As we saw yesterday, Matchbox figures became ripe for piracy as soon as they had been released, taking the pressure off old Britains and Lone Star sculpts and joining Airfix as the origin of choice for copyists in Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore and increasingly by the 1980's - Mainland China.
With the bulk of my Matchbox copies in storage the figures we are looking at today are all contemporary or very recent, we did have a brief look at older, larger US clones here and the small scale Airfx/Matchbox mix from the 1990's here while the rest of the figures below are labelled for known sources, where known.
The ones labeled 'USA' came from Brian Berke as a loose sample, but seem to be the same figures as the Funtastic for Poundland ones this side of the pond. The lower insets show how Ocean Desert Sales tampo-marked the base of one of their figures, and a swirly-marbled one.
The grey one is interesting, but his origins remain unknown to me, I'd guess either a small quantity issued as accessories with die-cast toys, or a modern'ish 20¢ price-range capsule/gum-ball prize. The small scale Wing Lung's we looked at yesterday are a tad smaller then the Red Box PVC-rubber chap.
On the left we see the Ocean Desert Sales figures compared to a better sample (both from Brian) in a dense PVC. The sandy coloured ones have a wider pose range and are pretty good copies, the Ocean sculpts being manufactured in a tinny-ethylene and skinnier. Note the guy being shot; the sandy one has a descent Tommy-gun sculpt to let go of; the Ocean guy is dropping a flipper!
To the right are the (known) poses/colours of the smaller figures, except Red Box's Motormax, who I know carried five poses (issued paired in tens) but they are in storage. They also come in various paint styles and I think another 'brand' source is ID'd in the archive.
The Ocean Desert Sales in their bag - Federal German 8th Army! And the full set of Wilkinson's ['Wilco'] figures which I think we've looked at before? We've also looked at the Funtasic and 99p/Poundland stuff quite recently so check the tag list if you missed them first time round.
Brian's sample of loose figures from NY, NY, and two compared to the Chinatroop cheapies which came from Peter Evans and are a slightly smaller copy/sculpt.
The sample from Peter Evans, I'm not 100% sure the two trucks were in the same set, but I seem to have photographed them in sequence and then included them in the collage without paying attention!
The little boats would paint-up well for war gaming, but the drivers/pilots (? Captains!) are a bit wooden. The map is fascinating, trying to tie-in to the Afghanistan 'adventure'.
There are a few non-Matchbox poses in this sample including an ex-Galoob Space Marine and some ex-Airfix chaps. The helicopter too is not that shabby, and a paint-job would bring it to life.
Finally, this came from Toysmith-via-Brian the other day and shows some quite good versions of Matchbox US Infantry clones, the window-box is very similar to the box the Funtastic smallies came-in over here. The figures are clearly marked MADE IN CHINA in the bases, and I find the need for a storage bag a bit ironic . . . "rip that box to bits and get it to landfill ASP kid, stuff the environment!"
About Me
- Hugh Walter
- 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.
Tuesday, August 9, 2016
Monday, August 8, 2016
W is for Wing Lung
So, the day Rack Toy Month started (I haven't heard back from Kofi or Teresa yet, but I'm sure it's only a matter of time before it's properly recognised!) I got an eMail from Tom Clague, along with three images that were very useful (I also got 7 eMails from Brian Berke - the same day! A lot of which will be featuring in RTM - there; now I've abbreviated it, it's part of the social fabric!), he (Tom) also posed a couple of questions, so this post is half Tom's and half whatever I can give in answer to those questions . . . which is not much really!
Tom's contribution: Wing Lung; Pirates of Matchbox (and Airfix) to the gentry of the West. This is actually a set of Matchbox British Infantry clones, in around 40mm (or about 1:45th scale). Tom points out that one of them (bottom right-hand image) is a clever conversion of a Matchbox 8th Army figure, with the addition of fully trousered legs, and of note is that they seem to have done the work themselves, it kinda' shows round the gaiters, but it's not a cut-n-shut from another pose as no other pose has legs/feet in quite the same position.
Sold on the runner, as most (but not all) their sets were, there are 12 poses for a twelve-figure count. Missing are the 'alternate' prone crawler, the stabbing-down pose (clearly replaced by the conversion - which actually makes a better figure), radio-operator and AFV crewman in coveralls. Also missing are the No.2 for the Vicker's MG and the sten-gunner.
I suspect that it's pronounced Wing 'Loong'. They only seem to have produced a basic five sets of figures/moulds, but with packaging variations and a green set of British clones issued with US header-cards there are a dozen or so to collect, although if they were dedicated toy-manufacturers they will be responsible for all sorts of stuff hidden as generics or under the made-up or actual brands of European importers/chains.
They must have flourished after 1971 (when the Matchbox started issuing these figures), so reasonably recent in historical terms, and possibly still out there contract-manufacturing for the Toysaurus or Wallmart, or making kitchen-bowls for onward shipping to Peru or South Africa, such is the fate of makers who don't stick to toys!
I had actually posted Wing Lung a couple of few weeks ago over on the Hong Kong Blog, and having only one old scan of a photograph of four figures for the post had enhanced it somewhat with a bit of home-made graphical content! The above are those which are best carried-over to this post.
The three header cards are consistent across the 'range' with the US getting a greyish-white card surround (blued on later sets), the British; yellow and the Germans an orange-tan. And base marking in all scales and types was the same neat HONG KONG either lengthwise on longer/thinner bases, or up-and-under on shorter fatter bases, and all bases have 'rectangle roundness' settings of around 100%, that is to say perfect half-circles at each end with parallel sides between, whatever the length/width, a few have flat tips, but perfect 45% radius' on all four corners . . . in fact very easy to ID as loose figures in your 'unknowns' box!
One of Tom's questions was "Does anyone know if they ever did this set in 1:76...", well, no I don't think so. I have a load of these loose, in storage and it's a funny thing, but the above shots (taken from feeBay back in 2006) show all the poses I've found. Being: five US Marines, four German stormtroopers off to Belgium, in all their early-war finery and three Fallschrimjager, all also ex-Airfix.
I have them in green, brown and a silver-grey . . . basically the same colours as the larger figures. Yet while the larger figures are Matchbox copies, each equating to one of the three nations depicted, in the smaller scale you get the same Airfix copies for all three sets, nation being set by colour! And - They are tiny, about 17/18mm, smaller than the Airfix HO-OO figures, but look how many you got - 3 or 4 frames to a stack and three stacks, that's 108 figures minimum, 144 maximum.
Here being sold as an unbranded 'generic' imported by N. Davison and Co. of Sheffield (sometime in the mid-1980's from the 'CE' mark on the sticker), and off-the-runner, but still following the colour rule for the header-cards (except the US, who have gone blue), the plastic colour rule for the figures, the base rules and showing the other sets, badly; I photographed these on Adrian's stall at the Plastic Warrior show a couple of years ago, but the lighting/flash was all wrong.
You will also have clocked by now that they also stole the artwork of the original Matchbox sets as well!
This isn't much better, but helps to show that the Germans are also Matchbox sculpts!
Related to his other question, Tom was hoping the prone figure/s may have been in the small scale as they weren't produced by Matchbox in their 1:76th scale set, at all, either of them? As we've seen, they weren’t I'm afraid, but here they are in the full 1:32 of the originals. One of life's little mysteries!
Listing
Known Sets
HO-Gauge compatible (18mm, mix of Airfix piracies)
- American Soldiers
- British Soldiers
- German Soldiers
30/35mm (ex-Airfix 1:32nd scale figures)
Cowboys and Indians
40mm (ex-Matchbox)
Single Runner Sets
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox US Infantry)
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox British Infantry in green plastic)
- British Soldiers
- German Soldiers
Large Bags of Loose Figures
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox US Infantry)
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox British Infantry in green plastic)
- British Soldiers
- German Soldiers
Small Generic Bags on Larger Backing Card (loose figures)
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox US Infantry)
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox British Infantry in green plastic)
- British Soldiers
- German Soldiers
There is also a Wing Mau Trading Co., who carried/exported the same spacemen as Hing Fat and a set of factory-painted 60mm PVC/rubber S.W.A.T Team figures. But going on the number of Chinese restaurants with 'Wing' in the title, I'm guessing it's a common enough name and that there's no connection between the two.
Finally you may have recognised Tom's name, I've plugged his two previous albums and an EP, well, he has another out, it's free, downloadable now, and good. I would describe it as chill-out psychedelia and it comes with CD-scaled cover art, give it a go . . .http://theloveexplosion.blogspot.com
Tom's contribution: Wing Lung; Pirates of Matchbox (and Airfix) to the gentry of the West. This is actually a set of Matchbox British Infantry clones, in around 40mm (or about 1:45th scale). Tom points out that one of them (bottom right-hand image) is a clever conversion of a Matchbox 8th Army figure, with the addition of fully trousered legs, and of note is that they seem to have done the work themselves, it kinda' shows round the gaiters, but it's not a cut-n-shut from another pose as no other pose has legs/feet in quite the same position.
Sold on the runner, as most (but not all) their sets were, there are 12 poses for a twelve-figure count. Missing are the 'alternate' prone crawler, the stabbing-down pose (clearly replaced by the conversion - which actually makes a better figure), radio-operator and AFV crewman in coveralls. Also missing are the No.2 for the Vicker's MG and the sten-gunner.
I suspect that it's pronounced Wing 'Loong'. They only seem to have produced a basic five sets of figures/moulds, but with packaging variations and a green set of British clones issued with US header-cards there are a dozen or so to collect, although if they were dedicated toy-manufacturers they will be responsible for all sorts of stuff hidden as generics or under the made-up or actual brands of European importers/chains.
They must have flourished after 1971 (when the Matchbox started issuing these figures), so reasonably recent in historical terms, and possibly still out there contract-manufacturing for the Toysaurus or Wallmart, or making kitchen-bowls for onward shipping to Peru or South Africa, such is the fate of makers who don't stick to toys!
I had actually posted Wing Lung a couple of few weeks ago over on the Hong Kong Blog, and having only one old scan of a photograph of four figures for the post had enhanced it somewhat with a bit of home-made graphical content! The above are those which are best carried-over to this post.
The three header cards are consistent across the 'range' with the US getting a greyish-white card surround (blued on later sets), the British; yellow and the Germans an orange-tan. And base marking in all scales and types was the same neat HONG KONG either lengthwise on longer/thinner bases, or up-and-under on shorter fatter bases, and all bases have 'rectangle roundness' settings of around 100%, that is to say perfect half-circles at each end with parallel sides between, whatever the length/width, a few have flat tips, but perfect 45% radius' on all four corners . . . in fact very easy to ID as loose figures in your 'unknowns' box!
One of Tom's questions was "Does anyone know if they ever did this set in 1:76...", well, no I don't think so. I have a load of these loose, in storage and it's a funny thing, but the above shots (taken from feeBay back in 2006) show all the poses I've found. Being: five US Marines, four German stormtroopers off to Belgium, in all their early-war finery and three Fallschrimjager, all also ex-Airfix.
I have them in green, brown and a silver-grey . . . basically the same colours as the larger figures. Yet while the larger figures are Matchbox copies, each equating to one of the three nations depicted, in the smaller scale you get the same Airfix copies for all three sets, nation being set by colour! And - They are tiny, about 17/18mm, smaller than the Airfix HO-OO figures, but look how many you got - 3 or 4 frames to a stack and three stacks, that's 108 figures minimum, 144 maximum.
Here being sold as an unbranded 'generic' imported by N. Davison and Co. of Sheffield (sometime in the mid-1980's from the 'CE' mark on the sticker), and off-the-runner, but still following the colour rule for the header-cards (except the US, who have gone blue), the plastic colour rule for the figures, the base rules and showing the other sets, badly; I photographed these on Adrian's stall at the Plastic Warrior show a couple of years ago, but the lighting/flash was all wrong.
You will also have clocked by now that they also stole the artwork of the original Matchbox sets as well!
This isn't much better, but helps to show that the Germans are also Matchbox sculpts!
Related to his other question, Tom was hoping the prone figure/s may have been in the small scale as they weren't produced by Matchbox in their 1:76th scale set, at all, either of them? As we've seen, they weren’t I'm afraid, but here they are in the full 1:32 of the originals. One of life's little mysteries!
Listing
Known Sets
HO-Gauge compatible (18mm, mix of Airfix piracies)
- American Soldiers
- British Soldiers
- German Soldiers
30/35mm (ex-Airfix 1:32nd scale figures)
Cowboys and Indians
40mm (ex-Matchbox)
Single Runner Sets
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox US Infantry)
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox British Infantry in green plastic)
- British Soldiers
- German Soldiers
Large Bags of Loose Figures
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox US Infantry)
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox British Infantry in green plastic)
- British Soldiers
- German Soldiers
Small Generic Bags on Larger Backing Card (loose figures)
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox US Infantry)
- American Soldiers (ex-Matchbox British Infantry in green plastic)
- British Soldiers
- German Soldiers
There is also a Wing Mau Trading Co., who carried/exported the same spacemen as Hing Fat and a set of factory-painted 60mm PVC/rubber S.W.A.T Team figures. But going on the number of Chinese restaurants with 'Wing' in the title, I'm guessing it's a common enough name and that there's no connection between the two.
Finally you may have recognised Tom's name, I've plugged his two previous albums and an EP, well, he has another out, it's free, downloadable now, and good. I would describe it as chill-out psychedelia and it comes with CD-scaled cover art, give it a go . . .http://theloveexplosion.blogspot.com
Labels:
20mm,
40mm,
Airfix,
American,
British,
Carded,
Contribution,
Davison. N,
German,
Hing Fat,
Hong Kong,
Matchbox,
N. Davison and Co.,
Plymr - Ethylene,
W,
Wing Lung,
Wing Mau
Sunday, August 7, 2016
F is for Follow-up to the Follow-up!
Very brief one, thanks to fellow blogger The Good Soldier Svjek and Tim Peterson who both got in touch to ID the figures Brian Berke bought and painted which we looked at the other day.
I know little about metal, and less about the whole Marlborough, French & Indian Wars and Revolution period and next to nothing about home-casts so any help is gratefully received!
My rule when the figures come in, in mixed lots (which they do tend to, being on the smaller side) is to check an old B&W copy of an Agasee (spell?) catalogue I have, if the figure is in there I call it that, on its index card, if not it goes in the unknown flats/home-casts 40-50mm box! A system that works until you get three cats in different sizes . . . knowing one must might be Agasee but at least two must be imposters! Hell is ID'ing home-casts!
Anyway, both correspondents said they were Nuernberger Meisterzinn and supplied links, I'vepinched borrowed the 'commercial advertising' images and included the links:
http://www.bauer-spielwaren.de/de/marken-produkte/nuernberger-meisterzinn/giessformen-und-zubehoer/kuerassiere-zu-pferd-1322/
http://www.bauer-spielwaren.de/de/marken-produkte/nuernberger-meisterzinn/giessformen-und-zubehoer/reiter-mit-degen-1002/
While this should take you to the whole page:
http://www.bauer-spielwaren.de/de/marken-produkte/nuernberger-meisterzinn/giessformen-und-zubehoer/
I know little about metal, and less about the whole Marlborough, French & Indian Wars and Revolution period and next to nothing about home-casts so any help is gratefully received!
My rule when the figures come in, in mixed lots (which they do tend to, being on the smaller side) is to check an old B&W copy of an Agasee (spell?) catalogue I have, if the figure is in there I call it that, on its index card, if not it goes in the unknown flats/home-casts 40-50mm box! A system that works until you get three cats in different sizes . . . knowing one must might be Agasee but at least two must be imposters! Hell is ID'ing home-casts!
Anyway, both correspondents said they were Nuernberger Meisterzinn and supplied links, I've
http://www.bauer-spielwaren.de/de/marken-produkte/nuernberger-meisterzinn/giessformen-und-zubehoer/kuerassiere-zu-pferd-1322/
http://www.bauer-spielwaren.de/de/marken-produkte/nuernberger-meisterzinn/giessformen-und-zubehoer/reiter-mit-degen-1002/
While this should take you to the whole page:
http://www.bauer-spielwaren.de/de/marken-produkte/nuernberger-meisterzinn/giessformen-und-zubehoer/
Labels:
40mm,
AWI,
Contribution,
F,
Flats,
French,
Make; German,
Metal - Home Cast,
Metal - Lead,
Nuernberger Meisterzinn
Saturday, August 6, 2016
B is for Ballard of the Toymen of Mankind
In the beginning there were 'playthings', and they did be made in people's spare time, out of mud and fingernails, sticks and birds' nests, they were poor playthings, but they were for poor people and they were made by poor people - in their five-minute breaks from losing their fingers down't 'Mine' or in't 'Spinning-jenny'! It was not good.
Yet
for the rich, there did be toys a-plenty, they did be lovingly hand tooled from
the finest materials known to man, or steal'able from the native citizens of
the India, the Africa and the New World by artisanal craftsmen, the first of
the toymen. It was good, if you were rich.
Sticks
with hoops shaped and sanded to perfection the ends blended together and
varnished until you couldn't see the join. Doll's in clothes of finest silk,
satin, cotton and velvet, pull-along toys, ride-on toys, leather padded
hobby-horses and hand-made wooden puzzle-pictures.
They
did be made in small quantities and get sold in 'Toy Shops' in the larger
cities and market towns, usually on a sale or return basis, the shop-keepers
being 'merchants' did consider themselves above the artisan manufacturers. It
was good . . . especially if you were a toy-shop keeper.
Then,
did come the age of mass production:
"You,
make 50 of those shapes, she'll make 50 of those, he'll glue them together and
the child-man can paint them red with that lead-based paint. Stamp those
in tin, sew these to that pattern, paint a hundred eyes before lunch or I'll
dock your pay!"
Now
the poor could lose their fingers in a toy-making machine, but they took the
rejects home to their bairns, and things looked gooderer and gooderer. The rich
could still identify themselves by paying more for better paint,
locomotive-numbers and pin-stripes, or crocheted hems, and fancy bows. The
'deluxe' range.
And
did Austria-Hungary and the new Germania excel at the making of toys with the
mass-production and a new business was formed, the import-export haus. A
middle-gentleman between the mass-producer and the toye shoppe (as it was now
retro titled for no good reason, like all retro-fashion bollocks)
And
in Albion did William of the Britains do well with a wide range of warrtoys, as
it helped raise a fierce brood of adventurers who could be sent out to expand
the colonies and find new people to lose their fingers making stuff, and was
the international shipper begat.
Then
did come an actual warr to the world of mankind:
The
sons of Albion did have to migrate in Pals Brigades to the land of the sons of
the Franks, even toymen Pals, and there in a field of pretty poppies did they
bash the brains of the men or the sons of the men who had been making their
Elastolin and Maerklin toys, bash them to a pulp and empty their skulls unto
the earth, and often did they get their own skulls mashed and emptied, for the
warr is not good for toys or toymen.
And
did the toys of the Germainians and the others become unpopular for a while,
and did Mr. Frank Hornby and the Tribes of Hassenfeld and Lines and Louis Marx
begat large toy combines who did sell direct to toy shops (for shoppe was
dropped as bloody silly) in their own lands and through wholesalers to
department stores and chains like The Woolies
And
then did the toy trade settle-down for a while, and did toys come from all over
the world to the lands of the Angles and the peoples who look like the Angles
by shipper and import-exporter, through wholesaler and direct-sale to toy
shops, chains and department stores. And it was good.
And
did materials get cheaper, and machines safer and less hungry for fingers and
did mass-production quicken. And the tribes of Elastolin and Maerklin did creep
back to the shores of Albion and in the land of the Yank did the Import Haus in
Yorktown also stock them and their brethren of the tribe of Lineol and co.
And
even the bear-toy did get re-born (for in fact as 'bear' he had been around for
a while) when 'teddy' did be christened after the man in the hat on the back of
a train, or did it be a postage stamp he decorated?
But
warr came back (the mankind can't escape it, he's too stupid, or votes for even
stupider leaders who have a nose for warr) and this time did all toys become
very thin on the ground, yeay verily, even unto the days of homemade things,
though not of mud and fingernails this time.
There
were wooden ships from the New Forest in Albion which fell-apart when you hit
them, while in the land of the Yank did the tribes of Hassenfeld and McSomeone
make flat figures of finest ply, with paper cut-outs glued unto them, for
shooting with sticks and marbles until they fell down.
But
did the Frank Hornby and the William of the Britains and all else be put to
making brain-mashing things, not toy things, for the six long years (only four
in the lands of the Yank and the Rous) that the warr raged.
And
were the child-men sorely vexed for they thought it odd that they should fire
stick and marble at the very likenesses of their elder brother's fine
battle-ship or of him in his Brodie helmet, but they hid their disappointment
as they could see the consternation on the faces of the grown-ups, and
appreciated their simple toys. And did the Import Haus in Yorktown disappear
never to be seen again.
And
did the child-men of Albion take their remaining Cowboys & Indians from the
William of the Britains and bury them in the ruins of the bombed-out dwelling
next door on Blackheath using the 'lightning doesn't strike twice' rule to hide
them from the Veewons and the Veetoos until the warr did end.
However
all good things come to an end . . . .er, so too do all bad things, and yeah,
hark how the warr had heralded the coming of the plastick!
So
it came to pass that when the warr did go cold (for it never really went away -
look at the lands of the Rous and the sons of the tribes of the Ott today) and
Mr. Marshall did okay-it for the Germanian toymen left in the West Germania to
sell toys again and the men of Nippon too, albeit with a 'Foreign' stamp, did
things look like they might get back to normal.
But
normal was far from the ways of the toymen and the plastick was to have a vast
say over the toys of the mankind in the decades to come.
The
men of Nippon did initially exploit the use of tin, and pumice, clockwork and
celluloid to flood the land of their occupiers with a vengeance, while the
locals in the land of the Yank did invent the plastick dime-store novelty which
was quickly copied in the land of Aitchkay.
The
land of Aitchkey was where the people who didn't want to live under the Mao
went. It could not be part of the land of Mao as the men of Albion had
pretty-much stolen it with the help of gunboats after the people of Por'cel'ain
had stopped the men of Albion doing a nice trade in opium a few long years
earlier . . . 1897, if you must be advised.
All this tin and plastick toy production over the seas, along with the
dime-store novelty thing did lead to a new kind of toy business, the Importer,
as now the export bit was done by coal merchants and car makers, toys only came
in to the lands of the Angles and the people who look like the Angles. In the
land of the Yank this was called jobbing.
Another
new business model was the tie-in, where tribes of toymen - often set up with
the help of Mr Marshall's money, or according to his plan - did swap moulds by
aeroplane and manufacture the same thing in a different place; this was
practiced by the tribes of Acme, Kleeware, Lido, Pyro, Thomas and others. And
things did look good . . .for about five minutes.
For
back in Aitchkay, the plastick did lend itself to the pyrate, and copies which
were not mould-swaps did begin to appear in numbers likened to the grains of
sand on a beach. And smaller tribes of toymen in Albion and the land of the
Yank did go to the wall and not come back again.
And
it came to pass that in the land of the Yank was a jobber known as the Tribe of
Rosenberg, that jobbed the Aitchkay's pyrate plastick, calling it Giant because
it was so small . . . the mankind is very humorous sometimes.
And
the Tribe of Rosenberg did source direct from the individual Aitchkay toymen,
which was copied by other jobbers in Albion, Germania, Neanderland (where they
are all very tall and live in boats on bicycles) the land of the Yank and even
unto Aitchkey itself.
And
the tribe's of Cornelius, Durham, Fishel, Grossman, Hagemayer, Ja-Ru, Lanard,
LJN, Larami, Mego, Nasta, Postler yeay even unto the Tribe of Rosenberg did
decide that Importing or Jobbing left them over-exposed and so, verily did they
re-invent themselves as FOB's passing the risk on to smaller jobbers and bigger
chains back in the homelands, setting themselves-up with plush offices in
Kowloon and they did have expense accounts for comfortable ladies.
And
the FOB was a secret thing meaning whatever the mankind you were asking said it
meant; sometimes it did mean Free On Board, sometimes it did mean Freight On
Board, sometimes it did mean Fob-off with your questions! None were truly
explanatory of the nature of the FOB's which was to make sure someone else paid
for the cost of dealing with the toymen of Aitchkay.
And
did the tribe of Rosenberg then change their name unto that of the tribe of
Arco, to get to the head of that long list perhaps? And more importantly indeed
did it get them to the head of the telephonic and telexian directories. And things
did look good again . . . for about five minutes.
For
did come to pass the scourge of the Great Oylcrysiss, and the shortage-of-black
times, when did go to the wall and not come back again, many, many tribes of
toymen in Albion, and the land of the Yank and the lands of the son's of the
Franks, Germania and verily elsewhere and everywhere even unto the lands of
Nippon and Aitchkey, but not so much in Aitchkay as elsewhere and everywhere
else.
And
not just the tribes of toymen, for the department stores and dime-store chains
did fall to the Great Oylcrysiss, car makers and coal merchants too (scratch
that, coal merchants did have a minor rebirth and did do okay for a few years,
yeay verily!), all going to the wall and not coming back again, while the sound
of the rending of capital did spread like the plague over the lands of the
Angles and the peoples who looked like the Angles.
And
in the meantime the Mao did die and the cold warr did thaw a little, and while
the people of Por'cel'ain (like the people of Rous) may never be as free as the
Angles, they were a little freer.
And
yeay did the Mao-clones and the replacement Mao's even free-up the economy unto
market-forces, so did the people of Aichkay start getting their relatives in
the land of Por'cel'ain to do a bit of plastick-work for them 'on the side'.
And things did look good again - for about five minutes.
For
it was that the tribes who went to the wall and not come back again did be both
small and medium sized toy-tribes (SME's), and the picking over of the bones of
the tribes of toymen did make some richer tribes very fat indeed and did the
tribe of Hassenfeld call itself now the tribe of Hasbro.
And
did the tribes of Tomy and Takara and Mattel grow inordinately large and swallow-up
even some of the healthy FOB's, such as the tribe of Arco which did get eaten
by the tribe of Mattel while the tribe of Bluebird did get eaten by the tribe
of Kenner which did get eaten by the tribe of Hasbro which did already eat the
tribe of Larami as a starter. And in this way too did the board-game and puzzle
tribes of Albion become the game brands of the tribes of toymen in the land of the
Yank.
But
this bonfire of the tribes of toymen was mirrored in the bonfire of the keepers
of toy shops. Everywhere the toy shops did go to the wall and not come back
again, often as the Toysaurus did open its own toy hanger (like an aeroplane
hanger, but bigger) nearby.
And
did the toy-making tribes of Aitchkay become the toy-making tribes of
Por'cel'ain, and move their plants across the straits due to cheap labour and
reasonable start-up grants from the dictators who were the Mao-replacements.
And
did the name of the tribe of Airfix be rescued from the land of the sons of the
Franks, and did it join the names of the tribes of Scalextric and Corgi who
were reborn under the tribe of Hornby, but of Hobbies not Mr. Frank. And did
the tribes of Tomy and Takara eat each other unto a merged entity.
And
so it came to pass that some Jobbers and FOB's survived the going to the wall
and not coming back again, but they lost the expense accounts for comfortable
ladies as margins were cut to the bones of the toymen, and all fed the gaping
maw of the Toysaurus who did call the shots of the Aitchkay and Por'cel'ain
toymen, and of the Jobbers and of the FOB's.
And
even unto the land of Nippon did Tomy-Takara listen to the Toysaurus and
respond with alacrity. And did a 12 month turnaround become the norm before a
toyline did get sent to the wall to not come back again. This sorely vexed the
grown-up mankinds as it affected collector choice and did mean the 'Star Wars
Command' did not stay in (or on) the hanger long enough.
And
did they turn to mature collectables and the 'New Production' which they said
came from the land of the Rous, but in fact it did mostly come from the land of
the You'crane. But to admit this would be to understand that they were
contributing hard currency to the brain-mashing in the Don-bass and the
Cry-more, under the absolutely not-gay, no never ever, straight-down-the-line,
bear-wrestling, mythical hero; Poo-Tin.
And
did few of the child-men worry about any of this as they were all too busy
looking for virtual pokey-mans on the motorway flyovers and rail-tracks, and
around the graveyards and cenotaphs of mankind and all other unsuitable and
sometime dangerous places. Their little faces lit from below by their
dumbfones.
And
did few of the grown-up mankind's think this was good, yet it was what they
were stuck with under the free-market Thatcherite-Raganomic capitalism, while
they did wait for affordable micro carbons; buckminsterfullerene, carbyne and
graphene to come into the world of the toymen, and/or did they wait for the
Toysaurus to get so big it fell over and died.
And
then too - did they wait for the next warr, as it was coming, and it would
speed-up the changes that were needed, and it would probably leave the
Chinasaur standing rampant on the ashes of the Toysaurus and then the age of
the men of Angle and the people who look like the men of Angle would pass.
Labels:
B,
Hong Kong,
Humour,
Miscellaneous
Friday, August 5, 2016
T is for Two - Euro'Rack-Toys
If nothing else, Rack-Toy Month will lighten Picasa's load! Spain and Germany provide today's frivolous novelty baubles of polymer loveliness!
Actually by Manurba, once they had crossed the channel they became Tallon . . . there'd been a war or something and it was considered practical to hide Germanic titles from the Brits, now the 'Brexit' idiots have re-dug the channel so thoughtlessly, maybe Tallon will be re-born, carrying Schleich or Playmobile. . . or worse . . .Nutella!
We've looked at them before, and will return to them when the rest are out of storage, but for now, here they are, Anglo-German Rack Toys in Rack-Toy Month!
Actually by Manurba, once they had crossed the channel they became Tallon . . . there'd been a war or something and it was considered practical to hide Germanic titles from the Brits, now the 'Brexit' idiots have re-dug the channel so thoughtlessly, maybe Tallon will be re-born, carrying Schleich or Playmobile. . . or worse . . .Nutella!
We've looked at them before, and will return to them when the rest are out of storage, but for now, here they are, Anglo-German Rack Toys in Rack-Toy Month!
Wholly uninspiring figures I'm sad to say, they look like
what I think they were meant to be in a de-militarised Germany - NATO troops on
manoeuvres! Available in grey or green, about every 40th figure is
marked ‘WEST GERMANY’, usually the officer or the standing ‘at ease’ pose,
although I think I’ve a prone figure with it written down the leg? There’s
probably an eighth figure, maybe ten (the bulk of mine are in storage), but don’t
expect them to be any more lively
Oh Dear! The Spanish running out of steam; painted 54mm and unpainted 60mm with not enough horses presented by Comansi in a too-big bag? No wonder they changed their name to Novalinea (New Lines) shortly after! It's a Rack Toy, what'da'ya expect for a couple of shillings and sixpence? And the artwork's lovely.
Labels:
40mm,
AFV; Tank,
AFV's,
Carded,
Cold War,
Comansi,
Make; German,
Make; Spain,
Manurba,
Plymr - Ethylene,
Plymr - Styrene,
T,
Tallon,
Wild West,
WWII
Thursday, August 4, 2016
W is for What the Heck!
We've looked at parachuting, poopa-trooper para-types so often I've run out of titles, that's the truth of the matter!
These are from Brian Berke; Amscan's latest on the other side of the pond, in two sizes, the blow-moulds are a definite 'generic', I think we've seen them twice under other 'brands' and I know I have another lot in storage, based on a design that must be 50 years old, and maybe coming from the same place, but a new moulding.
The smaller ones (with a Crescent sizer telling us they are about 56mm) are similar to others out there, but seem to be new sculpts (to me anyway), and hopefully when Royal Fail and Parcelfarce get their act together we may be looking at them in greater detail, later.
Brain also sent this shot of Max Headroom (well . . .nearly!) in training with the CIA, his instructor being more sensibly attired! A bit 'action-figure' like, but single mouldings, so definitely in the right place here! They also have catapults, so would be great-fun . . . in fact it's worth getting an old leather-cup catapult for all these para-chaps?
What the Heck! A penguin with a parachute, no . . . you read it right the first time, look at the picture. What else would you expect here? Some mounted Britains Swoppet knight, sweeping majestically down over the rockery? It's coming - but this is Rack Toy Month; so you get a Hawkin's/Tobar penguin in a snow-hat, parachuting . . . Airborne, AaiirrBORRRNE!
These are from Brian Berke; Amscan's latest on the other side of the pond, in two sizes, the blow-moulds are a definite 'generic', I think we've seen them twice under other 'brands' and I know I have another lot in storage, based on a design that must be 50 years old, and maybe coming from the same place, but a new moulding.
The smaller ones (with a Crescent sizer telling us they are about 56mm) are similar to others out there, but seem to be new sculpts (to me anyway), and hopefully when Royal Fail and Parcelfarce get their act together we may be looking at them in greater detail, later.
Brain also sent this shot of Max Headroom (well . . .nearly!) in training with the CIA, his instructor being more sensibly attired! A bit 'action-figure' like, but single mouldings, so definitely in the right place here! They also have catapults, so would be great-fun . . . in fact it's worth getting an old leather-cup catapult for all these para-chaps?
What the Heck! A penguin with a parachute, no . . . you read it right the first time, look at the picture. What else would you expect here? Some mounted Britains Swoppet knight, sweeping majestically down over the rockery? It's coming - but this is Rack Toy Month; so you get a Hawkin's/Tobar penguin in a snow-hat, parachuting . . . Airborne, AaiirrBORRRNE!
Wednesday, August 3, 2016
SAS is for Secret Army Supplies
A follow-up to this post which I published only a few weeks before I got this at Plastic Warrior's show in May, and it serves to show not all rack-toys are 99p or a dollar! Both Arco and Larami (among others) had price-positioned lines in 1, 2, 3 and 5 dollars, through the '70's and 80's.
I'm pleased to see that the shortage of poses for the 'enemy' force is as obvious here as it was in my sample, so it's not that my loose example was slewed, rather that Galoob decided to cramp the enemy's style!
Interestingly the set's code (5220) is the same as the Army Gear set, only with a different backing card and like the other card, it shows the unpainted figures coming with the accessory sets, while the 20-figure set has the camo-painted chaps. With the possible exception of the Army Gear medals, both lines seem identical.
The Rainbow Toys tie-in probably has something to do with it, did Galoob buy Rainbow and re-brand to Army Gear, or did Rainbow keep Army Gear going with a rebrand?
The flash has rather hidden the little rubber bases which are in a little compartment down the bottom left of the card, they are also in as short supply as my loose figures but with ten bases for 20 troops, that too was deliberate - sometimes you don't require hindsight to see why a line failed - what were they thinking?
I'm pleased to see that the shortage of poses for the 'enemy' force is as obvious here as it was in my sample, so it's not that my loose example was slewed, rather that Galoob decided to cramp the enemy's style!
Interestingly the set's code (5220) is the same as the Army Gear set, only with a different backing card and like the other card, it shows the unpainted figures coming with the accessory sets, while the 20-figure set has the camo-painted chaps. With the possible exception of the Army Gear medals, both lines seem identical.
The Rainbow Toys tie-in probably has something to do with it, did Galoob buy Rainbow and re-brand to Army Gear, or did Rainbow keep Army Gear going with a rebrand?
The flash has rather hidden the little rubber bases which are in a little compartment down the bottom left of the card, they are also in as short supply as my loose figures but with ten bases for 20 troops, that too was deliberate - sometimes you don't require hindsight to see why a line failed - what were they thinking?
Tuesday, August 2, 2016
C is for Chitinous Creepy-Crawly Carded Chinacritters
So - I am declaring August 'Rack Toy Month'. I'm not sure if the UN or HMG will add it to their lists of official days, weeks, months and cultural years, but certainly at Small Scale World, this August will be Rack Toy Month . . . and if Brian Berke keeps sending me images and examples at his current rate, it'll be Rack Toy Month for the whole of the second half of 2017!
As well as lots of images from Brian, I've collected a few myself recently and there are a few older ones in Picasa, all of which can be grouped, lumped or thrown-together violently in thematic posts, or as stand-alone posts.
We'll start with last week's little act of serendipidy or co-incidence; I had to go on an epic journey the other day involving 7 buses and several miles of walking, I won't bore you with the details . . . all frightfully parochial real-life shite involving a drive-belt for a garden chipper, but I had to pop into Farnborough for some vape-juice (over two years, no fag!) at the start of the day so popped round the corner to a party shop I check for this stuff occasionally and got more lizards, four key-rings, a bag of cats (coming soon) and a bag of insects!
The netted set top right, be they! One of the key rings was a snail, so the two purchases rather drove each-other. Two buses later found me in Frimley, where there used to be a shed-load of charity shops, some of them seem to have gone, but there were a few and with 20 minutes to kill for the connection, I flew round them and found the old tub of insects - bottom right.
As I'd seen, and rejected a set of large and not very good insects in The Works earlier, I thought "Well, 'it has to be' now!" and so, two buses later, shelled out the couple of quid for the set to the left in the above collage!
The contents of the three sets, you can see why I initially rejected the Works ones, they (upper shot) are big, rubbery, lacking detail and are not trying too hard to resemble anything known to entomologists - in all cases the legs/thorax rule is studiously avoided!
Below them to the left is the Ackerman charity-shop purchase, with 13 present I suspect a couple are missing? To be honest they're not much cop either but were only 50p! Finally the Unique branded bag's contents are a bit better, probably not that accurate either, but better sculpts and more subdued colours make them a reasonable set. They would respond well to a repaint.
Comparisons between the sets, you can see the sizes in the previous collage are pretty close to the actual size comparisons here, anyone who knows how Picasa collages work will know that's more by good luck than good judgement!
The un-branded key-ring which started the insect purchasing frenzy is probably a marine mollusc - with a shell like that, certainly something very foreign to the UK? I've removed the ring & chain for this shot, and looking at it next to the monkey and horse it came with, I suspect they were tub/toob items themselves once?
Supporting evi'dawnce! A few weeks ago I'd got the trick roach, also from The Works (59p, for a hysterical insect . . . bargain!) to add to the small number of novelty insects and invertebrates we saw back in December's novelty posts, now I'm well on my way to my first shed-full!
Several of these will be very useful as monsters in a secret dungeon trap! Although the best candidates for that are the scorpions who all need their tails bent up with hot-water treatment as they are all moulded flat. Indeed; the scorpions (count the legs!) can all be ridden by 25/30mm figures?
Again . . . from the I-buy-this-stuff-so-you-don't-have-to dept., a couple of day after I put this article to bed, I found these two, from H. Grossman (HGL) which I bought a while ago with next December in mind, bearing in mind last December's novelty 'season'!
The snake is vile, both sets come with a protective sheet to prevent them damaging the card backing and neither has the 'may stain clothes' warning of the 1970's capsule toy we looked at last Christmas. But, while the maggots are fun and quite realistic; the two larger black ones are more like leeches than maggots - the snake is a blob, which stained and deformed the first PE bag I put it in, which went soft and wrinkly - in hours?
I've now stored it in foil, rolled in one bag, in another bag, with a mental note to chuck-it if there are any more problems! Vile, I tells' ya; cold, slimy, probably radioactive, lump of sun-gelled, hell-spawn!
Monday, August 1, 2016
F is for Follow Up - Men of '76 and Their Relatives
Thanks to feedback from the Brians - Berke and Carrick (alphabetical, no favourites here!) and Tim Peterson we can reduce the question marks in the post on Colonial Insurgents I posted the other day while introducing another maker of these chaps.
Almost as soon as the post went live Brian (B) pointed out another maker's figures were similar, Brian (C) confirmed the base question and I had an email with the contents of set 9. I will update the original post, but here is the all-important shot -
Set 9
Muster List (not necessarily in correct order)
1 Standing Minutemen
1 Indian Scout
1 Kneeling Hessian
1 Standing Frenchman
4 Bases
This leaves us with the fact that there wasn't a standing Hessian? This will explain the Minuteman's legs on my example!
Brian (C) said he purchased the figures at the time and they were unmarked and dark green, so for some reason the full marking was only on the Petrol Premiums with the pale green bases?
Meanwhile the make known as Star or 'S for Star' (who made some of the better Hong Kong swoppet copies) had a stab -
Having suggested the Men of '76 are Britains piracies rather than Timpo piracies, I think it's fair to say these are closer to the Timpo figures, although they have the separate arm of the Britains/MO76 chaps, they don't have the hole in the arm to receive the ball on the end of the musket's butt which is actually not present either, and both are a Britains features rather than the single integrated-weapon moulding of Timpo.
However - there is an obvious Timpo copy horse (without blanket/saddle?) and the coat-tails look heavier and more Timpo-like? The gun only serves to further explain the mass of them out there, but I'd like to compare it side-by-side with a MO76 one, there are probably slight differences which would be worth noting.
Star was also responsible for the 'Regiment' sets of Britains Swoppet 'Khaki Infantry' copies in various colours, similar Mexicans, other Wild West/ACW types and the Action Jack articulated action-figure (copied from an Italian toy?) which was ultimately re-produced as the risibly bad Montaman by Montaplex.
Brian Berke also sent me this, with the following in his own words;
"The attached photo in the centre shows two mounted Americans painted by me.
The plain lead (probably pewter) castings were sold in a Farm Museum at Cooperstown, New York a town better known in the US for The Baseball Hall of Fame, and for being on Otsego Lake the setting for James Fennimore Coopers stories, Last of the Mohicans etc.
This is the sort of area where the plastic AWI figures would be sold if they were available."
The Tourist figures look like old home-casts and painted-up well? I'm more interested in what's happening on the far right; I think she needs a Perspex oblong laid on her so she can serve as a pop-art coffee-table a'la' Clockwork Orange! There's a lot happing in the picture actually - loving the Mekon lurking in his deep box frame, and the little group of French 'pilou' are interesting . . . Lucotte? Minot? At least three makes!
Almost as soon as the post went live Brian (B) pointed out another maker's figures were similar, Brian (C) confirmed the base question and I had an email with the contents of set 9. I will update the original post, but here is the all-important shot -
Set 9
Muster List (not necessarily in correct order)
1 Standing Minutemen
1 Indian Scout
1 Kneeling Hessian
1 Standing Frenchman
4 Bases
This leaves us with the fact that there wasn't a standing Hessian? This will explain the Minuteman's legs on my example!
Brian (C) said he purchased the figures at the time and they were unmarked and dark green, so for some reason the full marking was only on the Petrol Premiums with the pale green bases?
Meanwhile the make known as Star or 'S for Star' (who made some of the better Hong Kong swoppet copies) had a stab -
Having suggested the Men of '76 are Britains piracies rather than Timpo piracies, I think it's fair to say these are closer to the Timpo figures, although they have the separate arm of the Britains/MO76 chaps, they don't have the hole in the arm to receive the ball on the end of the musket's butt which is actually not present either, and both are a Britains features rather than the single integrated-weapon moulding of Timpo.
However - there is an obvious Timpo copy horse (without blanket/saddle?) and the coat-tails look heavier and more Timpo-like? The gun only serves to further explain the mass of them out there, but I'd like to compare it side-by-side with a MO76 one, there are probably slight differences which would be worth noting.
Star was also responsible for the 'Regiment' sets of Britains Swoppet 'Khaki Infantry' copies in various colours, similar Mexicans, other Wild West/ACW types and the Action Jack articulated action-figure (copied from an Italian toy?) which was ultimately re-produced as the risibly bad Montaman by Montaplex.
Brian Berke also sent me this, with the following in his own words;
"The attached photo in the centre shows two mounted Americans painted by me.
The plain lead (probably pewter) castings were sold in a Farm Museum at Cooperstown, New York a town better known in the US for The Baseball Hall of Fame, and for being on Otsego Lake the setting for James Fennimore Coopers stories, Last of the Mohicans etc.
This is the sort of area where the plastic AWI figures would be sold if they were available."
The Tourist figures look like old home-casts and painted-up well? I'm more interested in what's happening on the far right; I think she needs a Perspex oblong laid on her so she can serve as a pop-art coffee-table a'la' Clockwork Orange! There's a lot happing in the picture actually - loving the Mekon lurking in his deep box frame, and the little group of French 'pilou' are interesting . . . Lucotte? Minot? At least three makes!
Labels:
54mm,
Artillery,
AWI,
Carded,
Contribution,
F,
Hong Kong,
Innovative Promotions,
Make; USA,
Men of '76,
Plymr - Ethylene,
Plymr - Vinyl/PVC,
Shell Petrol,
Star
Sunday, July 31, 2016
D is for Die-Cast Machine Men
A bit of a box ticker here too, but equally a bit special, much sought-after, a bit pricey when they do turn-up, yet hard to find, so I only have three different torsos and four legs, I think it should be six and six in a complete set, not sure if they did mounted versions?
Lone Star's take on swoppet knights, and clearly influenced by Britains own, being better animated than either the Crescent or Timpo efforts and far superior to Cherilea's offerings (either type). I'm pretty sure I have a spare shield somewhere, so the other chap should get protection in the fullness of time!
Lone Star's take on swoppet knights, and clearly influenced by Britains own, being better animated than either the Crescent or Timpo efforts and far superior to Cherilea's offerings (either type). I'm pretty sure I have a spare shield somewhere, so the other chap should get protection in the fullness of time!
Labels:
54mm,
D,
DCMT,
Lone Star,
Make; British,
Medieval,
Plymr - Ethylene,
Swoppets
Saturday, July 30, 2016
S is for Sword & No Muskets
A bit of a box-ticker, but with more of an overview, we're looking at Cherilea medieval figures today, here at Smallscaleworld Towers. This is also a real Picasa-clearer as the images have been building-up in there for some time, I think the first photo-shoot was 2012, the final images were taken last week!
Taken at a show-and-tell a few years ago, these are thefirst version Cherilea possibly Lafredo (see coments!) 54mm solids, a bit on the small side maybe . . . 52/53mm? They are also very bitty, lots of fine detail, rivets, straps, hinges. The guy with a black plume is missing a lance.
The next version seem to come in 54-mil and 60mm, although I wonder if the smaller ones aren't - in fact - Phoenix? Also, some seem to be very clean and shiny, so I'm guessing one of the 1980's/90's re-issuers like Dorset or Marlborough had a go. There seems to be eight poses which is typical for these sets.
Moving toward the Tudor/Elizabethan era, we have these, another set in the 60mm range and covering the English Civil Wars, [some] Scots Rebellions (of many!), Conquistadors and the Drake/Armada periods quite effectively. Although as you can see from the single painted one, they can pass for musketeers of much later!
Again I think it's all eight of a set; these are mostly re-issues, with a duplicate - and we looked at the Scots here
The same period was covered in 54-mil and these are another sought-after set. Everyone had a stab at them Cherilea, Phoenix, and Dorset/Marborough, or is rumoured to have; Hilco. Also, I think this picture may have been on the Blog already? There was a nice group of these on evilBay the other day, but I didn't follow the outcome.
The sculpting of these six is equally rooted in the popular image of the Civil Wars or, new World explorations but without the floppy hats of the comic-book stereotypical Royalists, however I was listening to something on the radio the other day which made clear the actualité was a little different, with lobster-pots and floppy hats on all sides and coloured ribbons or feathers and sticking close to the flag being the only real ways of knowing who's side was who on.
Taken at a show-and-tell a few years ago, these are the
The next version seem to come in 54-mil and 60mm, although I wonder if the smaller ones aren't - in fact - Phoenix? Also, some seem to be very clean and shiny, so I'm guessing one of the 1980's/90's re-issuers like Dorset or Marlborough had a go. There seems to be eight poses which is typical for these sets.
Moving toward the Tudor/Elizabethan era, we have these, another set in the 60mm range and covering the English Civil Wars, [some] Scots Rebellions (of many!), Conquistadors and the Drake/Armada periods quite effectively. Although as you can see from the single painted one, they can pass for musketeers of much later!
Again I think it's all eight of a set; these are mostly re-issues, with a duplicate - and we looked at the Scots here
The same period was covered in 54-mil and these are another sought-after set. Everyone had a stab at them Cherilea, Phoenix, and Dorset/Marborough, or is rumoured to have; Hilco. Also, I think this picture may have been on the Blog already? There was a nice group of these on evilBay the other day, but I didn't follow the outcome.
The sculpting of these six is equally rooted in the popular image of the Civil Wars or, new World explorations but without the floppy hats of the comic-book stereotypical Royalists, however I was listening to something on the radio the other day which made clear the actualité was a little different, with lobster-pots and floppy hats on all sides and coloured ribbons or feathers and sticking close to the flag being the only real ways of knowing who's side was who on.
Labels:
54mm,
60mm,
British,
Cherilea,
Conquistadors,
ECW,
Lafredo,
Make; British,
Make; Spain,
Medieval,
Phoenix (ex-Hill),
Spanish
C is for Champion
Remember . . . I buy them so you don't have to! 99p in the 99p Stores, been in edit for so long the company has disappeared! So you wouldn't be buying them anyway; Doh!
Shite . . .even the sweets were gacky-kak!
Labels:
99p Stores,
C,
Champion,
Premiums,
Unknown,
Why did I even post this!
Friday, July 29, 2016
R is for ROCK & ROLL!
We've looked at most of the Hong Kong Beatles and a few other Rock Star types here in the past, here's one that escaped closer attention . . .
. . . The Swingers Music Set - Yeah, Yeah, Yeah!, boxed in all its slightly jazzy loveliness, it's not that rare, but like all the 'Beat Combo' sets does command a premium, especially when in this sort of condition, with the fine mouldings of the mic-stands, the cymbals &etc, all present.
Ladies and gentlemen; May I present for your pleasure, fresh from the top nightclubs of Tokyo, Kowloon Bay and 'Kay-Ell', the world famous, Sino-Japanese Beatles tribute act - The Beatelles!
Like most of these HK sets, they don't claim to be the fab four (the left-handed guitarist is the giveaway), and while none of them really resemble the boys; unlike the other sets these don't even look like Western musicians at all!
Seemingly based on 'The Swingers' we've already seen here (large blue ones) before I knew their title, they are poorer sculpts, but a fuller set, and about the same 66/70mm size, both sets would seem to be following the 'Go-Go Swingers' we have yet to see here, who are smaller and the best sculpts of these HK chaps.
With the three - above mentiond - and another 54mm HK set (in four colours), the named Spanish (Emirobar) and British (Subbuteo) Beatle sets, the board game guitarists (also four colours) and Gem for Culpitt's band (several colours), you can mount quite a festival on your display shelves, add the two types of Beatle 'Bobble-Head' (blow-moulded and styrene) I've tracked down over the years and all you need is love . . . and Nirvana's front man! Or is he from Guns and Roses?
Practicing air-guitar on a beach-inflatable; he's a resin cake decoration, in shops now, probably available from Wilton over the pond, or one of the bigger online cake-decoration suppliers, that only leaves me needing the Mattel Pop 'Cuties'!
Thanks to Adrian at Mercator for letting me shoot the photographs.
. . . The Swingers Music Set - Yeah, Yeah, Yeah!, boxed in all its slightly jazzy loveliness, it's not that rare, but like all the 'Beat Combo' sets does command a premium, especially when in this sort of condition, with the fine mouldings of the mic-stands, the cymbals &etc, all present.
Ladies and gentlemen; May I present for your pleasure, fresh from the top nightclubs of Tokyo, Kowloon Bay and 'Kay-Ell', the world famous, Sino-Japanese Beatles tribute act - The Beatelles!
Like most of these HK sets, they don't claim to be the fab four (the left-handed guitarist is the giveaway), and while none of them really resemble the boys; unlike the other sets these don't even look like Western musicians at all!
Seemingly based on 'The Swingers' we've already seen here (large blue ones) before I knew their title, they are poorer sculpts, but a fuller set, and about the same 66/70mm size, both sets would seem to be following the 'Go-Go Swingers' we have yet to see here, who are smaller and the best sculpts of these HK chaps.
With the three - above mentiond - and another 54mm HK set (in four colours), the named Spanish (Emirobar) and British (Subbuteo) Beatle sets, the board game guitarists (also four colours) and Gem for Culpitt's band (several colours), you can mount quite a festival on your display shelves, add the two types of Beatle 'Bobble-Head' (blow-moulded and styrene) I've tracked down over the years and all you need is love . . . and Nirvana's front man! Or is he from Guns and Roses?
Practicing air-guitar on a beach-inflatable; he's a resin cake decoration, in shops now, probably available from Wilton over the pond, or one of the bigger online cake-decoration suppliers, that only leaves me needing the Mattel Pop 'Cuties'!
Thanks to Adrian at Mercator for letting me shoot the photographs.
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