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 Kid Toys Moscow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kid Toys Moscow. Show all posts

Thursday, May 13, 2021

F is for Follow Up - Soviet-era Napoleonic Russian Cavalry

Б. Д. Савельев; МЗПИ; Малыш; Малыш Московский завод пластмассовых игрушек; 40mm; Cavalry; Flats; Kid; Kid Toys Moscow; Make; Russia; Make; Soviet; Make; Soviet-bloc; Malysh; Moskovskiy zavod plastmassovykh igrushek; Mounted Figures; Mounted Toy Soldiers; MZPI; Napoleonic; Napoleonic Cavalry; Napoleonic Hussar; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Russian; Savelyev - Boris D.; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet;

Б. Д. Савельев; МЗПИ; Малыш; Малыш Московский завод пластмассовых игрушек; 40mm; Cavalry; Flats; Kid; Kid Toys Moscow; Make; Russia; Make; Soviet; Make; Soviet-bloc; Malysh; Moskovskiy zavod plastmassovykh igrushek; Mounted Figures; Mounted Toy Soldiers; MZPI; Napoleonic; Napoleonic Cavalry; Napoleonic Hussar; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Russian; Savelyev - Boris D.; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet;

Б. Д. Савельев; МЗПИ; Малыш; Малыш Московский завод пластмассовых игрушек; 40mm; Cavalry; Flats; Kid; Kid Toys Moscow; Make; Russia; Make; Soviet; Make; Soviet-bloc; Malysh; Moskovskiy zavod plastmassovykh igrushek; Mounted Figures; Mounted Toy Soldiers; MZPI; Napoleonic; Napoleonic Cavalry; Napoleonic Hussar; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Russian; Savelyev - Boris D.; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet;
Moskovskiy zavod plastmassovykh igrushek  (МЗПИ  - MZPI)

Б. Д. Савельев; МЗПИ; Малыш; Малыш Московский завод пластмассовых игрушек; 40mm; Cavalry; Flats; Kid; Kid Toys Moscow; Make; Russia; Make; Soviet; Make; Soviet-bloc; Malysh; Moskovskiy zavod plastmassovykh igrushek; Mounted Figures; Mounted Toy Soldiers; MZPI; Napoleonic; Napoleonic Cavalry; Napoleonic Hussar; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Russian; Savelyev - Boris D.; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet;

Б. Д. Савельев; МЗПИ; Малыш; Малыш Московский завод пластмассовых игрушек; 40mm; Cavalry; Flats; Kid; Kid Toys Moscow; Make; Russia; Make; Soviet; Make; Soviet-bloc; Malysh; Moskovskiy zavod plastmassovykh igrushek; Mounted Figures; Mounted Toy Soldiers; MZPI; Napoleonic; Napoleonic Cavalry; Napoleonic Hussar; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Russian; Savelyev - Boris D.; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet;

Б. Д. Савельев; МЗПИ; Малыш; Малыш Московский завод пластмассовых игрушек; 40mm; Cavalry; Flats; Kid; Kid Toys Moscow; Make; Russia; Make; Soviet; Make; Soviet-bloc; Malysh; Moskovskiy zavod plastmassovykh igrushek; Mounted Figures; Mounted Toy Soldiers; MZPI; Napoleonic; Napoleonic Cavalry; Napoleonic Hussar; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Russian; Savelyev - Boris D.; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet;

Б. Д. Савельев; МЗПИ; Малыш; Малыш Московский завод пластмассовых игрушек; 40mm; Cavalry; Flats; Kid; Kid Toys Moscow; Make; Russia; Make; Soviet; Make; Soviet-bloc; Malysh; Moskovskiy zavod plastmassovykh igrushek; Mounted Figures; Mounted Toy Soldiers; MZPI; Napoleonic; Napoleonic Cavalry; Napoleonic Hussar; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Russian; Savelyev - Boris D.; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet;

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

K is for Kid's Stuff!

Another Russian maker, another new name to blog and new to the English speaking hobby, here at Small Scale World.

It's funny I posted that Krugozor the other day and TJF followed it up with a Russian post of his own (he did the same thing with the previous Polish post), but I'm bringing stuff new to the English speaking hobby, he's telling us about third generation copies of Linde copies of Dom (or Friedel or whoever - I really don't care Deadleaf) (which he had to get from someone else because he's a dealer not a collector), that he doesn't know the name of and which will be all over evilBay for the next 18-months! Yet, apparently, we’re supposed to think this makes him a legend and me the idiot?

This stuff has been around on the Russian sites for years, so I'm not much taking credit for it, although there's the effort of finding it and translating it, but it's in a different league to what TJF does and it's tiresome that all he's got is copying what I'm doing, or what a magazine's doing or what another site's doing! Tiresome and unoriginal, that's TJF.

Московский Завод; Пластмассовых Игрушек "Малыш"; Infant Toy Soldiers; KID; Kid Toys Moscow; MALYSH; Moscow Plant; Moscow Toy Factory; Moskovskiy Zavod; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Plastic Toys 'Malysh'; Plastmassovykh Igrushek "Malysh"; Russian Guards; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Toy Soldiers;
Anyway, 'Kid' or Malyesh; another of the Moscow firms which were swallowed-up by Krugozor, but unlike MKI, don't seem to have survived the break-up after the Iron Curtain came down . . . well, it sort of fell-down didn't it!

The full translation makes Kid the obvious choice:

Московский завод пластмассовых игрушек «Малыш»

˅

Moskovskiy zavod plastmassovykh igrushek "Malysh"

˅

Moscow plant of plastic toys 'Malysh'

Малыш» = Malysh = Kid (think: Kiddycraft, Little Tikes, Kinder), otherwise it would be a right mouthful! Although I will tag them as 'Kid Toys Moscow'.

Above is a cross section of their toy soldiers and a sample of the colours, and they are 'toy' soldiers aimed at infants, the small ones were five kopeks when a Ruble was 60-odd cents, so maybe 1½p?

Московский Завод; Пластмассовых Игрушек "Малыш"; Infant Toy Soldiers; KID; Kid Toys Moscow; MALYSH; Moscow Plant; Moscow Toy Factory; Moskovskiy Zavod; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Plastic Toys 'Malysh'; Plastmassovykh Igrushek "Malysh"; Russian Guards; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Toy Soldiers;
These are worked in the same stable PVC-like rubber material as the MKI cavalry, and one or two other colours exist, including a semi-transparet yellow, but they may be polyethylene production (possibly from one of that Odessa mob!), I've yet to find out.

I thought these two were different, but the red one's lost his plume, they are from a set of four which consisted of two Frenchies and two Russians, I'm missing the Russian with shako, who is similar to the yellow Frenchies seen in this post, but with a shorter headdress.

Московский Завод; Пластмассовых Игрушек "Малыш"; Infant Toy Soldiers; KID; Kid Toys Moscow; MALYSH; Moscow Plant; Moscow Toy Factory; Moskovskiy Zavod; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Plastic Toys 'Malysh'; Plastmassovykh Igrushek "Malysh"; Russian Guards; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Toy Soldiers;
These only seem to come in the one pose, although there are differences between my two, the bases are quite different (one a squashed ovoid, the other penny-round), as are the bayonets and the way they hold the butts of their muskets. Also one is marked with a price the other isn't, and apparently some carried the bear-logo but I don't have any of those yet.

Московский Завод; Пластмассовых Игрушек "Малыш"; Infant Toy Soldiers; KID; Kid Toys Moscow; MALYSH; Moscow Plant; Moscow Toy Factory; Moskovskiy Zavod; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Plastic Toys 'Malysh'; Plastmassovykh Igrushek "Malysh"; Russian Guards; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Toy Soldiers;

This was a single lot and when I saw it on feebleBay I wondered if the others I had might not actually be board-game playing-pieces, but the info' from Russia is clear that there's the one set of four Napoleonics and the other larger chap, all sold from counter-boxes I think; you may have been able to get one of each of the Napoleonic set (with or without an aeroplane?) in a little bag?

Added later the same day - when I was picking these up, I kept thinking I'd seen them before and/or that I must have some somewhere, if you're getting the same feeling looking at them . . . it might be because they are the same size and have the same bases as the hard styrene, yellowish GI figures which came with the bigger Pyro boxed sets of dime-store AFV's!

Monday, September 28, 2020

Савельев, Борис Дмитриевич is for Savelyev, Boris Dmitrievich (1928 - 2019)

Following an interesting fortnight on the Friends of Plastic Warrior Faceplant page, in which mostly Polish-produced stuff has been the center of attention, there was a sort of side-bar, which went-off to look at Russian flats at one point, in the course of which I found two pages which seem to reveal someone who could be considered as important to Soviet-era toy soldier production as say our own George Musgrave or the Scandinavian Holgar Eriksson.

This is not to ignore any or all the other well-known sculptor's, of which there are lots now known, we've already looked at another Russian one (Lev Razumovsky) here but to compare him with two who were A) prolific and B) left their mark on the products of many brands. And I must credit Wojciech Gudaczewski with pointing me toward the two pages, by mentioning Mr Savelyev in the first place.

Борис Дмитриевич Савельев, Борис Дмитриевич, Savelyev, Boris Dmitrievich, 1928 - 2019, Friends of Plastic Warrior, Soviet-era toy soldiers, Toy Soldier Production, George Musgrave, Holgar Eriksson, Lev Razumovsky,  Ilya Barkov, My Collection,  Shakhovskoy Museum, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev, The Battle of Stalingrad, Soviet Union Toys, Mechanical Clockwork Toy Factory, Moscow, The Ostashevskaya Toy Factory, The Malysh Factory, The Astretsovskaya Factory, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Horsemen of 1812, B.D. Savelyeva, URA Brand, Cavalry, Red Cavalry, Warriors of the Soviet Army, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Borys Dymytrowicz Sawlejew.

The first link is an article on a recent (2016) exhibition on the great artist's work juxtaposed with the modelling-clay efforts of a young man - Ilya Barkov - who is obviously (one hopes) going to go far himself!

Original article (in Russian) is here . . .

https://sh-rikm.mo.muzkult.ru/news/12156600

. . . and translates thus;

"News

06/09/2016 The works of the oldest toy sculptor in Russia are presented at the exhibition "My Collection" in the Shakhovskoy Museum.

The exhibition "My Collection" has started in the Shakhovsky Museum.

The exhibition features collections of two masters: the novice Ilya Barkov and the oldest toy sculptor of modern Russia, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev.

Ilya Barkov is a 13-year-old schoolboy from the village of Dubranivka. He makes his soldiers from plasticine. In 2014, his panorama “The Battle of Stalingrad” won first place in the “Modeling. Embossed Modeling "in the category" 10-12 years "at the regional exhibition-show of arts and crafts" Craftsmanship and Inspiration ".

Now Ilya has presented 35 of his works, including: French and Russian soldiers of the Napoleonic Wars era, Soviet soldiers during the Great Patriotic War, medieval warriors, as well as an Afghan war veteran and two characters from the Stalker game.

Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev during his life created hundreds of models of soldiers (and not only them), which were issued in millions of copies, and became known not only throughout the Soviet Union, but also in other countries.

The toys created by Boris Dmitrievich were produced at the mechanical clockwork toy factory (Moscow), the Ostashevskaya toy factory, the Malysh factory, and the Astretsovskaya factory of metal products. Perhaps the most famous items of the master are the sets of soldiers "Cavalry" (six red cavalrymen and a tachanka), "Warriors of the Middle Ages" (four Russian horsemen and four Teutonic knights), "Horsemen of 1812" (17 different figures of Russian and French cavalry).

Now the soldiers B.D. Savelyeva launches the URA! Brand

On June 14, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev will turn 88 years old. The exhibition "My Collection" is timed to this date.

See the work of B.D. Savelyev and Ilya Barkov are available until August 12, 2016.

In preparing the material, the article by Timur Zamilov “The oldest Russian master. To the 85th anniversary of Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev "// Old Tseikhgauz.- 2014.- №1 (57). - S. 93-96."

Борис Дмитриевич Савельев, Борис Дмитриевич, Savelyev, Boris Dmitrievich, 1928 - 2019, Friends of Plastic Warrior, Soviet-era toy soldiers, Toy Soldier Production, George Musgrave, Holgar Eriksson, Lev Razumovsky,  Ilya Barkov, My Collection,  Shakhovskoy Museum, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev, The Battle of Stalingrad, Soviet Union Toys, Mechanical Clockwork Toy Factory, Moscow, The Ostashevskaya Toy Factory, The Malysh Factory, The Astretsovskaya Factory, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Horsemen of 1812, B.D. Savelyeva, URA Brand, Cavalry, Red Cavalry, Warriors of the Soviet Army, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Borys Dymytrowicz Sawlejew.
The other link is to an obituary written shortly after his passing last year

Original article (also in Russian) is here . . .

https://labuda.blog/434405

. . . and translates thus;

"Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev. Toy soldiers

4 September 2019
Labuda
History
1
581

In memory of the master of our childhood. Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev. He died on August 30, 2019. He was 91 years old ...

Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev.

I guess many older and middle-aged people are familiar with these figures? With them passed our childhood (and not only ours), with them we had our first combat experience in battles on the carpet, in the sandbox or on the school window sill.

What is a soldier? This is a tiny visualization of history and our understanding of it. Small plastic and zinc-aluminum symbol. Whether it was successfully implemented by the heavy Soviet industry or not, we understood this much later, growing up. But when we were five years old, these were our fighters and they fought and died bravely.

It seems to me that this familiar one, "Cavalry", "Red Cavalry", more rare "Warriors of the Soviet Army", "Warriors of the Middle Ages" are very successful fighters.

As experts of soldier construction rightly point out, this is a real “patriarch of Soviet toys and soldiers”.

I admit that I am not an expert in toy soldiers at all, but I appreciate excellent authors of all genres. It was thought that finding out the name of this well-known and unknown person to all of us would be interesting to many former children of the USSR, well, to the envious young generation.

Unfortunately, everything related to the production of soldiers and the legendary personalities of the world of soldier building is more like rumors and myths. As far as it was possible to find out, Boris Dmitrievich, until very recently, continued to do his wonderful work and new fighters came out of his hands, produced in small editions of a firm known to collectors.

Undoubtedly, Boris Mikhailovich Savelyev is a part of our history.

Source: tt-762.livejournal.com"

Борис Дмитриевич Савельев, Борис Дмитриевич, Savelyev, Boris Dmitrievich, 1928 - 2019, Friends of Plastic Warrior, Soviet-era toy soldiers, Toy Soldier Production, George Musgrave, Holgar Eriksson, Lev Razumovsky,  Ilya Barkov, My Collection,  Shakhovskoy Museum, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev, The Battle of Stalingrad, Soviet Union Toys, Mechanical Clockwork Toy Factory, Moscow, The Ostashevskaya Toy Factory, The Malysh Factory, The Astretsovskaya Factory, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Horsemen of 1812, B.D. Savelyeva, URA Brand, Cavalry, Red Cavalry, Warriors of the Soviet Army, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Borys Dymytrowicz Sawlejew.

The second one is a Blog and there is other useful toy soldier stuff on there but I found it hard to navigate around and some of it seems to be composed of dead-links or dead image files, despite being quite recent, so some reblogging going on I think, my Russian is non-existent!

For Polish speakers, he can also be written - Borys Dymytrowicz Sawlejew.

Also you will see from the links he is credited with the figures we looked at the other day, courtesy of Chris Smith and there's two more poses and another colour!

Six days later; and it's nice to see that TJF was paying attention - he'd be lost for ideas without me!

May 2021; The figures used to illustrate the above are now recognized as the output of Malysh, one of the Moscow toy collective factories!

Friday, March 16, 2018

F is for Flats

Probably had that title before, but I'm in a faffing frame of mind, so we'll have it again and move on! Adrian brought a bag of bits to Sandown Park the other week for me, and I also managed to find a few handfuls of plunder around the show, some of which I've already shoved on the Blog

Among both sources were some of the comic flat Romans in hard plastic, which I've put to one side to compare with the soft plastic ones at a later date when I get the soft ones out of storage, a nice metal flat of a motorcyclist, probably from a board-game then . . .

. . . there were these five in soft polyethylene plastic. I may have a few more of the cowboy's set somewhere and he is actually semi-flat or demi-rond, in fact the chicken family is, too, really, and while the see-saw or Jack & Jill may be copied from a European 'margarine' premium, they are - as a group - nothing to write home about (which is why I've packed-out the post with additional material!), and will be sorted into the master collection when that comes out of storage.

As they are soft plasic, they will be gum-ball or Christmas cracker stuff, I'd imagine, and I don't know what's happening with the squirrel, standing up on 'man legs'! The ship on the other hand, has previous 'form', as we can see . . .

. . . in this shot, with a second blue one above the 'new' red one (I have lots in store) in the centre. To the top left is the Maison du Café (house of coffee) premium from which they are ultimately copied, while the two larger pairs of red and green ones are from the 1990's incarnations of Lucky Bag, and seem to be from the MduC tool, with the pin-release mark in the same place.

To the far right [we're all going! Boom-boom!] are two other Maison's, while the one bottom left is also a demi-rond, and while 'unknown' has similarities (in the base) with some stuff I have marked-up to Eei Fein, but I won't be putting it in the tag-list.

The copies match the smaller copies of the Pecos Bill figures from a Marx sculpt we've looked at before here, and like those figures, there are several; generations of polyethylene ship copy, each a bit smaller and crappier than the last.

But the above would have been a crap post, so I grabbed these two from the big waiting-zone folder in Picasa, where they've been sitting since 2015! Without Googling them I think there's a BRDM (top?) and a Fug or Skot (Skot's may be Czechoslovak and 8-wheeled - I'm winging it here, don't tell TJF!)? The whole set has four BRDM/Fug-Skot [whatever] variants with a PT76 and various out-of-scale 54/60mm infantry.

They are Polish-made and some sources state PZG, however, they tended to fully-round sculpts and - usually - are painted, even their flat scenic pieces, so these may be another maker; likely Centrum. It may have a field gun too and I have more in storage so we'll have another look one day!.

These in turn reminded me I had another 'flat' item in the 'News, Views...' folder waiting for a follow-up . . . or something . . .

. . . which is on the left here. It's the tray I mentioned last time we looked at the Russian/Bulgarian cavalry flats and which I kept meaning to show, for those who aren't familiar with it, but kept forgetting to! Doh!

I then went back to the dongles to find the image I knew I had somewhere of the tray in use (on the right) with a mixed group of Russian cavalry chasing the fat dictator's troops out of the motherland! Conversely, these DO look a bit like PZG (from the bases) but are definitely Russian as they have the price in Cyrillic on the edge.

It [the tray] is a superb piece of product-design with larger studs to prevent the cavalry sliding into each other's ranks and smaller studs to stop them escaping the tray horizontally, holes and ridges give strength to an otherwise flimsy moulding and discs balanced - on the ridges - above a row of holes hold the figures to the tray vertically, all in a pretty rough, single-shot product.

The tray also contains the full pricing scheme moulded into the underside:

u11k x8
uEHA kOMMnEkTIA IP

u11k - 11 Kopeks (price of single figure)
x8 - [= 88] (price of a whole tray of 8 figures)
uEHA kOMMnEkTIA - Complete set [price-]
IP - 1 Ruble

(In other words; the tray = 12 kopeks [8 x 11 = 88 + 12 = 100 = 1 ruble]) It's no wonder Russian spies can knock people-off in British shopping precincts, willy-nilly; they were learning complicated maths - as infants!

I don't know how many poses there are in the full set (left), as you can see I've managed to track-down 10 different sculpts, and assuming you might want two full trays to fight each-other; there may be as many as 16. However - there's no evidence any of these are French units, so your guess is as good as mine?

Other sets were available for the trays, on the right we see six (of a possible eight?) revolutionary cavalry from 1917 or thereabouts; depiction that is, not plastic manufacture; the figures date from the 1970's?
 
May 2021; The figures used to illustrate the above are now recognized as the output of Malysh, one of the Moscow toy collective factories!