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 Tobar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tobar. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

M is for May's Visit - Boxed and Carded

In addition to the stuff I bought on the day, Peter had also encountered some rack-toy and other stuff, which he put to one side for me, and with the next Rack Toy Month a while away, they can go here!
 


I think we've seen the Unique set before, but the stretchysaurs from Tobar are all new. Similar to others we've seen here, but a bit bigger. And with several comparison shots of these party-favour type monochrome beasts, in the smaller scale, now seen here on the Blog, I think the first image is the 'missing link'! 
 

KTL Topco Limited would appear to be a trading name for Kandy Toys, they share the same business park and postcode address/es, and this larger-scale set may give us a clue to one or two of the many mini-sets, as that bright pigmented spray, over a greyish-white synthetic PVC, is seen in mini-sets of Dinosaurs, sea-life and wild animals?
 

I think Peter really just wanted off'ski for this, and I said I'd try to offload it, but I didn't really know how, then I realised the gazebo/folly, and a couple of the other elements, might make useful photo-props in the future, so for now it's in the storage unit!
 
There used to be a chap who specialised in Bayko (it's not Bakelite, it's polystyrene!) around the shows, but I haven't seen him or his distinctive Bayko knitted-jumper for a while, probably not since . . . well,  lockdown, so I fear the worst - when you look at the Blogs which haven't uploaded/posted for five years, you realise Covid cut a bit of a swathe through old toy collectors, I'm afraid.
 
Many thanks to Peter for all these.

Saturday, October 4, 2025

B is for Bibliography - 1 of 2

I've had a fair few books come-in over the last 18/24 months, and the folder was getting unmanageable, so I've split it into 3, arbitrarily, as photographed, not as they came in (like you care!), and will chuck them up here, as two posts on collectables books, and one on non-toy stuff! This is the first of those collectable's posts.

Back in the 'day', the Burn's guides were THE guides, rather eclipsed by the excellent Scalemates website, now. They provided a good guide to what had been around when, and this came in a few months ago, I have also got the Sci-Fi specific volume, which was a little earlier, this is one of the later 'whole' lists I think.

This was recent show plunder, and I only got it because someone else had left it on the guy's table, after being tempted! Anything New Cavendish is worth a punt, and this is both an authoritative and academic work, and also beautifully illustrated, and has a comprehensive listing of toys made by the iconic tin-plate manufacturer.

One of several general books on games and/or puzzles, but each always has the author's own favourites, or unique finds, so each has something to add, and between them, they have most of the odd lead-flat or microscale wood vehicles and things, I post from time to time, and one day I'll sit down and ID everything, and we'll have some roundups here of ships, cars, horse racers/riders &etc. It may, however, be a duplicate in the library, I'm getting familiarity-vibes, from the cover?

Bought for 'completion', a kids book really, a primer on what to collect, or sugegstions for collecting, but even a basic book will have something to give, especially if it includes fields outside your own interests. Language/jargon, tools, renovation or cleaning hints or techniques, from other hobbies/pastimes.

It's funny, you can be involved in collecting from an early age, and still be totally unaware of a book, which, when you subsequently research it, becomes clear is quite common and well-known - this is that book, for me, recently! I have a couple of the other 'Advertorial' books; 'The Hornby Book of Trains', which ran to several editions, and would, after the amalgamation, include Tri-Ang, but this had slid totally under the radar.
 
To be fair, none of them add much, being only 'chatty' illustrated catalogues, but they are nice coffee table eye-candy, and would have been popular dream-time, wish-list reading for kids, at the time.

Becoming slightly comedic now, but also very useful. Originally Chris Smith (who's Mum worked for Hawkin/Tobar) sent, first images, then a whole copy, to enhance/back-up stuff being blogged here at Small Scale World, after I'd shown a photo or scan, I couldn't remember where from, then I got confused about what I'd shown, when. Then, earlier last year, sorting the whole library, I found a couple more, one in with the books, one or two in the box-files . . . then these three came in from the Late Micheal Hyde's estate!
 
So, allowing for a duplicate or two, I should have five or six of these, from the early 1980's through to the 2000's, with the odd page in a couple of the general catalogues, giving a good overview of the 20-odd years the tin-plate ran for.
 
And it's clear this was a membership thing, a collector's club for a whole sub-branch of the hobby, with regular/annual issues of these catalogues, each of which has a mail-order form, and where all the ZZ/Rogazz, Shilling, Japanese imports and German/Russian reproductions all sit side by side with Chinese retro/fakes! But all accurately described, sometime s with a potted history of the origins of how the tools/stock was found, put into production, or reproduced, etc . . . 
 
Above are from 1983 (October), 1996 (Cristmas) and the Spring 1998 editions. 

Mentioned the other day, one of two or three issued in a rather fantastical sting/fraud which seem to have been set up over several years! There's an interesting reference to it here;
 
 
and I quote "We even had Jeffrey Levitt (of Mint and Boxed infamy) calling in as he passed by on his way to Maidstone Prison. He was serving his time on weekdays but allowed home for the weekends. He did this for about a year, still trying to deal in toys whilst jailed for masterminding a massive fraud dealing in toys!" 

Another general book, or that's what it looks like, but this is co-authored by the parents of 'our own' James Opie, and they did more for the early research of all aspects of 'modern' Childhood, than anyone else, and - while better known for their work on playground/colloquial rhymes, fairy tales and children's song - they also covered the toys, and this has some very interesting chapters on play.
 
The social science of play and childhood is a fascinating field, with the well-meaning Jocasta's of Islington trying to raise 'gender-neutral' offspring, only to discover, on a walk in the woods, that the boys will pick up sticks and use them as guns or swords, the girls will pick up fir-cones and treat them as pets or babies!
 
And as a life-long Radio-4 fan, I've absorbed some of it, indeed, I dare say I've listened to one or other of the Opie parents' discussing it over the years, I've certainly caught James' brother being interviewed on consumer products, more than once!

I think this was an eBay grab, I can't honestly remember, it may have come from John B, and it's the commercial edition, of a book I may also have bought (without the shiny resin badge) as a self-publish/print-on-demand jobbie, from that there Wibbly Wobbly Way, a few years ago? It's a superb, single-subject work, with all the Reamsa rarities.

I was lucky to get this! It was earmarked for 'The Doctor', but he only wanted to check a couple of images on a specific page, then he left it, and I grabbed it with glee! Slightly deflated by realising there are several more volumes in the series! But it will help me ID stuff I know little about - French lead!

Sunday, August 31, 2025

T is for Tobar Army!

I think we saw these years ago, in the now gone Debenham's graphics as a Christmas generic, but here they are in Tobar branding, and I think they are also, or have also been seen in House of Marbles packaging?
 

Matchbox WWII American Infantry clones, and err . . . that's it!

Monday, February 10, 2025

P is for Polymer Plunder Package - Combat

Getting near the end of Chris's latest donation to the Blog, and we come to the proper toy soldiers, the guys in green, the khaki-whiskered gentlemen the feldgrau and desert sand of actual military chaps!
 
But, first we have a ceremonial who snuck into the wrong post, by dint of being in his sentry-box, I did finally track one down, but it didn't have a hanger-cord, so this one WILL go on the tree, I'd remind you Chris's Mother used to work at Tobar, so there's a familial connection there. I think I ID'd the yellow one as being Marty/M-Toys (Maysun - May Moon), while the anti-Terminator post probably came with 3 or 4" action figures in some generic big-box, but as you can see, it helps make for a useful comparison shot, and there will be more in the future!
 
A tradition now in these posts; the parachute toys! Seen elsewhere already, and nothing new, possibly new mouldings of the small ones, but always new colour variations, and while I know that page rather ran out of steam, it's partly because I need to bring everything together and re-shoot it all to reflect all the stuff from Chris, Peter, Gareth and my own finds!
 

And here's a carded one by an importer/jobber I'd not heard of before (Anabas Products of Romford), he's the smaller one, often found in Christmas crackers, especially as the brighter-coloured varients, but here, probably a sixpenny pocket-money job, or a later 10/25p type?
 

The upper three were in Poundland (or 99p Stores?) a few years ago, and we did see them here (along with firefighters I think), but I can't remember what colour they were, and I know Brian B found different-coloured ones in the 'States. While below them is a comparison with one of the old Arco Rambo figures, converted to a generic GI, with a helmet cover, and a nice five-inch figure, probably Hong Kong.
 
There were quite a few if these, off the back of the Marx, MPC, Blue Box and Lincoln 'biggies', and while they are slowly gathering in a larger tub, I still know very little about them, their packaging doesn't seem to survive like smaller figures/animals' does, probably because they would have been in open, counter-display boxes, sold individually?
 
Toy Story figures, I've rather lost track of these since we looked at some when doing an overview of the Tim Mee GI's, a few years ago, but there are several different generations/licences of them, mostly Mattel, but also Burger King and a mobile-phone stand thing, so we will gather them in one place and look at them again one day!

Mixed Hong Kong; the stand-out is the large figure, who's a modern PVC-substitute, and seems to be a scale-up of previously seen small-scale copies of the Revell 1:72 paratroopers, but until I can do a direct comparison I'm not 100% sure of that attribution, suffice to say he's new to me, Blog and possibly hobby?
 
Kamley/KS (Kwong Shing) in blue are useful, the kneeling 8th Army is that lesser copy with the oblong base, and the Monogram clones are in an unusual sandy-khaki, while I know I'm short of those chromed 45mm piracies, so a very useful handful
 
Starlux 30mm, but when found in pairs like this, technically, probably Solido!
 
Small scale, going clockwise from the top left;, three of the Euro-premiums, found in various branding of bubble-gum, and typically referred to as 'Dunkin', an Airfix sentry-box (which should have been in the first shot really?), HK copy, three Marx soft-ethylene polymer Brit's, an Indian (Imex? Italeri? I used to instinctively know this shit - it's all on PSR!), and a minor-make/new production Prussian (Strelets*R or Orion?).
 
Which leaves the chap in the centre? Only the best thing in the whole bloody parcel! If you weren't more enamoured of the dice-shaker, that is! It appears to be a reasonably good quality (if slightly play worn), small-scale copy of the Lido French Foreign Legion standing firing pose! How cool is that? And . . . it begs the question; whothewhatthewhenthewherethehowmanyposes???!!!!
 
Definately new to me, Blog and hobby, but, somebody, somewhere, probably has a biscuit-tin full of 'em? Can anybody shed more light on the figure? Still a real find, and many thinks to Chris for it, and everything above! Marche ou crève!

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

F is for Follow-up - Deep Sea Divers

Mine wasn't Tresco, although looking through past posts on the Divers - Deep Tag, I do have one, however, by then I'd shot the ones I have here, and Brian had sent me a bunch of shots of his, so I raided the Divers & Submarines folder for a few carded sets off of that evilBay, and we have a quick post!

Two Tresco's from Brian Berke, old and new, with the Tobar one, still on the card, and which I know you could also find in Hawkin's Bazaar, as I saw it before I was collecting all scales, so at least 15-odd-years ago?
 
What seems to set them apart as two groups, whether copies or originals, Tresco versus Hong Kong, is that those from or after Tresco have a small 'pouch' like a binoculars case, on the chest, while the Hong Kong lifts have a longer, thinner case-like object you might find spare machine-gun-barrels in!
 
In the centre is what must be Tresco's last production, in bright yellow, while to either side are the ones with the tubelike piece of equipment marked-up to Imperial and Kingsway, a quick check-back to Brian's image, and you'll see all three are the same Tresco design, with the packet/parcel.
 
While all three of the ones I have here are the tube-design, which I'm calling Hong Kong, to which I added the giant 5" one we saw a while back, so you could see how giant he is! From the apparent age of the paler two, I suspect they may be earlier and the origin of the tube-design, changed from the parcel of the Tresco they were aping?
 
I should have shot that fish-tank one from Chris again too, but . . . next time! Divers are a bit of a favourite here, and we do return to them regularly! Brain also sent three individual shots, but as we've seen the subjects before, and they are in the above line-up, I put them in the folder to replace the three carded ones, against another of those re-visits!
 
There are some very interesting things in that folder, but I need to find more in context to Blog them with, and I have a feeling there's some on the old 'unknown' dongle? So we may return to divers sooner rather than later?

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

E is for Extra Tin-Plate Post

Brian B sent me a shot of his - probably - Shilling tree-hangers, so I went-off and found a cheap MC and sidecar to make a post! It's a little one, but perfectly formed!

Bus; Hawkin Tobar; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Hawkin-Tobar; Loco; Motorcycle; Roggaz ZZ; Schilling; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tobar Toys; Tram; Tree Decoration; Tree Hanger; TX507; TX510; TX513; TX514; ZZ Trade-Mark;
Lovely colours; a deep lemon-yellow and a rich tangerine orange, with sky-blue highlights. The motorcycle has a series of thin plates running round and covering the main seam to prevent nasty cuts, as does the passenger, and the sidecar is on the right-hand side for those who have adopted the Napoleonic rule of the road - sword to sword, 'cos the Europeans are always fighting!

Bus; Hawkin Tobar; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Hawkin-Tobar; Loco; Motorcycle; Roggaz ZZ; Schilling; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tobar Toys; Tram; Tree Decoration; Tree Hanger; TX507; TX510; TX513; TX514; ZZ Trade-Mark;
As per his comment on one of the recent posts here are Brian's TX507 (Bus), TX513 (Loco) & TX514 (Tram), using the Hawkin-Tobar catalogue codes, I don't know if they extend to Roggaz's ZZ or Schilling, but they are the same tools, same for-Germany marks and same paint-schemes. Note the eclectic stuff around them and the now finished STS Direct impish cyclopean!

Friday, November 19, 2021

C is for Confused!

Right I'm confused, I'm sure the image I posted a while back was from Andy B, I'm sure Chris Smith sent me stuff on the same subject, which may have included a catalogue and I'm sure I found a catalogue the other day as stuff was going to storage, but that's as far as my being 'sure' about anything goes . . . it's been a difficult year!

I have these four images, which are not titled in a way I would have titled them, so they must have been eMailed to me, probably by Andy B? But they could have come from Chris with the written stuff, or did Chris send me a catalogue and was it the one I found the other day meaning there may be another Hawkin's Bazaar shop catalogue somewhere?
 
I think it's easier to thank both Chris and Andy again, for all they did on Tobar/Hawkin's Bazaar, or as here Hawkin - Tobar (no apostrophe-'s', no Bazaar), and get the images up before my head explodes.
 
German Design & Control; German WWI; Hawkins Bazaar; Herr. Ingo Roggatz; Hong Kong; Ingo Roggatz's; Japanese Boat; Japanses Tin-Plate; Japanses Toy; Made in China; Miniature Push-Alongs; Motorbike; Nurnburg-Furth; Schylling; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate; Tin Plate Robot; Tin Plate Robots; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Mercedes Benz; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tin-Plate Spaceship; Tinplate Toys; Tobar; Tree-hangers; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
Cover
Showing mostly the larger stuff
 
German Design & Control; German WWI; Hawkins Bazaar; Herr. Ingo Roggatz; Hong Kong; Ingo Roggatz's; Japanese Boat; Japanses Tin-Plate; Japanses Toy; Made in China; Miniature Push-Alongs; Motorbike; Nurnburg-Furth; Schylling; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate; Tin Plate Robot; Tin Plate Robots; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Mercedes Benz; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tin-Plate Spaceship; Tinplate Toys; Tobar; Tree-hangers; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
The motorcycles are actually quite big, so having said earleir I would look out for them; I probably won't! All 'China' and I rather like the Romano-Crusader and I'll have to look for the drummer instead of the 'bikes!
 
German Design & Control; German WWI; Hawkins Bazaar; Herr. Ingo Roggatz; Hong Kong; Ingo Roggatz's; Japanese Boat; Japanses Tin-Plate; Japanses Toy; Made in China; Miniature Push-Alongs; Motorbike; Nurnburg-Furth; Schylling; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate; Tin Plate Robot; Tin Plate Robots; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Mercedes Benz; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tin-Plate Spaceship; Tinplate Toys; Tobar; Tree-hangers; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
Space stuff, some of these are 'full sized' replica's of yesteryear's toys, I rather like the two small robots though, 80mm's is not that big?
 
German Design & Control; German WWI; Hawkins Bazaar; Herr. Ingo Roggatz; Hong Kong; Ingo Roggatz's; Japanese Boat; Japanses Tin-Plate; Japanses Toy; Made in China; Miniature Push-Alongs; Motorbike; Nurnburg-Furth; Schylling; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate; Tin Plate Robot; Tin Plate Robots; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Mercedes Benz; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tin-Plate Spaceship; Tinplate Toys; Tobar; Tree-hangers; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
A couple of Japanese made modern toys (but not Modern Toys), and the marked ZZ tree decorations, I must have cropped the top right image out for context last time and meant to do these later, but at the time? [Yes - he adds, ten minutes later - I meta-tagged all the model numbers for the core tree-decoration range last time!]
 
I should probably try to locate the water pump (farm) and there is a smaller motorcycle and side car, but then I said I'd look out for it didn't I . . . heehee!!
 
Andy, Chris - thanks guys, I'm sure you realise by now I'm a flaky, disorganised amateur, but we're getting there, with your help!

Thursday, November 18, 2021

T is for Two, no Three - Tinplate Toys!

One of the things which leads stuff to languish in the long queue for years is an annoying habit I have of getting the photos done, maybe even doing any collages or touch-ups, perhaps even starting the text, then thinking "Hold on, I really need x to make the post", going off to feebleBay, finding it's only available as a ten day auction and waiting for it to finish, by which time I've lost interest in the post, or finding it's not there at all and putting the whole thing on the back burner with a vague mental note to get one/some at some point!

Another reason, is that I imagine if I post it before I've located the 'missing element', y'all will rush off and find it first, so better to not raise it with you until I've got whatever it is first!

I say that only because when I posted the tinplate the other day, that's exactly what I nearly did, but in the end I published despite leaving bids on two items which would have made that a better post, and which you might have gone to look for after I published, which fortunately you didn't, despite Andy B mentioning one of them specifically in the comments to that post! Phew!

1:No scale; Austrian; China; Civilian; Decorations; French; German; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Hungarian; Ingo Roggaz; Inter-War; Limber; Make; Metal - Tin-plate; Novelty; Penny Toys; Prussian; Roggaz ZZ; Schilling; Sentry Box; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate; Tin-Plate; Tinplate; Tobar; Tobar Toys; USA; WWI; Zouave; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
So, I managed to get both without counter-bids, leaving a T is for Two as the obvious direction to go in. And the first was this lovely inter-war (?) piece of generic WWI limber.

I say generic, it's more a French helmet than a US or British one, however the dark-on-light grey of the cart's camouflage is more a Wehrmacht thing, but then it's been buggered-about-with, the horses are pulled tight to the limber and a bit squashed at the rear-ends by replacement wire traces, so I don't know how original it is, and it's missing a crewman, but if it was pucker it would be 100-&-something quid or Euro's or dollars, or whatever and well outside my budget! But it will look the part on a little shelf somewhere!

1:No scale; Austrian; China; Civilian; Decorations; French; German; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Hungarian; Ingo Roggaz; Inter-War; Limber; Make; Metal - Tin-plate; Novelty; Penny Toys; Prussian; Roggaz ZZ; Schilling; Sentry Box; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate; Tin-Plate; Tinplate; Tobar; Tobar Toys; USA; WWI; Zouave; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
The other item I literally went and bid-on half-way through editing the post two weeks ago was the missing Roggaz/ZZ-marked military piece from Schilling/Tobar; the ceremonial sentry box with a slightly Prussian or Austro-Hungarian bent, as mentioned by Andy! Luckily no one else from the loyal readership went to look for one, or if they did they didn't bid and I got it for the opener! isn't it lovely? It's lost it's tree-hanger, but is otherwise pretty minty.

1:No scale; Austrian; China; Civilian; Decorations; French; German; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Hungarian; Ingo Roggaz; Inter-War; Limber; Make; Metal - Tin-plate; Novelty; Penny Toys; Prussian; Roggaz ZZ; Schilling; Sentry Box; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate; Tin-Plate; Tinplate; Tobar; Tobar Toys; USA; WWI; Zouave; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
Then, a week ago I managed to find this at an otherwise very quiet Sandown Park show, which rather threw the T is for Two trope under a bus! It's a relatively common French 'penny toy' in the metallic 'spirit paint' finish such toys often came in, and again is probably a between-the-wars thing.

The boots and jacket should be gold'ish and blue respectively, but have suffered from degradation leaving little 'liver spots' under the varnish and fading the colours, but the red has held up well, and I'd photographed a better one on Mercator Trading's stall a few years ago (for the Tin Plate Page, if I ever get it finished!), so we will see a better one here at some point!

1:No scale; Austrian; China; Civilian; Decorations; French; German; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Hungarian; Ingo Roggaz; Inter-War; Limber; Make; Metal - Tin-plate; Novelty; Penny Toys; Prussian; Roggaz ZZ; Schilling; Sentry Box; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate; Tin-Plate; Tinplate; Tobar; Tobar Toys; USA; WWI; Zouave; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
The two horses with the limber are marked 'MADE IN GERMANY' from where a lot of the early tin-plate came from (Schuco, Bub, Tipp, Carrette, Distler, Märklin et al.), which is why the Roggaz goes with its misleading ZZ GERMANY ©, which can mean Roggaz from Germany's ZZ brand, copyrighted to Schilling or some Chinese firm, or not at all!

Something Schilling would have been happy with, expressly for that 'Germany' provenance, whether they were instrumental in the operation at the start or bought-in after Ingo Roggaz had instigated the line!

1:No scale; Austrian; China; Civilian; Decorations; French; German; Hawkin's Bazaar; Hawkin's Bazar; Hungarian; Ingo Roggaz; Inter-War; Limber; Make; Metal - Tin-plate; Novelty; Penny Toys; Prussian; Roggaz ZZ; Schilling; Sentry Box; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate; Tin-Plate; Tinplate; Tobar; Tobar Toys; USA; WWI; Zouave; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
So, three new pieces of tin-plate! You'll observe from the previous collage, I cleaned the limber after I'd taken all the other pictures! I wasn't just watching it Andy! And I will get the motorcycle and sidecar when I see a cheap one . . . for another day!

I've also found scans I'd taken, of the other catalogue, which I'll post shortly, or between now'ish and midnight, I must go and cook something!

Thursday, November 4, 2021

ZZ is for Hawkin's Bazzar, Ingo Roggaz, Schilling and/or Tobar!

We've looked at them before, Hawkin's have gone under for a final time since Chris supplied his potted-history and the connection with Schilling was proven at a toy fair, but there was one item I really wanted, and another I quite fancied from the tinplate range, and both have been secured since January, so that's what we're looking at here!

Airship; Amphibious Aircraft; Fire Engine; Float Plane; Hawkin's Bazar; Hawkin's Bazzar; Hawkins Bazaar; Hawkins Tobar; Ingo Roggaz; Schilling; Sea Plane; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tinplate Toys; Tobar; Toy Soldier; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
The best! Only because I can't really afford those beautiful old French or German ones when they come up occasionally! Vaguely Prussian or Austrian (even Italian or French) cavalryman of that 'colonial' period 1840-1914 so beloved of figure painters (and print artists) for the colours of the splendor of often quite OTT uniforms, many - well 'a few' - of which survive, simplified, as ceremonial uniforms to this day.

The reigns serving as the gilded tree-hanger, and the whole being three sheets of die-cut tin-plate, pressed to shape and assembled with bent ears/tabs in the traditional way.

Airship; Amphibious Aircraft; Fire Engine; Float Plane; Hawkin's Bazar; Hawkin's Bazzar; Hawkins Bazaar; Hawkins Tobar; Ingo Roggaz; Schilling; Sea Plane; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tinplate Toys; Tobar; Toy Soldier; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
My line-up now looks like this, with the fictional Vomag (Vogtland Maschinenfabrik AG, actually subsumed under communism and surviving as IFA - Industrieverband Fahrzeugbau) fire-wagon/ladder-truck as the other 'newbie'.

When we looked at these last time I marked some up as not by Hawkin's or Tobar, as they weren't in the catalogues to hand, but they all seem common enough here in the UK for an assumption that all three importers (Schilling [USA], Tobar [UK] and ZZ /Roggaz [BRD]) carried the full range in one catalogue or another, one year or another.

Airship; Amphibious Aircraft; Fire Engine; Float Plane; Hawkin's Bazar; Hawkin's Bazzar; Hawkins Bazaar; Hawkins Tobar; Ingo Roggaz; Schilling; Sea Plane; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tinplate Toys; Tobar; Toy Soldier; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
Really a generic fire fighting vehicle with lines that are more American (showing the input Schilling had from the beginning of this ZZ-branded line?) than anything else, the overly complicated bar the ladder is fixed to obviously doubling as pipe-work for interest/external detailing.

Airship; Amphibious Aircraft; Fire Engine; Float Plane; Hawkin's Bazar; Hawkin's Bazzar; Hawkins Bazaar; Hawkins Tobar; Ingo Roggaz; Schilling; Sea Plane; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Tin Plate Toys; Tin Toy; Tin-Plate Novelties; Tinplate Toys; Tobar; Toy Soldier; ZZ; ZZ Trade-Mark;
Couple more shots of the additions, the ZZ mark being something I've never managed to do justice to within the font limitations of Word-for-Windows! And Dinky's Centurion again shows how small these little tree-hangers are.

There must be loads in people's attics, cellars, sheds and under-stair cupboards, coming out every year and going back on the tree? And they are perfect to take off the tree as presents for sudden, little visitors . . . my late mother always had a few spare bags of chocolate-coins hidden in the center of the tree - on the fat-ends of the branches - for little people to search for, something she was still doing two years ago when the new neighbours brought round their daughter, and a tradition I will continue when I get to wherever I'm going-to.

Thursday, February 20, 2020

T is for Toy Fair 2020 Reports - Tobar

Tobar didn't have much on display this year, or at least not much new or exciting for the readers of this Blog (so this is another post with no inherent or actual urgency!), but if they were busy in December extricating from or protecting themselves from the fallout of the Hawkin's Bazaar collapse, they probably had other things on their minds?

2020 Toy Fair; Dino Tube; Dinosaurs; Fumfings; Fumfings Dinosaurs; Gold Fish Toys; Goldfish Novelty; Grossman Toy Group; H Grossman; HGL Dinosaurs; HGL Toys; Kensington Olympia Toy Fair; Key Craft Fumfings; Keycraft; London Toy Fair 2020; Novelty Gold Fish; Novelty Goldfish; Prehistoric Figures; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirting Fish; Squirting Goldfish; Squirting Toys; Tobar Novelties; Tobar Toys; Toy fair 2020;
They did have a set of dinosaurs, which are of interest only because we will be seeing them again twice - if I get all the Toy Fair 2020 reports out . . . in a vague and untimely manner!

2020 Toy Fair; Dino Tube; Dinosaurs; Fumfings; Fumfings Dinosaurs; Gold Fish Toys; Goldfish Novelty; Grossman Toy Group; H Grossman; HGL Dinosaurs; HGL Toys; Kensington Olympia Toy Fair; Key Craft Fumfings; Keycraft; London Toy Fair 2020; Novelty Gold Fish; Novelty Goldfish; Prehistoric Figures; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirting Fish; Squirting Goldfish; Squirting Toys; Tobar Novelties; Tobar Toys; Toy fair 2020;
In case I don't [get them out in a timeless fashion], I'll point-out now that the same weirdly decorated (mouldy birthday-cake? Cambazolasaurus?) stegosaurus (far left - bottom) was to be seen on both HGL (Grossmann)'s stand (top left) and in the inventory of Keycraft's 'Fumfings' (top right) pocket-money/rack toy lines.

2020 Toy Fair; Dino Tube; Dinosaurs; Fumfings; Fumfings Dinosaurs; Gold Fish Toys; Goldfish Novelty; Grossman Toy Group; H Grossman; HGL Dinosaurs; HGL Toys; Kensington Olympia Toy Fair; Key Craft Fumfings; Keycraft; London Toy Fair 2020; Novelty Gold Fish; Novelty Goldfish; Prehistoric Figures; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirting Fish; Squirting Goldfish; Squirting Toys; Tobar Novelties; Tobar Toys; Toy fair 2020;
I think we saw these last year (I shot them while I was talking to the sale manager about Erwin's bullshit re- both Schylling and Supreme!), but I thought we'd look at them again in such an untimed procedure as they are really rather good sculpts of fancy goldfish, for what are really 'only' simple bath/garden toys - except for the cartoon eyes perhaps! Note the differential between the unit price and the Recommended Retail Price (RRP)!

So, if you're timing the exercise; that's Tobar 2020! Did you see him this week; TJF? I don't live anywhere near Woking, and have mentioned Fleet so often we can only conclude he's a very stupid man. he then grandly announced a post of rare or unusual figures and showed us a bunch of mostly seen-before stuff, half of which was Dulcop, common as muck . . . common as Airfix . . . box-ticking!

The next day came two good'ish posts and I began to think they'd turned it round (the good ship shitestuff), but it all seems to have petered-out in the second half of the week, and that was with all of them running around like busy  bees! Sweet little Merkle Lickspittle was dispatched to buy the jeep I showed you a couple of weeks ago, and while it's lovely to know they use this Blog as their purchasing guide (that the whole point of the New Production News tag!), they then Blogged it without a brand, so what - exactly - was the point? To show that they can sit in my dust any-time; badly? We already knew that! Very stupid men, and one of them's a university type!