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 Mr Men. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mr Men. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

T is for Two - Novelty Sets

Sometimes stuff comes in which is worth more than a glance in a 'show report' but which won't make a decent 'headline' post, for which the 'T is for . . . ' trope sort of happened, one day. These two definitely fall into the category of novelty shite, but in a way which guarantees that some of you would give them house-room . . . as I have!

Alien Candle Holder; Alien Novelties; Alien Novelty Toy; Aliens; Cake Candles; Cake Decoration; Cake Decoration Figures; Cake Decorations; Candle Holder; Novelty Figurine; Novelty Robot; Robot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Space Cake Decorations; Wilton Cake Decorations; Wilton's;
Anyone who collects large scale space is going to say yes to robots and aliens, even if they have large holes in their heads! Copywrite to Wilton in Illinois, but happy also to claim Hong Kong for their origin, they are novelty cake candle-holders.

These will be contract manufactured in the colony for the American firm, what is now known as 'OEM' (original equipment manufacturing) contracting, back then it would have been 'exclusive' of some kind; commissioner exclusive, exclusive contract, something like that, it just means the contracting company is not allowing a generic run of 'their' product; not 'made by' Wilton, but made for Wilton - and nobody else.

Mr Bump; Mr Happy; Mr Men; Mr Men Novelties; Mr Men Pencil Toppers; Mr Silly; Mr Tickle; Novelty Pencil Tops; Novelty Toy Pencil Tops; Pencil Toppers; Pencil Tops; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Stationary;
Mr Men pencil tops, along with the candle-holders these were a find at May's Sandown Park toy fair, where I was supposed to be having a quite time after PW, a fortnight earlier, but still managed to find 17 rack toys, these two lots and a handful or other stuff!

I recognise Mr Tickle and Mr Bump and suppose the yellow one to be Mr Happy, but I haven't a clue as to the green one - Mr silly hat? Oh! Is he Mr Silly, there was one, wasn't there?

I have to confess they sort of passed me by as a kid; we had Beatrix Potter to learn to read (new one; once you could read the last one through, out loud), then it was on to Victor and Valiant comics with their cruiser-tanks and Messerschmitt fighters, or Look & Learn , Tell Me Why, and World of Wonder!

What I really like about these is the stands, why don't you always get stands with a set of pencil tops?  I wondered if maybe they were damaged spring-jumpers, but there's no sign-of or place for either a spring or a sucker.

T is for Two . . . actually six!

Wednesday, October 11, 2017

News, Views Etc . . . Overdue General Roundup!

PRB - Plastico Rastignano Bologna
An eMail from Theo van der Weerden, a Blog follower from the Netherlands, adds rich detail to the recent post on PRB, in his own words:

"When I read your blog about the Rastignano Bologna Toy Soldiers it brought back some good memories.

Those soldiers came with bubble gum. The brand was called Bang. It came with a piece of gum of course and a small cartoon. If you got a certain picture within your package you obtained a figure.

I remember one time buying 40 pieces to empty a box and hoped to get a figure. No luck with the special picture, but my brother and I got one each.
I think the man behind the counter felt sorry for us".

So basically - as I understand it - the bubblegum was like Bazooka, with a little paper novelty, but some of them (clearly not many) were prize tickets earning you a figure you had to exchange/collect from the vendor - in person - which may well explain why they tend to turn-up in large quantities, but very infrequently; they are old shop stock to be exchanged for prize tickets which seem to have been in much shorter supply than the figure-stock?!

General de Confiteria S.A of Barcelona, Spain issued a bubble-gum brand called Bang Bang, while Mis Biskuvi Gida  San ve Tic A.S. of Gazintep, Turkey issued a Big Bang whether either of these  is the same 'Bang' brand, or not; I don't know.

Theo also ID'd those Fire Service motorcycles from May/June as Minalux, not the Cofalux I'd penciled them in as, thanks Theo.

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News

Stamps
Following the brief news of the Britains Trojan stamp, there was more coverage of the set over the next few days, and for those who didn't follow the link last time, other toys/playthings covered in the eight-stamp set included Sindy, Spirograph, Stickle Bricks, Fuzzy Felt, Meccano, Hornby Dublo and Action Man, along with a Space Hopper and Merrythough teddy-bear . . . apart from Cindy I have fond memories of all of them!

The next set issued by Royal Fail (mid-September) was a set of Ladybird book covers, with three books illustrated per stamp and six large-format stamps it's a game of spot-your-favourite! I remembered/recognised the Postman and Fireman titles; Nelson, the Things to Make and Piggly Plays Traunt!

Other stamp new concerned the LeedsPhilatelic Society which was drumming-up new members in the 'i' on the 13th September with news of a roadshow, but no dates, as they tend to say on the Radio "Check local press for details!"

Mr Men
Sticking with books for a second - a set of adult-oriented parodies of the old Mr Men books are to be issued, four to begin with and in the same vein as the recent Famous Five parodies, using Roger Hargreaves old illustrations but with 'alternative' text! To give you a flavour; one of the books will be called 'Little Miss Shy Goes Online Dating' and another is 'Mr Greedy Eats Green to get Lean'!

Meanwhile, elsewhere in Mr Man parody-land (Sanrio Publishing), there are now 12 Mr Man / Dr Who mash-ups (one book for each Doctor) available online from https://shop.mrmen.com/collections/doctor-who

Shropshire!
Inexpertly torn from the 'i' Newspaper's Weekend edition on Saturday 29th July with a blunt knife, this was 'Image of the Week' and while I've tried to find a better version online I couldn't, I just liked the juxtaposition of British Hollow-cast and an Erzgebirge horse & cart against the rolling hills of Shropshire farmland.

Star Wars
Walt Disney unveiled the concept models for the new 'land' at Disneyworld, on Thursday 13th July last, as you will have gathered from the heading; it's to be called Star Wars Land!

Meanwhile a life-size model of R2D2 made from the collected remains of actual movie props sold in June for £2.1-million. The 3½-foot tall droid was star [wars] item in a sale which also included Darth Vader's helmet (£75,000) and Luke's Lightsabre (£350,000).

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More Licensing & Licenses

Paperchase
The High-street (rather; mall, rail-termini and airport-) retailer (owned by Primary Capital) announced at the start of August a deal with Hello Kitty to produce a new range of school stationary with the Miffy-clone's branding. Paperchase are also staying quite on rumours of a public share-offer, but have mentioned plans for US stores - 2 being due to open in Chicago next year.

Pokémon
Character Group have signed a deal with Wicked Cool Toys in the 'States to handle the Pokémon licence in the UK, adding the franchise to their Pepper Pig and Postman Pat stable - the toys will include Action Figures, Play-sets and soft-toys.

Wonder Woman
Time Warner exceeded their profits forecast, mostly due to the success of the Wonder Woman movie and associated licenses (presumably shared with the comic owner DC)

Mr Ben
There was an exhibition celebrating 50 years of Mr Ben, but it ended on the 16th September and I only learnt of it afterwards, however there is a movie in preparation . . . and an opera! The Author David McKee was interviewed in our local paper (Star Courier) at the time.

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Evil Empires

THE 'Evil Empire'
£24.99 vs. £29.99, they aren't paying for a license as an investment to get the feet through the doors or the units through the tills, they're getting their customers to pay for the license up-front! Your Lego is cheaper if it isn't Star Wars, yet the bricks cost the same-per-unit to manufacture.

Coverage of Lego or Lego-related stories has reached ridiculous proportions, with more news stories about or pertaining to Lego in recent weeks than Hasbro, Mattel and Tomy put together! And yes - I'm well aware of the irony of covering them all again here!

However; good news if you're a bit of an 'anti' (like me) as Lego announces it will be shedding 1400 jobs worldwide as the wheels start to come-off the wagon, the Toysaurus warning of dropping Lego sales. [Covered in a separate post now] Nano-blocks, Minecraft and computers being identified as the main culprits, but the high price-point Lego has maintained for years also being fingered by other commentators as part of Lego's problem - buy Megabloks, I've said it before and I'll say it again.

The Equally Evil Empire
We covered the news last 'News, Views . . . ' and I can't remember if I nicked this from Matt or Huw's Facebook feed, but it sums the situation up very nicely, I'm sure the well-paid bosses of GW will agree!

The Not-so-evil Empire
On the 18th of September a small piece in the 'i' suggested the Toysaurus might be preparing to file for bankruptcy . . . on the 20th Toys R Us filed for Chaper-11 protection in the US (and Canada) with most commentators giving them little hope of a recovery, long-term - they are sitting on a mountain of debt; owing £3.6-billion. Although; the 'Wall of Lego'* not selling as fast as normal will have been a factor?

* Like Ramesh's 'Wall of Crisps' but not so tasty! (link)

UK stores are - apparently - not affected, but having found the huge new aircraft-hanger sized Smyth's in Farnborough (rhymes with 'fleur' not 'morrow') totally empty - when looking up stuff for Rack Toy Month- I would imagine that whole retail sector is struggling, but as it's struggling with a toy industry it actually, deliberately, created (to the detriment of diversity in toys, and all small toy-makers) I have no sympathy whatsoever and I hope they all fail.

Everywhere you look now, you see the signs that 40-years of Thatcherite-Ragannomics have failed all but the few at the very top.

The entire UK workforce (who do have my sympathy - if it comes to the worst) is only 2,500-odd (in 110 stores), think about it for a moment, if you closed the Woking branch (average staff: 22.7) and replaced all the old toy and model and hobby and craft shops long-gone from the surrounding streets and nearby towns and villages, you would have work for 50-100 people, probably better paid that the Toysaurus's staff, but with a dearth of fat-cat executives flying round the world, carving it up, for their further profit?

Of course; my naive hopes ignore the elephant in the room - on-line retail. Comes to something when an elephant can bring-down a dinosaur!

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Wilco
Another one in trouble and one of the few sources of cheap toys and novelties outside of the discount stores or Toy Chains, has also announced difficulties, with 4,000 jobs at risk in the UK; Wilkinson's have admitted they are struggling with costs due to the fall in the Pound and are in talks with their staff-unions to make the cuts as kind as possible.

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Useful Links

Toy soldier bedding and soft furnishing, 'nuff said -

New makers in Singapore with varied product lines -

I've recently discovered (looking for a show date!) Eric Johns has published an index of PFPC articles, too useful! -

We may have had this one before, there are several around and I still have to look-up the one in the last PW, my favourite remains the Preiser road workers doing sultanas to grapes, that was priceless . . .takes a while to load, mostly Preiser -
 
I'll definitely be ordering number one, it's for Vichy's, obviously!

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Coming Shows and Exhibitions

Winter Reading

War-gamers or modellers of the Ancient persuasion (I refer to their chosen period of historical interest, not their age!) may like to know there's an exhibition on the Scythians being mounted at the British Museum from this Thursday - 12th October - through to Sunday 14th January 2018.

Title
Next date on my calendar is the final 'Christmas' Sandown Park show which is on Saturday the 18th, but the above show on the 19th might be of interest to some, from the publicity shots it looks like it probably has a cut-off date of about 1960, so lots of lovely old toys.

Title
I've totally lost track of the Birmingham show these day's; I'll try to find a date (it was yesterday! At the time of editing), but in the meantime Peter Bergner's 2nd show of the year is on the 3rd December at the usual place.


Freize London
The Autumn Frieze arts event (160+ Galleries) in Regents Park featured large-scale (human sized) Dunny-Bunny / Deathney-Mouse type sculptures in a gunmetal finish which would look lovely in a large garden, wooded-area, or - indeed - a formal park, and better-still . . . in a landfill.

Dolls Architecture
A bit late I'm afraid, but this is also running until January, called 'Small Stories: At home in a Doll's House', it's on at the Weston Park Museum in Sheffield and is a history of the more unusual Dolls houses made over the years, I particularly liked the stackable, unitary tower block (Jenny's Home) with its leery 1970's wallpapers, but would probably choose the coloured Perspex 'Kaleidescope House' (from 2001) - simply for its athletics.

Moomins
The Moomins have their own museum! The 'Moomin Muesum' (clearly they used the same naming agency as Star Wars Land!) is in the Congress Centre, Tampere, Finland, and contains 1,009 original artworks, donated by Moomin author Tove Jansson before her death (2001). As well as the Moomin stuff, the Museum exhibits 38 of the wonderful models and dioramas made by the author's partner Tuulikka Pietila.

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Other Bits

Meccano
I was looking at a Meccano motorbike the other day (French owned I believe), and it's come a long way from the slightly rusty, anodised mild-steel of my child-hood, or the even rustier, heavier red/green of my father's childhood; it's all a bit Lego-likey with specialised parts, powder-coated alloy shapes (or at least - they look to be alloy, they may be plastic?), and not much construction, there were about 72 nuts/bolts and 12 of them were the spokes! But worth a thought as you start the seasonal shopping for younger family members or friends.

Trending
Next big craze - if the hype works (and I'm indulging too, so it must be having some effect!), are things called Hatchimals which come in egg-boxes and have to be hatched; Tamgotchi plus ten years extra technology! There are 70+ to collect and what you get inside the egg is something resembling multi-coloured Gonks crossed with wind-up walker-toys!

Yacht Race
Some local lads (Epsom Collage) are hoping to become the first team to successfully navigate a remote-controlled model boat across the Atlantic Ocean, the boat was expected in Antigua in six months time a couple of months ago so should have been far enough-out to miss all the recent nothing-to-do-with-human-driven-climate-change-oh-no-definatley-not-that's-a-Donald-fact-not-fake-news series of record-breaking storms battering that part of the world.

Kids Bed
Cuckooland have a bed in the shape of a high-performance sports car in red (unbranded but I think we all know which brand of Itailan Sports car we are to infer), suitable up to age 12 or so, it's £249.95 which seems a lot for what is probably only a coated MDF box! Still - that 5p saving makes all the difference, huh? And the VW Beetle's over a thousand-quid!

Trumpundbrexit News Department
An RSPCA inspector was called out to deliver a 'terrified' family from the long, slow painful death about to be provided by a rubber toy spider the other day, in Alresford (home of the best model-railway show), there was me thinking we bred brighter souls in Hampshire, no, clearly not!

Hampshire Spider - apparently!

And that story (Hampshire Independent 28th July) came a month or two before the national 'news' story of the family (London? Birmingham?) who had to be rescued by the Fire Service from a smelly-sock 'lizard' under a bed.

People are becoming incapable of serious, rational, independent thought.

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Follow-ups
Three other stories from previous 'News, Views . . . ' have returned to the headlines;

Ship Shape
Plastic on the Beach was highlighted in a novel fashion in July - here reported by the Metro on 20th July 2017

Sheds
The Britains Best Shed competition (accurately: Cuprinol Shed of the Year) was won by something which looks more like a tree-house which I think is a bit of a swizz!

Lost Bears
Following the lead of the Spanish holiday firm we looked at in June's 'News Views . . .' Glasgow Airport has started a lost-teddy service, from the press-release photo it looks as if stuffed dogs and Muppets (good news for the PSTSM if they get lost) are included in the rescue plans, but girly-dolls will be melted-down and served in-flight to customers in economy-class!

I'm joking - or am I; have you tasted in-flight meals?! If you are travelling via Glasgow, with bear-equipped kids; be sure to collect a 'Take Care of my Bear' tag when you first check in and then if the chap or chap'ess gets lost, they should be quickly reunited with their young owner.

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More Bears
Back to local news; Alton played host to the annual Teddy Bear Festival on June 17th in the Assembly Rooms, bears and bearabilia (?) old, new and orphaned were on show, sale or available for adoption, while songs and stories were performed to younger fans!

Zeus on the Loose
Found this on Amazon a while ago, I won't be buying one but I know two Blogs who are working with Asterix or bubble-gum Romans, in the larger scale, who might like a cartoony Zeus to add a bit of mischief to their narratives! And it'll be turning-up in mixed rummage trays at toy soldier shows in a few years! Gamewright

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

News, Views etc . . . All Sorts!

Blog
Adsense

How many of you remember when the Blog carried these? I had Adsence from the off (December 2008) and ran it for a year or so before I dropped it as being a bit pointless! Now, the first rule of Adsense is that you can't talk about Adsense - I'm only talking about it because I don't have it!

In the first few months it earned me about $12-something, which - at the time - seemed like pretty small beer, however I was only getting 40-odd hits per day, so looking back it was quite good! But the money doesn't seem to have ever made its way to my bank, and when the major layout and coding changes (by Blogger) hit in the autumn, it all disappeared? It was re-instated (from zero) at some point and accrued another 8-dollars or so, before I closed that account so I never received that dosh either.

1.5 million hits went-up a couple of weeks ago!

But now I get considerably more hits per day so I may well reinstate it soon. Those who don't like it can just ignore it, as it will be for those who come here on an ad-hoc basis from Google searches, not the regulars. My stats are such that the 'casuals' outnumber the hardcore toy soldier people by a factor of 3-1 or more.

Also I need a new camera and it seems like a good idea to see if the blog can fund its own camera, no?

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Background

I said I'd look at it, and having been using the Library, my mate's router or the free service in Café Nero, for a year now, I can assure you that the problem is with the screen it's being viewed on, not the chosen layout. Some older Dell's seem particularly prone to poor settings, but it is all about the settings, and if you find it hard to read the Blog - use it as a 'test-card' to get your settings right!

It should be pale grey text on a dark-chocolate/purple-brown background, with muted prussian-blue hot links which go heliotrope once you've visited them. If the layout gives you a migraine (as it does for one poor chap on one of the die-cast forums) every time you visit it, it may be a sign of deeper problems which should be discussed with a doctor or optician.

If you have problems with it loading, you have slow broadband speeds and will have to wait! If you have to wait more that 30 seconds for a page to load, you're probably still on dial-up? The electric blue of hotlinks on older pages is a glitch in Blogger's coding I can do nothing about, but seems to be limited to posts/tag-results older that around 2011?

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Plastic Warrior Show

Don't forget it's only a month and a half away now, and the latest PW magazine is out with news that the table prices are down this year so if you are still thinking of taking a table, now's the time.


And they are on Paypal.

The old website is to be run-down/retired.

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A Year in Toys
The British Toy & Hobby Association's press release for 2017 included:

Toy sales in the UK were up 6% at £3.5bn quid in 2016.

Approximately 415-million toys were sold in the 'toy year'.

Shopkins (similar to those Fungus Among Us we looked at here, but one I'm trying to avoid!) were last year's best seller for under a £enner.

Collectables were the big trend with Star Wars and Lego 'minifigs' leading the way.

250 firms stalled-out at the fair.

The UK is the fourth largest toy market in the world after the US, China and Japan, Lego was the most popular brand.

Nanobloks (a mini [and bloody expensive] version of building block) sales are growing at 20% year on year!

Altogether it was an upbeat forecast/report, but then it would be - it was showcasing their annual get together!

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Real Toy News
Culled from the newspapers recently:

Did anyone else notice Transport for London (TFL) using Mr Men and Little Miss's in their advertising over Christmas?

In January the Character Group who we know from their Lego-like figures of British serviceman and Dr. Who (a license they seem to have lost to Lego), but who also hold licences for Pepper Pig and the (fading?) Tellytubbies announced that the fall of the pound due to Brexit would lead to higher prices for their toys, consequently their share price fell 5.8%! Cheers, Brexidiots.

Nestlé also posted negative results with a slowdown in growth to 3.4% from 4.2 in 2014-15, not that interesting but they do still contribute a few premiums through some of their subsidiaries.

Nintendo's [Apple] i-product compatible mobile 'app' version of Super Mario Run was the fastest ever download, with 40-million in its first three weeks (up to christmas) which may lead to a renaissance in the character's popularity, but - thankfully - there have never been many toy figurines of the little twat!

Hasbro have buggered-about with the playing pieces in the standard Monopoly set again - dropping three oldies for - among other things - a mobile 'phone! Obviously the 20-odd versions I saw in the Toysaurus last visit, just aren't enough!

 
Ex-Marx figurines in vinyl
From Disney Store play set

Disney is buying a controlling stake in err . . . Disneyland Paris! People said when it was announced in the late '80's that it was a bad idea, and it's struggled to make serious money ever since it opened in 1992, making a €102m loss in 2015 and ending-up €858m in the red last year. Disney plan to develop the unused sections of the site (nearly half the original area) and inject €1.5bn into new attractions and an overhaul, but first they have to purchase a 95% stake in order to get it off the Euronext Paris financial market. It may be that Europeans are just not that keen on a mouse in shorts with a girly voice! It's one thing to make a 'proper' go of it with [young kids and-] a trip to Florida, it's quite another to visit France and deal with traffic 'flics' on the Autoroute to and from Calais - in the rain!

Tesco PLC (Supermarkets) have obtained/resurrected the old Sindy Doll brand, taking a licence from Pedigree (who knew they were still going? Google reveals a small holding-office somewhere - presumably a Hornby subsidiary?), however the new Cindy isn't the stick-thin rival to Barbie of old, but a rather more realistic, rounded, 'buddy' doll.

The brand manager Iconix is contemplating a sale of its property Snoopy, if it is sold we should expect an injection of energy which ought to include new toys, whether any of them would be in our 'sizes' or formats remains to be seen. Chinese companies are apparently interested.

Speaking of China, at the beginning of February Jack Ma the head of Alibaba, while opening a new hub in Australia warned President Trump that 'the world needs globalisation, it needs trade' and went on to add that while he would try to create one million jobs in the US (bye-bye Amazon!) "Everybody is concerned about trade wars. If trade stops, war starts".

Finally - last week a local (Guildford) firm; Vivid Toy Group, was sold to private equity investor Privet Capital for an unknown amount.
 
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Other Lego News

Image courtesy of Brain Berke
Similar publications are available in the UK

Lego pushed Disney off the top spot in Global Toy Brands last year, the success is put down to the DC license and Lego Batman Movie, helped by continuing sales of Star Wars stuff and the tail-end of the Harry Potter craze.

They also pipped Tomy and Hasbro to No.2 toy seller worldwide, behind Mattel at No.1

Sales grew by 6%, which was a slowdown on 2015's 25% to hit $4.4bn while profit remained flat over both years.

They sold 75-billion bricks and launched 335 new lines or ranges, with the large 'scale' Millennium Falcon being the best-seller.

One of only ten 2x4-stud Lego bricks known to have been made in solid gold (14ct) recently sold for £12,000 on Internet auction site Catawiki.

Lego opened a flagship store in Leicester Square, London in November just gone.

In August of this year they will launch Lego Boost, the next level in their interactive PC/IT-based electronic product range with a user-coding element.

They also plan to enlarge their London offices making them some of the main offices outside Billund.

They still stole the idea from Hestair-Kiddycraft and Hillary Page though!

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Return to the 1970's?

Has anyone else noted these adds in papers and magazines, they are just like the old Sunday supplement 'Home Farm' and 'Funnimals' add's of the 1970's, an early sign of things to come in the Brexidiot economy no doubt. Both these are claimed by The Happy Puzzle Company (THPC), but I've seen others.

So far no figures or Noah's Arks, but it may only be a matter of time so keep an eye open. There are also the Corgi and Atlas Edition flyers, but they've been around for a while and are a different concept - same goal though; getting your personal/postal details on a saleable, mail'able list!

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I know - not enough pictures of figures in this 'News, Views etc...' so I hope this will do! I'm still working on the Hong Kong hollow-horse articles for the other Blog, these are some of the Giant or Giant-like on the 'Smoothie' or 'Mexican' horse types during a sort out/photo-sesh!

Monday, December 24, 2012

C is for Cristmas, Crimbo and CAKE!

A bit of a thematic - indeed - 'Seasonal' post tonight. We have looked at this sort of stuff before and will again, tonight's have all come into the collection in the last 15 or so months.

This is a surprisingly sophisticated design from Festival, a UK company, and I suspect a late production attempt to fight back against the onslaught of cheap imports from Hong Kong, who were simply copying their older polyethylene cake decorations in polystyrene.

Made from a polypropylene type material, it's in two parts which slot together, the white trim and red cloak reducing the need for the quantities of paint they had used in the 1950's and '60's. Supplied to Culpitts in the UK (as most of their output seems to have been), we see also a late Culpitts packaging.

Another carded set; this company (Anniversary House) are still extant and based in Bournemouth, although this item seems to be a discontinued - probably 1980's - piece, it has a spike or spigot to punch through the icing on a Christmas cake.

Nothing to do with cake this one, except that I have a whole set of cake decorations somewhere with this trombonist, so he's a case of cross-marketing, being supplied to cake decoration wholesalers and glued into snow-domes/snow-shakers.

Some older or more traditional ones - to me that is...or people of a certain age! Tradition with regard to Christmas is a very movable feast! But these are the sort of thing I remember from my childhood. The top picture's items are all by Festival, with the deer, the motto and the cupid all being copied in Hong Kong in polystyrene at one time or another, these are all originals with the registered trade numbers and/or Festival logo showing. The clown is only in the picture because they were all in the same bag, he's more of a Birthday cake decoration!

Bottom left are my favourite type of Christmas cake decorations; the plaster-of-Paris ones, going back to the turn of the century they ran alongside the bisque ones for years as the poorer brother, but have slowly lost out to plastics in the last 40 years, although they are still around and two of the above were bought new from a bakery in Newbury a year ago.

The final shot are 1970's style Hong Kong imports of a tree with and without a metallic finish and a little church, with another Festival item - the other tree - to the right.

Mostly more modern types although the large picture of the Santa' with a spigot looks to be early British (1950's) and could be Festival or Gem (who I think are connected anyway). Top left are poured resin (or 'Poly-stone'!!), the chap next to them seems to be made out of that oven-cure modelling compound, used by kids for craft stuff, but here used commercially.

A mixed bag which starts with a pair of earrings, these were imported by several companies a few years ago. and somewhere I have a bunch of them with the hangers removed and various treatments, both hand-painted and sprayed, in various schemes.

Next is a 'Mr. Man' pencil top who looks like a snowman and - you'll be unsurprised to hear - is called Mr. Snow! The very small one skating is interesting as he appears to be a polystyrene HK effort, but is quite finely designed and may be a copy of an earlier European moulding, but I've never found a soft plastic or marked version?

The chap on a card-plinth is the only Christmas themed cake decoration I could find in Britain's main supermarkets in the last month, and I tried Tesco (Andover and Aldershot), Walmart-call-me-Asda (Farnborough), Waitrose (Fleet) and Sainsbury's (Fleet and Farnborough). Not one of them thought to stock Christmas dec's, despite all having large displays of 'year-round' and birthday decorations? Oh...and he's made out of Royal Icing and is good for eating or removing teeth!

The lower image shows a china/ceramic 'fairing' type candle-holder of indeterminate years and origin...possibly made in Japan post war for the German market? And a hideous glitter covered, pipe-cleaner 'enhanced' Santa' who came with a commercial cake years ago, but was being sold with 5 other coloured fellows as tree decorations in Tesco this December, so the mould - unfortunately - survives somewhere in Hong Kong/China...

Going back to earrings for a moment; the main shot here shows three ex-earrings, which are just the right size for filling in at the top of the tree where you want little baubles and other hangings, and both the stripped bauble and the Christmas pudding were so converted a few years ago, while the little bell was courtesy of Tesco's about a week ago!

Below them is last years Christmas cake, with a poured resin and Santa Claus and his tree, which lost out at audition to a more traditional brush-type with plaster snow...and this years Yule Log with a squirrel bought from the local toy shop.

At the risk of repeating myself - wherever you are and whoever you're with; have a lovely Christmas, and get cake, eat cake, only...save the decorations!