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 Peter Pan Playthings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Pan Playthings. Show all posts

Sunday, November 9, 2025

M is for More from London, Second of Three Plunder Posts

Continuing with the look at Peter's late summer car-booty, and we're looking at sports figures and civilians in this post, with several useful examples of this and that, the odd oddity and some old friends!
 
Two Chad Valley and a Peter Pan Playthings footballer's, similar to the Palitoy push-heads, but having different mechanisms, I don't know if the Chad Valley's have been home painted or badly painted, while the Peter Pan can still be found in larger stores, or some of the mail-order novelty catalogues.
 
Note there are subtle differences between the fixing arrangement, of the Chad Valley players, to their bases, the significance of which I don't know (slightly different ball-kick characteristics?), while the Peter Pan player has a push button attached to a lever system like Palitoy's heads, Chad Valley's have a flicker on their upper shin, and (I think) a hidden spring. Similar figures were issued by Subbuteo as strikers or goalkeeper accessories.
 
Another bunch of the current cake decoration set, so far linked to three or more brandings, and several three or seven-a-side team strips, they will be added to and compared with the growing sample.
 
A humungous ice-hockey player, with a massive, chunky base, whom I assume is from some kind of table-game, akin to Table Football? I think he's polyethylene, but he could be a softer 'styrene, or some kind of 'propylene? Discolouration is probably from direct sunlight, and can probably be cured with an ultrasonic cleaner and some bleach solution?
 
The Gem golfer seems to be a Hong Kong copy, but it is in a soft polyethylene, rather than the usual (for Cullpit-Wilton commissions) hard polystyrene, and very-much in the ABC paint-style. Two of the HK mini-clones of the Olympic figurines and a key-ring, fat-footballer kid, conversion - loop removed and base glued on.
 
A lovely, current/new white-button Disney Princess knock-off from Rex London, another Disney-like in the Bully-Phidal-Safari style; I can't remember if she was marked, but one day we'll have to have a look at all of them on one page/in one post as there are so many! The cake-decoration dancer is missing her base, but can probably be wedged into one of the Charbens-Crescent-Marty circus horses, as some versions of the same sculpt are, by Marty!
 
And the bride, also a cake decoration is a better example of quite a few in the stash, who has her lace head-covering, 'posey' and silk ribbon intact. They come in a range of sizes and base marks, in various pastel colours and with different add-ons, and I do have a few complete variations now, so should blog them properly one day.
 
The key-ring looks like another variation of the Commonwealth sculpt, but I think it's more a case of the  dancers all being dressed in a grass skirt (the pāʻū) and draped in the floral-garland necklaces (lei lāʻī) associated with Hula, which is also about hip-movement as much as the hand gesture/language, so I think it's more a case of similar look, rather than crediting everything to Commonwealth!
 
Hong Kong (Wilton?) copy of the Hawaiian ukulele player, who is 'styrene, a Marx linesman, not clear, as he's on is back rather than up his ladder, but a set we'll look at properly another day, and two MPC civilians, in yellow (reissues?), the red one is new to me and the other two are different scales of a vast range of figures, seemingly from the same source, who were available to and issued by Tesco-Welly-Woolworth's/Chad Valley and others in the mid-1990's/early 2000's.
 
From the left, Cofalu, unknown 'China', Matchbox and Corgi, the long arm of the 'Leuwah' as Inspector Clouseau would have put it! And PVC-rubber, polyethylene, polypropylene and polystyrene respectively.
 
Thomas on the left here, I think, PVC, with an unknown and new-to-me, but interesting rider/driver next to him. A civilianised version of the common seated figure we saw in black, in part one of these posts. A Benbros-Kemlows type motorcyclist is next, with a pair of what I'm sure are novelty firemen, from a larger beach/garden toy.
 
One of the cross-over's with the forthcoming Chris Smith plunder posts is this nice hard plastic, possibly phenolic or urea-formaldehyde type, possibly an early 'styrene? And basically, a novelty, floating, bath-toy, there were also swans.
 
A collection of horses, with the larger one Britains for Tri-Ang if it's the one I think it is, two of them in contrasting colours came with a large tin-plate horse-box. Papo girl on pony, with another Papo to her right, a damaged Vitacup and two coach/wagon horses complete the group.

Sunday, April 10, 2022

I is for International Micro-Rescue

As a follow-up to two of the last three posts (Thunderbirds and micro space ships), while I was getting the Jumbo game, I picked this up as a box-ticker for something silly between 99p and a fiver, it's common, modern'ish (1992, Peter Pan Playthings) and fun!

1992 ITC Entertainment Group Ltd.; Board Game; Boardgame Pieces; International Rescue; International Rescue Game; IR; Licensed Copyright Promotions Ltd.; Peter Pan Playthings 1992; Playing Pieces; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thunderbird 1; Thunderbird 2; Thunderbird 3; Thunderbird 4; Thunderbird Game; Thunderbirds; Thunderbirds Are Go; Thunderbirds Game;
Box and tray; it's all happening on the lid and look at all those mini Thunderbirds!

1992 ITC Entertainment Group Ltd.; Board Game; Boardgame Pieces; International Rescue; International Rescue Game; IR; Licensed Copyright Promotions Ltd.; Peter Pan Playthings 1992; Playing Pieces; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thunderbird 1; Thunderbird 2; Thunderbird 3; Thunderbird 4; Thunderbird Game; Thunderbirds; Thunderbirds Are Go; Thunderbirds Game;
The mechanism - which I didn't read - is collection tokens (pegs) while travelling 'home you go' style round a board and dealing with stuff as you go . . . I think! Each 'ship' has two holes for it's pegs, and there's no constant scale between them, with 'T4' as oversized as it often is!

The card Tracy Island helps divide the four launch-pads! While more pegs lead to the Hood.

1992 ITC Entertainment Group Ltd.; Board Game; Boardgame Pieces; International Rescue; International Rescue Game; IR; Licensed Copyright Promotions Ltd.; Peter Pan Playthings 1992; Playing Pieces; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thunderbird 1; Thunderbird 2; Thunderbird 3; Thunderbird 4; Thunderbird Game; Thunderbirds; Thunderbirds Are Go; Thunderbirds Game;
Board, with close-up of the launch-pads.

1992 ITC Entertainment Group Ltd.; Board Game; Boardgame Pieces; International Rescue; International Rescue Game; IR; Licensed Copyright Promotions Ltd.; Peter Pan Playthings 1992; Playing Pieces; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thunderbird 1; Thunderbird 2; Thunderbird 3; Thunderbird 4; Thunderbird Game; Thunderbirds; Thunderbirds Are Go; Thunderbirds Game;
There's a shed-load (small shed!) of exciting artwork littered about to keep the board interesting and the bored interested!

That's it, box-ticked!

Sunday, April 4, 2021

B is for Bobbing Bunny!

We've seen bobbing tanks here several times in two designs, but this came-in with a mixed lot of mostly British/Canadian 'dime-store' type plastics, and I'd forgotten all about it until someone came round the other day and we were going through them, indeed, if it hadn't been for that visit and Brian's kindness a few days ago there would have been no seasonal stuff here today at all!

Bobbing Bunny; Cheerio; Comansi Novalinea; Dime Store Cars; Dime Store Toys; Dime Store Vehicles; Dimestore AFV; Dimestore Trucks; Easter Hare; Osten Haase; Peter Pan Playthings; Poplar Plastics; Poplar Products; PP; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thomas Toys; Thunderbirds; Tudor Rose;
In fact I got two mixed-lots recently, this is both lots together, some (from Mercator Trading) have been seen here in the past, others haven't, and a similar-sized lot came from a charity-lot on feebleBay, among which was the target of this post.

I know I've spelt probably incorrectly - Doh! And the wreaker-truck turned-out to have faint PP's on the wheel-hubs so is another Poplar, but the motorcycle-rider is PVC so probably a Thomas left-over. while the Cheerio's are half-and half 'Canada' (yellow wheels) and 'England' (black/white wheels).

Bobbing Bunny; Cheerio; Comansi Novalinea; Dime Store Cars; Dime Store Toys; Dime Store Vehicles; Dimestore AFV; Dimestore Trucks; Easter Hare; Osten Haase; Peter Pan Playthings; Poplar Plastics; Poplar Products; PP; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thomas Toys; Thunderbirds; Tudor Rose;
It's a Bobbing Bunny! He appears to be driving the bastard-child of a White's scout-car and an Indian Pattern Chevrolet as supplied to the Long Range Dessert Group (LRDG)! And that's all I can say about it really, it is what it is, and you can see that for yourselves!

Bobbing Bunny; Cheerio; Comansi Novalinea; Dime Store Cars; Dime Store Toys; Dime Store Vehicles; Dimestore AFV; Dimestore Trucks; Easter Hare; Osten Haase; Peter Pan Playthings; Poplar Plastics; Poplar Products; PP; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Thomas Toys; Thunderbirds; Tudor Rose;
I'm not saying my diet's that healthy at the moment but I made the little bugger work for his sugar-coated,Mr Cadbury's Parrot, chocolate mini-eggs! Up and down the carpet, up and down the bedspread, up and down the table, up-and-down the mantelpiece, he's quite versatile and delivers all sorts of treats!

Only marking is a Made in England and tool/cavity mark '2' and he probably came with either Jelly-Tots (or similar?) or a great, big, tooth-loosening gobstopper?

Saturday, August 10, 2019

X is for Xenomorphs

Seen briefly the other day, this was one of those couple-of-quid charity-shop purchases which have become an almost weekly topping-up of the collection's figure total, but - while I normally keep the figures and a couple of accessories maybe - this is staying as it is, being a rather neat little game I knew nothing about (and there's a long list of games with figures, still to find!), which can join the stack!

1993; 1:72nd Scale Figures; 20th Century Fox; 849765; Alien Novelties; Aliens; Aliens Board Game; Apone; Board Game; Boardgame Pieces; Combat Game; Drake; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; Hicks; HO - OO Figures; Mother Alien; Narcissus; No 940762; Operation Aliens; Peter Pan; Peter Pan Playthings; Queen Alien; Ridley Scott's Alien; Ripley; Sigourney Weaver; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Swindon; Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation;
Peter Pan Playthings 1993's Operation Aliens board game, licensed to - or loosely based on - the second movie in the franchise, but no Newt (thankfully - pesky kids!) and a nice bunch of 1:72nd scale figures!

Or at least that's what I thought until I studied the dates? It must be off the back of the 3rd (space prison?), 4th or 5th (?) movies? I gave up watching them, it all became a little silly and Sigourney Weaver was one of the biggest names in Hollywood until she tore the arse out of the franchise she bought . . . to tare the arse out of it! In one of the ones I didn't bother-with she even did an 'Arnie' with a vat of molten stuff, but them so did that Skywalker's dad, Frodo nearly did, but at least he 'nearly' did it first!

1993; 1:72nd Scale Figures; 20th Century Fox; 849765; Alien Novelties; Aliens; Aliens Board Game; Apone; Board Game; Boardgame Pieces; Combat Game; Drake; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; Hicks; HO - OO Figures; Mother Alien; Narcissus; No 940762; Operation Aliens; Peter Pan; Peter Pan Playthings; Queen Alien; Ridley Scott's Alien; Ripley; Sigourney Weaver; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Swindon; Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation;
There is a dice (or die) but the mechanism is mostly 'order' card-driven as far as I can tell, and the 'winner' table suggests the survival or escape of the space marines is a rare'ish event! This was also photographed on one of those odd days (we had one last year a swell) where the atmospheric light seems to fight with the camera's flash to produce an insipid pinkish 'glow' which doesn't make for brilliant imagery, but I suspect we'll find excuses to return to these in the future!

1993; 1:72nd Scale Figures; 20th Century Fox; 849765; Alien Novelties; Aliens; Aliens Board Game; Apone; Board Game; Boardgame Pieces; Combat Game; Drake; Game Counters; Game Playing Pieces; Hicks; HO - OO Figures; Mother Alien; Narcissus; No 940762; Operation Aliens; Peter Pan; Peter Pan Playthings; Queen Alien; Ridley Scott's Alien; Ripley; Sigourney Weaver; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Swindon; Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation;
Close-ups, equally washed-out by the lighting conditions, but good-enough for now. You get a queen alien, four offspring and four character players; Ripley, Apone, Drake and Hicks but I can't remember which is which - I think Ripley is the yellow one? The 'baby' aliens have three heads, the mother alien has about sex or eight arms!

I've put a comparison shot on the Airfix Astronaut page (which is a better image!) and you can see they are slightly taller, only a millimeter or two, so a reasonable 1:72nd scale or a tad too small for use as 28mm role-play gaming additions.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

D is for Dancing Dancers Dance a Dance!

I have Adrian little to thank for the first two lots here, he; having found the Fontanini set and knowing I'd be keen, put it to one side for me; also chucked the other in the small-scale scruff lot he had for me, in fact it's probably the more interesting of the two, Fontanini may have the following, but they are mass-produced and a lot of the mould-tools went for not just years but decades, while the other is less likely to survive in any numbers.

54mm Figures; 60mm Figures; Ballet Dancers; Cake Decoration Figures; Cake Decorations; Dancer; Dancers; Dressing-table; Fontanini Ballet Dancers; Fontanini Dancers; Fontanini Statuette; Jewellery Box; Made In Italy; Magnet Toy Figures; Magnet Toys; Magnetic Miniature; Magnetic Novelty; Magnetic Toy; Make-up Storage; Manicure Set; Music Box; Musical Novelty; Novelties; Novelty Figurine; Pedicure Set; Peter Pan Playthings; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vanity Set;
Depose, 'Italy' and the spider/tick/beetle/crab-thingy mark these out as Fontanini, even if you miss the 'antiquing wash' clue! All six poses in what I think is the smallest size they came in, around 54/60mm compatible given the deep baroque 'regency wig' (my moniker for them!) bases they come on, I'm not aware of a painted 45mm vinyl-rubber set?

54mm Figures; 60mm Figures; Ballet Dancers; Cake Decoration Figures; Cake Decorations; Dancer; Dancers; Dressing-table; Fontanini Ballet Dancers; Fontanini Dancers; Fontanini Statuette; Jewellery Box; Made In Italy; Magnet Toy Figures; Magnet Toys; Magnetic Miniature; Magnetic Novelty; Magnetic Toy; Make-up Storage; Manicure Set; Music Box; Musical Novelty; Novelties; Novelty Figurine; Pedicure Set; Peter Pan Playthings; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vanity Set;
Having forgotten I'd shot the first two images above (for an 'H is for How They . . . ' post), I tried shooting them again a few days later, suffering from light problems and collaging the best of a couple-of-dozen poor shots, these are they!

54mm Figures; 60mm Figures; Ballet Dancers; Cake Decoration Figures; Cake Decorations; Dancer; Dancers; Dressing-table; Fontanini Ballet Dancers; Fontanini Dancers; Fontanini Statuette; Jewellery Box; Made In Italy; Magnet Toy Figures; Magnet Toys; Magnetic Miniature; Magnetic Novelty; Magnetic Toy; Make-up Storage; Manicure Set; Music Box; Musical Novelty; Novelties; Novelty Figurine; Pedicure Set; Peter Pan Playthings; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vanity Set;
This is the more interesting of the two additions, marked to Peter Pan Playthings (who made a mix of 'general' toys and the odd board-game and are one of several PPP's in the archive!), and carrying a magnet in her heavy, drum-base, she's likely to be form either a novelty pair who dance-round each other's polarity, or a wand-controlled magnet game, like Merit's Driving Instructor game?

54mm Figures; 60mm Figures; Ballet Dancers; Cake Decoration Figures; Cake Decorations; Dancer; Dancers; Dressing-table; Fontanini Ballet Dancers; Fontanini Dancers; Fontanini Statuette; Jewellery Box; Made In Italy; Magnet Toy Figures; Magnet Toys; Magnetic Miniature; Magnetic Novelty; Magnetic Toy; Make-up Storage; Manicure Set; Music Box; Musical Novelty; Novelties; Novelty Figurine; Pedicure Set; Peter Pan Playthings; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vanity Set;
She's 40mm in total, 30-mil' without the base and a hard polystyrene against the soft polyethylene of the Fonatnini's.

54mm Figures; 60mm Figures; Ballet Dancers; Cake Decoration Figures; Cake Decorations; Dancer; Dancers; Dressing-table; Fontanini Ballet Dancers; Fontanini Dancers; Fontanini Statuette; Jewellery Box; Made In Italy; Magnet Toy Figures; Magnet Toys; Magnetic Miniature; Magnetic Novelty; Magnetic Toy; Make-up Storage; Manicure Set; Music Box; Musical Novelty; Novelties; Novelty Figurine; Pedicure Set; Peter Pan Playthings; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vanity Set;
I was kindly allowed by the staff to shoot this in British Heart Foundation's Farnborough store back in July, after pleading poverty! It was in the 'smart items' cabinet so I wasn't able to handle it, but I think it consists of a head/torso assembly and two legs sewed into the pink dress.

54mm Figures; 60mm Figures; Ballet Dancers; Cake Decoration Figures; Cake Decorations; Dancer; Dancers; Dressing-table; Fontanini Ballet Dancers; Fontanini Dancers; Fontanini Statuette; Jewellery Box; Made In Italy; Magnet Toy Figures; Magnet Toys; Magnetic Miniature; Magnetic Novelty; Magnetic Toy; Make-up Storage; Manicure Set; Music Box; Musical Novelty; Novelties; Novelty Figurine; Pedicure Set; Peter Pan Playthings; PPP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vanity Set;
Later versions of these things (this combines all the tropes - music box, manicure/pedicure, dressing-table and jewellery/make-up storage) tended to have the same copies of Britains (or Fontanini's) dancers as were also used as cake decorations, all from Hong Kong, and while I suspect this may also be sourced in the colony, I think we're looking at the late 1950's and a more unique sculpting?

Also, it would appear there was nothing new in Ms. Madge Ciccone 's pointy, gold brassier, but it was nice of her to reprise the apparel! Thanks to Mercator Trading, the British Heart Foundation and Madonna!

Friday, July 3, 2015

P is for Peter Pan Playthings

When we looked at the MPC mini-planes a while ago, I mentioned briefly the 'rocket planes' in the other-makes round-up picture; last shot here. Well; synergy being what it is, they turned-up a few months later to explain the slot in their underside.

Found at Plastic Warrior' show in May, I tried to buy it but the owner had wandered-off and there was no price on it, so I just shot it for the archive! A pull-back, sprung-lever flic-fires the 'planes (I'd imagine with some force) across the carpet, possibly at an unsuspecting sibling...since known as 'one-eye'!

A reminder of the original three from my bag of bits. Two are marked Hong Kong and have crude stars on the wing-uppers, the third is unmarked, has smaller ailerons/tail-planes (?...horizontal/flat bits of the tail!) and cannon extending forward of the wing-tips, hinting at at-least two other makers of what was probably a common 'novelty' toy in the late 1950's.

I wouldn't be surprised to the learn the original was Thomas or Pyro, with moulds being shared to legitimate companies and the whole copied in HK by less legitimate ones!

Friday, May 27, 2011

C is for Cricket (Board Games)

Well, a volcano and high pollution levels caused by extraordinarily nice weather have led to ideal if lung-irritating playing conditions at the more commonly ‘wet’ end of the season for cricket (foreign readers - don’t worry, I’m not going to get technical!). It must be remembered that some seasons during my younger days were wet from beginning to end…

This is the offering from Capri, a marketing division of Mettoy-Playcraft (Corgi, Triang et al.) selling (and finishing?) Board games originating with DRG Packaging, one of the large Pulp Mills on the banks of the Thames Estuary and a major player in world paper, card etc…
You may remember that when we looked at the Soldiers of the World premiums we encountered Bowaters, another Thames-side Pulp Mill, who had connections to Waddington’s who ended up owning Subbuteo, from whence the figures in this set come.

The inference being that these big multi-national paper corporations, as well as pulping and processing wood on a global level, along with supplying paper and card, raw and cut, also drove product itself, in order to shift the material they were in the business of making. They seem to have had close connections with toy and breakfast cereal companies, sometimes because they were already supplying board games or cereal boxes, sometimes because they were all members of larger over-arching multinational ‘portfolios’, the various subsidiaries and divisions of which were bought and sold like sweets in the playground…still are, look at the recent histories or either Corgi or Airfix!

So, is this set DRG, or a Subbuteo subsidiary, or a Waddington ‘Budget Brand’ or one of the DRG executives having a punt with a company innovation grant? I don’t know, all I can say with some certainty is that Mettoy-Playcraft’s involvement would have been sought rather than brought, and would of consisted of sell-through for a slice of the take.

The trouble with research into this period is that from the late 1960’s to the early 1980’s, company history is very fluid. At the end of the 70’s through to ’82-ish, you get the toy industry crash that saw 70% (?) of all household-name brands, sold, lost or amalgamated, and then Thatcherite-Reganomic bean-counters moved into the surviving boardrooms, and chucked out the company archives as being either irrelevant to the new materials, new business models (TV, Movie and Cartoon tie-ins) or new corporate relationships or because saving the archive meant ‘spending money on a storage unit we don’t need to pat for’. The Toy archives of the better European museums can tell you more about the Toy Industry in 1907 than they can for 1970!

We’re very lucky that the Corgi die-cast archive fell into good hands, as did chunks of the Frank Hornby/Binns road stuff, while lots of the Airfix and Britains archive material has been sold at auction in recent years, but for most Marques, we’re rather stumbling around in the dark, getting clues from the box sides of cricket games…

As for Capri, these are also known to me as containing figures;

- Conquer Everest, (4 (?) figures, previously or later (?) issued by Merit with 6 figures)
D 403 - Knockout Cricket (1976, same figures as Subbuteo)
- Championship! (4 (?) plastic or 6 card show jumpers)
- Olympics (12 figures, 25/30mm, 1 each of three poses in four colours)


Toward the end of Subbuteo’s pre-Hasbro life, this set appeared, clearly some sort of a one-man band working out of a lock-up in Surrey, RDA Marketing used the same figures as Capri with added Subbuteo sun-screens, a further list of Subbuteo products were offered as mail-aways, I suspect they were ‘helping’ Subbuteo clear old stock, whether they knew it or not, and based in Horsell, Surrey, they were quite near the home of Subbuteo, and round the corner from the PW Editor!

I found a website that details two box-types, but without Internet here I can’t check the significance...was one issue signed by a famous cricketer or had less extras or something maybe? Perhaps someone could find the page and post a link in the comments section after I’ve up-loaded this? As I remember the web-page, there is a small following for this specific game, so it must be quite playable?

I love the little stick-on Union-Jack; as if this set would have originated anywhere else, or - for that matter - export in large numbers to anywhere else…er…except India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, the West Indies, South Africa…I feel a Monty Python sketch coming on…”What have the Romans ever done…”!

Wicketz product listing;

? - Wicketz (1988, contains the same figures as Subbuteo cricket games)
1 - Catalogue
2 - Self Assembly Scoreboard in Black
3 - Self Assembly Figures to Paint
4 - Set of 2 Rollers and 6 Deck Chairs
5 - Scorebook
6 - Sets 2-5 complete


Ariel, who’s address was in Poland Street, London (lots of corporate HQ’s), so probably another ‘Generic’ brand - in the loosest sense of the word - and probably also connected to the pulping mills along the Thames corridor, went with their own figures, but a close look suggests they were sculpted by the same guy who worked the Subbuteo cricketers, in this case almost certainly the world renowned Charles Stadden, who was known to work with both Waddington’s and Subbuteo, sculpted many other games pieces, and is responsible for most of the figurines still found on Sports trophies today, indeed his likely involvement strengthens the ties to the pulpers through Waddington’s?

Other Ariel stuff with figures;

- The Gillette Cup (cricket game, 13 figures in six poses)
- Soccer Boss (160 players in three colours?)
- Zoo Quest (6 player figures)


Comparisons of the various Board Game figures, top are Subbuteo fielders with their ball catcher bases and bowlers and batsmen with gradated bases. Middle shows the Subbuteo figures at the front with the unpainted Capri versions at the back sandwiching the Wicketz figures in the middle, they don’t all get all poses and while Wicketz have gradations on the batsmen, the Capri set have all smooth bases, relying totally on the board for playing mechanism. The Bottom shot has the ArielGillette’ set.

Other Subbuteo items, the watchers and roller-man came as a double set mail-away for Wicketz, these are - to my knowledge - the only accessories Subbuteo made that weren’t designed for the Football range which was their ‘Bread & Butter’ (they also made Rugby and Hockey sets)

The stretcher teams are from the football range, but would also be seen at cricket matches, there are three versions, the early ones at the rear having some similarities with the early Airfix Combat Group set (Stadden again!?), front left finds a redesign with the old stretcher case (no red stripes on blanket) and new bearers and the modern team (green bases, right), ready for action and part of a larger set of pitch-side figures including a mounted policeman.

Bottom left shows plastic ‘flats’ for bowlers, with whom you could flick the ball at your opponent’s ‘bat on a stick’. These mirror the original footballers, who were cardboard flats, and the new ‘photo-realistic’ flats that Hasbro use with the rump of Subbuteo to date.

A few other cricketer models, I’ll deal with the bottom left shot first as the others are all the same. We have the two quite common Peter Pan Playthings poses, these are common not because the game sold particularly well (although it might have) but because they are 60mm vinyl and have a high survivability factor. Unlike the little styrene guy between them, probably from a 1950’s board game, to find one with the ball catcher intact is probably a minor miracle! I can see him tuning up severed at the ankles in 50p bags, but as this example, very uncommon. The game he came from is unknown to me.

31st January 2018 -He's now known to be from the  Toogood & Jones / Balyna board game Discbat Cricket Game

The other three shots show both early and late UK and Hong Kong versions of the Culpitts cake decorations in approximately 45mm. The Hong Kong production is vinyl again, but mine have been chewed…you start just getting the cake off the feet and before you know it you’ve had a left arm and a cricket bat for tea! The right-hand pair in both the bowler and batsman photographs shows two distinct sculpts, both undoubtedly from Gemodels. Although on the left of each shot, the vinyl figures would have come out last and may still be found in older cake shops if you’re lucky.

The image top left shows what your sick-green cake would look like if Mum invested in the whole grouping, sadly some Mums hated their kids so much they’d save money by not buying the wicket or wicket-keeper, so both items are rarer, that’s before you take into account the size of the wicket and its likelihood of getting lost.

However when I say rarer, I mean in comparison to the other two poses, as all cake decoration production seems to far outstrip demand, mint sets, bagged or lose, turn up all the time, cake decorating shops don’t tend to last long so mint product ends up as clearance, and out-painters often end up with the stuff, as do catering wholesalers, and the only Gemodels stuff I consider rare is/are the Fairy Tale figures and the Scenics – although the model railway world is hiding tons of Gemodels trees!

Oh - You know I said I wouldn’t get technical…well, now that China (and apparently; the US university circuit) are learning Cricket, I’d better explain the rules for those foreign visitors who fancy a go;

There are two teams, one ‘out’ in the outfield, the other; in, each player in the ‘in’ team ‘goes in’ until he is ‘got out’ when he comes back in and another man goes out to be got out, sometimes you get a man left not-out. When all of the in players is got out (except for the one who's not-out), the team that was out goes in and the team that was in goes out and tries to get the team coming in, out! At some point they all stop for tea, even if it’s lunch-time. Simple, makes Baseball look like Brain surgery and American Football sound like rocket science!

[Can’t remember where I stole that from but it’s been around for a while]

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

P is for still more Puzzles!

Continuing a theme...or tearing the arse out of it, depending on your point of view! The most sought after by collectors are those with a space connection, or the various weapons....

These would all appear to be by the same manufacturer, an unknown Hong Kong producer, the Robot and 'plane are both set-up as key-rings, the ray-gun is one of two designs I know of, while the Tommy-gun is damaged and glued (there should be a bit of the orange sticking out of the bottom and twistable), I do have a revolver but I will cover that when I look at the British manufacturers another time.

The Lorry on the left is a soft plastic Kellogg's one, the other is a hard plastic HK copy. Another design of Lorry has the long bonnet (hood) of a Volvo type truck. There are also several versions of car around.

These are by Peter Pan Playthings and Bell, the Elephant by Bell is in the same Phenolic plastic as the multi-coloured wagon in the previous post, hinting at the origin of the otherwise unmarked wagon (and unmarked instruction sheet). The Peter Pan toys are in Polystyrene - hard plastic, the motorcycle cop is about 35mm, the traditional ball puzzle is also a key-ring with plastic fob, not something designed to last much beyond Christmas day!

I will cover both these manufacturers and Merit in greater depth another day, but feel you've probably had you fill of puzzles for now!!!