About Me

My photo
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 Obituary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obituary. Show all posts

Thursday, October 27, 2022

News, Views Etc . . . Links, Silliness and Seriousness

Silliness first; Toys in the media . . .

A popular meme but not actually true for toy dinosaurs, as the real ones were still millions of years in the future during the carboniferous era, when fossil-fuels were laid down, but definitely true for plastic insects and invertebrates which are made from 'real' insects and invertebrates! I can't find the original post but I downloaded it a while ago and lost it in a dinosaur folder! Faceplant page is here; INRITH

****    ***   **  *  **   ***    ****

I found this (first link) a while ago, and now there's a follow-up (second link), lots of interesting snippets within the two, on Bergan-Beton and the early toy industry; not least how far Islyn Thomas's influence stretched!

https://www.plasticstoday.com/consumer-products/plant-manager-behind-modern-plastics-industry

https://www.plasticstoday.com/injection-molding/portrait-mid-century-plastics-pioneer

 ****    ***   **  *  **   ***    ****

Ken Osen, President of the W. Britain will be presenting the talk at Ross County Historical Society in Chillicothe, Ohio on the 16th of November, you may need to post the link directly into the top left-hand search bar of whatever page you've got open, I had trouble finding it again through a Google 'new page', but got the 'memory' URL to come up . . . and it may help to drop the final numerals? Or just Google it yourself from the above details?

https://eu.chillicothegazette.com/story/news/local/2022/10/17/ross-county-historical-society-announces-fall-speakers-series/69560279007/

 ****    ***   **  *  **   ***    ****

Staying in Ohio (lucky Ohioans this Autumnn/Fall!), the Dayton Art Institute has an exhibition of David Levinthal's photographs, running through to January, which involves the use of various toys including what look to be King & Country or Tamiya (?) Modern US Infantry. There's also a bit of a promo-video for a specific digital camera brand, but it's interesting none-the-less.

I can only post what I find, and I found Ohio twice!

This is on a Russian language anti-war article about the lack of democracy and the export of war (Putin's neo-Nazi Wagner Group are already active in Syria, Libya and Central Africa, as well as Ukraine and are now moving into the Sahel through Mali), which you can find here if you want to read it in it's entirety or translate it. Figures are Preiser.

 ****    ***   **  *  **   ***    ****

While a new game seems to have received several good reviews, as I've said before I don't have the time or inclination to game, but if you like a bit of X-Box action try Tin Hearts.

 ****    ***   **  *  **   ***    ****

Missed the event I'm afraid, but still well worth a read;

https://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/lifestyle/4609210/newtonmore-event-will-highlight-the-impact-of-the-indian-contingent-during-the-second-world-war/

While this shot, a commended photograph in this year's Drone Photography Awards seems to show women in Vietnam (I think) drying the dyed sedge straw from which I think my 'rope' dragon is made?

 ****    ***   **  *  **   ***    ****

The serious bit;

Obituaries

As well as sad news on David Pomeroy's slipping away earlier in the year and the recent passing of Eric Johns, We have also lost;

Ed Borris and Nick Versteeg - PlaysetMagazine Obituary

Britains Collector David Leigh - Legacy Obituary

Collector's Michael Fondren - JeffersonMemorial Funeral Home and Kenneth Backus -Kalas Funeral Home

And famous Spanish author Javiar Marias, of whom The Times said "Marías lived in an apartment in Madrid that was cluttered with toy soldiers, piles of dusty fan mail and . . . ", but as The Times (of London) is hidden behind a pay wall I wouldn't direct you to, I will post the New York Times Obituary, which doesn't mention the toy soldiers, if you have subscribed to the UK-title; the obituary's still there. 

****    ***   **  *  **   ***    **** 

This rather staid image was on The Conversation's website, illustrating an article on wage growth, or the lack of it - foam-stampings or 3D-prints?

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

A is for And so to Sandown Park!

The ultimate cause of the failure of ITLAPD this year was a trip to NW Surrey two days earlier where I blew most of my budget on one item, but still managed to come away with enough stuff for a post.

Airfix Attack Force; Airfix Landing Craft; Asterix and the Romans; Asterix Premiums; Atlantic Export Series; Attack Force Landing Craft; Batman; Budgie Tank Transporter; Budgie Toys; Celluloid Animals; Ceremonial Guard; Charbens Hollow Cast; Crescennt Hollow Cast; Crescent Gun; Crescent WWI; Dave Pomeroy; French Spahi; Kellogg's Astronaut; Kellogg's Noddy; Kellogg's Pirates; Kellogg's Sooty; Les Higgins Medievals; Magic Roundabout; Medieval Knights; Ola Premiums; Robin Hood; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tank Transporter; Wall's Premiums; WHW; Wintershilfswerk;
What the budget was blown on, and no, I'm not telling you, but it wasn't cheap, and I had to talk myself into it with the help of the seller! It was the only item of Attack Force I still needed to find on a card, since finding the Centurion last year, and here are before and after shots.

There's not much of a difference, but I cleaned, ironed and wiped the card with a silicon furniture-cloth, to get a bit of depth back in the yellow. I also washed the landing-craft, but it's mostly dirt/dust, out of shot, on the flat surfaces.

Airfix Attack Force; Airfix Landing Craft; Asterix and the Romans; Asterix Premiums; Atlantic Export Series; Attack Force Landing Craft; Batman; Budgie Tank Transporter; Budgie Toys; Celluloid Animals; Ceremonial Guard; Charbens Hollow Cast; Crescennt Hollow Cast; Crescent Gun; Crescent WWI; Dave Pomeroy; French Spahi; Kellogg's Astronaut; Kellogg's Noddy; Kellogg's Pirates; Kellogg's Sooty; Les Higgins Medievals; Magic Roundabout; Medieval Knights; Ola Premiums; Robin Hood; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tank Transporter; Wall's Premiums; WHW; Wintershilfswerk;
This was only a fiver, it's pretty clean, and it's another tank transporter for that particular side-collection! With the die-cast collectors, box is everything isn't it, so a loose one is often to be found cheap, trailer is the same as the Airfix/Dinky/Lipkin (et al) ones, but the cab claims to be an International, although it's pretty fictional I think, the Aussies do have an International Harvester 'SF2670' tank transporter but it postdates this model by several decades!

Airfix Attack Force; Airfix Landing Craft; Asterix and the Romans; Asterix Premiums; Atlantic Export Series; Attack Force Landing Craft; Batman; Budgie Tank Transporter; Budgie Toys; Celluloid Animals; Ceremonial Guard; Charbens Hollow Cast; Crescennt Hollow Cast; Crescent Gun; Crescent WWI; Dave Pomeroy; French Spahi; Kellogg's Astronaut; Kellogg's Noddy; Kellogg's Pirates; Kellogg's Sooty; Les Higgins Medievals; Magic Roundabout; Medieval Knights; Ola Premiums; Robin Hood; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tank Transporter; Wall's Premiums; WHW; Wintershilfswerk;
Adrian gave me the five Les Higgins ECW's, they are exquisitely painted for 18/20mm figures, while the figure to their left is a rubber blow-mould from France, which being a latex type, has perished to a kind of chalky material, but still - mercifully - in one piece.

Bottom right are two other purchases, three of the smaller, better-sculpted, celluloid animals from Japan and a handful of Atlantic air force chaps, while the pair of guitar-playing Tim-Mee style GI's are what I have left after giving the rest away. They are/were issued by the US Armed Forces Entertainment (AFE) unit.

I bought a job-lot a while ago, and as they didn't owe me much and various people were interested, they all got divvied-out, three to mates from a Facebook group and the other five at Sandown, with Brain C politely declining, only for Matt Their to show up and happily take the 'spare'!

Bottom left was a little handful Adrian brought to the show for me, and the stretcher is important, I can't find it now, but I know it has been [is] somewhere on the blog as a pale-blue-grey unpainted moulding, 'probably' a margarine premium, but I said at the time, I think, that I'd like it to be WHW, and I'm confident with Adrian's turning-up of this painted one, that it is from the set of police figures from the Gau of Berlin.

A set which has several versions, painted, unpainted and silver. The set being three Nazi's, four gendarme and one each fireman, traffic cop and this stretcher-team for a ten count, not of 'police' but 'public' or mixed emergency-service personnel?

Airfix Attack Force; Airfix Landing Craft; Asterix and the Romans; Asterix Premiums; Atlantic Export Series; Attack Force Landing Craft; Batman; Budgie Tank Transporter; Budgie Toys; Celluloid Animals; Ceremonial Guard; Charbens Hollow Cast; Crescennt Hollow Cast; Crescent Gun; Crescent WWI; Dave Pomeroy; French Spahi; Kellogg's Astronaut; Kellogg's Noddy; Kellogg's Pirates; Kellogg's Sooty; Les Higgins Medievals; Magic Roundabout; Medieval Knights; Ola Premiums; Robin Hood; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tank Transporter; Wall's Premiums; WHW; Wintershilfswerk;
I also got a nice tub of cereal premiums from Steve Vickers, among which were these Kellogg's types; almost a complete set of Sooty, and a similar Noddy 'bear', a couple of the Olà & Co., Magic Roundabout and four of the comedy pirates, along with an astronaut - because the astronauts are known to be manufactured by Crescent (along with other marked premiums - guards, cowboys, Robin Hood etc.), it's assumed all these are (not the Roundabout stuff - we know that's Tatra), but there's nothing to say so definitely.

Airfix Attack Force; Airfix Landing Craft; Asterix and the Romans; Asterix Premiums; Atlantic Export Series; Attack Force Landing Craft; Batman; Budgie Tank Transporter; Budgie Toys; Celluloid Animals; Ceremonial Guard; Charbens Hollow Cast; Crescennt Hollow Cast; Crescent Gun; Crescent WWI; Dave Pomeroy; French Spahi; Kellogg's Astronaut; Kellogg's Noddy; Kellogg's Pirates; Kellogg's Sooty; Les Higgins Medievals; Magic Roundabout; Medieval Knights; Ola Premiums; Robin Hood; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tank Transporter; Wall's Premiums; WHW; Wintershilfswerk;
The same lot also had a nice selection of the Asterix figures from Europe (although as I've said before, they are common enough over here to have probably had an issue in the UK, possibly with Wall's Ice Cream), the lower lot are a bit chewed-up (compare the blacksmiths), but in an interesting plastic colour.

Airfix Attack Force; Airfix Landing Craft; Asterix and the Romans; Asterix Premiums; Atlantic Export Series; Attack Force Landing Craft; Batman; Budgie Tank Transporter; Budgie Toys; Celluloid Animals; Ceremonial Guard; Charbens Hollow Cast; Crescennt Hollow Cast; Crescent Gun; Crescent WWI; Dave Pomeroy; French Spahi; Kellogg's Astronaut; Kellogg's Noddy; Kellogg's Pirates; Kellogg's Sooty; Les Higgins Medievals; Magic Roundabout; Medieval Knights; Ola Premiums; Robin Hood; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tank Transporter; Wall's Premiums; WHW; Wintershilfswerk;
These were interesting, but sad, as they heralded the passing of Dave Pomeroy back at the start of the year, sadly his estate has been broken-up, and I happened upon these workshop bits which consist of the blue blob (back left) which seems to be a wax moulding of a (pre-existing?) Brickwoods Brewery key-ring (variation seen on the Blog), which sort of makes sense as they were Portsmouth based?

I have no idea on the queen, but she's got a resin body with a wax-head, but carving wax, rather than the poured candle-wax of the Brickwoods chap. Next to her is a resin test-shot (?) of the lady hockey players from the Subbuteo (or Waddington's?) board game, and a grave-stone, which must be of similar history - playing piece or game accessory?

In front of them are two 'product' quality shots, both busts, both board-games I think? The round blob is a Buddha or casting of a novelty smoking-monkey, it's not clear, while the other piece has plaster still stuck in it, so would appear to be a mid-process piece from the prototyping stage? And it looks like it might also have origins as a novelty key-ring? So he obviously used existing stuff to try things out on? Or 'keep his hand-in'?

Now, I had the pleasure, or privilege of spending a very enjoyable afternoon at Mr Pomeroy's house, many years ago now, with John Begg, having afternoon tea, quizzing him on the Triang game pieces I'd inherited from him a year or so earlier, and asking about the relationship between Almark, Minimodels, Omnia et al., while being shown various swords, model soldiers and a suit of armour!

Dave was also connected to the artist Denis Knight (of the Lettraset rub-down historical picture books, also carried by Patterson Blick in the States and someone else in Europe), and the pair of them probably worked with or knew Charles C Stadden as they all seem to have been involved with the Minimodels plant at Havent at around the same time, and to have also worked with Subbuteo, Waddington's etcetera.

So, while not necessarily monetarily valuable, the above are a small slice of the hobby's historical archive, if you will, and it's very sad to learn of his passing.

Airfix Attack Force; Airfix Landing Craft; Asterix and the Romans; Asterix Premiums; Atlantic Export Series; Attack Force Landing Craft; Batman; Budgie Tank Transporter; Budgie Toys; Celluloid Animals; Ceremonial Guard; Charbens Hollow Cast; Crescennt Hollow Cast; Crescent Gun; Crescent WWI; Dave Pomeroy; French Spahi; Kellogg's Astronaut; Kellogg's Noddy; Kellogg's Pirates; Kellogg's Sooty; Les Higgins Medievals; Magic Roundabout; Medieval Knights; Ola Premiums; Robin Hood; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tank Transporter; Wall's Premiums; WHW; Wintershilfswerk;
At the end of the show I helped myself to a fiver's worth of hollow-cast from Adrian's 50p tray, it's all grist to the mill, and provides further samples for future thematic posts, particularly the Robin Hood pair, while the sentry with gas-mask case on his chest looks similar to the Zang composition version. There was also a clean gun from Crescent.

Airfix Attack Force; Airfix Landing Craft; Asterix and the Romans; Asterix Premiums; Atlantic Export Series; Attack Force Landing Craft; Batman; Budgie Tank Transporter; Budgie Toys; Celluloid Animals; Ceremonial Guard; Charbens Hollow Cast; Crescennt Hollow Cast; Crescent Gun; Crescent WWI; Dave Pomeroy; French Spahi; Kellogg's Astronaut; Kellogg's Noddy; Kellogg's Pirates; Kellogg's Sooty; Les Higgins Medievals; Magic Roundabout; Medieval Knights; Ola Premiums; Robin Hood; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tank Transporter; Wall's Premiums; WHW; Wintershilfswerk;
The Batman sticker is a genuine 1970's vintage PVC vehicle-graphic which went down well on another site, the Crescent WWI plastics are home-painted, so will need cleaning, but I knew I didn't have one and couldn't remember which one, so got all three, as I knew it was one of the 'advancing' poses - it's the one on the left! Pink frame is chuck-outs and floor sweepings!

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

News, Views Etc . . . Passing of Clive Smithers

Very sad news, and I don't know how I missed it, but Clive Smithers passed away last year. I didn't know him personally, but I think I'm still linked to all his Blogs: Hinton Hunter, The Lone S Ranger and Vintage Wargaming, and either he, or another of the party invited me to join a non-public Blog where attempts were made to ID old lead figures, where all were friendly and polite - I wasn't much help on that front (I think a few early metal posts had given a false impression of my knowlage in that field!), and I quietly excluded myself after a year or two when it had gone quite.

Clive did a lot of important work ID'ing the old Alberken 'S' Range (precursors of Minifigs) and tracking down the more esoteric Hinton Hunt's, he also kept the early Lamming sculpts in the news, so will be sorely missed by the War Gaming hobby.

His collection is currently being sold by his brother, and there is more here;

https://www.thisisoxfordshire.co.uk/news/20175401.toy-soldiers-get-thousands-pounds-auction/

And a lovely tribute here which I seem to have missed at the time;

http://prometheusinaspic.blogspot.com/2021/08/the-old-metal-detector-personal.html

Off to the great board-game in the sky huh? Rest in peace Clive.


Friday, April 29, 2022

V is for Very Sad News


Nuno, over at Soldiers in Miniature has posted on yet more appalling news from Ukraine;

http://soldadosminiatura.blogspot.com/2022/04/valeriy-grygorenko-ilustrador-da-roden.html

Friday, January 21, 2022

News, Views etc . . . New Links

More Toy Soldier faces from Roger Carter
 
Action figures, but fun in Vancouver!
 
Exquisite miniatures from Agnika Creations in India

Report on Lockdown, Prince August and Lord of the Rings (from last May)

After an unsung Pennsylvanian museum (last lot of links) comes an unsung Kentucky Toy Soldier collection

While the emphasis is more on dolls at the Kansas City Toy Museum

And then there's Tiny Town, Arkansas (looks like Ed Berg's work!)
 
Meanwhile in Ilkley (Yorkshire) our childhood is to be taught to today's kids!
 
Hand carved birch soldiers as conference awards (last paragraph)

Holy Cow History of Milton Levine - the comic-offer king
https://insidesources.com/holy-cow-history-how-ants-made-a-broke-gi-rich/

A collector's collection - Richard Schuster

Toy quiz! (UK readers - 'Boardwalk' is the same colour as Mayfair/Park Lane)



Obituaries

 

Saturday, January 8, 2022

News, Views etc . . . General Roundup

Obit's
I don't often stray into gaming territory, as it's really a different bough rather than another branch of the hobby, but this guy was clearly loved and respected within the industry and too young, RIP

Another Toy Soldier Collector (ad' pop-ups)

 
TableTop Games Listicle
As simplistic and - no doubt - as controversial as any other listicle, but with some useful side-links


Mudlarking


Refighting the Punic Wars


Warhammer
 
 
Nostalgia
I had to refresh after clicking the cross-button on the pop-up - old Dundee toy stores!
 
 


Miniatures
I cant's remember if I've posted this before, but there's tons and while Prieser and Noch figures are to the fore, he uses all sorts of scales and figures, and of all the sites with this type of stuff, Tatsuya Tanaka's is about the best.


ACW


Beautiful Brass

Saturday, September 11, 2021

News, Views Etc . . . Obituaries

Given how sombre the day has been today (more-so than the 10th anniversary?), I thought upbeat or trite stuff about toys was out of place, and having got well behind with News Views . . . and links, here at Small Scale World over the last nine-months, it is the day for sad news . . .

Ron Angelon
https://obituaries.kokomotribune.com/obituary/ronald-angleton-1082992291

Melvin Aria (MA Toy Soldiers)
https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/inquirer/name/melvin-aria-obituary?pid=199597871

Dave Bills (Wallace Ladmo Show)
https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/arts/artist-dave-bills-wallace-ladmo-show-has-died-11771252

Charles Byron
https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/fredericknewspost/obituary.aspx?n=charles-byron-fulks&pid=197602120&fhid=9951

Bruce Miller
https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/louisville/name/bruce-miller-obituary?pid=199892757

Thomas Sandford
https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/wiscnews/name/thomas-sanford-obituary?pid=197654895

Charlie Watts, late of the Rolling Stones (a popular Beat combo'!) who collected American Civil War memorabilia, including Toy Soldiers, among his other pastimes; vintage cars, breeding horses (Arabians) and antique silverware, he was a percussionist of some note[s] too!

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

News, Views Etc . . . A Little Housekeeping

Airfix Blog

I've added yesterday's rubber key-ring knight to the Sheriff of Nottinham page on the Airfix figures Blog (http://airfixfigs.blogspot.com/2010/06/1964-sheriff-of-nottingham-s21-hooo.html), probably not something you need to rush off and look at again, but it's done!

 

Sad News

Don Pielin, giant in the hollow-cast branch of our hobby has gone off to play with his toys for all eternity; an obituary page has been set-up here.

Another fellow-collector; Steven C Rowe, has passed-away, and Covid-19 has been fingered as the culprit. More here onWYDaily where they may also make you watch a video on why you should be wearing your mask!

 

Forthcoming Auction

Norman Joplin's Old Toy Soldier Newsletter are holding their 'OTSA 58' auction as an online event on Sunday 8th November (just over a week) more details here;

https://www.facebook.com/events/261020408579198

 

Toy Shows

With the above in mind, I will not be publicising toy soldier shows or toy fairs until we have got a grip on novel corona viruses full stop. It's quite easy once you understand the science; either you are

  • ·         Protecting yourself by protecting other people
  • ·         or
  • ·         Protecting other people by protecting yourself
  • ·         or
  • ·         A selfish, self-centered wanker.

You should be wearing a mask whenever and wherever you can! Not just when you absolutely have to, but at every opportunity; it's a virulent killer and it's airborne! It's only modern medicine which is preventing higher death-tolls, and a quick mutation over the winter could still see death-tolls rise sharply, in the meantime people continue to die, every day.

There have been two toy soldiers shows recently and two toy fairs, they were all in the US and all poorly attended and rightly-so.

Recent coverage of a toy soldier show has one chap with his mask off his nose, I hope he gets a worse dose than his President (if you believe his President ever had it!), another is shown with his mask pulled under his chin . . . fuckwit, if he dies I won't be posting his obit'!

People promoting, dealing or buying at shows - right now - lack basic common sense, or have consciously surrendered common-sense in preference for serving their greed.

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!

Saturday, July 25, 2020

News, Views Etc . . . Fits & Giggles

So, he's mentioned Bum, in passing . . . because I mentioned them the other day? Tragic! Re-posted a link to the 'interview' in which he apparently uses words he's never, ever used ever, in conversation or on his blog, and re-iterated the old 'collector' hackery! Is he that stupid? Are his followers that dim? I guess they must be! He's clearly that insecure!

......∙∙∙•••●●●◘◙◙◘●●●•••∙∙∙......

Onward and upward . . . a few links; new ones, not two year-old stuff edited by someone else to try and make me look better!

Another mention of GW

A polemic against the Nottingham mafia's rather sickly bandwagonning the other day is frankly well overdue.

In the course of the article you'll find the use of a new accronym; 'SJW', according to Wikipedia its definition reads . . . "Social Justice Warrior (SJW) is a pejorative term for an individual who promotes socially progressive views, including feminism, civil rights, and multiculturalism."

Because who wants civil rights huh? Who wants to treat women the same as men? Who wants to respect the religious or cultural beliefs of his neighbour? Why try to build a nicer, better, more tolerant world? It'll be those bloody red-pinko' commie rat-fink, socialist swine, no doubt! The abbreviation is quite clumsy, but it was invented by intolerant, reactionary, meat-faced, drive-at-the-crowd, Trumpundbrwreakshiteers, so it was always going to sound a bit forced!

Although, if you say it with a hard, southern drawl, it sort of slides snakelike off the tongne! Eesssjaydubeeyah! - The 'silent majority'; demanding regressions since the dawn of time!

......∙∙∙•••●●●◘◙◙◘●●●•••∙∙∙......

Another Museum

This one in Turkey - Istanbul Toy Museum


......∙∙∙•••●●●◘◙◙◘●●●•••∙∙∙......

Another Obituary

Sadly another collector has left us, although - as well as toy soldiers - he seems to have collected pretty-much everything! Joseph Manalang

......∙∙∙•••●●●◘◙◙◘●●●•••∙∙∙......

And, because I've not been doing the Friday 'show dates' posts for obvious reasons, I've not been properly thanking people for their contributions, which sometimes disappear into the long queue for any length of time . .

. . . so a quick acknowledgment and thanks to both Brain Berke and Chris Smith who have sent all the above follow-ups, bits and bobs and other stuff in the last few weeks, some for soon, some for laters! Recieved with thanks guys!