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 Make; Belgian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Make; Belgian. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

ITMA is for It's That Man Again!

The hype has been growing for a week or two now, with the BBC's Radio4 and World Service both covering a certain new movie more than once in the last few days, it's all about some Corsican chap 'Blownapart', from the Wellingtonian period, who did something notable, or infamous? And the talkie-format, moving-picture presentation opens worldwide, today!

He's been modelled a few times, indeed we've seen him here before, so often, he has his own Tag (yeap, it hurt!). And here we have a large fairing in the centre, flanked by two substantial home-painted model soldiers on plinths, in the 80mm bracket.
 
Then the smaller front row, around 54/60mm scale and from the left . . . 'Metallion' of the younger artilleryman, two French-made Jim, a JSB from Belgium, Hong Kong's Blue Box (courtesy of Chris Smith's forthcoming donation-plunder posts), another French plastic (Acedo maybe, or Cofalu/x, Guillbert/Clairet, someone like that?) and a faux-antiqued tourist piece in slush-cast base-metal.
 
******      ******      ***      ******      ******
 
On the subject of the title, for foreign readers; ITMA was the moral-boosting comedy sketch-show on BBC Radio from 1939-49. We lived, for a while, next-door to Clarence Wright, who had retired to Alderney, he played several of the well known characters, among whom were the Commercial Traveller and the Man from the Ministry, and I had the pleasure of chatting to him on several occasions, when he would tell the most irascible stories, which I couldn't possibly repeat here, even if I could recall them, but I remember him as a thoroughly nice man.

Tuesday, August 1, 2023

S is for Sandown Park - May 2023 -

Welp, it seems to be Rack Toy Month already! But I've the Sandown sequence to finish first, just a few composition figures I picked up as samples or to compare with those in my existing collection.
 
Three - in khaki - marked NB for Nazaire Beeusaert, the Belgian composition maker and a fourth - sailor - who may be from the same maker, but is unmarked and a little smaller, so he may be another Belgian maker, they had several manufacturers who shared a certain style?

A Zang to check against the existing sample behind, and in front two which I was told were TAG, and may have shown here as TAG? Except I don't think they are, any more, TAG's seem to be larger, better detailed models, so these two are probably one of the other early British composition makers?

An unknown prisoner (who probably doesn't go with the Mountie, but 'goes' with him quite well here!), with his hands tied behind his back (possibly Italian?), and, errr, a Mountie! The Mountie is Durolin, from Germany, and I'd happily accept any help with ID on the seated Westerner?

He's quite rough and looks cheap, his paint a water-soluble thing, which has soaked and spread into it's not very dense composition, which almost has the feel of old egg-boxes, but isn't papier-mâché as far as I can tell?
 
And a few close-ups of the RCMP figure and his base mark, in the best traditions of learning something new every day, or whenever you can (life-long learning!), I was today-years-old when I learnt that in French they are the Gendarmerie Royale du Canada or G.R.C., which may be the 'R' on the left side of the saddle-cloth, with MP on the other side for Mounted Police, but a quick google-search only confused, with various saddle-cloth marks including a badge, but MP on both sides seeming commonest?

Monday, December 12, 2022

T is for Two - Machine Gunners

As I may have intimated, I acquired a few machine-gunners the other day, and while most of them will just be filtered into the collection for future use, there were one or two which are worth a closer look as stand-alone figures.

金; Belgian Machine Gunner; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Blow Moulded Toy MG; Japanese Machine Gunner; Japanese Toy Soldiers; Japanses Toy MG; JSB Belgium; Machine Gunner; Machine Gunners; Machine Guns; Machinegun Novelty; Machinegun Team; Made in Belgium; Made in Japan; MG Gunners; MG Team; MG Toy; Novelty Machine Gun; Plastic Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Toy Machine Gunners; Toy Soldiers;
This is the Belgian firm of JSB, you may remember I had a very poor figure from them which I seemed to save with a thick coat of plumber's sealant a few years ago (he was still fine and stable last time I looked), he was also a pretty realistic figure, not something which can be claimed for this chap, who's channeling American 'dimestore' sculpts from the likes of Barkley or Manoil; single-highhandedly engaging aircraft (or cliff-top dwellers) with a 40mm pom-pom!

His barrel was very bent (further up, like a priapic flaking flak gun!), but I mannaged to bend it the other way with the hot-water system, although I was very careful and had several incremental goes, as I do't know what polymer this is, some phenol, formaldehyde or cellulose-based material I suspect? Proper toy soldier!

金; Belgian Machine Gunner; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Blow Moulded Toy MG; Japanese Machine Gunner; Japanese Toy Soldiers; Japanses Toy MG; JSB Belgium; Machine Gunner; Machine Gunners; Machine Guns; Machinegun Novelty; Machinegun Team; Made in Belgium; Made in Japan; MG Gunners; MG Team; MG Toy; Novelty Machine Gun; Plastic Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Toy Machine Gunners; Toy Soldiers;
As is this fellow, a seven-part assembly of blow-moulded and vac-formed polystyrene (or celluloid, but I think the former in this case) sheet from Japan, he has moving arms and may have had a moving head once; it's now glued, fixed to the front. I don't recognise the logo-mark, which seems to be a single China-Japan-Korea compatible ideograph character '' ?

But what a fantastic survivor of 1950's novelty tat. And; out of six successful bids (and one bidding war) to get most of them (one lot was lost to someone else), not to mention some mail-fail, probably my favourite out of the whole lot!

Saturday, April 30, 2022

H is for How They Come In - Francophone Lot

I was round a mate's a while ago, John Begg, who many of you will know as PTS52 on feebleBay, and he talked me into a junk lot, well, he sort of shoved it at me and I accepted it with an unbecoming over-eagerness . . . I'm addicted to this stuff, but you've probably worked that out for yourselves by now!

Acedo; Bazaar Figures; Blue Box; Briatins Copies; Cofalu; Cofalux; Cyrnos; Disney; Durso; Elastolin Hausser; Farm Animals; French Bazaar; French Toy Soldiers; Giant Wild West; Gibb's Flats; Gilbert Wild West; Heller; Italeri; JEM France; JIM France; Made In Singapore; Poultry Models; Redbox; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; Starlux; Supreme Knights; Wild West;
Four 'SINGAPORE' marked animals; without the box, or a bit of research I can't say whether they are Blue Box or Redbox, but Tai Sang owned all three (? see the Blog passim) factories, so it's all a bit academic! Along with a Jean Höfler one-humped Arabian camel; with that factory paint - I think an earlier version.

Acedo; Bazaar Figures; Blue Box; Briatins Copies; Cofalu; Cofalux; Cyrnos; Disney; Durso; Elastolin Hausser; Farm Animals; French Bazaar; French Toy Soldiers; Giant Wild West; Gibb's Flats; Gilbert Wild West; Heller; Italeri; JEM France; JIM France; Made In Singapore; Poultry Models; Redbox; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; Starlux; Supreme Knights; Wild West;
A charming polystyrene cockerel which I suspect might be French, or Danish? Pretty little thing either way and new to me, new to the collection  . . . and now - new to the Blog! Can you tell I had no blurb for this? It's factory-painted!

Acedo; Bazaar Figures; Blue Box; Briatins Copies; Cofalu; Cofalux; Cyrnos; Disney; Durso; Elastolin Hausser; Farm Animals; French Bazaar; French Toy Soldiers; Giant Wild West; Gibb's Flats; Gilbert Wild West; Heller; Italeri; JEM France; JIM France; Made In Singapore; Poultry Models; Redbox; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; Starlux; Supreme Knights; Wild West;
Interesting but damaged solid copy of a Britains Swoppet Indian, again, possibly French (hard plastic) rather than a Hong Kong knock-off, a nice Wagoneer, who is Hong Kong, but a cut above the usual pirated swoppet crud, with a separate vinyl jerkin and PVC whip. He's not rare, but it's nice to get him with the whip.

While the loose 'styrene flats, are downscaled copies of the Gibb's ones, and finding a few more loose justifies my not de-bagging the set we saw here, and nice to find a couple of the teepee/tipi's, but still waiting for the cavalry to turn up? They are also Hong Kong.

Acedo; Bazaar Figures; Blue Box; Briatins Copies; Cofalu; Cofalux; Cyrnos; Disney; Durso; Elastolin Hausser; Farm Animals; French Bazaar; French Toy Soldiers; Giant Wild West; Gibb's Flats; Gilbert Wild West; Heller; Italeri; JEM France; JIM France; Made In Singapore; Poultry Models; Redbox; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; Starlux; Supreme Knights; Wild West;
I have quite a few of these, they have a distinctive 'drum' of plastic, usually around the feet or on the base, which might be a mould-release pin-mark, or something more technical, and I assume French 'bazaar' or Spanish late-production?

This sample increased my pose-count and revealed that they come in two sizes, or were themselves copied - the bright, fluorescent-yellow chief could be younger as well as smaller! Remember the Hugonett beretted combat figures had a saluting chap in a smaller size too? Lifted poses are a mix of Britains and French figures I think?

Acedo; Bazaar Figures; Blue Box; Briatins Copies; Cofalu; Cofalux; Cyrnos; Disney; Durso; Elastolin Hausser; Farm Animals; French Bazaar; French Toy Soldiers; Giant Wild West; Gibb's Flats; Gilbert Wild West; Heller; Italeri; JEM France; JIM France; Made In Singapore; Poultry Models; Redbox; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; Starlux; Supreme Knights; Wild West;
These are mostly Cofalu and include my first mounted Indian from them. I'm not sure about the hard-plastic chap, he's similar to my 60mm swivel waist Cofalu French infantry, but he is glued and doesn't have the swivel head, if neither Cofalu nor another French producer; might he be an Italian make?

Acedo; Bazaar Figures; Blue Box; Briatins Copies; Cofalu; Cofalux; Cyrnos; Disney; Durso; Elastolin Hausser; Farm Animals; French Bazaar; French Toy Soldiers; Giant Wild West; Gibb's Flats; Gilbert Wild West; Heller; Italeri; JEM France; JIM France; Made In Singapore; Poultry Models; Redbox; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; Starlux; Supreme Knights; Wild West;
Medievals; again, I think mostly French and a fair-bit of home-paint, but the important one (bottom left - Cyrnos) is still in his factory finish. The figure next to him could be Hong Kong or French bazaar and is clearly a copy of Timpo's early swoppet line, the two top right are Cofalu again I think, while the Elastolin siege-engine crew copies are more (home-painted) bazaar output.

Acedo; Bazaar Figures; Blue Box; Briatins Copies; Cofalu; Cofalux; Cyrnos; Disney; Durso; Elastolin Hausser; Farm Animals; French Bazaar; French Toy Soldiers; Giant Wild West; Gibb's Flats; Gilbert Wild West; Heller; Italeri; JEM France; JIM France; Made In Singapore; Poultry Models; Redbox; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; Starlux; Supreme Knights; Wild West;
Combat infantry; a Reisler wire-cutter from Denmark leys alongside two 'multipose' kit figures, and while the DAK MG38 operator may be Airfix Multipose, I suspect the Italian is Italeri (or Italaerei as the name probably was when the kit was first issued!), or even Heller?

Behind them two Starlux 35mm's which from the state of the paint (cursory flesh on one, none on t'other) I suspect are 'for' Solido (Belgian) die-cast model vehicle accessories.

While towering over everyone is other Belgian, a WWII/Post War infantryman, in his British inspired beret and battle-dress (poor Belgians!), who's base is thinner than the Durso one's I thought were here somewhere, but I think they must be on the languishing composition page, so he maybe by someone else?

Acedo; Bazaar Figures; Blue Box; Briatins Copies; Cofalu; Cofalux; Cyrnos; Disney; Durso; Elastolin Hausser; Farm Animals; French Bazaar; French Toy Soldiers; Giant Wild West; Gibb's Flats; Gilbert Wild West; Heller; Italeri; JEM France; JIM France; Made In Singapore; Poultry Models; Redbox; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; Starlux; Supreme Knights; Wild West;
These are interesting, in that I've not seen them before (but did see a lot again the other day!), and they are based on the larger Silver Knights by Supreme, but without the moving arms, and some of the poses of the smaller Supreme figures we've seen here before, and my suspicion is that they probably are Supreme, but possibly a specific contract for someone else, maybe even a generic?

Soft PVC in black and chocolate brown, the reborn Starlux 'brand' had a similar set in silver/black a while ago (Le Chateau Noir), which was a partial re-badgeing of a Simba set (also Supreme contents) and given the French/European nature of most of the contents of this tray, it may be a rival product from that market? I think the painting has had 'help' at someone's home!

Acedo; Bazaar Figures; Blue Box; Briatins Copies; Cofalu; Cofalux; Cyrnos; Disney; Durso; Elastolin Hausser; Farm Animals; French Bazaar; French Toy Soldiers; Giant Wild West; Gibb's Flats; Gilbert Wild West; Heller; Italeri; JEM France; JIM France; Made In Singapore; Poultry Models; Redbox; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; Starlux; Supreme Knights; Wild West;
Everything else! Three flat lead, horse-race, game-playing pieces, two Giant horses and a cowboy, Matchbox Adventure 2000 (boy, were they a few decades out!) spaceman, early British intermediate-scale horse (Rocco Household cavalry), Minie Mouse (Combex or Heimo?) and a Supreme pirate who is a color variation of those previously seen here, I think?

Which leaves the chap all tied-up. Now I was sure I should know who he was, and searched quite hard, but I'm stumped, he's similar to the Domplast/Heinerle/Manurba one, but his chaps are far more flared, Jean's is moulded integral to the tree, while I have a similar one somewhere, tied to the tree with little button-thread ropes, but I think he's smaller (storage!) and possibly Timpo, so, I'm out of ideas - he could be French bazaar (given the rest of the lot), and I wondered if he may be from a helicopter toy's casualty basket (with flared jeans - very 1970's!), but I would like to know for sure!

Anyway, all useful grist to the mill and many thanks to John for saving them.

Tuesday, November 9, 2021

P is for Postscript on Plasticom and Their Polish Pals!

Return or follow-up wouldn't compute once I'd decided on an alliterative heading and 'Pandect' would have flummoxed most I fear! Anyway, Plasticom were first seen here a long time ago now, and we have re-visited them several times AND looked at Polish versions, so this is another view, with more Polish figures (courtesy of Chris Smith) and, and . . .

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
I took a lot of pictures, and Chris sent a fair few, so we're starting with line-ups of his new Polish takes on the Plasticom 'Soldabar' sugar-candy/lolly-handle WWII figures above and below from two different angles, and  - the middle - the current rainbow of polymer colours from my Plasticom sample.

Note also slight variations; offset holes, smaller base and deeper reinforcing round some of the holes, also the orange-red 'short-shot/miss-mould' at the back left.

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
Chris's Polish knock-off's compared with the Plasticom, these would appear - from below - to be from two makers, but I think they are all of the same origin and although we've looked at similar figures here from Konrad Lesiak, and Wojciech Gudaczewski recently covered them on a Faceplant group, the maker/s remain anonymous! Wojciech did say they were mostly produced around Warsaw though, and would be what have been described here before as Kioskowce - cheap 'tobacco kiosk' novelties.

The standing firer is quite an original pose, with a serious attempt to replicate the Plasticom base; a shallower rim to the lolly-socket giving him away, while the 8th Army officer is a straight lift from Airfix's set. We've seen the two Plasticom's before, they are a Crescent (firer) and Britains (officer) clone respectively.

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
These are Chris's Matchbox clones, to whom belongs the firing figure from the previous image, we have 8th Army and Afrika Korps. Polish troops fought with the Eighth Army, but in Italy when they had gone into long trousers I think (and there weren't many Highland Bren-gunners in the Polish formations!), but still the affinity is there, and it gets round making hated Russians?

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
While Airfix are plundered for more 8th Army poses and - unusually - Ghurkhas, with both these and the previous, the colours are very hard to photograph under any conditions, and more worryingly - in the case of the center four - made to look almost as edible as the candy-lolly they were holding!

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
I wasn't thinking when I did this collage, so we have Wild West above (US Cavalry) and WWII below! The bazooka-man is taken from the late Britains Hong Kong output while the advancing pair in the middle are Crescent again with another Britains (damaged) on the left. The cavalry which I didn't recognise last time were ID'd by someone a while back (Vichy?) as Jecsan I think, but it's a fleeting similarity, with the Plasticom's far more naturally stance'd.

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
Image on the left here is from Theo van der Weerden, with two of the Cofalu clones (one each beret and helmet) of French infantry, more Britains and another US cavalryman, while I have the same pair (lower right) of Frechies, with another, stabbing pose, in various colours - above.

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
My four together, we've seen this shot on the Khaki Infantry page, but for the sake of completeness it might as well be here too!

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
Chris kindly sent me three duplicates from his collection, and I will eventually use them in comparisons on the Airfix Blog, but for now, one of each; Ghurkha, 8th Army and DAK above, order reversed below.

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
And to the wild Wild West! Top left (they too, came from Theo) and bottom are the Platicom from Belgium. The other two shots are all Polish figures from Chris (oops, I've only just realised one of them is WWII British!). Note the higher collar on the two top-right, which may be another maker's work?

There seems to be a bit of mix-and-match with these, but I'm not so au fait with Wild West figures . . . Theo's red figure is taken from Britains Herald Hong Kong, the green chap from the same maker's Swoppet range, the high tube pair might be based on ex-Jean or Manurba poses, the two six-gun chaps (bottom left) Herald (similar) again? The standing riflemen are quite nice poses/sculpts, albeit a bit flat; like most the Polish figures.

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
All Plasticom and a mix of Britains and continental sculpts being lifted here, I think we've seen them all before, I recognise the four interesting poses but can't place them (French?), while the standing firing and kneeling archer are both Herald HK. The standing bowman looks a bit like Rambo!

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
Two Polish Indians, again courtesy of Mr. Smith, and clearly a new manufacture for the blue figure, who might be mistaken for 'just' a Kioskowce but that base is hollow and too large to not be for a lollypop to sit in! I don't recognise either pose and the green one is missing a hand.

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
This chap came in the other day and I thought I'd better add him here for the full overview! He's similar to the Herald Hong Kong one, but the legs are slightly different, I think.

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
Plasticom's scenics, with a Britains original to the far right, you can see the Plasticom tree is greatly simplified. I think we have Chris to thank for one or two of these as well, but some time-ago now!

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
The Plasticom 'Czech hedgehog' tank-trap, compared with the Britains Herald Hong Kong accessory, and it's an early marbled one on the left (matching the previously seen tree), with a later plain-brown one to the right.

Airfix 8th Army; Airfix Ghurkhas; Belgian Toy Figurines; Belgian Toy Soldiers; Britains Herald; Britains Khaki Infantry; Britains Swoppets; Cofalu; Cofalux; Crescent Khaki Infantry; Czech Hedgehog; Field Works; Jean Höffler; Jean Hoefler; Jecsan US Cavalry; Matchbox 8th Army; Matchbox Afrika Korps; Plasticom; Polish Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldabar; Totem Pole; Trawigo GmbH & Co KG;
You may have noticed that the ex-Matchbox advancing pose has what looks like a sign on his base, and I asked Chris about it, as a 'supplemental'! He studied it in depth and took tons of shots to try and get a few good ones (which was all 'a call above' for the blog) and sent me the best results. Stopping the shadow setting down 200% (that's the same figure in both shots) made it clear the 'HQ', 'Tobruk >>' or 'Achtung Minen' I had hoped for is not there!

Moreover, it's not that clearly a sign at all, and Chris wondered if it might actually be doing the job of what I call 'sprulettes', allowing material to pass beyond the products original cavity design, so the figure itself gets fully formed. Chris noted most of the other figures are more balanced with a leg either-side of the lollypop hole, while this was a one-sided sculpt, and it seems to me he might be spot-on? Although the bayonet has still short-shotted!

The last time I mentioned Plasticom online someone stated they were available in Germany from Trawigo, Bloomberg list Trawigo GmbH & Co KG (founded 1953) as an importer and wholesaler of confectionery & related products, not a manufacturer, so they didn't make them, they imported Plasticom's Soldabars, and repackaged them.

As I've mentioned them (Trawigo) now, I'll tag them and anyone searching in the future can come here and read > click here or on the Plasticom tag below this post or the tag down the right-hand side of the page for the - currently- seven other posts on these and the previous looks at Polish production/similar figures < !

And it gets them in the tag-list! Indeed, as we now know they got as far as Poland, and seem to turn-up most in mixed lots from France, Belgium, Holland and even the UK (occasionally), they must have had/carried several brand-marks, do you know your local one?

Many thanks to Chris Smith for help, images and figures, thanks to Theo for images, to Konrad for past images and help and acknowledging Wojciech's input, that's them, again, for now!

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

F is for Follow-up - Belgian Footballers

This is following-up on this post, but these aren't marked Pak-Me-Mee, and are a pinkish-flesh off-white, rather than the creamy off-white of the aforementioned pudding-mix premiums.

110mm Figures; 4 1/2 Inch Figures; 4.5-inch Figures; Belgian Football Player; Belgian Premiums; Dumortier Brothers; Flemish Figurines; Food Premiums; Football Premium; FootBaller Premiums; Four Inch Figures; Novelties; Novelty Toy; P. Dumortier Fres; Pak-Me-Mee; Plastic Figures; Plastic Footballers; Prenez-Moi; Pudding; Pudding Figures; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Wallonia;
Luckily, with eight to find (in any variation) I managed to score two more, so that's five in the bag now; an instep-pass and a flicky back-kick.

I shot them against an 1898 atlas I found, I don't think the boarders have changed much, even after two World Wars, but I recall a Belgian farmer helping himself to a piece of France a while back - top lad!

110mm Figures; 4 1/2 Inch Figures; 4.5-inch Figures; Belgian Football Player; Belgian Premiums; Dumortier Brothers; Flemish Figurines; Food Premiums; Football Premium; FootBaller Premiums; Four Inch Figures; Novelties; Novelty Toy; P. Dumortier Fres; Pak-Me-Mee; Plastic Figures; Plastic Footballers; Prenez-Moi; Pudding; Pudding Figures; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Wallonia;
Not much to add really, they are what they are; unknown maker, simple but nice sculpts (although the back-kicker is the daftest pose so far) in hard polystyrene and around the 4-5" / 100-130mm mark - that back-kicker again, he's much taller than the others! I tagged them 4" and 110mm last time, so that'll do, and I've included the Pak-Me-Mee/Dumortier tags as they were the same tool-production.

Tuesday, August 25, 2020

M is for Mare Mediterraneanus

Had a bit of a board-game photo-sesh the other day, one of them was this, mentioned before in passing, we may even have looked at one or two of the figures from time to time, but today we'll get the box ticked properly!

Alexandria; Archers; Board Game; Board Game Knight; Board Game Playing Pieces; Boardgame Elephant; Boardgame Pieces; Boardgame Ship; Carthage; Constantinople; Elepant; Horsemen; Mediterranean; Parker Board Game; Parker Brothers; Parker Games; Parker Toys; Rome; Ship Model; Small Scale Tank; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
Seems to be clear!

Alexandria; Archers; Board Game; Board Game Knight; Board Game Playing Pieces; Boardgame Elephant; Boardgame Pieces; Boardgame Ship; Carthage; Constantinople; Elepant; Horsemen; Mediterranean; Parker Board Game; Parker Brothers; Parker Games; Parker Toys; Rome; Ship Model; Small Scale Tank; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
The pieces; each player gets an 'army' (including naval elements) in one of four colours consisting of various numbers of four unit types; Elephants, Horsemen, Infantry and Ships. The colours are in the lower image and consist of an ivory-white or cream, black, red and blue, scale is all over the place!

Alexandria; Archers; Board Game; Board Game Knight; Board Game Playing Pieces; Boardgame Elephant; Boardgame Pieces; Boardgame Ship; Carthage; Constantinople; Elepant; Horsemen; Mediterranean; Parker Board Game; Parker Brothers; Parker Games; Parker Toys; Rome; Ship Model; Small Scale Tank; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
The box-art is superb, mixing the naval battles of the Persian or Punic-wars with the Islamic migration/invasions and fall of Constantinople (when, although still oared, the vessels looked very different) , it's trying to cover the four great empires, who waxed and waned around the edge of the Mediterranean Sea over a few thousand years, in order to justify the game which pits them against each other!

The artwork is also similar to some of that produced by artists Don Lawrence for the Trigan Empire strip in Look & Learn, or Frank Hampson for his Dan Dare work in Eagle, but the box carries no signature or credit note, and I'm mostly basing my wild assertion on the treatment of the smoke & flames of the burning vessel!

Alexandria; Archers; Board Game; Board Game Knight; Board Game Playing Pieces; Boardgame Elephant; Boardgame Pieces; Boardgame Ship; Carthage; Constantinople; Elepant; Horsemen; Mediterranean; Parker Board Game; Parker Brothers; Parker Games; Parker Toys; Rome; Ship Model; Small Scale Tank; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
A full 'army' in red, the single cavalry and elephant units being joined by three of infantry and two naval, in a similar way to the later Risc, there aren't enough to cover each point (towns & cities), so have to be set out with strategic goals and working with your partner, the game being designed to be played either with two pairs of allies as a four-player, or two players commanding two armies apiece.

The cavalryman in blue has warped and I think it's heat-shrinkage (technically; 'cooling' shrinkage) due to premature removal from the mould-tool, not latter deformation due to unstable-polymer ageing, as they are otherwise a stable polystyrene; the problem is common with these, and some of my lose acquisitions are similarly warped.

Alexandria; Archers; Board Game; Board Game Knight; Board Game Playing Pieces; Boardgame Elephant; Boardgame Pieces; Boardgame Ship; Carthage; Constantinople; Elepant; Horsemen; Mediterranean; Parker Board Game; Parker Brothers; Parker Games; Parker Toys; Rome; Ship Model; Small Scale Tank; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
As I was having a session, I had the time to spend on generating a couple of .gifs, the other to follow later. It's basically unpacking the box to the Nth degree and then setting the table up for a game!

Alexandria; Archers; Board Game; Board Game Knight; Board Game Playing Pieces; Boardgame Elephant; Boardgame Pieces; Boardgame Ship; Carthage; Constantinople; Elepant; Horsemen; Mediterranean; Parker Board Game; Parker Brothers; Parker Games; Parker Toys; Rome; Ship Model; Small Scale Tank; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
The board is generally to be treated as a diamond, evidenced by the angle of the titles and the rule-cheat boxes, with the four 'contemporaneous' City States (for the purposes of the game) being Ptolemaic Alexandria (red), Hannibal's Carthage (black), Western-Empire Rome (cream) and Eastern-Empire Constantinople (blue, Byzantines?), there are two each of the red cards (which photographed abysmally) and which are randomly-dealt 'go to jail' type things each player hangs-on to, until needed.

Alexandria; Archers; Board Game; Board Game Knight; Board Game Playing Pieces; Boardgame Elephant; Boardgame Pieces; Boardgame Ship; Carthage; Constantinople; Elepant; Horsemen; Mediterranean; Parker Board Game; Parker Brothers; Parker Games; Parker Toys; Rome; Ship Model; Small Scale Tank; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
Play is by a pack of cards (made in Belgium, interestingly) rather than dice, and there's not much else to add - so I won't.

Alexandria; Archers; Board Game; Board Game Knight; Board Game Playing Pieces; Boardgame Elephant; Boardgame Pieces; Boardgame Ship; Carthage; Constantinople; Elepant; Horsemen; Mediterranean; Parker Board Game; Parker Brothers; Parker Games; Parker Toys; Rome; Ship Model; Small Scale Tank; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
"What? Board Games? No, I don't do them, there's far too much space in the lid and the walls aren't high enough, they don't call them 'bored' for nothing, you know! Wake me when there's something I can make a real nest of"

Sunday, May 24, 2020

F is for Follow-up - Cap-Bombs & Rocketry

So, we looked at cap-bombs the other day and I said there were a few still in the attic, but the brown one with a yellow spaceman seems to have been totally lost being in none of the places it might have been? And apart from the missing one there was only one other and a buckshee tail-section, but the whole one is different to the others so worth a shot or two.

It has an internal anvil, and exhaust venturi, which as they face forward would/could be seen as retro-rockets on an interspatial vessel! It needed a good clean and I used cotton-buds to remove the rusty gunk from the interior and an old flossing-brush to clean the venturi!

There's nothing to hold a cap or a section of cap 'tape' in place, so I suspect it was designed and/or issued with the plastic-drum caps in strips to place over the end of the hammer-bar. The anvil-plate seems to be set into the plastic, but it's very rusty so I'm not about to shove it around or pick at it to prove or disprove the suspicion!

And, if you're one of the older loyal readers of this blog it may look familiar to you; because it's a copy of the Merit (J&L Randall) one we saw here.

Before it was cleaned up (crap shot - sorry!), it's somewhere between the two common'ish sizes we looked at last time, and has a screw-cap where they had pop-on ones. In the comparison below we see the odd part in dark-olive, they all go in the tub together, and as bits which fit come-in they get put with each-other.

The two on the left are not cap-firers, but rubber-tipped projectiles. The smaller red one being from the rail-mounted 'Battle Space' launcher from Rovex Tri-Ang/Hornby-Triang, it replaced a short-lived die-cast alloy version (also with a rubber nose, but in oxide red).

The yellow one is annoying me as I'm sure I know (or should know) its origin or have ID'd its brand/maker in the past - possibly on this Blog - but I can't find it on the Blog, can't find it in the archives and can't find it on-line, so if you can tell me - kudos to you! Is it ammunition from a 'One Man Army' type thing?

An old internet image (possibly Vectis?) it's a bit fuzzy but you get the idea and we looked at mine years ago (over a decade ago! And I now know the yellow one in that post!), the real aim here is to use the connection of this and the 'unknown' yellow one to get us to this . . .

. . . sent to the Blog by Mr Berke, it's mintier than a minty-mint 'minter' from the Royal Mint! Crescent's rocket launcher; which carries a cap-bomb of epic dimensions, with a fully die-cast nose/firing mechanism on a polyethylene body. This baby would take six or eight caps and detonate with quite a flash, having a much heavier rod that the other's we've looked at.

Unfortunately, because we abused them with large charges, the tiny elastic-band which kept the 'breech block' in place quickly failed and the little piece of mazac is often missing. We looked at the rarer desert variant here a while back, but a temperate/tropical unit was also available . . .

. . . and Brian sent one of those too! Although obviously a cap-bomb, it was originally sold as the Mobile Space Rocket in the red/green combo', with this version normally having a white plastic body for its Corporal Rocket & Lorry (the real corporal was longer and thinner) and the 'civil' coloured truck carrying the yellow bodied rocket.

I thought we'd seen my paint stripped one on the blog, but I can't find it either, not can I find the HK copy's post, but I did re-show it (if I'd shown it at all? Maybe a show-report?) in this post, it's all plastic with a no-cap missile copied from another (Corgi) toy.

Going back a post (from the earlier link) Mr. B also sent this to compliment the spring-loaded rocket launchers of that post, it's the MPC rocket launcher, which is supposed to be rubber-band operated.

Although when I say rubber-band operated, Brian couldn't get it to work so I turned to Ed Berg (who has just Blogged the whole MPC space range) and asked him for help (or the instruction sheet), but he explained he had just as much trouble trying to get them to work, but told us how it should be done and Brian had another stab at it.

But - basically - it seems the rocket gets a little too comfortable in its mounting slot/groove and sticks fast, clearly the rocket designer and/or the launch-pad designer and the tool's 'pattern maker' weren't talking to each other with the clarity necessary? Or the  rubber-band 'interactivity' was a late addition to the toy's features? But it looks the part!

The gang at Moonbase have been running a Money Box Season through lockdown (among all their other stuff!) and I sent my German BAC Spaarraket's over there, so follow the jump for more on them or this link for loads of money boxes (banks), including at least four other rocket types, a spaceman, several globes &etc.
 
It seems BAC Spaarbank is actually a Belgian entity, part of the [now] Dexia combine, previously; Gemeentekrediet van België / Crédit Communal de Belgique
 
Three months later - and it's nice to see Collectors Gazette were paying attention!

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On another matter altogether, the Police Commissioner for Durham has just accused Grant Chapps (Transport Secretary) of "Making it up as he goes along" with regard to Dominic Cumming's shenanigans over the Covid-19 Lock-down . . . well, fancy that, fancy populist fuckwitts on the right making it up as they go along! History will reflect more kindly on my whitterings that mine 'eemies'! Have you injected your dose of loo-cleaner today?!