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 Fire Engine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fire Engine. 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! 

Saturday, December 14, 2024

S&S is for Scale and Size!

 Can you see what I did there! As well as our regular visits to the canyons of New York, there has been this for . . . about seven or eight years now, I think - the annual Christmas toy-related display by the Fleet & Crookham Local History Group in Fleet library, which this year is all about size/scale of like subjects.

Another 'lazy' post, in that it can be blurb-light, it is what it is! I would add that the FCLHG do other presentations through the year, local development, the medieval period, how the maps change, that kind of thing.


























It's getting like we've seen most of it before, hence a different theme every year? I think the Furby's are new this year, they used to be called Gonk's, when I was a lad, and were made by Travellers on old loo-rolls for the fairground-prize trade. They were a good introduction to loss and death, as their little paper faces slowly dog-eared, ripped or even slid off, and eventually damp got to their cores or an adult's foot or arse flattened them!
 
The Exhibition normally comes down in the first or second week of January, so if you're passing, worth a quick visit.

Saturday, September 14, 2024

G is for Go Space Trucking!

Really - 'futuristic' trucks!
 
Panhard 1951Titan IE 45 HL Pathe Marconi
 
This existed as one of several futuristic/novelty builds, used for advertising, or as crew-vehicles for teams or media outlets in the Tour de france or Grand Prix circuits of the 1940-50's, sometimes, like the Weiner mobile in the US.

General Motors 1964 Bison concept truck

Chevrolet 1965 Turbo Titan II concept truck

Ford 1966 Big Red Turbo concept truck
 
It's funny, but my childhood was quite liberally sprinkled with iconography related to 'space trucking'? From early articles in World of Wonder magazine on futuristic trucks, through the various multi-wheeled, articulated beasts in the backgrounds of strips or TV series like Dan Dare or Thunderbirds, through Deep Purple's hit, also Space Trucking, and my first Def Leppard album, bought from scrimped pocket-money; On Through the Night, which had a bog-standard 'big rig' rocking through space with a giant, tarpaulin'ed guitar on the flat bed, issued around the time of the most famous space trucker, no, not Han Solo (although - of course - he counts!), but Lone Starr, the mercenary in a Winnebago, from Space Balls!
 
There were a few images in the many sci-fi art books I had, the daft strip in 2000AD; Ace Trucking Co., and the equally interesting vehicles on the elevated freeways of Megacity One and the badlands of the Cursed Zone, and then, Mad Max (and a Plethora of straight to VHS knock-offs - the iconic Herkimer Battle Jitney being notable), while the above four were among many, swirling about in the background of the public conscience.
 
Latterly, we have had Fry and Leela, in Futurama, but they had a more 'conventional' spaceship! All the while, Matchbox, Corgi and Mattel (Hot Wheels) had been producing ever more whacky die-cast spacey trucks in an attempt to hold market share . . . but the dime-store guys had already been there, in the 1950's, before I was born!
 


I can't find this on Google, I'm sure it's been through the Internet at some point, probably various points, but apart from a slightly streamlined Ford saloon (sedan) car, also by Palitoy (for this is theirs), I couldn't find anything about it.
 
The front wheels are a little low, due to the ageing of the thin celluloid (?) belly-pan, which holds a crude steering system, and from, the warping of the plastic, not severe, but there, it must be contemporaneous with the aircraft, we've been working through since the early days of the blog, so the hope must be that more will be out there to find




Gilmark's fire engine (missing a ladder, I suspect, but so is every example I can find on Google!), is probably more accidentally futuristic, being 'just' a toy? The chassis designed - like Beeju's - to take different bodies/loads, and having a tip-back cab, so you can 'work' on the engine!
 
The beauty of all these dime-store types, whether military, civilian or space/futuristic, is that they go quite well with the smaller scales, and both these would suit 23-28mm figures, so your Giant, LB (Lik Be) or Airfix astronaut/space figures, through to role-playing stuff?


A couple of comparison shots, I have a few more dime-store type, rigid-bodied 'space trucks' in the collection, and we may have seen one or two over the years, and a bus (?), but this is my first 'Artic' (articulated/tractor-trailer) type wagon, and hopefully we'll return to them when they all come together, or I find more Palitoy efforts, or even a Gilmark ladder?
 
These both came in at the weekend, last, but I'm not doing a show-report, or, I might do one on the loose figures and bits, but most of what I bought on Saturday, was specifically for posts, given everything else is in storage now! "Go Space Trucking"!

Thursday, August 29, 2024

P is for Portagiochi

I think we just have to face the fact that we aren't going to escape the 'P's this month, and it's not deliberate! I put 'Rack Toys' and 'Toy-rack' into Google Translate, and they both came-up Portagiochi 'portable toys' (?), so that's what I went with, as I like to go native sometimes with these specifically foreign toy posts!
 
Brian Berke visited Italy earlier in the year, and sent lots of photographs to the blog, on various subjects, enough to provide posts for some time, and it's not like Picasa isn't full of older stuff from him, but Picasa is filled with all sorts, it's a case of me getting round to it, like yesterday's fortuitous slamming together of three folders as four posts! Anyway, Brian sent us a flavour of current Italian rack-toy/kiosk fayre, so that what we're looking at here;

Starting with a lovely 'bog standard' set of Army Men, whose card roughly translates as Assault Troop, and while mostly the sort of stuff we've seen in many of these sets, it's interesting for being clearly Italian market graphics and looks to have new sculpts, the green grenade thrower doesn't ring any bells?
 
Apparently branded to Edizioni Nicoletta, these construction and firefighting vehicles will probably be bought in from someone like Pioneer, now Universal have gone and Mattel are sitting pretty with both Matchbox and Hot Wheels under their skirts?
 


Stretch-Dragonball-Strong! A bit out of our comfort zone maybe, but they are sort of solids, in that while squidgy, they have no articulation, and definitely novelty, while also TV-related, and it gets Diramix in the Tag List! There is a fledgling Dragon Balls Z post in the pile, and we've looked at them a couple of times already, so a useful addition to the Tag! Note they've dropped the 'zee' on this Italian packaging, or left it as it's Japanese character. Dragon Ball Super is the current iteration.
 


Nice to see some people can still get realistic cap-guns (even if they aren't actually cap-firers I'm afraid), here in the UK, it's all multicoloured nonsense, if you can find it, and if you do, there's the clear risk of being shot by half-trained police! And we have both cowboy classics (which are sparking I think?) and a more novelty dart-pistol. But it's also the 'Sheriff' badges, and a holster - proper toys!


A larger beach/garden type toy, in a net bag, like we're at the seaside and six-years old again! And while also rather outside the remit of the Blog, I know for a fact that fire-engine/firefighter fans follow the blog.
 
Thanks as always to Brian for these, and I've stopped myself cropping most of them for the hints of other stuff in the peripheries of the shots, not least an interesting sea-life set in the first shot! How the Italians are doing rack-toys at the moment!