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 Insects - Beetles - T. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Insects - Beetles - T. Show all posts

Sunday, November 23, 2025

B is for Big Box of Bounty - Animals

The penultimate post of plastic plunder from Chris, and it's the animals, the least documented of the collection, simply because there are thousands upon thousands of them, and they've just never been a priority, and as the pile of unknowns grows, it gets, like any dark secret, too big to face!
 
But one day soon I hope to tackle it (there's realistic-sculpt Lik Be hidden in there, among other things), and when I do, it will fall into place, or at least some of it will!
 
A Dino-skeleton, a modern phenomenon which is contributing to that pile, although we have ID'd a few over the years, but they keep coming, and this one, one of those 'berry-heads' (Pachycephalosaurusby the look of it, is larger than most and new to me, it's creeping-up on two arguing cave-men, who are now known (by me, other people knew all along!) to be HG Toys.
 
Small PVC jobbies, and a big job too, with many ID'd and many still to be, here I think we have examples of two modern/current'ish sets, a good [detail] and a not so good set, and one of more vintage, the green one with a splash of pink paint?
 
Not Dinosaurs in my Pocket (Matchbox and cereal premiums), but 'Dino Brites' by Happyness Express of New York (1991), originally Panosh, there's plenty on the Internet about them, this is a good précis on the subject;
 
 
 
Larger chaps, with an erasersaur, and one from my favourite rubber set, front right, in a bit of a state, but that state is interesting - it looks upon first glance to be a string, tied by a young owner, which has cut into the foot, but actually, upon trying to remove it, it became clear it was actually an inclusion, running through the leg, and exiting at two points, a piece of cleaning cloth, or hessian sack used to transfer batches of product around the factory floor, which got flicked into the tool? Amazing how it's survived!
 
Two recognisable Holly's (now we've had half a look at them here, as part of the Gygax posts), and the silver one is a nice, but unknown, moulding? Which leaves a softer, more 'Chinasaur' Stegosaurus, who may belong with the Protoceratops and red chap in the second image above?
 
I've seen this chap in mixed lots on evilBay and wondered if it was a copy of one of the Wild West charging/fighting bears, but I think it's a copy of an Elastolin (or Lineol?) composition model, perhaps for Roggatz's ZZ-brand, although not with those green eyes . . . a copy of a copy? Still a nice sculpt, though!
 
Two Airfix piracies, getting a good sample of these now, with and without painted eyes, two larger Hong Kong/China pieces, being a mouse/rat and copy of the Corgi farm dog, a Matchbox boxer-dog from the pick-up truck, and a Berlin-marked bear, with MAMPE, on the other side, a logo-premium for the 'Berlin Mule' kicker-spirit!?
 
A flocked kangaroo, believed to be a Hong Kong-supplied tourist keepsake, three Safari animals, another weakness in the collection, as I've concentrated on the figural sets, and a collectable-series monkey from Topps, who need a better post, along with those Yowies, still in the long queue!
 
Tupperware zebra on the left, chalkware lion from the Naturecraft Christmas crackers in the middle, and one of the two, or four, I'm still looking for! And another bath-toy swan (there was a blue one in the last lot from Peter Evans, and I think I have a pinkish-red one?), which is almost certainly an early post-war novelty, brightening the Christmases, and bath-time's, of the nation's baby-boom.
 
Farm stuff, the composition cow looks particularly interesting (Brent?), while piggy-wiggies and eeeps will need their own ID pages eventually, as there are many of them, and so many copies of known sculpts, it's a collection field in itself . . . Indeed I know a cow collector, who comes round the shows, and from just what I've seen him buy, his collection must be amazing.
 
Two modern horses, and a rather knackered, but still interesting (a sample is always better than no sample) wagon or cart horse, in a solid plastic, which may be Bakelite, or a similar phenol-formaldehyde resin / thermo-set?
 

A bit of fun on the left (but it's a sample!), probably from a modern kid's magazine freebies, and a more conventional beetle on the right, I have half an idea, one day, if I get the time, to mount them all in thematic, glass-fronted, deep frames, as if they are real entomologists exhibits, and ladybirds will be first, as I have a dozen, or more, already!
 
 
Vitacup premiums, mostly damaged, but 'styrene, so usefully glueable, and kept apart, against a future mending session! The baby elephant is more robust, and has survived intact.
 
Lego (?) fish, a Hammerhead, who is damaged, he's missing his lower 'gape mouth' jaw, but it actually, ironically, takes him from the realm of rubber-juggler, to something more realistic looking! A Safari White Shark, and a more generic . . . Mako? Marked China and 'Shark'!
 
Two stretchy 'rubber-jiggler' lizards, probably from two sources, the one unmarked, and flattish with fine sculpting detail, the other fully-round, with fuzzier surface detail (marked China), despite both being metallics, common on these stretchy toys.
 
The turtle is amusing, to me, as I have a blue one which I think is a childhood survivor, despite my not remembering the set, or occasion of its acquisition, it seems to have been in the toy drawer for forever, and nice to find his mate, in another fantastic parcel from Chris Smith.

Sunday, March 2, 2025

I is for Insect Lore - More Recent Imagery

Quickly getting the rest up here - see previous post!
 
2023
 

Thinking I'd published the previous post, in the previous two years, I just shot a couple of confirmatory shots of the Toobs, seeing nothing else new on the stand! Trying to count the Insects, I get to about 14-likely, but with some hidden in the heap at the bottom of the tube, and behind the labels, I suspect they are both a 16-count?
 
2025


So, fresh from this year's Toy fair, and we have now got the life-cycle blisters extended with Ants and Honey Bees, the Ladybird's card graphics have been brought into line with the other four, and sets with squishy Ladybirds have been added.
 
So, if you weren't familiar with Insect lore, you now know as much as I do! I didn't see them at the Birmingham Spring Fair, on either visit, but they may have been there, perhaps in one of the Halls I didn't bother with?
 
Websites -  

I is for Insect Lore - Archive

I thought I'd posted these guys, literally years ago (these are from 2020), but they are all still in Picasa! So I'm posting this here, and then I'll combine the smaller numbers of shots from '23 and '25 in a single post later. This was from the London show, a couple of months before the Covid lockdown, which - time has, I think, shown - changed all our lives, more than we thought it was doing, at the time?
 





!!!! Effing annoyed when the images loaded in reverse, which seems to happen quite often these days and I don't know if I should be blaming Windows 11, Blogger/Google or Lenovo! But in fact, it makes sense to use the poorer images (which were going to be at the end) for the introduction to the company, then look at the figural products!
 
Insect Lore are a kind of 'early learning' schools-support / craft outfit, where you buy the kit, and/or any supporting products, then sent away for the Butterfly (or Ant?) eggs, so you can raise them to adulthood, learning the egg-pupae-lava-adult cycle along the way, and then release them, or do an ant-farm?
 
In 2020 they were raising Painted Lady's (or Ladies? No, some of them must be men!), which - while not native to the UK - are a regular summer visitor around the Southern and Eastern coasts, and with nowhere in the UK further than 51 miles from a beach, it means you can find them pretty-much anywhere in a good year, and also means that after any release, they can complete a typical life-cycle.
 
The kit here consists of a jar of feed, instruction booklet with details on how to raise them and find the food plants, along with a jar of the special feed etc . . . and the 'butterfly net' netting cage, in which to observe the metamorphosis of the chrysalis phase and emergence of the adults.
 

Blister carded life-cycle sets of rubber (modern PVC-substitute) polymer animals are also sold, and these may be bought in or commissioned specifically, I don't know, and am no expert on toy insects, but they look a little different, so may well be exclusive to Insect Lore?
 




Toobs of mixed Insects and Butterflies are also in the catalogue, along with all the expected stickers, booklets &etc. Again I don't know if these are unique to Insect Lore, or bought-in generics, they look more familiar, so may be the latter, however, they are both reasonable samples with about 18 Butterflies in the first image of this sequence - Insect Lore, box ticked!
 

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

T is for Toy Fair 2020 Reports - House of Marbles


Taking up some of the slack from the demise of Ackerman, House of Marbles had a few nice things on display this year, we've seen the eraser-troops already, but here's the rest of the stuff I though all or some of you might be very or vaguely interested in!

015505; 2020 Toy Fair; Beetle Game; Childhood Memories; Dino Key Ring; Dino-Keyring; House Of Marbles; Kensington Olympia Toy Fair; London Toy Fair; Made in China; Mini-Zoo; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Toys; Pocket Money Toys; Retro Range; Sky Diver Extreme!; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Teeny-Tiny Mini-Zoo; Toy Fair 2020; Toys And Games;
They seen to be carrying two colours of this chap whom we've previously seen carded under the Tobar tag in green, I took more shots and he/they'll soon be on the new parachutists page, so this will do for now, I like the tag line; Shoot up, chute down!

015505; 2020 Toy Fair; Beetle Game; Childhood Memories; Dino Key Ring; Dino-Keyring; House Of Marbles; Kensington Olympia Toy Fair; London Toy Fair; Made in China; Mini-Zoo; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Toys; Pocket Money Toys; Retro Range; Sky Diver Extreme!; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Teeny-Tiny Mini-Zoo; Toy Fair 2020; Toys And Games;
This is lovely (I mean it's the poorest grade of ex-HK shite you can find, but its 'throwback/retro' existence is lovely to someone like me!), I know I have these with various HK-era marks, and you may remember about seven or eight years ago I bought the Farm version in a department store (Debenhams in Newbury?) at Christmas, also in HoM branding - so it should be on the 'tag'.

015505; 2020 Toy Fair; Beetle Game; Childhood Memories; Dino Key Ring; Dino-Keyring; House Of Marbles; Kensington Olympia Toy Fair; London Toy Fair; Made in China; Mini-Zoo; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Toys; Pocket Money Toys; Retro Range; Sky Diver Extreme!; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Teeny-Tiny Mini-Zoo; Toy Fair 2020; Toys And Games;
The best thing is the Black Panther; the rest are pretty standard old, much sub-pirated sculpts, half Britains Herald (Tiger, baby Giraffe, Pelican etc.), some Timpo (Llama) some more generic with an old cake-decoration pine-tree and some zoo fencing which probably owe more to Blue Box than the Britains originals!

But - despite the age of the sculpts/tools - it's hours of fun for a youngster, and they've packed a lot into a tiny box.

015505; 2020 Toy Fair; Beetle Game; Childhood Memories; Dino Key Ring; Dino-Keyring; House Of Marbles; Kensington Olympia Toy Fair; London Toy Fair; Made in China; Mini-Zoo; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Toys; Pocket Money Toys; Retro Range; Sky Diver Extreme!; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Teeny-Tiny Mini-Zoo; Toy Fair 2020; Toys And Games;
These are a bit 'deform', but could pass for fat little baby-saurs! Key-ring novelty dinosaurs; there sem to be four sculpts, a stegosuarus, a carnivor/'Rex type a Proto- or Tri- ceratopsian and a dimetrodon who looks like a cross between a Spinosaur and a  Baryonyx!

015505; 2020 Toy Fair; Beetle Game; Childhood Memories; Dino Key Ring; Dino-Keyring; House Of Marbles; Kensington Olympia Toy Fair; London Toy Fair; Made in China; Mini-Zoo; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Toys; Pocket Money Toys; Retro Range; Sky Diver Extreme!; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Teeny-Tiny Mini-Zoo; Toy Fair 2020; Toys And Games;
Finally, I couldn't pass this by without snapping a picture; we loved this as kids and managed to play it for years without breaking any of the pieces. These retro games are being carried by various brands and both sides of the pond, so you may find them in different graphics?

They are weird animals; the tongue of a butterfly, the antenna of a slug, the head of an ant, the body of Thunderbirds 'Mole' and legs removed from a trio of can-can dancers while their eyes seem to have been removed from the back of a washing-machine! Timeless toys!

The rule in our house was . . . you can build multicoloured ones but the legs, eyes and antenna must match the same components' colour!

Sunday, January 19, 2020

DD is for Dig Den

Once I had decided to take shelfies I looked around ofr other stuff to shoot, and this was the only other figural than which wasn't a full-on action figure type thing, and also exactly the kind of figures which will filter through in mixed lots and rummage trays in a few years time.

10 Bugs To Discover!!; 2 Bugs; 2 Zombies; 3 Bugs; B&M Retail; B&M Stores; B&M Zombies & Creepy Crawlies; Coffin Digging Blocks; Coffin Novelty; Creepy Crawlies; Dig Den; Glow In The Dark; Glow-in-the-dark; Mega Dig Set; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Zombies;
Again a generic branded to B&M so likely to be also found nearer you under another make or marque if you're not near a B&M! I could have saved it for Halloween, but that's a while away, and theses were 2-for-£20 in the run-up to Christmas (or 12-quid each?), now reduced to seven, if you're tempted to shell out three-fifty each for two zombies before they all go!

10 Bugs To Discover!!; 2 Bugs; 2 Zombies; 3 Bugs; B&M Retail; B&M Stores; B&M Zombies & Creepy Crawlies; Coffin Digging Blocks; Coffin Novelty; Creepy Crawlies; Dig Den; Glow In The Dark; Glow-in-the-dark; Mega Dig Set; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Zombies;
It's all on the box so that's it really, the zombies would make better aliens, and look to be the same pose/sculpt, possibly pantographed to two sizes, one of which glows in the dark and you also get six small insects of two species and four-x-two larger bugs.

What struck me about the set is that it's clearly been designed for two siblings to share, which I thought was a nice touch?

Monday, August 13, 2018

I is for Interim Invertebrate Index

It must be the best part of a year or more (last Rack Toy Month?) that we saw [toy] insects here at Small Scale World, but there haven't been any or many, still enough have come in for a yearly round-up, and these are they.

1 Plastic Toy Insect Sets DSCN7497 Animals; Ants; Beetles; Blister Pack; Creepy Crawlies; Flies; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Header Card; Insects; Maggots; Plastic Toys; Premiums; PVC Vinyl Animals; PVC Vinyl Rubber; Rack Toy; Rack Toy Month; RTM; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spider; Sunny Patch; Tobar Toys;
I kept not buying this at 3-quid, but when it was re-anointed with a £1.50p sticker it seemed like a better idea, and it's a shed-load of bugs! From regular visitors to these pages Tobar (Hawkins Bazaar) these were actually purchased in an independent general/hardware store.

Animals; Ants; Beetles; Blister Pack; Creepy Crawlies; Flies; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Header Card; Insects; Maggots; Plastic Toys; Premiums; PVC Vinyl Animals; PVC Vinyl Rubber; Rack Toy; Rack Toy Month; RTM; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spider; Sunny Patch; Tobar Toys; 2 18 Plastic Toy Insect Sets 1
The maggots are that clammy, soft, stretchy, silicone rubber, the spider is a bit small, the fly a bit big, but the ants are fun, the glow in the dark ones cover for termites, then you have black-ants, red-ants and errr . . . . 'Red' ants! Heliotrope-crimson-scarlet-red-ants; 'slot that Commie mo'fo and put a cap in his Soviet red'ass'-ants! Too funny! Did the factory have some lipstick pigment left-over from another job?

Also, it's often interesting with these multi-lingual packagings to see what familiar things are in other languages, but usually it's only curiosity sated, however with these they are all Excellent Dude!

Creepy Crawlies is a fine phrase, it says it how it is, not like 'door', what's a door, could be anything, but creepy crawly, you know you need to look out, tread carefully, probably shudder . . . you know what I mean, yet . . . Kribbel-Krabbler? Fantastic! And the French; Horribles Bestioles . . . even better!

I don't know if it's correct but I pronounce it Hor-reeb-ler best-ee-oles, and I can think of a couple of people I'll be calling bestioles before the year's out! That Boris Johnson - he's a Horrible Bestiole!

3 18 Plastic Toy Insect Sets Animals; Ants; Beetles; Blister Pack; Creepy Crawlies; Flies; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Header Card; Insects; Maggots; Plastic Toys; Premiums; PVC Vinyl Animals; PVC Vinyl Rubber; Rack Toy; Rack Toy Month; RTM; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spider; Sunny Patch; Tobar Toys;
Giants - these have come in with mixed charity-shop lots over the last eight-months or so, the stag went straight in the recycling as it was missing three feet, while the other two are even bigger and they have gone in the big-ugly-stuff tub!

Actually I think we saw the spider at Halloween last year and I re-shot it for a size comparison?

Animals; Ants; Beetles; Blister Pack; Creepy Crawlies; Flies; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Header Card; Insects; Maggots; Plastic Toys; Premiums; PVC Vinyl Animals; PVC Vinyl Rubber; Rack Toy; Rack Toy Month; RTM; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spider; Sunny Patch; Tobar Toys; 4 Plastic Toy Insect Sets
Again from a Charity-shop lot; I thought these were old Gum-ball or Christmas cracker type novelties and they may [currently] be both, but I saw them the other day (a week or so ago) on a kids comic/magazine, so they are contemporary novelties, not old ones.

5 Plastic Toy Insect Sets DSCN7218 Animals; Ants; Beetles; Blister Pack; Creepy Crawlies; Flies; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Header Card; Insects; Maggots; Plastic Toys; Premiums; PVC Vinyl Animals; PVC Vinyl Rubber; Rack Toy; Rack Toy Month; RTM; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spider; Sunny Patch; Tobar Toys;
Shelfie from TKMaxx about two months ago, Melissa & Doug do vinyl-rubber; a bit big, a bit bright and a bit cartoony, but a bit of paint would improve them, not enough for me to take them off the tack though!

See what I mean about the translations - interesting; but they're no Kribbel-Krabbler!

Ohhhhhh! I should have done K is for Kribbel-Krabbler shouldn't I? hey-ho! Ich bin ein braindead bestiole.

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

F is for Follow-up -Poundworld-Plus Insects

Well . . . I bought them . . . it's funny, a few years ago I never would have bothered with this stuff, and - indeed - have been studiously  not buying the other set since the store opened back in the spring (or was it last year? I can't remember when I first Blogged their stuff?), but after the plethora of insects came together in one day last year (or the year before!) and with the Halloween tat piling-up this year, it's almost like why wouldn't I? And when you follow the traffic-stats per-post; it's funny what people actually want.

Buying the other set the other day obviously triggered a re-stock message back at head office as there were a whole bunch more when I was in the other night, and sure enough the other six of the "12 to collect" are on the other card, so 'two to collect' really!

No spiders in this sample, but we get two longer coffin/ground beetle types, three more hedge/garden beetles (the yellow one is very chafer-like) and a roach-alike.

They still look better dead! Gas! Gas! Gas!

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Countdown to Halloween - 5 - Poundworld Plus's Rubber WTF's

While I was getting the previous 'countdown' post's back of bugs from Poundworld Plus I also purchased these - so you don't have to!

These are not part of the Halloween range, and I have been studiously ignoring them in the toy section of the store since it opened back in the spring, they are basically shite; large blobs of poorly executed silicon rubber, vaguely representing generic species, three spiders, two beetles and an ant, except that the ant is probably not an ant and therefore the only really interesting item on the card.

The card claims both Toy Bank and Green Geko [sic] Industries as brands/brand-marks but are actually another ITP Imports item - here in the UK at least.

The 'ant' looks like a Velvet Ant, which is actually a wingless wasp and a worthy species to have as a model, but the beetles are poor and while the three spiders are all different and all resemble the outlines of real creatures, they are chunky infant toys of no real merit, fun for five-year olds!

I would add, that while I've been ignoring them for a month [and wouldn't have bought them if it wasn't for the fact that over the last few weeks what was going to be multiple posts on the 31st became an insect related set of rack-toy posts suitable for a countdown trope], I have as yet to find the other six of the advertised "12 realistic insects for you to collect", despite checking the toy section at least once a week. Now that I've weakened and bought these I'll have to get the other six - if I see them!

They look better . . . dead; now that's a proper bit of the spirit of Halloween, right there!