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 Deetail WWII - American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deetail WWII - American. Show all posts

Thursday, December 4, 2025

B is for Britains - Seen Elsewhere, Eye Candy and Odds & Sods

Although, some of this might hurt your eyes, but even the mighty falter and in the end, everything dies.
 
Toward the end, Britains tried to get away from 'war' war, and the whole WWII, 'Boys Own', ♪♪♫Two World Wars and . . . ♪♫, "I mentioned it once . . but I think I got away with it / You started it!" type toy theme which had served British kid's so well since 1945, by adopting first this generic UN theme, then some of the silliness below! Standard farm version of the Short Wheelbase (SWB) Land Rover, given a United Nations makeover. Here missing its 'hard-top'.
 
Using the late version US Infantry (solid sculpts, no moving, plug-in arms), accompanying UN troops (Task Force Action Figures) were provided, along with several other paint schemes as 'enemy' or just other units, only available for a couple of years in the mid-1990's, they should be rare, but many retailers were left with unsold stock, and a few years ago most dealers had mint sets on their tables!

Arctic warriors?!
 
Sold with a desert version of the Land Rover as 'Desert Storm'!
 
75p was still a fair-bit of money for a kid in 1996, and that's for one figure!
 
 The final indignity - Task Force Special Units
 
I showed a few of the other-coloured ones on the Airfix Blog;
with more shots on the Modern British Infantry post. 
 

Slightly safer ground with these, the two standard packagings for the earlier WWII-themed support weapons 'Combat Weapons', here the British Mortar (also given to the Germans) and the US Recoilless Rifle (also given to the Japanese!). There was a longer card, which was the display one, designed to sit across the top of the counter-top box, and sold last, after the box was empty.
 
 
There was an attempt to relaunch the range in the mid-2000's by First Gear, who had bought the intellectual property rights and a few of the moulds (most are with DSG in Argentina), and a couple of 'realistic' paint issues were forthcoming, I think these are the second tranche, the first having matt-green bases and better paint?

Thursday, October 17, 2019

KWI, CWI or RWI? is for Kwong Wah Industrial!

Or Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Toys Limited.

I've been rather bounced into the first-half of this post, and it will be brief as I know someone else is working on an article about the figures which should be appearing in a magazine which ought to be dropping on your mats four-times a year, but only if you keep subscribing! Also I have very few of the figures and haven't dug-them out.

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
You will know these, if not from collecting them, for seeing them in rummage trays at shows, you may have picked them up, seen the clear logo-mark on the base and asked a fellow collector or the seller or a passing member of the 'Old Guard' if they know the maker to get an answer along the lines of 'No, Hong Kong though, but I don't know the mark', I know I have!

Chromium-plated copies of Britains Deetail with integral bases. People call them 'electro-plated' but they aren't, they are just sprayed, which is why they wear so badly; electroplating leaves radio-buttons, toaster parts, mobile-phone detailing, or polypropylene B/O robot highlight's shiny for years, Lego elements can be found with electroplating; this is the stuff you can buy in cans from craft shops for a fiver!

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
Kwong Wah Industrial is the moniker, formed in 1971 and they were still going until around 2008 as Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Toys, producing more up-market stuff, their slot-racing sets were in many households, as will have been their microscopes, telescopes and robotic stuff. They also had a range of Playmobile-like play sets with larger, simply-articulated figurines. 1986 above, magazine-advert graphic in the middle and 2006 below.

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
I did still have this copy of the US Recoilless rifle to hand and it's one of the nicer pieces, the weapon is heat or friction-welded to the base, but the figures are just plugged-in. You can see the logo clearly above the code.

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
I'm giving what little history on the company I have to the author of the article forthcoming, so for now I'll close by trying to disassemble the logo; the earlier cutting dates from 1986 and it's easy to see the WI of Wah Industrial, but how you get the Kwong's K from that basket of snakes is anybody's guess!

There is a possibility (revealed by the cable (direct telegram) code) that there may be an R for Ray in there or that the K has been iterated as a C, or (most likely?) that there is an element of a Chinese character (or characters) incorporated into the logotype?

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
Note how the stars - small stickers on the Britains originals - have been etched into the helmets of the Kwong Wah knock-offs, on the front of the officer/NCO's helmet and the left side of the soldier/gunners'.

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
These don't have the Kwong Wah mark and might be another HK maker altogether, being copies (third or fourth generation?) of the die-cast figures known here as Lone Star Metallions, but also part of the Fontanini/Cané/Peltro family of much-licensed/copied/influenced stuff, they were further copied in metal, in Hong Kong and supplied to SS.Kresege (now K-Mart) and Cragstan (and a third brand, I've since forgotten - AHI or the one from Philadelphia?), so whether Lone Star were first, or just a step-on-the-way remains a question.

There's a link to a very good German-language site on these, which should be on one of the 2017 Fontanini posts? The fact that Kwong Wah also did copies of the large Fontanini figures may point to a link though! They were also sold through Zodiac Toys here.

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
Returning to the theme; we're back to Deetail-copies, but not Kwong Wah, and now Kwong Wah has been indentified, these are next on the list, with their distinctive H? Unlike the Kwong Wah's, these have the separate bases with the little foot-catches and they are copies of the oblong ones, so probably slightly earlier than the Kwong Wah's as well.

The reason I took three shots is not because of the bag-reflection, but that I kept umming and arrhing or whether or not to get them out of the bag, and each time I'd take a shot before opening them and then - not open them! But it does work for the reflections to a certain extent; I think you can make out the three poses copied here.

And the deciders for not subsequently getting them out were that with one figure duplicated twice, there are only the three poses, and also that they are the same colour-schemes as the originals (Deetail Turks), if I find a second sample with a better mix I will probably open than one!

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
The H is also on the bases so not a 'phantom brand', but a serious attempt at brand-marking both packaging and product with something which must have been known/familiar to the Haitch-Kay Toymen?

I would like it to be Herald Holdings, but that would be too neat, and there's rarely anything neat about HK company naming, look at how Kwong Wah have changed their title over the years.

It's not Herald Metal and Plastics, or I don't think it is and I don't know if they (1980's) were the same as the 1960's Herald Holdings, or if either are in anyway related to Britains Herald (I don't think so) and with forty or fifty + other H's in the colony, of which I've only eliminated 30-odd, it's still up in the air? But it will come out in the wash, one day; as Kwong Wah now has.

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
The backing card is a weirdly anachronistic battle between Viking long-ships, I can only guess at a tangential reference to the crusades and/or the fall of the Eastern Empire to Islam and/or Viking or Rus mercenaries/traders in the Holy Lands or Constantinople (Istanbul)?!

ACW Infantry; Antique Finished Cowboys; Antique Finished Indians; Bagged Rack Toys; Britains Copies; Britains Deetail; Britains Deetail Turks; Britains Deetail US Infantry; British Infantry; Chrome Plated Toy Soldiers; CWI; CWIS; Deetail Piracies; Deetail Turks; H; H Hong Kong; HK Antiqued Figured; Hong Kong H; Japanese Infantry; KWI; Kwong Wah; Kwong Wah (Lap Kay) Ltd.; Kwong Wah Industrial; Lap Kay Toys; Made in Hong Kong; Mid-Century Knights; Rack Toys; Recoiless Rifle; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Infantry;
Unpainted Hong Kong-made copies of Deetail knights also appear in gold, silver, greeny-gold and pale-grey polyethylene plastic, but I don't have any so I don't know if they have the H-mark (making them likely late issues of the above line) or are blank generics, but Brian Berke sent us this China-made, silver one, which is a clear, late third/fourth generation copy, possibly relatively or actually current.

He's marked CHINA and the thinner legs & arms, along with the poor quality of the detail all point to copying rather than any skill with a pantograph! Sized with a spigot-armed Co-Ma copy, he's been promoted from medieval to 'Janissary' with an upgrade from cold steel to Springfield's-finest courtesy of . . . AIP, BMC or TSSD . . . Conte even??

Thanks to Paul Morehead and Bill B for KWI info., and Brain for the late Turk, a Kwong Wah A-Z listing will appear after the other article has published.

Friday, March 13, 2015

B is for Better, or Best!

I'm not going to cover the Germans this time round, they are too bad, little dwarven lumps of war gaming metal, albeit in plastic! They will appear here one day (if I live long enough everything will appear here 'one day'!), but to finish the current look at these sets; the best of the bunch....

I don't remember the Jeep's runner ever being included in the box, but I guess they were thinking of it when they commissioned the artwork? This set is also marred by a large chunk of plastic crap, but a more useful piece than the British bridge to nowhere, or the mini-bunkers the Germans get.

Basically a mix of pose-lifts from the Britains Deetail and Airfix 1:32nd scale US Infantry sets with a couple of leg changes and a radio-man. I clearly gave the Bazooka to the wrong pose...but then a man running with a Bazooka would look a bit awkward, so...

On the runner, 10 poses is not a lot (for all these sets), when you consider that at the same time you could get a pack of 48 Airfix for 18p, or 100-odd Hong Kong copies for 10p! Kits like this being around 40/50p (I'm talking about 1973-4 here), and that differential continued for years, even know a pack of Airfix 2nd version US is around £4/5, while this kit - if you can find it (and it does get occasional re-issues) - will be around £6/6.50.

Scan of the box-art, another last-stand, with useful helmet painting guide to half the US army!

"Everyone to me! Fall-back on the Jeep, make very shot count! Get that .30 barking!" yelled Master-sergeant John Audie Wayne-Murphy!

I forgot to scan the instruction sheet, I'll try to remember to do it next time I get them out.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

L is for Lost Patrol!

When I covered my Brother's Detail from the attic back in December (D is for Detail) I was bemoaning the fact that I didn't have all the poses and that the Japanese I thought I'd obtained for my own collection weren't there...well it turns out that I do have some US Detail figures in the large scale 'US Infantry and Marines' box! So here they are...

At the top we see a comparison between the older and newer standing firing pose, the older one is so much better for a number of reasons...better paint in better colours, sensible sized bayonet, no over-blousing of the trousers and a very realistic M1 Garrand rifle (which I've used), unlike his replacement in the later sets who seems to have equipped himself with an 1880's Winchester, all right - after zeroing - for a target competition, but I suspect not much use on the 'Sands of Iwo Jima' (shouldn't that be 'Pumice of Iwo Jima' ?!).

In the middle are a couple of the missing poses and another kneeling firer and the lower shot has two new (left) and two old (one incomplete; right) advancing figures, showing various shades of green plastic, early and late bases etc...

At the end Britains were struggling, and painting them up as first UN infantry (upper shot) and then 'Attack Force' or something wasn't going to help. The colour scheme of the lower lot was also applied to the British Infantry from the Detail range and they looked even worse in it than the Americans...they look like they're dressed in pyjamas and wearing chocolate buttons on their heads!

The Bazooka I thought was a new pose is among these late ones and the advancing pose appears again, what with my Brothers figures in the attic we've got that pose well and truly covered!

Monday, December 5, 2011

D is for Detail

The real reason I grabbed the Japanese in the post below when I was at the unit the other day was because I thought I had the Japanese Detail figures missing from this lot; I didn't but we'll look at them anyway...

This rather grubby box was not a car-boot find, it came from the attic at Mums and consists of my Brother's childhood collection of Britains Detail, which as you can see is A) German heavy, and B) in a bit of a state brought about by 24 years or so in a poor environment, luckily they are PVC and will take a lot of punishment.

As can be seen some have a black 'bread mould' all over them, others a white bloom. They will clean-up with nothing more than a little mild detergent such as washing-up liquid or - as I used here - shower-gel!

Before and after shower-gel shots of the US Infantry. These are all early types with the separate arms, some would later be redesigned to have integral arms. The very earliest had brown bases, but they changed to green - as memory recalls - within the first year or so, the early Brits and Germans also got brown bases initially.

If you clean them in mildly hot/warmish water, you can also straiten any bent bits and get all the figures to stand-up properly at the same time.

There is a pose missing, as the officer in these shots has been removed from the recoiless-rifle base, yet without a catalogue to hand I can't remember the missing pose! The fact that they got a second set of new poses doesn't help...there was another advancing pose, a bazooka-man, a grenade thrower and others including another waving rifle (was he the other first series?) and a stabbing with bayonet.

Various arm-swaps, a paint colour variation (bottom left) and the rather tatty Recoiless-rifle given a new lease of life with a different figure. The rifle has been wedged in to the original slots! These guys are all missing their helmet stickers and while I know someone with German sticker sheets, I don't know anyone with the US stars (black on a red shield).

My brother has said in the past that I can have this box for my collection, but once they have been posted here there is no real need to keep them and I will clean them all up, give them a better container and put them back in the loft, he'll be glad I did one day...