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 Oklahoma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oklahoma. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

A is for All-sorts of Argentine and Ante American Armed-forces

Both loyal readers and more casual visitors will be aware of the successes I've had tracking down various bits of South American toy soldiery and model figurey over the years, especially in the last few, with 20 of the 35 uses of the Argentina tag being in the last six years, and here's a few more Argentine or believed to be Argentinian pieces, and some other South American makers.
 
This chap was sold as an Argentine model of Santa Anna (Mexico - Alamo insurgency), but I wondered if he mightn't be one of the Argentinian revolutionary heroes, so googled them, they were all in blue jackets! So I returned to Santa Anna, only to find he's always in blue too! Simone de Bolivar? . . . Blue, or blue-black! So your guess is as good as mine, unless you're an Argentine collector and know who he was sold as?

Although he fits much better on the horse in the previous shots (an old Elastolin composition horse copy?), he was sold with this horse (vaguely Britains), marked Gulliver (which the figure isn't) of Brazil, which he really isn't comfortable on, so as well as not being sure who he is, I'm not sure if I've found his horse yet!
 
I guess all those South American revolutionary wars were modelled to some extent on the French Revolution, or the American War of Independence, to wit; throwing off the yoke of the old European masters, or a more-local tyrant, and, as such, the leaders would have looked to Washington or Napoleon for their sartorial guide, beyond the prevalent fashion of the day?
 
And, as we saw the other week, Napoleon liked he blue AND his green! So I'll go with Santa Anna, as the slight;y more popular figure, historically, across the whole continent, possibly for being the last South American to give Uncle Sam a bloody nose? I've seen other Gulliver figures on this horse, and they fit it properly.

Along with him and the second horse, there was another Gulliver piece, the African warrior at the front, a horse far to small for the General; a copy of the Britains Trojan horse, marked Industria Argentina and an unmarked copy of Charbens or Britains draft-horse, which is unmarked and could be Hong Kong output, but is I suspect from the same lot.
 
I think we've seen the more modern triangular lozenge mark in a previous Gulliver post somewhere, but here's the earlier one in a sort of 1970's Lettraset curlycue'esque font, it's not the best image, but . . . black plastic!

Ind. Argentina announces this rather battle-damaged Jeep as another Argentine piece, it's also marked 'Eplax', whom we have to assume to be the maker! A composite model, with a hard PVC or vulcanised rubber body, soft rubber tyres on steel axles, a polyethylene steering wheel and a sheet-alloy (probably pure aluminium) so soft it bends if you look at it wrong!
 
Hopefully a future find, even in a similar state, will give me the missing wheels/axle? Until then, this will sit in the collection as a 'better a damaged one than none' example! It seems very similar to a Birmania one I have in a set which I thought I'd shown here (should have been part of the Plastic Warrior show reports), but have shown elsewhere, only that one is lacking the seat-holes.

This is also similar to a tree in the Birmania set, a polystyrene plastic flat with detail in relief on one side and a blank reverse, painted as if the detail it there anyway, but in a more basic fashion than the obverse!

A bit of an oddity, this one, it's a sort of blow-moulded rubber bath or pet toy, sans squeak (not that there's a hole for one, or ever was one, I'm just trying to describe the feel of the thing, under the paint), and may be home painted, and not Argentinian at all, but it came with some of the other pieces on this page, so can sit here, until its origin is more empirically known! 54mm'ish assault-boat!

Another Oklahoma figure has jointed that growing sample, you may remember I missed-out on some at the Plastic Warrior show, back in May, but picked-up a mounted lancer. This guy is obviously based-upon the Britains Herald American Civil War trumpeter.
 
The closest match I could find on these near-60mm figures, was some Gulliver/Casablanca production from Brazil, but not exactly the same as my pair, and mine aren't marked. This and the next shot were my attempts at arty-farty photo's, with views of the Toy Soldier library in the background, both images 'seen elsewhere' a couple of years ago!
 
This is actually Mexican, from Ara (or ARA? Family Arakelian) and depicts a Mexican lifeguard trumpeter, in the uniform of the Mexican-American war, I can't find any modern images of them as ceremonial troops, so I don't think they survive as such, but I could be very wrong on that one?
 
This is a set of figures from Trovador, also of Argentina, the warriors were copied by someone else in an unpainted form I think, and I dare say a couple of shields are missing here. The figures seem pretty unique, but the elephant is lifted from the Britains' baby elephant.
 
Another seen elsewhere image, these may be Oklahoma too, as they seem to have targeted Herald for their mentor! However, another Argentinian company - Grafil - are known to have targeted Lone Star, while the Marx figure could be another South American company, but seems to crude for the Mexican Plastimarx who used original moulds, not forgetting there's a Timpo sculpt in there too!

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

H is for How They Come In - Chris - October 2021 - Military & Sci-Fi Stuff

So, the other half of Chris Smith's Autumn donation to the Blog last year finds us with the helmets and guns, mostly in khaki! But there is a couple of red-coats, some spacey stuff and an Esquimaux!

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
Always, always, always! They all get carefully sorted into bags of identical figures to eventually get matched-up to branded items or set titles . . . like the firefighters, the paratrooper page is another thing which is lagging, but the work goes on in the background - I found a nice novelty variant of the Trojan red-devil the other day!

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
ABC and 'probably' ABC; Chris returned the two sand ones I'd sent him, not out of churlishness, but because he found better ones! He sent me the - frankly better sculpted - green ones at the same time (which we have now looked at) and he sent me two - believed to be ABC - in colonial line-infantry uniforms (from Britains hollow-cast) and a variant of the standing sentry with a new arm and new colouring.

The sentry's pose is not a recognised drill movement. but is close to a left-handed "Raise weapon for inspection"! That 'colonial' era spiked infantry helmet still survives in bands, but with No.1 Dress 'Blues' not scarlet! I picked-up three more the other day from the legendary Joe Bellis, and a third pose is blowing on the instrument I get in to trouble for . . . an oboe/clarinet'y thing!

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
A nice selection of mixed figures, the crossbowman is Exin (seen here - fourteen years ago!), the guardsmen are the denizens of crackers/lucky-bags (seen here four years ago!), while the flat/semi-falt cavalryman with carbine may be Plástico Osul from Portugal?

The Argentine Oklahoma figure looks like the advancing pose also sent to the Blog by Chris, but it's a single pole he's holding, so I fancy he's a standard bearer missing a flag? Something I will sort with a print-out at some point!

Another Spanish Civil Guard in terracotta takes that sample three, the blue knight is similar to some capsule toys marked Saban, but he is unmarked, while the white plastic Britains copy knight is very interesting . . .  

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
. . . for being clearly marked Petrel. Now; it happens I have several rack-toys marked up/overprinted to Petrel (one or two seen here now), and would have happily accepted they were a phantom brand for someone like 1960's Woolworth's or the Dutch Hagemeyer, but here he is, claiming a factory-tool as his own! How many were there in the set, are they all Britains inspired, do you know? Damaged - but a first here!

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
Khaki types; The sandy one will be Revell, Aurora, Renwall or someone like that, early box-scale or 1:48/50th kit figure, possibly from one of the missile sets. The diver below him is a lot like the Chap Mai ones, but softer and equipped with a mean dart-tip, he's hunting Moskva!

The two 'army men' at the top are both uncommon, one channeling the Lido pod-feet chaps, but as a unique sculpt, the other seemingly a khaki copy of Deluxe Reading's white one, but without the slot in the base, I must assume therefore another DR piece, from a similar big-box toy?

The large chap in the middle will be for a 1:18th German AFV, but I couldn't tell you who's or which, I haven't followed the phenomena, except to be very impressed with a  mixed battle-group of 1:18th, 1:12th and 1:6th (action man sized!) AFv's running around at Beltring hop-farm!

Finally - another 'army man', who must be from some sort of interactive zip-wire/death-slide, or helicopter (with hook) toy/set; I can't imagine he'd be auctioning a bow-saw to the highest-bidder in the middle of a battle?

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
Very useful Blue Box stretcher-case in white, I knew it was out there as I have it in a boxed-set somewhere, but I didn't have a lose one, now I do! Posed with the WAAC nurse, also from Blue Box.

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
These two will be from a modern gaming system, which are similar to but not Bolt Action from Warlord Games, I will endeavor to ID them, to which aim I have ruled out Wizards of the Coast and Flames of War . . . so might be looking for a stand-alone boxed game? they are quite nice though, factory painted PVC, and they've gone to storage in a TBS box, so I can't for the life of me remember if they had base-marks? Same Day - Heroscape! Thank you Daniel - see comments!

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
I think this chap was on Moonbase, not that long ago, but I'm damned if I can find it, obviously a target for a shooting game, I think it was a little rack-toy pistol? With the Azco/Hassenfeld, Ideal/Kleeware, Kellogg's, Kwong Ming, Lion, Lone Star and May May ones, I'm building quite a pile of targets - with help! We'll have to have a target page here?

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
Going off-world; there's a probably Kinder (or similar Italian pocket-money toy) space ship, a Micro-Machines command module, some capsule toys, one as a pencil-top (three-headed Kaiju) and one as a charm (green robot).

Robin's lost his head; probably at the sight of the pink block-man . . . is he Roblox or Minecraft? He might be a Minecraft 'hex-fusion' figure whatever the hell one of those is! One day I'll do something with the damaged dime-store/Tudor Rose pulp figure, like graft a small propeller to the wrist?

While we've looked at the two rack-toy Power-Ranger knock-offs before. The blue fellah is a Pokémon I think, and I have no suggestions for the 25mm action figure with moving arms and legs?

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
Mentioned in passing the other day - this completed my MPC XL5 character line-up, Steve Zodiac I think a reissue in this grey and he was a bit shredded, but a very quick pass with a cigarette-lighter removed most of the jiggits, but it didn't restore his nose! I would never recommend the lighter-technique, it's something you have to be practiced in (or confident of carrying out), before you start, and practice makes casualties! But done right it disappears all those little 'tails' of a worn, sanded or badly-fettled plastic item.

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
Probably could have been in yesterday's post, a small collection of Kinder figure parts, which will go with all the others, if I ever find the big box, which is still somewhere in the garage! And the Attic stuff has long-gone to storage, so that's a job for next-home now! I think blue-top is an ice-hockey player, there's half a fantasy barbarian, the blue legs go with the Esquimaux, and the horses had those chunky brass-look knights riding them.

ABC Hong Kong; ABC Toy Soldiers; Army Men; Blue Box; Ceremonial Troops; Day Fran; Deluxe Reading; Esquimaux Novelty; Exin Lines; FBI Shooting Practice; Flats; GI's; Kaiju; Khaki Infantry; Kinder; Kit Figures; Lido Plastic Figures; Micro Machines; Minecraft; MPC XL5; Oklahoma Argentina; Parachute Toys; Paratrooper Toys; Petrel; Pokemon; Shooting Game; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Figures; Steve Zodiac; Swoppets; Terracotta Figurine; Wargaming Figures;
"Now you've sorted everything into their little bags and spread them all over OUR nest, can Teddy and I have our Cheesy Dreamies please? We're starving here and it's well-past our bedtime!"

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Found it! FBI Shooting Practice, by Day Fran so now I need to find the Captain Scarlet ones - Doh!

Saturday, June 6, 2020

H is for How They Come In - Week 18 - 2 Other Military

We're starting with the money box (known as money banks over the pond), which doubles as a 'bissquit' tin, well, it's primary goal is one of protecting biscuits, the saving of money is the novelty 'added value' afterthought!

I did send this to Moonbase's recent season on the subject, which continues apace with a tram added the other day (I might have a bus somewhere, but buried deep in the garage I fear) , however and in the meantime I had found out a little more about it, so we'll have another look now!

I wondered from the shape if it might have contained the dry crackers for cheese, but on reflection suspect it may have been shortbread, aimed at the tourist market, it obviously bearing the likenesses of several ceremonially-attired British troops, namely a Coldstream Guardsman (paired buttons), Royal Marine bandsman/drummer, a Yoman Warder 'Beefeater' from the 'white' Tower of London and a member of the ceremonial 'Kings Troop' of the Royal Horse Artillery (RHA).

Issued by Huntley & Palmer, a local firm here, down the road in Reading (I well remember the smell!)* it is apparently the third in a series, issued in 1971 it followed the pattern of tins originally issued in 1910 and 1914 (hence the 'apparently', it's such a big gap to the third design, one feels there may have been interim designs?).

*Reading had two smells when I was a kid, the H&P factory's wonderful baking sugar and bread smells and - in the centre of town - the sour, stick-in-your-throat smells of the brewery!

The plastic roof was the innovation on the 1971 version, as was the money-slot and all three sentry boxes are on Reading Museum's website (which is why I suddenly know so much about them!) and the earlier two can be seen here;



I've had an email exchange with Matthew Williams at the museum, and after lockdown they will look at adding images of the other sides of the tins, as while it will be interesting to see who's on the other sides of the 1910 tin, more interesting will be who - if anyone - replaces Germany on the 1914 tin?

[06-06-2020 - In fact the notes have already been updated to reflect that fact, Germany was replaced with Belgium! But the RHA is still described as a Hussar. Oh, and it's the 76th anniversary of D-Day today!]

The marking however, is an HBS, which was for many years an independent 'arm' of the biscuit makers started and run by one of the sons; Huntley, Boorne and Stevens, although eventually it was brought in-house, it will - for half a century or more - have also supplied tins and tin-plate goods/components to other customers around Britain and across the 'Empire' - as was.

Other ceremonial or historical figures in Chris's donation include the large guardsman who goes with the previously seen Guards officer and RHA trooper, but this time is based with the full set of Tringa Toy marks including a date; 2004, showing how quickly things which are 'It's still in the shops' current production, become 'Blimey, it's over 15 years old' collectables, purly by dint of the inexorable march of time!

He's missing what I have half a recollection was an SA80, and I think I may have one in the loose weapons zone, from another mixed lot as some point? If I can marry them up we'll have another look at them all-together, as they (three and a sentry box) have all been donated to the Blog (Chris Smith and Peter Evans) for showing to you, loyal readers!

Due only to the delay in getting these posts out, we now know - from the recent plumping of Plastic Warrior magazine No.179 onto our door-mats that the Herald clones are from the Argentine company Oklahoma, we looked at another a while ago (from Adrian I think - another officer with sword?), however, the mag' shows the ACW bugler was also given the Argentinian Army make-over!

The other three are an Esci gunner, a small Highlander 'mocherette' and another Highlander, who may have been removed from a pop-up toy and wired, but Chris suggested he may be an old, damaged earring? I think there's millage in that.

Medievals; Both Chris and I suspect Poland for the rider, the under-paint polemer is very 'Polish' and I have a memory of seeing plain, gold-paint foot figures attributed to Poland somewhere? The little guy may be a war-gaming figure, but I suspect either a board game or a touristy thing; another 'mocherette' anyway! While the archer is Wild Republic (K&M).

I placed him on a spare horse - also in Chris's donation, and if you think the angles poor for getting a handle on the horse, we'll look at it again in the Wild West shots! It's not the rider's horse, but looks the part of a tough little steppe-pony!

Many, many-thanks again to Chris for sending us all these and next-up; Wild West, Prehistoric and Civilians!

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

F is for First Show of the Season!

And so to Sandown Park racecourse and my plunder from the best show in the UK, I used to say the best show in the world, but some of those Dutch and Belgian shows are very big and very good these days, from what I've heard.

Airfix; Argentine Toy Figurine; Britains Copies; Britains Guards; Cherilea Foreign Legion; Darth Vader; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Giant Roman Chariot; Grant's Whiskey; Novelty Sportsmen; Novelty Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Star Wars; Tennis Player; The Rocketeer; Triang Cowboy; Vintage Flats; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys; Vintage Wild West; Waddington's Custer;
I didn't get much, but it was all good, interesting or unusual stuff, most of which we'll look at in a minute but above are a couple of 'Khaki Infantry' of note; the kneeling firer I thought might be Polish, but Adrian reckoned British (confirmed by the arrival of PW 178 this morning, reminding me I have a different one somewhere!) and it is a soft polyethylene (rather than the hard recycled mix the Poles used) so I'll have to sort them again and slot it in with whoever had those grey helmets, Speedwell over on the Khaki Infantry page? The other is an anonymous MG-gunner in a flecked-brown.

Below them is a pack of styrene kit-built (R&L style) racing cars (thanks to Gareth Morgan) which appear to be the same as, but likely the originals of, the ones we saw recently here at Small Scale World from Tito. The mouldings are finer than Tito's and the assumption has to be that Tito copied, but I haven't had a chance to compare them properly yet.

A small pack of probably 'box scale' ship's boats from an old Pyro or Revell-Monogram kit, some hollow-cast corn-stooks and a couple of Cane musketeers make up the rest of the stuff not looked at below.

Airfix; Argentine Toy Figurine; Britains Copies; Britains Guards; Cherilea Foreign Legion; Darth Vader; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Giant Roman Chariot; Grant's Whiskey; Novelty Sportsmen; Novelty Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Star Wars; Tennis Player; The Rocketeer; Triang Cowboy; Vintage Flats; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys; Vintage Wild West; Waddington's Custer;
The main theme of the day ended-up being Native American Indians; and while the bulk of these came from John Begg's stall (PTS52 on eBay), the trio of Waddington's copies were from Gareth and the Tri-Ang mounted cowboy came as a swap with Barney of Herald Toys & Models.

The polyethylene Thomas Indian in the centre seems to be painted the same as the earlier PVC pirates and costumed-children, so may (must?) be a crossover piece from between the painted PVC era and the unpainted PE-era? While the other Thomas pose (green, rear) is actually a smaller, semi-flat piracy, possibly a premium of some kind.

There were some other Wild West procured on the day, for a project I've been working-on for a while, and I left them out of these shots as I was going to post the article this week (or last week if the forecasts had been more accurate!), but I've learnt someone else has gone to print with them so I'll wait for them to have the first word on the subject! However thanks are still due to Adrian Little and John Begg for managing to find some for me, and also Steve Vickers who had some hollow-cast originals the same day!

Airfix; Argentine Toy Figurine; Britains Copies; Britains Guards; Cherilea Foreign Legion; Darth Vader; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Giant Roman Chariot; Grant's Whiskey; Novelty Sportsmen; Novelty Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Star Wars; Tennis Player; The Rocketeer; Triang Cowboy; Vintage Flats; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys; Vintage Wild West; Waddington's Custer;
I picked-up three 'colonial' types, the FFL from Cherilea is not my first, but he has the best paint I think, and while their bag is getting quite stuffed, I can't say the same for the Arab, where every example is damaged! While some legionnaires can be brittle, most are still supple; the same can't be said for the nomadic 'local' tribesman who's always brittle now! Really; I should give-up on finding a good plastic one and settle for a hollow-cast example!

The copy of the Britains Herald ACW officer is probably Argentinian*, but could be Spanish and the Grant's Whiskey premium (Britains-supplied) is a new pose in a slowly growing collection of the die-cast 'New-Metal' / Deetail style figures - which sounds grander than it is, I have five or six maybe, and one (initial offer?) seems to be far more common than all the others?

*06th June 2020 - Now known to be Oklahoma and indeed; Argentine

Airfix; Argentine Toy Figurine; Britains Copies; Britains Guards; Cherilea Foreign Legion; Darth Vader; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Giant Roman Chariot; Grant's Whiskey; Novelty Sportsmen; Novelty Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Star Wars; Tennis Player; The Rocketeer; Triang Cowboy; Vintage Flats; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys; Vintage Wild West; Waddington's Custer;
A bit of Sci-Fi, I can't remember how I ended-up with a bunch of 4" action figures (less than two weeks ago and my mind's a blank! Must have been cheap, or in a bag of something else?), the two 'actual' action figures (battle droid and un-panelled C3PO) will go to charity, but the polished C3PO is a vinyl solid, so will stay.

The bag of Hasbro's Star Wars Command figures were a quid! Mostly duplicates but the two in front are new to collection (and therefore to Blog!), while the Tomy Egyptian Pharaoh mummy-zombie thing (King Sphinx from the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers) came from Abid's stall with a couple of other bits. I love the Darth Vader key ring, he's been plated in an anodised chromium type coating, which make him look like he's been grown as a crystal of pure bismuth!

Finally the Rocketeer figure (Applause) came from a stall which always has nice stuff, I try to get at least one figure from him each time, this show it was The Rocketeer, which - strangely - I had been wondering about the likelihood of toys-of, a few weeks earlier - and for no particular reason; I saw the DVD in passing somewhere or something?

Airfix; Argentine Toy Figurine; Britains Copies; Britains Guards; Cherilea Foreign Legion; Darth Vader; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Giant Roman Chariot; Grant's Whiskey; Novelty Sportsmen; Novelty Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Star Wars; Tennis Player; The Rocketeer; Triang Cowboy; Vintage Flats; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys; Vintage Wild West; Waddington's Custer;
These - as a single bag - were bought on the cusp of packing-up time, and are an interesting mix, the lower shot of micro-planes will be familiar to some of you, they are credited to various brands, and I have them with three different slot-types in the undersides, and two materials; hard polystyrene and softer polyethylene.

The upper ones are newish (to me - Adrian gave me a yellow one about a year ago) and may face a call for 'Airfix' at some point, they are of two variations, the top five are firm, near-mint polystyrene, the middle pair are a less stable phenolic or cellulose/celluloid-based polymer, starting to curve downwards with age at the wing-tips, which raised the nose of the twin-boom (Vampire, Goblin?), while digging it in on the more conventional 'plane.

Now, I know they're not Kleeware or Tudor Rose, as I have both, marked, while the parallels with Airfix's early animal-flats and the micro-planes I've 'called' for Airfix (some years ago), not to forget the 12 'first' figures are hard to ignore; the colours and the two tranches of material; so I suspect I'll call them at some point, but for now they are unknown [probably] early British!

Of note - the PS five are marked MADE IN ENGLAND, the older pair are totally unmarked - which I think was the same situation with the mico-ones?

Airfix; Argentine Toy Figurine; Britains Copies; Britains Guards; Cherilea Foreign Legion; Darth Vader; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Giant Roman Chariot; Grant's Whiskey; Novelty Sportsmen; Novelty Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Star Wars; Tennis Player; The Rocketeer; Triang Cowboy; Vintage Flats; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys; Vintage Wild West; Waddington's Custer;
This was another of the items I picked at Abid's stall in the annex (more of a small, temporary State, all they need is a flag!), post-GIANT, and in need of a good clean, here's a before-&-after! Nice subdued colours for this 25mm 'plastic small', which are usually far more leery!

Airfix; Argentine Toy Figurine; Britains Copies; Britains Guards; Cherilea Foreign Legion; Darth Vader; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Giant Roman Chariot; Grant's Whiskey; Novelty Sportsmen; Novelty Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Star Wars; Tennis Player; The Rocketeer; Triang Cowboy; Vintage Flats; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys; Vintage Wild West; Waddington's Custer;
A lovely novelty to finish-up with, probably a Christmas cracker-prize and I have a matching diver in yellow somewhere, but she lacks a base (so I though; cake decoration), meaning that this chap (from Adrian Little - cheers!) tells the next bit of the story!