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 Transogram. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transogram. Show all posts

Friday, June 12, 2020

P is for Princess Polymer's Perfect Pumpkin Pimped for Prince Plastic's Posh Prom!

"And be back before midnight young lady!"

Proving the old adage (we'll it's an old adage here as I keep saying it, it's one of the reasons I have so many 'eemies' (as they call theirs) in the 'old guard'!) that none of this stuff is rare!

"Jack and the Beanstalk"; "Three Bears"; 1430A - "Cinderella"; 1430A - "Jack and the Beanstalk"; 1430A - "Red Riding Hood"; 1430A - Goldilocks; 1435A - Carton Assortment of 1436/1437; 1436 - "Cinderella"; 1:No scale; Boxed; Cake Decorations; Christmas Crackers; Early British; Emenee Toy Company; Fairy Tales; G; Jack and Jill; Make; British; Make; USA; Marcel Jovine; Mother Goose; Once Upon a Time; Plymr - Ethylene; Plymr - Styrene; Renwal; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; The Three Bears; Transogram; Unknown Figures; Vol. 1 - The Three Little Pig; Vol. 2 - Little Red Riding Hood; Vol. 3 - Jack and the Beanstalk; Vol. 4 - Hansel and Gretel; Vol. 5 - Goldilocks; Vol. 6 - Cinderella; Went up the Hill;
I grabbed this the other day, the seller had two left at time of writing, grab-one before they're gone!

And before we go any further it's worth reminding you of these posts;


Then click 'newer post' or;


and then click 'older post'

"Jack and the Beanstalk"; "Three Bears"; 1430A - "Cinderella"; 1430A - "Jack and the Beanstalk"; 1430A - "Red Riding Hood"; 1430A - Goldilocks; 1435A - Carton Assortment of 1436/1437; 1436 - "Cinderella"; 1:No scale; Boxed; Cake Decorations; Christmas Crackers; Early British; Emenee Toy Company; Fairy Tales; G; Jack and Jill; Make; British; Make; USA; Marcel Jovine; Mother Goose; Once Upon a Time; Plymr - Ethylene; Plymr - Styrene; Renwal; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; The Three Bears; Transogram; Unknown Figures; Vol. 1 - The Three Little Pig; Vol. 2 - Little Red Riding Hood; Vol. 3 - Jack and the Beanstalk; Vol. 4 - Hansel and Gretel; Vol. 5 - Goldilocks; Vol. 6 - Cinderella; Went up the Hill;
How they arrived, in a little poly-bag like this they could have been aimed at cake decorators, Christmas crackers (so I'll stick Culpitt and Tom Smith in the tags), arcade crane-machines or travelling showground hoopla stalls? The point is, this is the third iteration of the two 'sets' of these, which ten years ago were 'rare' and only visible as a couple of thumbnails on TSHQ, but which are now becoming 'old hat'!

"Jack and the Beanstalk"; "Three Bears"; 1430A - "Cinderella"; 1430A - "Jack and the Beanstalk"; 1430A - "Red Riding Hood"; 1430A - Goldilocks; 1435A - Carton Assortment of 1436/1437; 1436 - "Cinderella"; 1:No scale; Boxed; Cake Decorations; Christmas Crackers; Early British; Emenee Toy Company; Fairy Tales; G; Jack and Jill; Make; British; Make; USA; Marcel Jovine; Mother Goose; Once Upon a Time; Plymr - Ethylene; Plymr - Styrene; Renwal; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; The Three Bears; Transogram; Unknown Figures; Vol. 1 - The Three Little Pig; Vol. 2 - Little Red Riding Hood; Vol. 3 - Jack and the Beanstalk; Vol. 4 - Hansel and Gretel; Vol. 5 - Goldilocks; Vol. 6 - Cinderella; Went up the Hill;
It's so cool! The mice needed some straightening with hot water (and I mean 'hot', this is polyethylene, not PVC, so a boiling kettle poured down the reins/traces for a good 15 or twenty seconds, then pulled taught and pressed against a piece of cold marble (cutting board) or steel (draining board), needed two goes, but right as ninep'nce now!

♫♫♪ "We will pull it, we will drag it, to the party, how, how, how . . .
we will pull it, we will drag it; lets get going, now, now, now" ♫♪♪♪

Obviously with this kind of ex-shop stock, it tends to look like it was made yesterday, and while it probably is later than the stuff we looked at last time, it's clearly marked 'No307 Made in Hong Kong' down both sets of the hard polystyrene suspension, so it must be at least 30 years old?

"Jack and the Beanstalk"; "Three Bears"; 1430A - "Cinderella"; 1430A - "Jack and the Beanstalk"; 1430A - "Red Riding Hood"; 1430A - Goldilocks; 1435A - Carton Assortment of 1436/1437; 1436 - "Cinderella"; 1:No scale; Boxed; Cake Decorations; Christmas Crackers; Early British; Emenee Toy Company; Fairy Tales; G; Jack and Jill; Make; British; Make; USA; Marcel Jovine; Mother Goose; Once Upon a Time; Plymr - Ethylene; Plymr - Styrene; Renwal; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; The Three Bears; Transogram; Unknown Figures; Vol. 1 - The Three Little Pig; Vol. 2 - Little Red Riding Hood; Vol. 3 - Jack and the Beanstalk; Vol. 4 - Hansel and Gretel; Vol. 5 - Goldilocks; Vol. 6 - Cinderella; Went up the Hill;
The three figures; these are unmarked and like the mice, a standard or 'Airfix'-soldier polyethylene, so probably the same ones previously (or subsequently?) supplied to Transogram?

Friday, October 13, 2017

G is for Golden-Gamete laying Goose Gone to Greedy Gormless Git

So - I said yesterday it would get more complicated and it's going to get more complicated; but first remind yourselves of Kent Spreacher's research into the subject at the Toy Soldier HQ; scroll-down to Emenee.

Mother Goose! Not listed as an Emenee or Transogram set? The box is otherwise (the Title label being the exception) the same as yesterday's Little Red Riding Hood set, graphics wise, the card insert is - of course - a different one and the under-try has a different story printed.

As yesterday, with the enhanced one on the left and the new shot on the right.

Again following yesterday's sop's, from the left we have a pig who is worth a goose! A figure we assume to be Idle Jack, his mother (is she 'mother goose' or 'mother' to the goose?), then the goose that lays the golden eggs and what appear to be Hansel & Gretel; from another set, presumably the owners of the Goose - who; not knowing it laid Golden Eggs swapped it for a pig, no questions asked?!

Another question mark comes from the graphics, where there are three references to Jack & Jill, two on the side panels and a third on the top panel round the window. So we have a 'new' set with odd figures and the hint of an eighth set.

While it would be nice to claim them as a larger range of - British - sets, using the bed as 'evidence', I suspect the truth will be that Kent or other American collectors will find the Mother Goose (and Jack & Jill?) sets in Emenee packaging at some point for an eight-set count and that Transogram picked the more-popular four for their colouring sets.

Although, at about the same time as Emenee were issuing them, a British firm obviously borrowed the moulds, and perchance a Mother Goose has turned-up here first. Supporting the theory that the other sets will turn-up in the US is the fact that Kent's already carried some of the Mother Goose figures as loose stock, as well as smaller characters who may be Jack & Jill?

So not that complicated after all! I am guilty of hyperbole to get you to return the next day!

The obverse of the inner-card - just for completeness.

The figures in situ; upper shot is colour-enhanced.

The data to date;

Emenee (info. via Kent Spreacher)
Vol. 1 - The Three Little Pigs
Vol. 2 - Little Red Riding Hood
Vol. 3 - Jack and the Beanstalk
Vol. 4 - Hansel and Gretel
Vol. 5 - [Goldilocks and] The Three Bears
Vol. 6 - Cinderella

Transogram (info. via Kent Spreacher (via - Rick Koch))
1430A - "Cinderella"
1430A - "Jack and the Beanstalk"
1430A - "Red Riding Hood"
1430A - [Goldilocks and the] "Three Bears"
1435A - Carton Assortment of 1436/1437 (1 dozen, probably 3x4)
1436 - "Cinderella" (and) "Jack and the Beanstalk"
1437 - "Red Riding Hood" (and) [Goldilocks and the] "Three Bears"

Early British
- Mother Goose

Evidence (in artwork and loose figures) for;
- Jack and Jill [Went up the Hill]

And thanks again to Adrian Little of Mercator Trading for letting me photograph them - twice!

Thursday, October 12, 2017

L is for Little Red Riding Hood visits Little Old Lady who's been Lunched-on by Leery Lupus which then gets Laid-low by Lanky Logger!

You can't beat a fairy-tail for a bit of ultra-violence . . . actually you can, you don't find things being sliced like bread in fairy-tales, you need Tom & Jerry for that kind of shenanigans - but you know what I mean, and the originals (back in the dark, dank, forest-bound Central European villages of yonder yore) were full of all sorts, rape, incest, flaying-alive, eating alive, cooking alive . . . all sorts, and - come to think of it - someone gets eaten alive in this set!

These have been in edit for two years and I must thank Adrian Little for letting me photograph these two years ago and then again a few weeks ago, after the first set of images proved really too poor to use, these are from his collection not his stock, so he definitely went the extra nine-yards on this one.

Ostensively 'just' an early British kids interactive set, with which to play-out a favourite fairy-story, probably aimed at the 4 or 5 - 7 or 8-year old bracket? They look to date to the early 1950's and while someone mentioned the late 1940's in discussion the other day, it's unlikely, but not impossible, as all the dates for early plastic have been pushed back over the years, WHW, Bergan, Airfix, some French stuff, some minor makes, Palitoy &etc.

A colour enhanced shot from two years ago and the replacement next to it - with the bed the right way round, and it's 'my bad' it was the wrong way round two years ago as it gets loose and I replaced it for the shot!

From the left, as factory painted polyethylene mouldings we have Little Red Riding Hood, a big bad wolf (who looks sweet, how can you take a wood-axe to that*), granny (spelt "grannie" on the box - which may be important), wolf-granny and the wood-chopper.

* He actually looks like my favourite bear - Mary Plain . . . in Wartime! Who never managed the same level of fame as Paddington, despite being just as funny, but she was a tad more poignant, and some of the subject-matter was probably considered best forgotten by parents in the 1950/60's, allowing Paddington a free-run at the red-carpet? 

The bed is an unpainted, polystyrene, mould-shot with "MADE IN ENGLAND" inside the cavity, very unlike the figures.

And this is where it gets complicated! Kent Spreacher had done a lot of work on sets that look so alike this one you can't pretend they are anything other than Identical!

Now it's best if you go and read Kent'spiece as it's been 20-odd years in the editing and seems to be the whole story - less this bit! You have to scroll-down to Emenee.

There's nothing there to argue with there, that I can see? He's got the sculptor, an idea of the mould-history and the date - 1951, which would tie-in nicely with these sets being 'early fifties' - but not 'late forties'. So one has to assume (for the time being!) that this was part of the mould-swapping that went-on after the Second World War, and up to the point when Nixon lifted the tariffs Trump is threatening to reinstate!

We had a long discussion on the HäT forum about it ten years ago and there's more in Blast Off the space toys book. Basically there were hideous tariffs attached to finished goods imported into the US (and elsewhere, before the WTO unreasonable taxes were the bane of exporters and importers!), so toy companies (specifically - small moulds) would sent their moulds to their 'oppos' in other parts of the world as there were no tariffs on lent stuff, only on stuff for sale!

I call them 'oppos' (opposite numbers) because if the shipping of product was uneconomic they weren't 'competitors' as such, but they could recoup some of their investment by leasing their moulds (or charging for a specific tool-run, per unit, as a sort of rent?) to people who would be competitors - if they were both operating in the same market, which they weren't!

So, for the time being we'll assume that's the case here, and the Made in England will be no different to Kleeware putting their mark on the Pyro mouldings they used to borrow. The odd spelling of 'granny' is a further clue, I don't know if it is or was an Americanism back in the day (it's getting a red wiggly-line today), but if text was copied from the US sets . . . ?

Close-up of the figures in situ, how does that sweet little Mary Plain wolf become that fat old hag in pink? By swallowing the little old lady in blue, whole and alive!

Kent has listed the basket next to Little Red watsit, and I think that's likely the case, the Granny-Wolf has no need of a basket, while Little Red dar-di-dar was delivering stuff . . . food and flowers - that we know of! But they've both got their arm out so, I guess . . . play value - switching the basket! Also the Emenee bed seems to differ just as greatly from the PVC figures Kent reports and looks to be the same moulding.

Tomorrow, though; it all appears to get even more complicated!

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

G est pour la Guerre Civile

Having covered both Cherilea and Timpo albeit not fully, it seems to make sense to look at some of the other swoppet types before moving on to pastures new. These are all small samples, and a lot are 'unknown', but they give a flavour of what else is out there.

Another British firm; Charbens, did a set of swoppets which are clearly Timpo rip-offs, as kids we always thought these were better Hong Kong production due to the ridiculous pistol holster/belt. The flag's a belter though, bit of paint and it would knock the Timpo guidon into a cocked hat! No Union yet - I'm afraid, but they were the same mouldings with blue shirts.

These are a common kind of Hong Kong pirate, again taken from Timpo and possibly some connections with Linda or Blue Box, but it's such a firm 'don't know' I'll not be putting either name in the tag list. I do have somewhere images of HK ACWswoppets - that could be these - under another name entirely, if I find them I'll update this post in pink!

Very similar - even to the plug-in boots, this chap is by Transogram. Several of these HK sources adopted the double belt-loop and over system in vinyl for the braces that replaced the actual leather or canvas belts used in the civil war, this was due entirely to Timpo's influence and lead!

This guy is actually quite a good moulding from the waist up. A small HONG KONG on the top of the base helps separate him from all the similar figures. The third hole in the base is for the running legs that came with some of the Cowboys and Indians in this range.

Of the four HK sets looked at so far these are the best, they also have the plug-in boots but are otherwise very good copies of the Timpo originals, even down to the guidon, leading some unscrupulous dealers to try passing it off as Timpo - it actually has much cruder stitching and an almost unreadable 'th' after the 7.

These may be by Ellem for Cherilea, but I don't know so for now the same note applies as to the first lot (re. Linda/Blue Box) and once I've identified the Ellem bases, it may all become a little clearer?!

Dec. 28th 2023 - Now known to be produced by Merehall who use an MH mark on their packaging.
 
This 45/50mm lot are more Britians based, with PVC vinyl-rubber torsos on ethylene legs. Origins seem to be half Herald (bugler) and half Britains Swoppets. At some point the torsos were used on larger legs making 60mm giants - far-left in the lower left image.


I love what they've done to the Britains lying firing pose, reminds one of the Airfix prone or mounted poses that Montaplex put on bases!

"Lookout! Observation balloon!"

"I'll poke you with my big stick!"

"Go on then...I'll get my sabre out while you ignore yours shall I?"

"Blame the Photographer for posing us like this"

"Hmm, all right, I blame the photographer...you're still a long time dead"

Elastolin Yankee waves a red-flag to a Giodi Reb-bull...ha ha - I shouldn't be allowed! I think he's one of a set made for Kinder in the 1970's. These are both good quality figures - as you'd expect from European manufacturers, although the Giodi figure has some disturbing similarities with some of the HK production?