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 Olá. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olá. Show all posts

Thursday, October 23, 2025

F is for Follow-up - Wavyline Magic Roundabout

So, re: the red set of Magic Roundabout premiums in the previous post (see below, or click on 'previous post/s'), the colours usually associated with the known UK issue, are as these;
 
To which you can add orange, we looked at them in more detail here;
 
 
in part as a follow-up to the previous post here;
 
 
And while some sources still call them 'cereal premiums', we know they were issued with biscuits here in the UK (above colours) and as Olá ice cream premiums in Europe, as a much wider range of colours, they were probably also issued as individual gum packet premiums in Europe, under more than one brand, and now; 
 
Wavyline Magic Roundabout
 
Promotion
No.00997
 
Wavyline premiums. This is at least the second set of these to appear on-line, there is one on there now (same given code, which might be the promotion-code, rather than a carton number), but I would never use live images, I know someone who would, but he has the ethics of an ally-cat, and the morals to match! Scally's, what can you do?
 
Do we start with the image, or start with the history? Wavyline was a small, independent supermarket chain, in the Co-Op model; smaller, local 'supermarket' or convenience stores, down here in my neck of the woods, indeed, I think the current Tesco in Hartley Wintney was a Wavyline once, after it was a butcher's? Then an International? But, I might have made all that up? I was a kid! And, we used the Keymarkets in Farnham, now a Sainsbury's superstore!
 
The image above, shows each pose/sculpt in a separate bag, and while I don't know the nature of the premium/prize issue, I'm guessing it was a bit like Green-Shield Stamps (other stamp collecting schemes were available!), except with instant gratification, i.e., spend a pound, get a figure, spend five - get six figures, something like that? The similar Codec stores in France, were running giveaways in their rural shops, using multi-issuer premiums; ex-Van Brode, ex-Bonux etc . . .
 
EFE Bedford TK as articulated tractor-trailer for Wavyline
HO-OO gauge/scale
 
So, if you did live in a village or suburb lucky enough to have a Wavyline, or a smaller market town, where everyone knew everyone else, and/or you knew the staff in the store, you could, upon qualifying for the dividend, ask for them to be red, so long as red ones were still in the bag, or you could ask for the figure/character of your choice? If your aunty/Mum/older sibling worked in the store, they might put aside the ones you were still needing?
 
Which would enable you to build a set of red ones! Or blue ones! So, the set I picked-up in DEBRA the other day were probably Wavyline, not Nabisco (who put one (random colour) in each pack), not that you would know, when you find them loose, they were all coming from the same factory, which still hasn't been identified, either side of the Channel. But the point is, we've lost more than we know, with a lot of this stuff, and it's only lucky feeBay hits, which fill the blanks we didn't even know were there!

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Something is for Something Else!

I couldn't think of a title! I rather lost the rhythm this week, alcohol was involved (75th; had to happen!), and while I managed to get these shot on Tuesday, I didn't text-up until yesterday and tidied-up this morning! There won't be much more 'till Mon/Tue; there's a show this weekend, firewood to fetch Sunday (before they ban it!), but - for now - here's some mini-mals!

We looked at these right back at the start of the Blog, in a roundup of the various food premium animals, but a few more lots have come in and I needed to do comparisons with the Airfix sets, so I had a bit of a photo-sesh'; the Olá ice-cream premium animals;

1:72nd Zoo Animals; 1:76th - 1:72nd Zoo; 1:76th Scale Zoo; 1:76th Wild Animals; Airfix 1:72nd Scale; Airfix Zoo 1; Airfix Zoo 2; Airfix Zoo Sets; HO - OO Animals; Ice Cream Premiums; Mini Animals; Olà Ice Cream Premiums; Olà Wild Animals; Olà Zoo Animals; OO-Gauge Wild Animals; OO-Gauge Zoo Animals; Portuguese Premiums; Premium Animals; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Zoo Animals Set 1; Zoo Animals Set 2; Zoo Set 1; Zoo Set 2;
The whole sample, unwashed was about eight 'colours' but it was clear that some were so dirty it was hard to tell what was what! Not a large sample, but they now fill one of the small-scale sample-bags (inset) which is not bad since they've grown quite slowly in three small lots and a few odds over forty-years!

1:72nd Zoo Animals; 1:76th - 1:72nd Zoo; 1:76th Scale Zoo; 1:76th Wild Animals; Airfix 1:72nd Scale; Airfix Zoo 1; Airfix Zoo 2; Airfix Zoo Sets; HO - OO Animals; Ice Cream Premiums; Mini Animals; Olà Ice Cream Premiums; Olà Wild Animals; Olà Zoo Animals; OO-Gauge Wild Animals; OO-Gauge Zoo Animals; Portuguese Premiums; Premium Animals; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Zoo Animals Set 1; Zoo Animals Set 2; Zoo Set 1; Zoo Set 2;
After cleaning and it's five colours; with a paler-grey rhino' and two distinct whites, one semi-translucent (and greyish in daylight), one solid, neither clear from the other in this shot, or any of the others I took trying to show the difference!

I have no idea how many are in the whole set, but with several singles in the sample, it's a fair bet there are more to find, and, if I've managed twenty-one so far, there's probably at least 30 all-in? Note the pairs of some animals;

1:72nd Zoo Animals; 1:76th - 1:72nd Zoo; 1:76th Scale Zoo; 1:76th Wild Animals; Airfix 1:72nd Scale; Airfix Zoo 1; Airfix Zoo 2; Airfix Zoo Sets; HO - OO Animals; Ice Cream Premiums; Mini Animals; Olà Ice Cream Premiums; Olà Wild Animals; Olà Zoo Animals; OO-Gauge Wild Animals; OO-Gauge Zoo Animals; Portuguese Premiums; Premium Animals; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Zoo Animals Set 1; Zoo Animals Set 2; Zoo Set 1; Zoo Set 2;
I can't claim any of this is scientific or anything, but I suspect the elephant on the left is trying to be Asian, and the one on the right is trying to be African; going mostly on the ears! Likewise the two reptiles would seem to be a deliberate attempt to cover two continents, but I've only gone on snout-length, and they could be the other way round?

The two big cats could equally be other things, the one on the left a Jaguar, the one on the right a cougar? The wildebeest and water-buffalo (previous shot - top left) are pretty obvious, but why two different hippo' sculpts? That is a mystery!

1:72nd Zoo Animals; 1:76th - 1:72nd Zoo; 1:76th Scale Zoo; 1:76th Wild Animals; Airfix 1:72nd Scale; Airfix Zoo 1; Airfix Zoo 2; Airfix Zoo Sets; HO - OO Animals; Ice Cream Premiums; Mini Animals; Olà Ice Cream Premiums; Olà Wild Animals; Olà Zoo Animals; OO-Gauge Wild Animals; OO-Gauge Zoo Animals; Portuguese Premiums; Premium Animals; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Zoo Animals Set 1; Zoo Animals Set 2; Zoo Set 1; Zoo Set 2;
The real reason I dug them out - Airfix comparisons reveal - if nothing else - a lack of scale consistency in the Olá figurines; the lion is vast while the giraffes are tiny, and while not in the Airfix shots; the pelican is some prehistoric man-eater of a bird!

I won't post links to those pages as this image is good-enough for now, but they're on the Airfix Blog if you fancy a 'plastic smalls' diversion!

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

F is for Fuchsia-Flushed Feline

As well as 'the year of the footballers', 2018 has also been the year of the carmine cougar, here on Small Scale World; equally accidentally, although with some design in the middle of the year when I looked for a few on feeBay! There weren't many in the storage lots, but three have turned-up in time to be posted before the year's end!

Cartoon Character; Corgi; Corgi Pink Panther; Film Character; Ice Cream Premiums; Key Chain; Key Ring; Key-Fob; Movie Promotional; Ola Premiums; Panther Pink from Head to Toe; Pink Panther; Polyethylene Toy Figurine; PVC Figurines; PVC Vinyl Animals; PVC Vinyl Rubber; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tito Premiums; TV Character; TV Related; TV Tie Ins; TV Toys;
The key-ring we've seen before, around 50mm and old-school PVC, the 'green panther' is an old European premium (Olà Ice Cream?) in polyethylene and showing all the signatures of Tito except the mark, while the bike must have been Corgi's entry for novelty vehicle of 1979!

Cartoon Character; Corgi; Corgi Pink Panther; Film Character; Ice Cream Premiums; Key Chain; Key Ring; Key-Fob; Movie Promotional; Ola Premiums; Panther Pink from Head to Toe; Pink Panther; Polyethylene Toy Figurine; PVC Figurines; PVC Vinyl Animals; PVC Vinyl Rubber; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tito Premiums; TV Character; TV Related; TV Tie Ins; TV Toys;
A rocket-firing, low-raked, street-fighter! What the fuck's that all about, the Pink Panther may have covered his little nemesis in paint occasionally, even helped him down a few holes in the road or pavement, but last time I looked he wasn't a cold-blooded killer?

The cowling is a styrene polymer and can be damaged if it comes into contact with the PVC cat, while the die-cast body has polyethylene wheels and I think this probably went in a little sub-set with the Muttley thing?

Friday, September 7, 2018

F is for Follow-up - Magic Roundabout

Although a follow-up, it's a little longer than most, as it pulls everything together in one place with some archive stuff. As we saw last time (no point in a back-link as we're going to look at it all again) there were three sets of Magic Roundabout premiums, getting at least four issues between them.

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
We are actually starting with the second, as it was the first to hit the UK and I've already re-numbered all the images once, so I'm not going to do it again!

Kellogg's brought these out in 1969, almost certainly manufactured for them by Crescent who had a contract with them for such things, while the plastic colours/bases match the Sooty, Noddy, Spacemen and Thunderbirds figures of the same era.

  • Dougal Dog
  • Zeberdee
  • Brian the Snail
  • Dylan the Rabbit
  • Mr MacHenry
  • Florence

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
From Cluck I comes this poor scan (copy of a copy of a copy . . . ) of an advert from TV Comic for the set in 'Twicicles as Nicicles' Ricicles! Dated to the 5th of April 1969 it lists the six to collect. These are the 2nd largest of the three sets and would be the equivalent of 50mm-odd; were we not talking about fictional anthropomorphs!

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
Base marking refers to the French licensor; © SERGE DANOT 1968 rather than Kellogg's or the BBC who were carrying the series over here.

Funny story I happen to have in my head about The Magic Roundabout;

The BBC Children's TV department ('Watch with Mother' in those days) bought the footage from the French either without sound, or without translations (or both?), so had to make-up the narrated storyline from what was happening on the screen, as a result some of them are completely different 'mini-adventures' to their French originals, and even when it was pretty obvious (the sugar-cube trail/hunt) they are still far removed as far as dialogue and unfolding action sequence is concerned from their Gallic counterparts!

And - if it's not true - it's a nice story!

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
The rival food combine and breakfast cereal producer Nabisco issued these in the autumn of 1970, I have a note somewhere that they were in their cereal Shreddies, but both Cluck and Brian Berke's contribution (below) say Magic Roundabout Biscuits, so the Shreddies link will have been an earlier assumption on the part of collectors in the late 1980's-1990's I guess?

16 items to collect gave 15 'assemblies' as one of the items was Mr. McHenry's tricycle. I have to confess, despite being a fan of the Magic Roundabout at the time (I was six, alright!) I don't remember the birds, either separately or on the barrel-organ? I do vaguely remember Penelope the spider in a few episodes though.

  • Dougal Dog
  • Zeberdee
  • Brian the Snail
  • Dylan the Rabbit
  • Ermintrude
  • Penelope (spider knitting)
  • Mr MacHenry (long beard) and his 'Motor Trike' (tricycle bike)
  • Mr Rusty (long toothbrush-moustache) and his Barrel Organ
  • Tweet (bird looking one way!) and Tweet-tweet (bird looking the other way!)
  • Florence (ribbon on her head)
  • Peter (boy pointing)*
  • Rosalie (girl with pony-tails)*
  • Paul (smaller boy)*

* As far as I can remember, these characters were mostly seen in the comics and annuals which accompanied the success of the TV series.

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
These had actually already been issued in Portugal back in 1968 by Gelados Olá ("Hello" Ice Cream); believed to be a Wall's subsidiary or partner brand. I think they were also issued as bubble-gum premiums at the time through various brands.

Cluck I reports that the figures were made by Airfix, I don't know where that comes from, the plastic colours would suggest someone like Crescent or Hillco (who had turned down the Kellogg's gig?) and while any one of a number of plastic fabricators could have run them, I believe the moulds were continental (as evidenced by their earlier-use over there), while others mention R&L in Australia.

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
Brian Berke kept his packet tops! 48 biscuits AND a toy! There are 8 of the commoner characters illustrated on the box and no clue as to how many you need to collect.

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
The Olá/bubble-gum issues came in a myriad of plastic colours while the UK got the four colours in the 'one-of-each' shot (three images above) only . . . and ours were a shinier plastic against the continentals more understated, chalky - or at least matt - finish.

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
Piracies exist of them, similar to the Tito-marked, Comansi-carried, Lucky Luke bubble-gum premiums we've seen here before. I guess they must have been gum-ball capsule things from Hong Kong, or possibly Christmas cracker prizes over here?

And like those Lucky Luke figures the originals have the distinctive holes (usually assumed to be mould release-pin marks, but a little too deep and deliberate, in my mind) in their feet, also shared with the two series of Asterix premiums of similar size and issued by the same ice cream and bubble-gum sources, along with wild animals and Disney, ergo, Tito are more likely to be the parent; not Airfix?

However, trying too-hard to work it all out leads you up a garden path littered with Americana, Malabar, Mundi, Tylers et al! There's a very good bubble-gum wrapper site somewhere which shows how incredibly convoluted the market was and still is with people like Bazooka, Topps, Wriggly's and ABC issuing licenses all over the world and sometimes to multiple factors in the same country.

So, it will never be worked out where they all came from, certainly not 'first'; another name in the frame (after Tito) is Heimo, who produced other sizes of the Disney even as Comansi were carrying rubber versions of the Tito's?

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
Two Mr MacHenry's meet! He has a larger hole in his feet which locates with the stud on the tricycle, firmly holding them both together as one. The set would be the equivalent of 35/40mm in a weird, but otherwise 'real' universe!

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
Ricicles had another stab (deliberately against the Nabisco issue?) in 1970, but instead of re-issuing their previous set (as they had done with Sooty and Noddy) they turned to Tatra for a new set of sculpts carrying eight characters instead of six, these were overall slightly larger at an equivalence of around 54mm.

  • Dougal Dog
  • Zeberdee
  • Brian the Snail
  • Dylan the Rabbit
  • Ermintrude
  • Mr MacHenry (long beard)
  • Mr Rusty (bushy moustache)
  • Florence

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
Tatra's own image which they kindly let me have before being swallowed by a competitor, ironic really; as they had swallowed a couple of dozen firms themselves over the decades, but there's always a bigger fish in the pond!

16 Bonecos Diferentes; 1968; Barrel Organ; Brain the Snail; Carrocel Mágico Olá; Dougal Dog; Dylan the Rabbit; Ermintrude; Florence; Gelados Olá; Grátis Carrocel Mágico Olá; Kellogg's Premiums; Kellogg's Ricicles; Magic Roundabout Biscuits; Motor Trike; Motor-tricycle; Mr MacHenry; Mr Rusty; Nabisco Foods; Nabisco Premiums; Olá Ice Cream; Ola Premiums; Paul; Penelope; Peter; Ricicles Premiums; Rosalie; Serge Danot; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tatra Plastics; The Magic Roundabout; Tito Premiums; Tweet and Tweet-tweet; Zebedee;
Above; a scale comparison between the three sets.

Below; We gott'a Rock Band with Spidey on the sticks! She (along with the barrel-organ) is harder to find undamaged.

So, that's them, there were other Magic Roundabout toys, the much sought-after Corgi sets, larger flocked-toys imported by HCF, wet-on temporary tattoos, rub-down transfers, key rings and such like, and you could send away with packet-tops from the Nabisco set for trees or a little train (also available commercially) which now goes for a mint on feebleBay occasionally.

From Cluck;

"Send-away 2/9d (14p) and 3 packet tops for a complete set of 16 Magic Roundabout toy figures. Also send-away 9/2d (49½p) and 3 Magic Roundabout biscuit packet tops for Mr Rusty‘s Magic Train - a toy steam engine with cattle-cart, passenger carriage and cart, also 4 Magic Roundabout Garden trees."

The difference between the Nabisco mail-away trees and the Corgi play-set ones is in the bases; Nabisco's were round, Corgi's diamond-shaped.

While the Nabisco/Olá organ and Penelope commonly suffer damage, both Dylan and Brian also can lose ears/antenna respectively, something the first set gets around in Brian's case by not modelling them, the tricycle sometime loses its headlight-lantern.

The TV series was remade a few years ago for a newer audience, and some new episodes were added, which to be fair - as someone who hates re-hashes and the changes to resurrected franchises - I didn't realise I was watching until I saw a computer in it and thought "Hold on! They hadn't invented PC's in the 1960's", I then realised the narrator/voices weren't quite the same; it was an all-new episode!

Links
Gum Companies (now only on the WayBackMachine - takes a while to load)

I think the metal set in that third link will be from Goodsoldiers, I did email the webmaster a while back but I think he's no longer active on the site?

Thanks to Brian Berke for the Nabisco pack-tops and The Philosophical Toad for the Cluck I

Friday, September 9, 2011

D is for Dunkin, Disney and Deutschland!

Reader/follower 'Gerhard' of Germany sent me some interesting shots the other day and although he's missed my return email and plea below somewhere, I've cobbled together a couple of posts round what he sent.

This is entirely collage'd from Gerhard's images, and is very interesting as it shows the Tito logo on an Americana gum envelope. It also states MADE IN SPAIN when the Americana company is centred near Aachen south of the Ardens (although Munich is stated on these packs), so I guess they were all part of a bigger multinational that also involved Dunkin, Tylers/Mundi and Jopar...all part of the Sanchez group????! - In the end it does your head in!

Anyway - nice shots of the envelope and a full set of the Disney figures, as Gerhard stated in his eMail; these were originally Marx Disneykins, manufactured in Hong kong in hard styrene. At some point the Marx arm in Europe; Heimo got sets of moulds for a fair few of the TV, Movie and cartoon character sets in various sizes and produced them in unpainted softer ethylene's, even shipping some back to the states.

Somehow they - the 'kin' moulds - seem to have gone to Tito (and/or Olá?) where they were supplied to all sorts of bubble-gum, ice-cream and other food companies as premiums from the mid-to-late 1960's until the early 1980's, after which some (Tin Tin) ended up in Mexico, others got as far as Taiwan (Asterix) where some of the original Marx Miniature Masterpieces had been made!

I meant to knock-up the notes for this post at home and forgot so I can't remember the name of the show from which the characters in the two lower left shots come from! It was an European TV cartoon though! Some kind person chuck the name in 'comments' if you know it, I won't be back here till next Wednesday! Added 24th Feb 2013 - Jan Koolen has let me know they are from the European TV cartoon Nils Holgersson, thanks Jan.

The other shots are either colour variations from Portugal (Olá) or Spain (Tito) or other characters from the old TV Tinykins range, taken from the oeuvres of Warner Brothers or Hanna Barberra.

Although distorted by my collageing them together these are pretty much all between 25/40mm. Again - because I didn't pre-load the article, I'm sitting here doing it off the top of my head in the Library and will NOT attempt to name half these critters!

Marx originals; Top is a Swansea large scale ethylene Panchito and two colour variants of the Disneykin.
Below him we have various Peter-pan characters, again all Disneykins. The last shot shows Hong Kong and Heimo treatments of Captain Hook in both Styrene (small) and PVC vinyl (Large) respectively.

Larger Vinyls at top, these are mostly unlicensed HK copies of Schlich, Bully (Heimo's modern trademark) or Papo, Daisy Duck is Heimo to the left and Marx to the right, Gerhard mentions getting the Schlich ones every time he went to the Dentist, any other German readers remember freebies. Also it wasn't clear if he was talking about the larger vinyls or the smaller ethylenes?

Below are some more old Marx figures to the right and a Heimo character who's name I've forgotten, but she was a US TV cartoon from the 50's (Little Orphan Annie, Dagwood? - something like that!)

Pecos Bill - one of the most pirated figures in the history of toy figures; Top row are all Marx/Heimo (Swansea ethylene is the unpainted yellow one on the left), bottom row are all Christmas Cracker/Lucky bag giveaways, with various stages of remoulding or decrepitude from 4 different sources!

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Z is for Zoo Animal Premiums

This post is entirely the fault of the 'Philosophic Toad' who in her question on the Bonux post, got me started on a day's research which has resulted in my not doing a clients garden, not picking up some cash and not going to the shops! As a result I've run out of coffee and tobacco, can you imagine trying to sort out 11 lots of half-understood animals without nicotine or caffeine? Toad - you owe me, however, for you delectation, and the interest of any other interested passers-by, here is my take on some (not all!) of the non-domestic animal gifts, giveaways and premiums issued over the years. [Toad made-up by sending me two images of the original ad's, and a follow-up post has now been done, when I've more time I'll re-do them both into one, but in the meantime, if you open them both in two tabs, you can flick between the two for a slightly fuller - if more confusing! - picture. new post is here; Update ]

I'll do acknowledgments first this time;

Kent Sprecher's Toy Soldier HQ provides an image of the Lido mouldings here;
Wild Animals

Jean-Claude Pifret's 'Figurines Publicitaires' gives a list and photographs of the Bonux/Mir/Omo ranges.

Wayne Ratcliffe's Cluck Vol.2 gives lists and dates for two sets, and I have a photocopy of the original advert for one set which seems to have come from Vol.1.

Lots of Spanish and Portuguese language websites/pages were found but my lack of both languages meant they were of limited use, however they did contribute to the overall picture, so thanks to the many, everything else is my own guesstimation!

The first picture shows the Kellogs animals as laid out in the Cluck Vol.1 picture, with three other animals, two of which are seen in the Lido set, linked to above; Buffalo and Moose, the Wild Boar is in the same vein, but could well be a Dom/Manurba moulding, or similar (Jean/Big, French premium?). The Lido link means these were almost certainly provided by Tudor*Rose.

Issued by Kellogg's in their Puffa-Puffa Rice and Coco Krispies breakfast cereals, announced as 'Zoo Animals' in kids comic in May 1971 (Hotspur, 22nd May to be specific). A set of ten (still no Wild Boar?) were issued in Canada (and the USA?) in Sugar Pops, also by Kellogg's as 'Big Game Hunters Favorite Wild Animals' (and everything in the picture has been hunted and shot by humans in the last 200 years...), these would most likely have been Lido Originals.

We then hit this set, very similar, but much finer sculpting, and a larger range. Now the first thing you'll notice is - during the photo-session I labeled-up the group to represent the missing figures in the list of animals issued by Kellogg's at some other period (still unknown to me) in the 70's, however, as I was doing the photo's it struck me they may have been Cadbury's not Kellogg's. Ratcliffe's notes in Cluck Vol.2 on the first (8 animal) set gets to mentioning a pose variant of the Buffalo and Nabisco "shaped biscuits", and I think he was confusing the two sets as the same set.

I was already thinking of the Cadbury's Animal shaped chocolate biscuits and Google has not helped! However, I have one 1980's plastic flat of a blue Elephant with a big square base marked Cadbury, so they may well have had a similar promotion in the 1970's?

Because I photographed them as if they were the Kellogg's set below, I left out the two bottom left, if they were issued with biscuits, then they will be part of the set, as will the two Tigers, as I was looking for one! The Moose behind the Tigers is in a hard nylon plastic and points to another source of these animals somewhere? Again apart from the red Moose, these are Tudor*Rose in style and colour, why they needed to re-design 10 of them is anyone's guess, but clearly newer production methods led to finer castings.

I can't just publish a photo of the image in FP without the permission of the author/publishers, and don't have time to seek it, so will describe as best I can. There are two sets of animals, both sets are in both gold and Silver/Gunmetal with a painted Giraffe and variants of 3 of the larger set giving 30 to look for, with others bound to be still undiscovered/yet to be ascribed.

In the larger set The Bear is the same as that in the second set above, with the Moose and Zebra similar and the Camel and Giraffe bearing a good resemblance. In the smaller set the Hippo and Rhino are the close matches. The similarity's weighted against number of unrelated castings would suggest piracy in a different vein to the above sets, where the 8 are clearly the same.

Bonux are nominally linked with the larger ones only. Mir seem to have the larger set too, with a Hippo from the smaller set (to my eye it should be with the larger animals) leaving Omo with most of the small animals and the largest of the three Hippo's plus the painted Giraffe.

Animals similar to all the above sets were also made by Marx and Renwal/Plasticraft, again; good pics on Toy Soldier HQ.

The second Kellogg's set; 'Zoo Animal' is actually the set in green, red and brown bottom right with the missing Gorilla and snake, they are similar to the set in the larger picture which are the bubble-gum animals from Mundi Toys/Tylers and Dunkin, both selling to the Iberian Peninsular.

The Kellogg's set is not identical, with loss of detail on some, while others are noticeably larger. Note that apart from the Snake, all the Kellogg's are duplicates of the larger series from Spain, and as the Spanish set was issued in 1967, it's fair to assume the Kellogg's set was the copy rather than vis-a-versa.

I think the long-horned red thing belongs were I've put the missing animal card '2nd/3rd Deer' but it's hard to tell from the packet. The Tylers/Dunkin soldiers I covered a while ago came on sprues of 8 figures before being broken down into packs, so with Ratcliffe reporting the Kellogg's coming on sprues, in fours, that makes sense as you could cut an 8 figure sprue of animals into two 4 figure 'spruelets' and ensure 4 different animals in a box with a 25% chance of new animals each time you ate your way to another purchase!

The other side of the pack from Mundi Toys, I think it translates as Animals of the Savanna (or Velt?), along with similar products from Tito (cartoonish) and Olá (the name for Wall's Ice cream in Portugal and southern France), I can't find the source for my having ascribed them to Olá, so it should be taken with a pinch of salt...The Tito are marked with their little wobbly-diamond. Finally a comparison between the Kellogg's and Spanish Hippo's.

leaving us with a further size comparison, main picture, bottom, from the top left reading L-R; Kellogg's, Cadbury?/Nabisco?, Kellogg's, Mundi/Dunkin, Olá?, Unknown.

To go with the unknown Elephant is a Giraffe (smaller inset photo.), above them is a small sample of tiny soft PVC/vinyl rubber animals [Schlicht 'Minis' with the little black-dot eyes worn off!] and a group of Christmas Cracker gifts of recent origin to the left, both with Spanish bubble-gum Elephants for scale.

My sofa during this afternoons constructive activity! That box on the right is 'Animals, Unknown, Wild' and contains about 150 envelopes like the ten on the board! So it's gona'be a long life if the man upstairs wants me to finish this task!!!

Further study;
Wikipedia; Animal Biscuits

Still No Ducks

Monday, December 29, 2008

O is for Olá

Olá is an Ice Cream brand in Europe, who were (are?) part of or a subsidiary of Walls in the UK. Along with Tito, Kellogg's and others they issued a variety of premiums in the late 60's/early 70's including Rosenheim & Lippmann stuff and other products. Some of their give-aways were however unique to themselves.

Among which are these animals, not quite in scale with each other but all roughly 20mm. This is almost certainly not all the poses and they are all marked 'OLA' somewhere on their body.

These are among the hardest to find of all the small scale premiums (although eBay France and a cheque-book would probably offer up a reasonable sample in a week or two!), they are the small range of Tin-Tin figurines from the early 1970's, these are about as small and realistic as premiums come, being 30mm tall and very naturalistic.