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 Schneider. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Schneider. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

G is for Grendon Underwood . . .

. . . a place I actually know quite well, and it's a half-horse hamlet, which in the 1960's would have quite literally been in the middle of nowhere, like all those villages in the greenery between London and Birmingham!
 
I'm absolutely positive this set, or one very similar from the same maker has been shown on the blog already, as an 'unknown', but I just can't find it anywhere, but neither is it waiting to go, in Picasa, so I don't know?

Grendon Valley Toys from Ornamental Alloys, sounds grand, and it gets two new entries in the Tag List, but I suspect it was a bloke in a shed, with his mate who had a mate who could print stuff?!! I may be totally wrong, but I have a vision of pots of lead going soft over a camping stove, while the wife spends her Sunday afternoons painting tigers!
 
I've definitely shot a similar set (it might have been five animals and no natives, though?), and I'm sure I blurbed it with the usual 'probably from Schneider moulds, or those supplied by Agasee, or someone like that, commercially sold as a sideline, maybe at Christmastime?
 
Anyway, the whole point was to ID the previous set, which I can't find, so it is what it is; a minor-make, producing a commercial product from home-casting moulds, in the years immediately after WWII, I would imagine? Thanks to Mercator Trading for letting me shoot it (the original, and missing one).
 
Added 12-03-2024 - While thanks are due to David Fisher, who let me shoot this one on his stall the other day.

Friday, January 12, 2024

T is for Two - Ceremonial Castings

I'm trying to clear some of the nascent posts in 2022, '23 & '24, which are now making-up a bulging 2025, that's how I roll! And Brian B from New York sent these to the Blog back in the autumn of '22, so well overdue for an airing.

It's one of life's quandaries that after a successful armed insurgency against their legitimate government, the newly independent Americans would spend the next 250 years utterly obsessed with their former parent, its royalty, its Parliament, its Capital, its 'pomp-and-circumstance', and its ceremonial troops, consequently, a lot of 'Royal Guards' figures have appeared on that side of the pond!
 
London Bridge is one of those makers, and with the old London Bridge having been situated in, errr . . . London, England, and it's now residing in Lake Havasu City, Arizona, the company seems to have named themselves in homage to the Mother Country, rather than for any geographical connection to either site of the eponymous water-crossing infrastructure!

Compared with the Britains Deetail figure, we can see the castings are closer to the old Britains 'Standard' 54mm (1:32nd scale), which is as it should be, the Deetail were heading toward the 'new' size of 58/60mm.
 
I'm not sure if bearskins have changed size over the years, but they are now 18 inches tall and over a pound in weight, built on a bamboo frame, I've handled one, at an auction-house, and they are very floofy! But older model soldiers and paintings seem to indicate one of around 12/14 inches prior to the mid-20th Century?

From the archive, and to make-up the image numbers, comes this flyer from Reb Toys' 'Castings' division (I believe they recently [last ten years?] changed their name to Miniature Moulds, and are now defunct?), and we see the same 'traditional' toy soldier lines in the sculpting, but you have to cast them yourself.
 
While they also supplied the ex-Schneider semi-flat / demi-ronde Prussian marching band, which you often see on feeBay, sometimes as ratted old damaged rubbish for re-melting, sometimes as nicely painted sets, often for a daft amount of money, for essentially homemade figures in an odd scale; about 40mm.
 
Many thanks to Brian Berke for his 'work in progress'.

Sunday, September 10, 2023

E is for Eclectic Donation!

Well, I seem to have found a fix for the problems with editing since the changes in 2020/21, especially the annoying habit of not loading images in the right/desired/numbered or even date/alphabetical order, preferring to sometimes load in reverse or just reverse the first and last images . . . I think at lest once or twice, it's totally jumbled them!
 
And of course blogger have locked all the chats screaming for a solution, but this kind person has an answer, I've just tried the piece of code, the 'bad' code was there, I replaced it and these all worked in one hit! And I forgot to add the xxx's or any text, and it still worked!


Shooting yesterday's plunder earlier I realised I still have a London Show and possibly a Sandown to Blog, so I am behind again, but they are self-imposed criteria which probably don't bother you anyway! This is the second of Jon Attwood's donation parcels - which was taped, piggy-back fashion, like a space shuttle, to the main-booster tank of his third parcel!

Jon is having a clear-out, so it's an quite eclectic mix he's been sending the Blog, which makes for more interesting posts, as there's something for everyone! This is a lot of figure-modellers or figure-painters stuff, mostly whitemetal with a bit of plastic/filler, and some repainted or home-cast solids from Hollow cast, and it's a question of what can you spot?

I have a soft-spot for Hussar uniforms, inherited from my late father's interest in Yeomanry uniforms and that excellent series of articles on the same in Military Modelling in the 1980's! I think the WWI/BEF type is an original (Britains?), as is the farmer's wife, but she has been repainted, and I may try repainting her again to something more blue maybe, certainly less pink!

Schneider moulds, or maybe (UK) Agasee, what I like - as a sample - is the variation on the blue, giving us a European on the left, British on the right and Central American in the centre! A lot of guys melt this stuff down to make their next figures, but I like to hang-on to it, as a sample of what went before, these could be home-cast/painted or something more commercial?

The horses that came with the above. The one on the plinth looks more ornamental than 'toy' and the two medieval ones in front need a name as they are definitely commercially painted. I have a fancy a bunch of these were seen/discussed at the NEC years ago, and someone ID'd them as a Spanish make, but I could be confusing them with some other's, they had similarly decorated riders with lances in swivel-arms I seem to recall?
 
Adrian Little kindly looked at this for me, and he thinks it may be Hyde, but without a rider he couldn't be sure what set/series it was from. He suspected a jockey in silks, but it's sadly lacking a tail. Again, it would have been ornamental rather than a plaything, and is quite large (1:25th'ish?), but a useful sample nevertheless!
 
Now, these are fascinating! One of the articles in the long-queue is the recent 'Steam Punk' sets from Hornby under the old Bassett-Lowke branding, and while I shot pre-production stuff at one of the toy fairs, these are the actual figures (BL8011 Steampunk Passengers Standing Pack 2), one of two initial sets, there were also some 54mm figures, for figure painters. A really useful addition, thanks Jon!
 
Not my best shot, but I'll shoot them again and add them to that forthcoming post.
 
I also loved this, it's the Cadbury's Caramel Bunny, who - you may remember - had a breathy, flirtatious manner with a voice provided by Miriam Margoyles, in a sexy West Country accent, imploring the other woodland animals (or her beau) to "Take it easy with Cadbury's Caramel!" !
 
Funnily enough, I had just taken in a small set of Lone Star Treble-O-Trains, so there is a small overview in the pipeline, I sold my childhood sample at a car-boot about 25-years ago in a misguided moment, and have regretted it ever since, so it's nice to be reclaiming those memories!
 
I think these three are Dinky, and hoses and taps are missing on the pumps, but again it won't stop them featuring in future comparison or over-view posts, so it's all useful stuff to arrive unexpected in the post! Funny; the Lone Star N-guage traffic lights had little paste-jewelled red and green lights, while in a much larger scale you just get spots of paint!

Pairs of Matchbox road signs, two die-cast on the left, two plastic on the right. I think we've seen these before, but they are always useful as they tend to lose the little waterslide transfers, and you definitely need pairs of Level Crossing signs!
 
Marked Strickets (C) 1993 (I think), if that means anything to anyone, I first thought he was a Native American making a bison sign, but I think he's a dark-age warrior; Viking or Anglo-Saxon type, making a bull's head sign with his thumbs, some kind of tourist memento or museum keepsake? If anyone knows more, we all need to! About 45/50mm?
 
For some reason, he reminds me of Nigel Planer's Hippy from The Young Ones! "Like, man, you love the bull, you play the bull, you ARE the bull, d'you see, Riiiick?! Possibly from a fantasy boardgame, although I don't think so?
 
The Leyland Motors sign has joined the pub-sign already and is the swinger from one of those cocktail-stick/toothpick type publicity things, barrels have their zone, and Paddington will be off across 'The Pond', as a small thank-you to another contributor, who I know, knows a Paddington fan!
 
Cereal premium dog (Rice Krispies Champion Dogs), and a bear which I should know, or do, but van't recall, something like Corgi Circus I think, Jon identified the horse between the two as one of Salco's little wagon horses, from the gypsy wagon I think?
 
Probably another home-moulding shot, but it could be from a boardgame, but with so little paint remaining, it's hard to call! Around 35mm in scale/size, and we have seen a few similar ones over the years, both larger and smaller, with a few more in storage, we will have a good round-up of these, one day!
 
We saw the painted 'Huminiatures' from Slater's a while ago, but we haven't looked at the more modern sample. I thought we had, but I got a bit depressed about that box when it suffered badly in the 2007 flood, so I've looked at it a few times but not shot them!
 
However, I'm now keen to do the complete overview, as these are the unpainted Huminiatures, in a crinkly cellulose pack (for railway modellers on a budget), along with a pack of bases (pre-cut clear 'syrene in the Roco/Preiser style), which I didn't know existed.
 
Note the continuation of both Wardie/Mastermodels and Randall/Merit DNA in the sculpts . . . There are related posts in the interim queue! And one day I will try to pin the whole story down, but I need everything out of storage first, and as the chap from Pritchard's (Gaugemaster/PPP and now Ratio and Modelscene) couldn't bring himself to tell me, beyond an exasperated eye-roll a few years ago, it may never be accurately transcribed! Briefly I think it goes Mastermodels-Merit, with Slater's copying, but that's over-simplified, as we shall see shortly!
 
Many thanks again to Jon for all this stuff, it really is all gratefully received, and - as mentioned - will enhance future posts on motorcycles, Slater's, even barrels & water-butts!

Monday, April 18, 2022

P is for Polish Roundup - 1 - Flats, Semi-Flats & Historical Solids

So the plan was always to have three posts here today catching-up on incoming polish figures over the last 14-months, and as a foil to yesterdays space-horror, which only got Easter Sunday because I thought, well, the eggs! And I didn't have anything more festive.

That changed yesterday evening, with the recipt of a couple of eMails and a quick search of Picasa; so we're going to try six posts (I won't make a habit of it, except on ITLAPD!) before the clock register's Tuesday. How we do will depend on a number of factors, not least the weather - I must mow the lawn - second cut!

Cossacks; Grunwald 1410; Highlander Flat; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Napoleonics; Polish Flats; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; PZG Flats; PZG Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; PZG Napoleonics; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Urlich von Jungingen; Winged Hussar;
This post is the oddments, and we're starting with a small mixed lot I bought a few months ago, mostly flats, but not the hard 'styrene flats I got from Grzegorz Maciak, these are more like PZG (recycled Nylon-66), slightly softer, and painted after PZG too.

Indeed, most are credited to PZG on that site we've visited before, these being found under the last button (Inni) which I think is the equivalent of 'other' or miscellaneous? Clearly a Polish winged-hussar and two Cossack types, although (as some of you will know from your studies and others from recent current affairs programmes) at the time both were part of the Empire of Poland-Lithuania or The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, but they posed better attacking each other!

Note to Putler - don't attack the land of the Cossack's with a bunch of Siberian conscripts, you'll get your nose burnt, along with most of your tank-crews . . . and your best boat!

Cossacks; Grunwald 1410; Highlander Flat; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Napoleonics; Polish Flats; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; PZG Flats; PZG Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; PZG Napoleonics; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Urlich von Jungingen; Winged Hussar;
A little light reading I've inherited! I've actually had to pack it for now, but I will read it soon, in the meantime, it seemed to be the perfect backdrop to the two figures.

Cossacks; Grunwald 1410; Highlander Flat; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Napoleonics; Polish Flats; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; PZG Flats; PZG Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; PZG Napoleonics; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Urlich von Jungingen; Winged Hussar;
Another unlikely pairing, a contemporary levy (?) to the previous mounted figures faces off against a Highlander? In a sky-blue kilt with his tartan lines at a rakish angle! he looks like he might be another plastic figure taken from old Schneider's home-casting moulds, but I think the Eastern sculpts here are all originals?

Cossacks; Grunwald 1410; Highlander Flat; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Napoleonics; Polish Flats; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; PZG Flats; PZG Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; PZG Napoleonics; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Urlich von Jungingen; Winged Hussar;
The guy on the right is also credited to PZG, but the other two remain question-marks, and he's a swordsman not an artilleryman, but again for the sake of a photogenic vignette; it'll do. They are also from very different eras!

Cossacks; Grunwald 1410; Highlander Flat; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Napoleonics; Polish Flats; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; PZG Flats; PZG Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; PZG Napoleonics; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Urlich von Jungingen; Winged Hussar;
This chap is apparently Urlich von Jungingen from a set of Grunwald 1410 figures, and note he's posed on two different horses, as that was what came in the lot! More a fully round, he's some semi-flatness to him and his horse, and both have the look of what we or the French might call 'from Hollow-Cast', but I don't know if there was a lead progenerator?

Cossacks; Grunwald 1410; Highlander Flat; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Napoleonics; Polish Flats; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; PZG Flats; PZG Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; PZG Napoleonics; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Urlich von Jungingen; Winged Hussar;
This was a shot I took a while back (two years ago) of my small sample of what I thought were all Napoleonic troops, but actually there are troops of several nations and several conflicts many years apart, so it became my even smaller 'samples'! But it makes a colorful group of what PZG (and another maker I think; I've lost the note!) were capable of.

Cossacks; Grunwald 1410; Highlander Flat; Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; Napoleonics; Polish Flats; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; PZG Flats; PZG Napoleonic Toy Soldiers; PZG Napoleonics; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Urlich von Jungingen; Winged Hussar;
Seen before but this is the 'appeared elsewhere' image! Bought at the pre-Christmas London Show in December, and note the chap in the middle is the same as my existing one, but a deliberately different shade of blue. There is a fifth somewhere I think, so that's a better sample than some of my PZG sets! But they're all growing.

Sunday, July 25, 2021

F is for Follow-ups; Recent'ish Posts!

A trio of shots I've taken in the last few months which add a little to posts seen here in the second half of last year.

1 Soma Holdings Industries Space Riders Spacemen Astronauts Aliens Warriors DSCN0616
In August last year we looked at the Star Rider Space City play set by Soma, to which I have added a few of the missing green versions to the loose figure stash, giving the above line-up. There is - at time of publishing - another one on feeBay, which has the outer box-lining missing from mine, unfortunately the postage from Australia is a bit sheesh!

1870's; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Shilam Miniatures; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; ZW Poland;
While in November 2020 a quick post on some Polish swaps and a Russian gun covered some plastic flats which I mentioned were from old home-casting moulds, probably Schneider, the above shows one of the plastics against a modern home-casting mould catalogue, to show they are still around!

Taken from the Shilham Miniatures catalogue, Google suggests they are no longer around, but they were about ten years ago and other suppliers still exist.

Birds; Culpitt Doves; Kettle Whistle; Novelty Birds; Owl; Plastic Birds; Plastic Ducks; Plastic Vulture; Resin Owl; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Songbirds; Toy Birds; Toy Ducks; Toy Flamingo; Toy Geese; Toy Owl; Toy Penguins; Toy Poultry; Wedding Cake Decoration; Wedding Rings;
Finally, last November I did a quick post on 'what had come in' re. birds/poultry, and within weeks of posting it had found the above! Anti-clockwise from the top left; a resin owl (who's trying to escape the photograph?!!); a novelty kettle-whistle (possibly French); a Culpitt (et al) 'love-doves' wedding-cake decoration; a vinyl duck (possibly Macau-via-Portugal), and another PVC piece; a vulture of unknown origin, which could be Wild West toy related? It keeps coming in!

Saturday, November 14, 2020

P is for Polish Plastic People-Parcel Plus . . .

. . . a bit of Russian-should-be-Bulgarian stuck on the end of the post!

I received a lovely donation from Grzegorz Maciak the other day, of rare, unusual, new-to-Blog or much needed Polish polymer, which we are to look at right now!

1870's; 1877–1878; Artillery Cannon; Battle Of Shipka Pass; Cannon; Cavalry; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Golden Horde; Guns; Medieval Figures; Mongol Invasions; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Russian Plastic Toys; Russo-Turkish War; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tourist Keepsake; Tourist Souvenier; ZW Poland;
As it arrived; The figure top left is a PZG, from the larger scale sets, probably later production (unpainted) and the officer from the Cold War set, next to him a lovely horse from the PZG set of 'Golden Horde'; those from the era of the Mongol invasions . . . indeed, with both rear feet of the ground, possibly the most dynamic and 'best' horse-pose in the set. Both are believed to be manufactured in Nylon-66.

Next to them is what I think is a home-made modelling-clay/craft clay figure of a medieval warrior with his shield slung on his back, the rest are hard polystyrene flats in two sizes/from two sets and from or based-on the German Schneider's home-casting moulds, some marked ZW.

1870's; 1877–1878; Artillery Cannon; Battle Of Shipka Pass; Cannon; Cavalry; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Golden Horde; Guns; Medieval Figures; Mongol Invasions; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Russian Plastic Toys; Russo-Turkish War; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tourist Keepsake; Tourist Souvenier; ZW Poland;
The figure (which you may remember was in a donation from Chris Smith back at the start of lockdown) is the Hetman from the Golden Horde set, I suspect Hetman gives us, or gave us many centuries ago - the terms 'Headman' in English and Hauptman in German, or that they all share a common-root? His horse was much needed!

I have somewhere a pot of gold ink (from my days as a calligrapher! Pelican Plaka or something?) which is the same dull shade PZG used, so when I find it I'll try giving them both a heavy dry-brushing to get them back to something of their past glory and get them to match; the original set were all-gold, horses and riders.

1870's; 1877–1878; Artillery Cannon; Battle Of Shipka Pass; Cannon; Cavalry; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Golden Horde; Guns; Medieval Figures; Mongol Invasions; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Russian Plastic Toys; Russo-Turkish War; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tourist Keepsake; Tourist Souvenier; ZW Poland;
The larger flats, originally designed as infantry of the Franco-Prussian war, pass just as well for the uniforms of Russian, East European and Balkan forces in the wars with the Ottomans (and each-other!) in the 1870's - link in a minute.

1870's; 1877–1878; Artillery Cannon; Battle Of Shipka Pass; Cannon; Cavalry; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Golden Horde; Guns; Medieval Figures; Mongol Invasions; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Russian Plastic Toys; Russo-Turkish War; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tourist Keepsake; Tourist Souvenier; ZW Poland;
The smaller figures are more WWII/immediate post-war period (if assumed to be Polish Infantry) but are based on the original WWI/Inter-war period German/generics of Schneider's moulds, while the Cavalryman could be Polish, but is wearing a helmet while their 'last ever' cavalry charge was probably conducted with the soft Czapka headdress?

A footnote to the previous paragraph - for years Poland claimed the last ever cavalry charge in 1939, but the Australian Light Horse charged the Japanese later in the war, while Cossacks on both sides in the 'Great Patriotic War' will no doubt also have claims to that record - it's not a debate though as the Poles then charged German positions at Schoenfeld in 1945, cementing their claim!

1870's; 1877–1878; Artillery Cannon; Battle Of Shipka Pass; Cannon; Cavalry; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Golden Horde; Guns; Medieval Figures; Mongol Invasions; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Russian Plastic Toys; Russo-Turkish War; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tourist Keepsake; Tourist Souvenier; ZW Poland;
It's the mounted lancers who carry the only mark on all these, a small 'w' sitting on the tail of a larger 'Z'. It could be something as simple as 'Zakład Warsaw' (Warsaw Plant/Factory), but I have no evidence for that or anything else and there is nothing in Garratt's encyclopaedia?

1870's; 1877–1878; Artillery Cannon; Battle Of Shipka Pass; Cannon; Cavalry; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Golden Horde; Guns; Medieval Figures; Mongol Invasions; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Russian Plastic Toys; Russo-Turkish War; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tourist Keepsake; Tourist Souvenier; ZW Poland;
The new polystyrene figures compared to the two older soft polyethylene figures Paul (from Moonbase) gave me years ago and which were recalled by Yori as being Polish and - what we now know as - 'Kioskowce', the older two are probably also from Schneider moulds.

There is a current Schneider in catering/silicon moulds, but it was only formed in 1977 and has no link to the 1913 Schneider Brothers of flat-mould fame,that I'm aware of. Although - calling all these Schneider is an 'old school' practice, they ceased production before the 2nd World War, and most of the moulds you encounter these days may be/are more likely to be St Louis Lead, Greiner or Agasee to mention the better-known of many inheritors/copyists.

1870's; 1877–1878; Artillery Cannon; Battle Of Shipka Pass; Cannon; Cavalry; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Golden Horde; Guns; Medieval Figures; Mongol Invasions; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Russian Plastic Toys; Russo-Turkish War; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tourist Keepsake; Tourist Souvenier; ZW Poland;

While all the above was going on I managed to pick this up on feebleBay, it's a Russian tourist trinket I think, commemorating the battle of Shipka Pass (which was several battles over some time), where actually the Bulgarians played the greater part in manpower.

It's a large lump of polyethylene with a rubber plug in the breach, as the trunion-bar runs through the barrel and out both sides it's not missing a firing mechanism, so I guess the rubber-plug is original. That bar and three others between the trails are heat-welded closed/shut as are both axle ends so there is a robustness to the chunky thing!

1870's; 1877–1878; Artillery Cannon; Battle Of Shipka Pass; Cannon; Cavalry; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Golden Horde; Guns; Medieval Figures; Mongol Invasions; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Russian Plastic Toys; Russo-Turkish War; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tourist Keepsake; Tourist Souvenier; ZW Poland;
I say Tourist Trinket because while I can't imagine many 'western' tourists asking to visit the sight, it is a curated site, now in Bulgaria, and must be a draw to many in the region or with connections to the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878). Also its large scale points to an infant's carpet or beach toy, rather than its being part of a larger, or more serious set, or series?

1870's; 1877–1878; Artillery Cannon; Battle Of Shipka Pass; Cannon; Cavalry; Flat Figures; Flats; Gebruder Schneider; Golden Horde; Guns; Medieval Figures; Mongol Invasions; Polish Copy; Polish Flats; Polish Plastic Toys; Polish Production; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Poland; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG ZSP; Russian Plastic Toys; Russo-Turkish War; Schneider Brothers; Schneider Molds; Schneider Moulds; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tourist Keepsake; Tourist Souvenier; ZW Poland;
(picture credit - Wikipedia)

Above are the guns upon which the toys seems to have been based.

Another minor connection with this addition and the preceding shots is that it was in the wars surrounding the Russo-Turkish fight, some earlier, some later, which lead to Poland's loss of independence and partition between Russia, Prussia and Austro-Hungary. Sad face.

And thanks again to Chris Smith, Grzegorz Maciak and Paul 'Woodsy' Woods for all the interesting figure donations!

Thursday, January 21, 2016

F is for Follow-up - Charms

So....I'm opperating out of the libray for a week or two, so no spellchecker (or caps checker!), and while I'm loading lots of articles I'm waiting until I can edit them properly befor I publish, so 30-odd to come, but likely to be the second half of February!

When I popped-in to see Paul (of Plastic Warrior) before Christmas he thrust a bag of bits at me, and a few of them came just a day or two late for the charms post i did in the fluffy, plastic, tat run-up th Christmas! So here is an up-date/addtion to that post.

From the same source as each other but different subjects/scales, these figures seem to be based quite recent and turn-up on evilBay quite a bit, there were some yellow dancers on these last week!. The bandsmen seem to be based on old composition figures?

Added 21-08-2016 Cake Decoration versions now here

The same sculpts as last time but different colours, it would seem they were issued probably as a set of six, with six unrelated items in a set of 12 crackers?


 
I'm building quite a fleet of these now! A couple of them were in Pauls bag, and I dug mine out for the mass 'Dunkirque' effect! And to make myself realise that the one with a blue clothes-tag looking thing has - in fact - got a clothes-tag looking thing, not some weird simplified boatman!
 
Cheers Paul!