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 F. Show all posts
Showing posts with label F. Show all posts

Monday, June 8, 2026

F is for Fireman Pat, the Paw Patrol Builder

There's a ton of this infant oriented stuff out there, and in scanning the shelves I tend to filter it out, what with the American knock-off of Tomas the Tank engine starting to make inroads to British shelves, and Postman Pat now joined by similarly-cloned builders and firefighters (still called 'firemen', shock-horror!), even if you could argue Pugwash or Mr. Ben came first!
 
But luckily, Brian Berke spotted these in the 'States a while ago, and they've been in edit since . . . checks images . . . 2024, in fact, June, so two years ago, and well overdue for an outing here. Also, while flat erasers aren't necessarily a thing, we have had similar robots and dinosaurs, so by default, they are part of the Small Scale World oeuvre now! The law of unintended consequences!
 

 
Apparently direct-from-Turkey imports, or is that a version of Arabic? Zaini (LZ) are well known as a Kinder rival, and we've seen a few figural efforts or vehicles from them over the years, the likely prizes as illustrated on the box, weren't in the box! But do include two figures who may turn-up in mixed lots someday?
 


Instead you got flat-slab erasers with water-slide transfer-printed images of the characters from Fireman Sam on them, credited to a Prism Art & Design Ltd.* Many thanks to roving reporter Brian, for roving, and reporting!
 
*According to the Fireman Sam wiki - "Prism Art & Design Limited is a Welsh entertainment company currently owned by HiT Entertainment, itself a subsidiary of Mattel" - so, wheels within wheels! 

Sunday, June 7, 2026

F is for Follow-up - Dime Store Row Crop Tractors

The first of a few (?) follow-ups to things seen recently here at Small Scale World, and it's those pesky row-crop tractors, a design which never took off here in the UK, indeed, while there may have been a few demonstrators, or experimental imports, they were never a 'thing' over here at all, but, nevertheless, British toy companies ran with them, as mould-swaps or straight lifts from US dime-store vehicle manufacturers, and may have instigated some?
 
Partially as a follow-up to this post;
 
A line-up of the recent additions to the genre, with from the left marked Tudor Rose, x2 unmarked, marbled blue is slightly larger, both likely British, possibly Tudor Rose or Kleeware, the previously seen (in the above-linked posts) marked Made in England in military green, and a marked Banner in dark blue, The last two being bigger again, but not the same. Obvious differences in wheels, also contribute to the question marks.
 

Comparison between the Banner and unknown tractors, frankly the unknown (which I floated as possibly Kleeware last time) is the better moulding, did it come first, or was it re-cut? Maybe it was a mould swap with someone else - Pyro, Wannatoys or Wyandott - with the Banner being a copy of whatever donor's tool, the England mark was using?
 
I then found the military pattern Banner-marked version, so re-took the comparison, light conditions differed, so here's two, the lower image is eye-true colours, and you can see how the engine details are cleaner and more symmetrical on the Made in England - left hand of each pair.
 
The two Banner's, the blue one is marked Banner USA, the military-green one has had the USA removed, otherwise they are the same, and one wonders if it's a case of domestic and export, and if so, which is which?
 
They both have a hole on the right side of the engine-bay, which could be for a missing flywheel (more normally found in the other side in the UK, when present), or a higher-price-point's clockwork conversion, unlikely as the wheel is partially obscuring it?
 
The two known British ones, they are different mouldings, with the yellow Tudor Rose one slightly smaller, and only marked in the upper portion of the hollow engine cavity, while the 'army' one has the Made In England along the length of the engine on the right-hand side.
 

A larger, closer to 1:32nd scale, soft polyethylene Tudor Rose row-crop, in reversed colours from the smaller one, which is an earlier 'styrene, or less stable polymer (phenolic or urea-formaldehyde type?), but with perfectly stable polystyrene wheels.
 
Kleeware marked wreaker-truck (a straight mould-swap of the Pyro dime-store model) behind the 'England' pulling its gun, just for a colour study between the two, and because it was kicking about! The gun is a much copied design, and really, I don't think anyone knows who did it first (Auburn Rubber?), or in what size! And - of course - there was that close connection between Kleeware and Tudor Rose, and between both of them and Pyro on the space-stuff.
 
This artillery combination appears to be the one seen in this post;
 
 
Where a mix of a Bell machine-gun, a pair of unmarked Gilmark (possibly Tudor Rose) AFV's in bright colours, and some of the 'Built-Rite/Hardy/Kilty/Loeser/Spencer' semi-flat GI's were all found together with the tractor-gun combo'?
 
We've looked at them before, and looked at three versions of the Merit (J&L Randall) offerings, with solid wood, solid-rubber and hollow-backed plastic wheels like all the above. When I've got them all together, we may be able to work out a timeline of piracy, from US originals, to n'th generation Hong Kong clones!
 
All six. This post doesn't prove anything, but it didn't set out to, beyond the fact that there are many of these, and their heritage/origins aren't clear! When marked, we can say, they are what they claim to be, even if the tool is someone else's, but when unmarked, it's all a bit grey. More images are here;
 
 
And knowing at least one was used as an artillery-tractor, I'll have to look at them all again, with the guns present? There were several already in the stash, mostly military green ones, but there are some other 'farm' ones.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

F is for Follow-up - LJN Swivel Heads

Whinging Pom here - too hot to bloody sleep! 
 
So, it turned out that Chris had actually sent me shots of his LJN figures ages ago, and they were languishing down the bottom of Picasa (I look upon my numbering of image folders as a scrollable 'ladder'), while he sent me more the other day while conversing on them as part of the most recent donation, so let's have a look at them!
 
LJN were what you might call a medium-sized toy company;
 
 
And like most medium-sized companies, they ultimately failed, being bought by a bigger fish, or at least one with deeper pockets, but for a while they were big in licensed products. The figures we're looking at here, were more of a generic catalogue gap-filler though, gotta'have a few toy soldiers or model figures in the listings!


Play-sets, tied into LJN's own property, a 12" knock off of GI Joe (Action Man), called Mr. Action, were announced in the 1975 trade catalogue, as E-Z-Fold giant action playsets, and Brian Heiler has them here; 

 
On Plaid Stallions, but he's not sure if they were ever issued, and I think someone else has them listed as another US toymaker's product. 
 
But clearly they were LJN's, and came to market somehow, maybe as counter-top dispencer/pick boxes, and while I initially thought they might be copies, based on the French Cofalux's 60mm swivel-heads, I don't think they are, the kneeling with rifle is similar to a metal mocherette of Kit Carson, but he's waving his above his head, so it's no more than a passing sculptural similarity.
 
Two of the figures share a sculpt, with the hands' contents rendering one an 'officer' (pistol) and the other a rifleman, throwing a very dinky-little grenade. And obviously, they are Vietnam era/Cold War troops with M16's, minimal webbing and no packs.
 
I did however, instantly recognise the US Cavalry as Elastolin 'swoppet' copies, albeit welded together at the waist, and with most of their accessories also permanently reattached as a part of larger integral mouldings, only the neckerchief being still separate, along with head/hat.
 
Meanwhile, we looked at my small sample of the combat Elastolin's back in 2019, with help from Girly-girl, who, that March, was as alive as both my Parents and her son, all four gone now, with Covid, Putin and Trump adding to the mess Farage had already started!
 
 
And, you can see, the sculpts are not the same as the LJN GI's? So they would seem to be pretty unique, compared to the cavalry knock-offs.



Markings are a simple H.K. on the GI's, a fuller HONG KONG in a DIN font on the foot cavalry (both marks are quite common on various toys from the colony, the full-stops on the HK being possible clues to future ID'ing of true maker), and an LJN -specific marking on the horses bases, one has to assume it's the same for the Indians, and Peter Evans thinks there may have been cowboys too, both taken from Elastolin, although the thumbnail in that catalogue seems to show the crude Star/M-Toy types, mostly BritainsLone Star or Timpo piracies.
 

Chris's more recent close-up shots of the six combat troops.

Returning to whether or not the sets were ever issued, as Chris pointed out in his correspondence with me; "Maybe the E-Z-Fold sets were never produced as the Vietnam war had just finished and maybe considered ill-timed or poor taste?", and with Brain H also having misgivings on their execution, it may be that the figures (already ready for the catalogue photo-shoot) were cleared as loose figures. This would have been at the same time Highlander were failing to get their Vietnam-era project fully off the ground.

Can anyone else add anything to the circumstantial evidence, and musings of Brain, Chris, Peter and me? Can you remember how you encountered these, back at the time?

Saturday, May 9, 2026

F is for Fishy Business!

Do you remember the B&M shark carry-case we looked at, not that long ago;
 
 
Well, here's another one, this time courtesy of TKMaxx, apparently clearance from Code Red Novelties of New York, they've clearly seen the B&M effort somewhere in the pipeline, and thought "We could do that, cheaper!"
 


Cheaper means no little boats or submersibles, but in order to address the lack of vehicular action, the whole carry-case is a truck! And, just like the B&M one, it has inhabited compartments on one side, and empty compartments on the other, to be filled by the owner. The truck and packaging have already gone to charity and recycling, respectively!
 

I guess you always get one of the paired palm trees, along with a random selection of five from twelve of the sea life sculpts, I would have liked the octopus, as they are growing as a side-issue, but so are star fish and turtles, so I'm not complaining!
 
That's it, we buy this shit so you don't have to! Box ticking some new production - a couple of years ago it was all dinosaur-head truck carry-cases, now it's sharks!

Monday, May 4, 2026

F is for First Decent Walk of the Year!

I always mean to post more non-toy-soldier stuff than I do, so while there are thousands of often quite good images of insects, when I do get around to posting some, they aren't always the best, but I like a narrative, and I managed to have my first proper walk of the year the other day (24th April), and found a long hedge, at the top of a dip slope on the downs near Borden, which was facing a very warm sun, and saw loads of butterflies, not all of which were hanging around to be photographed, so missing from these shots are Orange Tips, Small Tortoiseshells, Whites and a Brimstone, but I did get these others.
 

Peacock
It actually posed for me, and when I swore. as it closed its wings, it opened them again!
 
Red Admiral launching.
 

 
 
There were loads of small Holly Blues, but they were actively having what is best described as an orgy, and while I took dozens of shots, most of them are rather blurry, or one of the pair is missing altogether, or I just shot holly leaves!
 
There's a small striped, solitary 'Digger' wasp in there somewhere!
These are the ones who tunnel into well-trodden sandy paths, or bare banks. 
 
 
Not sure what these are, I need to look them up.
Some kind of fly, maybe Willow Sawflies, with notably long antennae.
 

I thought this was a very big version of the 'Basingstoke Orange Bums' as they were called in our family (Mum had some notion they 'came out of' Basingstoke, to compete with her honey-bees! A journey of about 8-miles), but later following it along the ground for a while, trying to get decent shots, I realised it was probably a [larger] queen, of the aforementioned, looking for a suitable nesting site. She's actually a 'Red Tailed Bumblebee'
 
First Hover-fly of the season, among my favourites.
 
Once they've had some pollen or nectar for sustenance, as the one above was, the Digger Wasps will hunt and take these as larder stock for the small broods - booooo! Raw in tooth and claw!


Standard Buff-bottom, sharing a dandelion with another solitary wasp type, possibly Oxybellus, from the silver and black striping?
 
Robber- or Horse-fly? I was probably lucky not to be bitten by one, while I was concentrating on other things, I often get a bite on the shoulder or back as I'm doing this, especially if I'm only in a T-shirt. There were sheep in the valley at the bottom of the dip, and these biting flies do seem to go hand-in-hand with livestock!

Thursday, April 23, 2026

F is for Follow Up . . . From Ages Ago!

Do you remember when we looked at the Nazi board game Friegur;
 
 
Well, I managed to pick up a few of the pieces at the BMSS show last weekend, they weren't cheap, but well worth it, to add them to the stash, and they also add something to that previous post, being unmarked and introducing a new colour, useful, as the link to the Leipzig set found by Paul at the time is now dead?
 
A full squad of twelve infantry, with the standard-bearer.

One each of the German Army's poses, the officer has lost his hand, maybe his Mauser exploded! And we can see the oxblood red of the mounted figure (in German helmet . . . ish) must be from another set, as we saw with the whole game, last time, each army is one colour.
 
Likewise, there are 'Frenchies' from two sets, but there were only three items, two foot officers and one mounted, again in the oxblood red.

Comparison between the not very German helmet (the foot figure's helmets are a better shape, as can be seen in the previous images), and the more obvious Adrian helmet of the 'French' side, and a difference of base design, one's thicker too. So we have examples from at least two sets, possibly three, and none of these were marked, whereas there were clear base-marks last time we looked at them.
 
I'm guessing here, but I suspect the different tech' involved in producing Bakelite mouldings, over the later petrochemical-polymer injection processes, might have led to larger tools or bolsters, for oven finishing of whole 'sides', with all the pieces required of a game, being made in one colour batch, then another, and the two opposite sides swapped for contrasting colours, at the packing stage?
 
Certainly the larger components made in the phenolic material for the electrical industry would suggest such large tools/components were not rare, although nowadays, Bakelite is, or can be injected, in quite small moulding machines, so I guess it's a moot point!

Howitzer, trench mortar and the 'lozenge' tank, as seen last time.
 
Notice on all these, the uneven finishing/sanding of the bases, as opposed to the marked set we saw last time, where they were all clearly ground level, in a uniform fashion, here they've just been touched to the sanding belt, to remove high-spots. It would be interesting to know if these are earlier or later production, I suspect the latter, maybe licensed to another maker, the Leipzig connection from last time? Although I've tagged them Denkmeier and Fischer to keep them together with the previous post.
 
The cockpitless Messerschmitt Me.109 'drone'!
 
So, marked or unmarked, in black, khaki or oxblood, I still have a few to find before I'm happy with the sample, given that an actual game will stay well outside my budget parameters! But this is a nice start!