantasy set, a few pirates, and was there Biker Mice from Mars, or am I thinking of something-else entirely! The figures in all sets (there was a Roman fort too) are rather juvenile in execution, but the accessories and scenics are very useful, from HO through to about 28mm.
 
Goes and looks them up, it was Teen Turtles, and possibly Playmates!
 

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

H is for How They Come In - April I - Chris - The Rest!

We're working - vaguely - backwards from the 20th century with this post as we cover the historicals, ceremonials, Wild West, medievals and ancients from the donation Chris sent to the Blog back last April.

Battle of Kulikov; Britains AWI; Flat Figures; Kulicovo; Kulikov; MPC 40mm Knights; Napoleonics; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Premiums; Raja cavalry; Semi Flats; Semi-Flats; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Spencer Smith Miniatures; Wild West Flats; Wilton Cake Decorations;
These were accompanied by a number of eMailed images from Chris's own collection and have been covered in full here now, being both Polish sourced Plasticom and Polish takes on Plasticom, with more Plasticom 'Soldabars' added to the post! WWII/Modern infantry and Wild West.

Battle of Kulikov; Britains AWI; Flat Figures; Kulicovo; Kulikov; MPC 40mm Knights; Napoleonics; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Premiums; Raja cavalry; Semi Flats; Semi-Flats; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Spencer Smith Miniatures; Wild West Flats; Wilton Cake Decorations;
True Wild West here, and a really nice mix; we have one of those teeny-tiny cowboys (in Peru they had a very similar set of race-horses and jockeys), another pod-foot in metallic blue, as I said only the other day, you can't have too many of these as there are so many to find!

The semi flat in red soft plastic is also nice and more have been seen here in their own post somewhere. One each of the Waddington's copies will join their mates but the metallic-purple trio are very useful. I think I've singled them out before, in silver and possibly brown or gun-metal, copies of Elastolin plastics and probably a [French?] premium, but so far a brand has eluded me.

Battle of Kulikov; Britains AWI; Flat Figures; Kulicovo; Kulikov; MPC 40mm Knights; Napoleonics; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Premiums; Raja cavalry; Semi Flats; Semi-Flats; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Spencer Smith Miniatures; Wild West Flats; Wilton Cake Decorations;
These are all worth a word, starting with the Beefeater, who may be a tourist memento bust, or part of a larger chess-set? I can report that both he and the 'swizzle-stick' from the other day just managed to fit in the tub all the Beefeaters are in now! Some shuffling was required!

The outside pair are recent (but discontinued) Spencer Smith Wellingtonians, inside them are a pair of Raja 'Regiment' TV-related Portuguese ice-cream premium cavalry, and in the less common colours, so a real treat, while the two versions of a stroppy corporal could be early Kinder?

I say that because they seem to be based on the set from Portugal which has been issued by several premium-givers over the years, but as larger figures with separate bases and slightly finer sculpting; these being smaller, slightly 'blobbier' and having integral bases. Both sets have been credited to Kinder, but the better ones may have been dragged in (as other things have been) erroneously by over-enthusiastic Kinder collectors!

Battle of Kulikov; Britains AWI; Flat Figures; Kulicovo; Kulikov; MPC 40mm Knights; Napoleonics; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Premiums; Raja cavalry; Semi Flats; Semi-Flats; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Spencer Smith Miniatures; Wild West Flats; Wilton Cake Decorations;
Very interesting; an AWI copy of a Britains swoppet, but as a single moulding, the locating stud suggests Wilton or someone like that (Carousel, SSCO, Grandmother Stover's, there were a fair few), but he could plug into a touristy thing? He's lost the end of his musket, but as a first sample is very gratefully received!

Battle of Kulikov; Britains AWI; Flat Figures; Kulicovo; Kulikov; MPC 40mm Knights; Napoleonics; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Premiums; Raja cavalry; Semi Flats; Semi-Flats; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Spencer Smith Miniatures; Wild West Flats; Wilton Cake Decorations;
A painted Hun (warrior with bow - simple), we looked at them back in March here, and I'll keep him painted (is it your work, or the standard, commercially available Toy Soldier Co. paint-job?) as he's the recent Chinese gold-plastic production-run underneath.

The other two are chalk and cheese; on the right is a bog-standard MPC 40mm knight in silver (Ed Burg just posted the fort carry-case here), but the chap on the left is a first for the Blog and the collection (I have a mounted figure or two who may go with him I think, somewhere), and could be a European premium.

He has something in common with the soft polyethylene premiums from Portugal, but they were Starlux copies, I don't think this is a Starlux pose and they were off-white he's silver! Equally he could be a crudely added addition to a toy fort, it's quite a rough moulding, or even a 'from hollow-cast' but they tend not to have such heavy bases; he's very interesting!

There will be one other post related to this lot, but in the meantime my gratitude to Chris Smith for sharing them with the rest of us.

Sunday, April 26, 2020

I is for Intermediate Scales - 40mm Wild West; Ex-Waddington's 'Battle of the Little Big Horn'

Very similar to the next set (above; or click 'newer post' below) and equally unmarked and equally Hong Kong production-looking are these Battle of Little Big Horn clones of the old Rojas e Malaret sculps, except I suspect they aren't clones so much as a late running of the final tool of the two or three we saw here.

40mm Cowboys; 40mm Cowboys & Indians; 40mm Indians; Atlantic Cowboys; Atlantic Indians; Battle of the Little Big Horn; Cowboys and Indians; Culpitt Cowboys; Culpitt Indians; Culpitt Wild West; Culpitt's Cake Decorations; Injectaplastic; Jouets Super Plastic; JSP; Merten Cowboys; Merten Indians; Waddington's Cowboys; Waddington's Custer; Waddington's Indians; Walter Merten;
Whether the mould was in Hong Kong or was moved to Hong Kong is - currently - anybody's guess, just because some people have attributed HK without recourse to evidence or caviat is not really the point, the figures exist and while those late painted ones 'look' Hong Kong'y, there is nothing to say either way!

40mm Cowboys; 40mm Cowboys & Indians; 40mm Indians; Atlantic Cowboys; Atlantic Indians; Battle of the Little Big Horn; Cowboys and Indians; Culpitt Cowboys; Culpitt Indians; Culpitt Wild West; Culpitt's Cake Decorations; Injectaplastic; Jouets Super Plastic; JSP; Merten Cowboys; Merten Indians; Waddington's Cowboys; Waddington's Custer; Waddington's Indians; Walter Merten;
Indeed; these may be from a late version of the board game, paint is not necessary for 'playing counters' and while I've never seen a set with these, equally I've never seen a carded or bagged rack toy with them either?

They could just as easily have been run as cake decorations, the same as those very frangible Triang-Minimodels ones - who also have unpainted versions. Note: the second shade of brown.

40mm Cowboys; 40mm Cowboys & Indians; 40mm Indians; Atlantic Cowboys; Atlantic Indians; Battle of the Little Big Horn; Cowboys and Indians; Culpitt Cowboys; Culpitt Indians; Culpitt Wild West; Culpitt's Cake Decorations; Injectaplastic; Jouets Super Plastic; JSP; Merten Cowboys; Merten Indians; Waddington's Cowboys; Waddington's Custer; Waddington's Indians; Walter Merten;
There is a clear difference is in the horses where there are various horse colours (and I must thank Gareth from Morgan Miniatures for putting a few of these - foot & mounted - aside for the Blog recently), but I don't think there is any import by it, beyond a bit of variation.

40mm Cowboys; 40mm Cowboys & Indians; 40mm Indians; Atlantic Cowboys; Atlantic Indians; Battle of the Little Big Horn; Cowboys and Indians; Culpitt Cowboys; Culpitt Indians; Culpitt Wild West; Culpitt's Cake Decorations; Injectaplastic; Jouets Super Plastic; JSP; Merten Cowboys; Merten Indians; Waddington's Cowboys; Waddington's Custer; Waddington's Indians; Walter Merten;
The real American [not a] Hero who gets to be massacred again and again and again and again and again and again and again . . . although when I say 'massacred' I mean taught a lesson by the locals "Never go south of the River if you're not properly tooled-up and ready for trouble" . . . . everybody knows that, ask a taxi-driver!

Wednesday, January 29, 2020

E is for Eye Candy - Atlantic Boxes

Not much to this post, but Atlantic aren't a big-priority here, they're not as rare as some people make out, they're not as mysterious as some people think and they're definitely not as mythological as some people would have you believe, but these shots have been kicking around since 2014, so it's time they got off the laptop!

Abilene West-City; Atlantic; Bank; Cavalry Fort; Fort Riley; Four Cattle Wagons; Frontier Fort; Gatling Gun; Hotel; Mezzi Del West; Pioneer's Wagons; Pioniers Wagon's; Plastic Toy Figures; Saloon; Sherif; Sheriff; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry Guns; Wild West Fort; Wild West Wagons;
The four sets in the Wild West accessory or scenics range were an eclectic assortment of buildings and 'vehicles', with a chunky fort, small village of timber-frame commercial properties, a wagon train and some Gatling-guns!

The artwork for Abilene West-City makes the content look much better than they are, the wagon train (with misplaced comma and dodgy syntax) tends towards brittleness when found these days, which seems to be down to a lot of 'minters' coming back from the Middle East in the 2000's, it also has the same cavalry crew as the Gatling-gun limbers.

The fort paint's up better than the heavy moulding would suggest while god knows what's happened to the gun-battery, but they've lost a team or two, with one man crushed under the horses - dead horses - and corpses littering the battlefield, the remaining teams rushing in two directions and a last-stand happening in the background . . . how can you be having a 'last stand' with four Gatling-guns at your disposal, you should be destroying the opposition!

Abilene West-City; Atlantic; Bank; Cavalry Fort; Fort Riley; Four Cattle Wagons; Frontier Fort; Gatling Gun; Hotel; Mezzi Del West; Pioneer's Wagons; Pioniers Wagon's; Plastic Toy Figures; Saloon; Sherif; Sheriff; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry Guns; Wild West Fort; Wild West Wagons;
The backs of the boxes are very-much 'after' the pattern of Airfix's forts and play-sets with a basic assembly diagram in black-line, but on a 'scroll'; both Abilene and Riley (the earlier pair issued) also get their titles on the back and Riley benefits from some red arrows!

They suffer here from flash-reflection (one reason they've sat in Picasa for so long!), and next-time I'll scan them, but I need to source an A3 scanner with depth of field first!

Monday, July 22, 2019

7th is for Cavalry!

Do they still have a 7th or was it quietly retired after . . . ahem . . . 'the event'?

Someone should have done that; back in the 1400-somethings when standing armies were first being organised, the Pope or someone filling the place of a UN should have dictated that units would be numbered in sequence from 1, within each country, with units suffering more than, say, 65% casualties in a single action or campaign being retired as jinxed or dishonoured or whatever. I mean - how can you have a 501st parachute unit five minutes after the invention of the parachute, or a 633rd squadron less than 40 years after the invention of the Airforce? Equally how can you have BB1 decades after the term battleship has been popularised!

I digress, and am in danger of getting up on my high-horse and riding off on one! I think we've looked at these briefly before, if we haven't they are in the queue (which I am totally losing track of!) and will turn-up at some point, in a lesser form!

Waddington's board game pieces from the battle of The Little Big Horn game. I do have the complete game somewhere and we will look at it as a briefer post when it turns up, but today we're looking purely at the playing-piece figures.

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
Bluster and his flag, unlike the other figures we're about to look at, there seems to be only two versions/mouldings of this figure, and the fact that some of them are in a white plastic suggests they may have had their own tool, and consequently, enough were manufactured initially to carry through one of the subsequent publishing tranches. But the blue ones are a tad poorer in sculpting and paint.

The flag also has at least two forms, and the difference between them is more marked than the other variations we'll look at! Late shots (below) reveal there probably are three different sculpts of this figure too.

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
The Adjutant/ADC/2IC . . . 'other officer' type! Here there seem to be three versions; the darker figure (second from the left) being - probably - the Spanish original, a Hong-Kong'y, stab-and-hope painted figure on the far right and two commoner intermediate figures - 1st and third.

Below the main line-up are two comparisons between the commoner one and the thin-based, in-house copy.

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
The troopers' consist of standing and kneeling firers, with - again - three variations of sculpt for each, and a second, rarer sculpting of the standing figure, leaning into the shot, which seems to have had a shorter existence, being issued 1-to-2 of the standard straight-legs in Spanish-figured sets? Elastolin-Hausser just had six kneeling cowboys in blue styrene, very boring!

The upper line-up shows, from the left; two commoner types in different plastic shades, a probably earlier Spanish one (larger hat, deeper base) and finally; a thin-based copy. Below them to the right are three kneeling firers, the larger one on the right being the - probably - earlier one, the other two being similar to the eye, but which are different.

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
With the Indians the main difference is that earlier versions have nicer paint, in various schemes, while later sets tend to contain simple painted-figures in the same scheme. On the left here is a sample of mostly earlier figures with a variety of loin-cloth colours, some enhanced with a second colour.

On the right are the three versions I've found so far, with a smooth-based (three-part tool) on the left, a two-part moulding with join-line in the middle and another thin-based, probably late copy, to the right. The third version came in a sample of all plain-red loin-cloths.

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
A similar situation occurs here with the advancing-menacingly pose - I think they go top four (Spanish originals, chalky plastic, three-part tool [no join-line], good painting), middle eleven (two-part tool [join-line], smaller base, poorer painting) and the bottom one; smaller, overall.

A closer look suggests the forth figure on the top belongs with the lone warrior at the bottom?

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
There are only two obvious horse types, three-part tool with a smooth base and two-part mould with a clear join-line running across the bottom.

The various shades of sea/azure-blue saddle-blankets only seem to occur with the better (three-part moulding) horses, probably from the earlier sets, with the glossy later (?) sets only having the red-fringed yellow blankets. Spanish-issued sets (see link below) also have red blankets.

The shot bottom left compares the (Spanish?) original on the left with the (right-hand) copy.

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
The riders are much harder to separate, but there are clues; better paint, fuller sculpts and I have tried to line up the bowmen by type, best at the top, while with the shooter, apart from three obviously better sculpts at the top, the rest are a bit of a free-for-all?

Somewhere I have true Hong Kong copies of the rifleman, unpainted on crappy horses, probably nothing to do with the game; rather, some capsule or Christmas cracker knock-offs?

---------------------------------------

2nd photo-session

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
I have stuck with a plethora of 'probably's above and question-marked the few attributions to Spanish originals because I don't know the answers as to why there are at least three tranches of these, or why there's an extra standing rifleman in the cavalry - sometimes (!), or why the flags and horse only have two apparent types (both white plastic?) or even why there's two Bluster's of the 7th, in different colours?

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
And while I always post this link as to being the last word on all these sets originating in Spain, from Rojas y Malaret, and licensed to both Hausser (two games) and Waddington's (Little Big Horn) along with the French Capiepa, he doesn't have much on these differences either, probably because he's dealing with Spanish originals and the odd sample of British, German or French versions.

He does however highlight the differences, crediting the third (?) set to Hong Kong, but I don't know where the attribution comes from (they're not marked) and around a third of the Waddington's sets are Spanish-figure equipped anyway. The Spanish figures have Jecsan-like bases, but the horses are more Reamsa-like, but I don't know who supplied Rojas'' - I think Lafredo have been fingered as well? Elastolin used their own figures (shipping the Macedonian elephant over from Spain - a bit like the Hannibal originals!), and Waddington's had the top-ups!

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
My guess - for what it's worth, is that the set sold so extraordinarily well, so quickly, Waddington's were 'jumped' into finding tons more figures at short notice to supply demand from big and/or powerful clients; mail-order firms or department stores,  probably in the run-up to a Christmas?

Whether Waddington's sourced the copies in the UK or HK is a moot point. And any source trying to state Waddington's only used their own/Hong Kong figures is bullshitting (you know who, over at Vichy!), 'early' Waddington's sets contain Spanish figures; my own (when it turns up) has a set of mint, chalky, orangey-brown, well painted Spanish figures.

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
Anyone who's been collecting in the UK for any length of time, who's rocked-up at enough shows or who knows the odd dealer will know this set is not rare over here, with some dealers having a 'stock' stack of them, and most shows turning-up at least one, with loose figures seemingly in most rummage trays! And most donators to the collection/Blog have heaved a few this way over the years.

And the obvious thing is; the British boxes are all the same, whatever figures are in them, so while it would seem to go: 1 Spanish - 2 Spanish-like - 3 Honk Kong'y, and common-sense dictates such, there is no empirical evidence for either the order of issue, or the origin, Waddington's may even have had the Spanish tool - for a while?

7th Cavalry; American Indians; Bataille Du Little Big Horn; Battaglia De Little Big Horn; Custer; Empresas Españolas; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; George Armstrong Custer; Grand Batallas Del Mundo; Guerras Indias; Guerre Del Far West; Guerres Indiennes; Hausser Elastolin; Indian Wars; Indianer Kriege; Indians; la Bataille du Little Big Horn; Lafredo; Les Boîtes de Jeux Historiques; Little Big Horn; Native American Indian; Native Americans; Peaux Rouge Contre Longs Couteaux; Playing Pieces; Rojas y Malaret; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Cavalry; Waddington's; Waddingtons Game; Waddingtons Games; Wild West Figures;
The conclusion being; it was a very popular set - the year I was born!