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 Sci-Fi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sci-Fi. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

SPC is for Spectrum Patrol Car

Up to London on Saturday last, and managed to get to the toy dealer we'd failed to reach, through a diabolical mix of sudden torrential storm, and pre-existing line-failures, before Christmas, where I bought all sorts of lovelies, and Peter Evan gave me some plunder I haven't shot yet, but I did get an odd box-ticker, which is the subject of this post.
 
 
But first, another labyrinth maze, (explanation in the comments, thanks to Brian B), and the one I doubted I'd ever find, given the nature of the station, the miles of tunnels, escalators and travelling walkways, not to mention the various entrances and exits, at Waterloo.
 
But in the end it was just there, blankly staring at me! It's on one of the main pilasters at the major entrance, between platforms 17 and 20, at the top of the escalators, and I'd passed it many times! An apt one as it mirrors, or conjures-up the Spectrum symbol from Captain Scarlet!

 
Not a nostalgia purchase, but more of a settling of scores! No, not Bushy the twig, he's an idiot ("Oh, look, I just watched this movie two days after Hugh mentioned it"!), but that we never had this one as kids, although several of our friends did, and we hankered after it, but it just never happened.
 
 
And, it wasn't for trying, when asked what we wanted for a Christmas or a Birthday present, we always asked for something better - the SPV with its tracks, rocket and sprung-loaded figure, the Security Vehicle with its treasure chest, gull-wing doors and folding walkways, the Thunderbird 2 with it's T4, pod and delicate folding legs, and frankly, we just never got far enough down the wants list (along with the Airfix, Action Man, Lego . . . etc. ) to get one!

 
This is loose, and a bit chipped, no bad thing, as a good one with box is £250-plus, this was in the tens! And it struck me that it's quite a retro' design, even at the time, compared to the other vehicles in the series, it's half 1950's American car, half early jet fighter, and a bit ambulance!
 
Without flash!

Monday, January 26, 2026

G is for Gashapon - Bandai Namco - Ultraman Cityscape

It is the bane of blind or random selection that you won't always get what you want, what you hoped for, or what you need to complete a run or set, and while this set has three nice figures, both Adrain and I ended-up with the same simplified, micro-building, hay-ho!
 
The machine!
 
The capsule, and prize, I couldn't work it out until I'd got it out of the packet and studied the sheet! It's a small (1:600th or even 1:1200th) type micro-bulding, to be made-up, with five others, into a cityscape, for the 'Giant' Ultramen to stand amongst as they battle Godzilla or Mothma, or something equally daft and rubber-suit sized!
 
Paperwork, I don't know if the three figures are different heros. different generatuons/movie-versions of the same guy or what? Having never really followed the franchise (I haven't seen any of the recent big-budget Hollywood takes either, and I'm not in a queue to!), it always struck me as a kid's daftness, and while you can have nostalgia for your own (I wish someone would find a stash of Hector's House recordings), I don't think you can retro-establish a love for something aimed at kids, as a cold, cynical, logical adult?
 
Powered by a sealed watch battery, the novelty has a limited life-span, in its illuminated form at least, but you can, hopefully, from the right-hand image, get an idea of how a bunch of them would look with one or two of the figures looming out from the midst of them!

G is for Gashapon - Bandai Namco - Ultraman Monsters

I forgot to shoot the figures with this post, and they are long buried in the storage unit, so this one's just a quickie now, to get us to the end of the sequence, and my favourite set! Not that these were in any way shabby, and I actually ended-up with two sculpts, the 1st and 3rd in the line-up below.
 
 
 The machine responsible for this truncated post!
 
 
 Pink balls . . . Ooo-eerr missus!
 

Paperwork, and that's a wrap! Well, more of a fold . . . bah-duum TISSH!

Saturday, January 24, 2026

G is for Gashapon - Introduction

Well, these have been in the queue for nearly two years! A mate, Adrian, was doing the Cherry Blossom trail in Japan, with his wife, and I said to him "Oh, you'll be able to fill your boots with Gashapon!", which required a quick explanation of the particularly Japanese take on capsule-toys, as they evolved from Western gum-ball machines, themselves evolved from earlier, Victorian postcard dispensers, a mutual friend - Gareth - backed up my enthusiasm, and Adrian was clearly intrigued enough to look them up while he was out there.
 
What I didn't know was that when he came back, he would present me with results of his research as a fiftieth birthday present! So we're looking at them over the next few days, purely as a brief overview, their full story is far greater and there are catalogue-type books on the subject available in Japanese, rather like the O-Ei-A books on the similar, but tending to more juvenile, Kinder Toys.
 
So, Gashapon, from Gasha (the cranking of a 'one-armed-bandit' handle) and Pon, the actual capsule; Japanese capsule toys; not the occasional tray of chocolate eggs, or the odd machine outside a convenience store, but rather a semi-industrialised craze, primarily 're-invented' by Bandai in the 1970's, with Tomy ('Gacha') and Kaiyodo also heavily involved now. There have, since the late 1990-early 2000's, been whole stores dedicated to banks of the machines, which we are looking at here, all shot by Adrian.
 
Clockwise from the top left we have, 'luck dip' mystery prizes, highly detailed miniature firearms, specifically semi-automatic military rifles, I guess pistols or machine-guns will be separate issues/series? Some kind of miniature viewers (?), construction-brick bunk-beds, cat's arse rings (who knew there was even a market for them!) and Tama and Friends keyrings - more Hello Kitty knock-off?
 
Squishies, manga deforms, some kind of pump-dispenser keyrings (?), Halloween wallets, more cutesy keyrings and miniature lunch-bags - it's quite an eclectic collection of subjects, and materials, especially when compared with Kinder*, but that - in part - is explained by the larger capsules, and the fact that adult collectors don't hide under Edwardian leftover shame as we do, in the West; the Japanese 'grown-ups' happily, openly collecting them, as an expression of Shōwa nostalgia.
 
*Kinder do seem to be moving (at a glacial speed) in a similar direction, with more keyrings, phone-hangers and luggage tag type prizes, appearing these days. 
 
A canyon of gift-dispencers!
 
Choices, choices!
 
Advertising display cabinet, I believe all the larger Gashapon stores have something like this, with a selection of current or recent offerings, to kick-start the consumer urge, among the undecided!
 
Platform shoes and fishing lures! And the lures, conveniently telling us - in English - that they are the 5th wave, I think? And - even more weirdly - without actually knowing much about it, I suspect, you could remove them from the keyrings, tie them into your tackle line, and use them to fish?!
 
Miniaturised, or doll's house scaled, tea-ceremony furniture, and necklaces of . . . Japanese mythological themes?
 
Miniaturised foods or foodstuffs seem common themes, both modern and nostalgic, and the display of cartoon, Manga or Anime figural models, above the machines, might be some of the staff's own duplicates? Or maybe leftover/end-of-line stuff, or damaged capsule contents . . . something like that?
 
Likewise, here, where more necklaces and keyrings feature in the machines themselves, including miniature beach sets, blood bags (?!!) and two different 'Juggler' related things, which I can only guess - badly - at!
 
Watch-battery illuminated, stand-ups of Harry Potter characters.
 
Sci-fi feature quite heavily, along with historical's, and here we see stuff related to The Rocketeer, Batman, Star Wars and The Avengers
 
More Anime/Manga stuff, either side of miniaturised Pioneer Hi-Fi decks!
 
An amazing maze!
 
A mystery to finish, not speaking Japanese, I can only guess these are Alice's Adventures in Wonderland coasters? Featuring Sir John Tenniel (the first commercial illustrator to be knighted)'s original artwork? Which would require the largest size of capsule? There are different sizes and designs of Capsule, as we'll see working through them, while a few sets seem to be cheaper or more expensive than the 'standard' Gashapon.
 
Many thanks to Adrian for all these images, which give us a good flavour of the subject, and for the toys which we will be looking at over the next few posts.
 

These two consumer sheet/covering leaflets came-in with some mixed paperwork, and sadly i don't have the figures to show, but it gives an idea of the type of stuff you get in a capsule, along with the toy, novelty or model, very similar to the sheets you get in Kinder or other chocolate eggs.

Friday, January 16, 2026

F is for Follow-up - Marx Space

As a follow-up to last Spring and Autumn's posts on the rather mixed contents of my two Marx playset boxes, and associated stuff, here are a few scans with a bit more info'. Not much, but it'll get Burbank attached to the Marx Space tag, and may have clues as to one of the size variants of space-base accessories?
 
So, Burbank Toys of Wellingborough, were the Marx sales 'arm' of Dunby-Combex-Marx, although I think they also carried some Mattel items, and they issued at least one glossy catalogue (in 1979), which has three space-related playsets.
 
This is the Martian Landing Playset, and you can see that the 'Aliens' group (presumably all Martians in this case!) is the same six figures which keep turning up in apple-green, not the seven claimed elsewhere? But that could be a British thing, either a Swansea leftover or a Burbank-specific detail, however it might explain why I have picked up a few of them, now?
 
The Air Command set is, like the Kennedy sets seen here last February, more realistic, and has the trucks and ground crew of those sets, with four delta fighters, while Star Station 7 has the NASA'nauts with a full set of vehicles and most of the accessories. Note also: the Balloon-tyre mould tool seems to have gone missing, or stayed in the 'States!
 
It struck me that the colour of the accessories in both sets here, matches the smallest version we looked at in September, so it may be that they too, are Burbank-specific, which would make sense, as these sets were literally among the last iterations of Marx, and as part of the 'far-flung' UK arm, might well have got a third, or copy set of tools?
 
Schmidt in Germany produced a board game, Weltraumfahrt 'Space Travel' (On Board Game Geek), with four glow-in-the dark astronauts, and you can see the artwork draws (heheh!) heavily from the Marx tower accessory, for the ship which takes our intrepid Weltraumfaher to their destination.
 
I'm not sure if I've got the figures/contents, or if the box came with something else in it, or even empty from a friend, but I scanned it, during a scanning-session, before it went to storage, I was buying a lot of space-stuff at the time, and most of it went to storage unshot, you may remember the shot of the car, all packed up with space. sci-fi and fantasy, when we looked at the pocket sets a few years ago.
 
This is from a Marx branded fold-up flyer which probably came from a toy, you know the kind of thing, Spears and Waddington's were always including a leaflet in their board games, it also included the wheeled skier set (which might help date it?). Not dated, but pre-1971, from the pricing, which equates to about £2.40p.
 
I have a vague memory of a friend having this, and it being quite heavy, I mean to the point where, as an eight-/ten-year-old, you were happy to surrender it when it was somebody else's turn, as your wrist was getting achy! There's a small, pre-digital, record-player and speaker in there, long before true miniaturisation! U2 Batteries became SP2 and are now known as D-cells.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

S is for Seen Elsewhere - Kinder Figures

Shown on a Facebook group a while back, and time to get them up here and out of Picasa, many of these Kinder figures have been seen here before, in mixed lots, donations or as bit & pieces! But these are all complete, as far as I know, and blurb can be kept to a minimum! These are mostly from the mid-late 1980's or early-mid 1990's.
 
Diver on the left, mostly polystyrene, an RP-sourced archer on the right, in a polyethylene, but they are starting (like a lot of RP stuff) to get brittle now.
 
Three musketeers, also Res.
 
Fencers.
 
American egg-ballers!
 
Alien, also Res Plastics, also getting brittle now, you have to be very careful of the joins.
 
Small-scale astronauts, and their means of locomotion!
 
Panthers, that are pink!
 
Wellingtonian . . . Enemy dragoon, I think?
 
Charley's, one's Kinder (soldier), the other Hong Kong or Italian copy?
 
Speedy Gonzalez!
 
Ice skaters.
 
Different set from the above, same trope!
 
Caricatures.
 
Two from the 1970's on the left, a later caricature figure on the right.

Thursday, December 4, 2025

N is for November's Sandown Park - Sci-Fi &etc.

On to the odd-and-sods of the last show, and these are a bit of a mix, nothing exciting, but it's all grist to the mill, and there's always something new!
 
I think the devil is probably a rather naff Valentine's Day 'thing', but it IS a bendy! While the green chap, also a bendy, is probably more modern, and wasn't easy to shoot, but I decided to leave him in his crinkled bag for now. He has something of the Muppets about him?
 
Straight from a shop-stock / counter display box, three colours/poses of the Cherilea 60mm astronauts, interesting that the whole box, only had these three poses, the non-EM2 Bullpup armed chaps? And colours tie-in with the Tibidabo issues, so I think it's fair to say the Italians just bought-in the product, but never had the tools?
 
If there's anything exciting in this post it's the left-hand of these two from Yolanda, of Spain, being a large Anime/Manga type robot, Marked Toei, while the other chap is marked Troma I think, the US pulp-Video Nasty producer, and both are the earlier polyethylene, some Yolanda were later issued in a softer PVC-substitute.
 
Adrian gave me this, his head is broken-off, so will need pining at some point, but in the last few years several whole, and part, Cherilea Batmans and/or Robins have come in with one or two bases, so I'll sort them all into the best pair and Blog them again properly, one day!
 
'Gygax' spikey, one of the Crossbows & Catapults figures mentioned the other day, home-painted and play-worn, he needs a good clean, along with a Bandai Power Ranger's villain - I think!
 
What looks like a 1:48th scale aircraft kit's gunner, and one of the Aurora figures from the Lost in Space set with the rock-throwing cyclopean alien. He's lost his hand, but as a first sample, will do for now, although I may have these in white-plastic (Mobius) somewhere?