Obviously, a lot of you are Toy Soldier
collectors, only deigning to touch other genres if they happen to fit your collection's parameters, vis-à-vis scale, maker, period or whatever! So this portion of
Chris's donation is probably the best one for you!
We'll start with 'the rest' as I tried to alternate
the green and pale backgrounds, needed to separate the medievals and wanted to
finish with the Trojan, and for no
other reason!
Top left we have five kit-figures, some ex-Monogram and a
chap who looks a lot like some of the larger R/C tank crew in the master
collection, he also has a locating spigot between his knee and foot, and
may-well have been attached to such an item?
The grey figure below him looks a bit like
some Portuguese premium Jap's I recently got, but he's not as deeply sculpted
and while they are unique sculpts, he's ex-Monogram and a bit Hong Kong'y in
execution, but a first in the collection (very heavy base?), as is the damaged turquoise
figure, one-place to his left?
Center of the bottom row are two more
Special Forces types, these are becoming common, I guess because of their prevalence
on both current affairs/news programs and their position in popular
culture/gaming?
The white Timpo (et al) copy is interesting; I forgot to check his base, so
while he may be HK/China, if unmarked he might be a French bazaar figure? below
him, next to the SF figures is a figure which ought to be a Speedwell copy of a Timpo swoppet, but looks glossy enough to be a HK copy of Speedwell! And not a Star Toys pose?
The big boy (bottom right) is a Mattel 'Hero in Action' and I seem to be building a bag-of-bits of these,
so one day I might try to get a couple of whole ones and cover them here, they
are technically action-figures, but articulation is limited and if you like the
Vietnamese summer 'Rambo' esthetic of them (flak-jacket, trousers, boots,
helmet and not much else), then they are a fun thing, although they came out
when I was a kid, so long before John Rambo started shooting-up his
neighbourhood!
Three perennials in four sizes; Pioneer (for Realtoy et al), Smart Toys
(new poses), and Soma (with ATV), the
two Pioneer/Realtoy are hard to find
undamaged, The Smart sample is getting a little lopsided with many more green
than sand!
Chris sent me two of his new, probably
first, unknown-brand versions of the ABC figures, I have Blogged them now,
but here they are again!
Medievals, from the left; these are fun
(and a bit funny) they came in various branded and more generic sets (so maybe
handled by Toy Major?), and at first glance - or, depending on which ones you
find first; closer inspection - appear to be US construction workers, but they
are in fact medievals and this one is sneakily hiding his axe behind his back.
Then the All The King's Men board-game piece bowman, if I'd Blogged him earlier
he would have come before March's 'reveal'! he's next to a Roman who we had also looked at, but he's definitely a darker shade than the shiny set I
found - in liaison with Chris, at the time, I think?
One of the unpainted, mono-coloured Cherilea 50-mils, I
wonder if they had a Lucky-Bag or ice cream premium contract for these, as they
do turn-up quite often? Penultimate figure in the line-up is a Hong Kong copy
of MPC's little 45mm figures and next
to him on the end is an MPC original
of one of the mounted ones!
I thought I'd put them on the Blog, back at
the start but I'll be darned if I can find the images?
Don't know what this is, I'm guessing some kind of wall or gatehouse decoration from a larger-scale action-figure play-set? Pig's head visor, ornate crest and the reverse image is out of focus - sorry!
Chris is as intrigued by this as I am! He
thought King, I thought Beefeater, and it clearly plugs into something? It is
flat, and has some of the design elements you might find on a lollypop- or cocktail swizzle-stick?
I wonder
if it's a long gone and pretty forgotten company logo, perhaps a steak-chain or
a smaller chain of restaurants like (but not) London's Old Kentucky where we had several treat-trips as kids in the one
opposite the Duke of York's barracks in Chelsea - which google informs me was
at 54 King's Road from 1968, there was another in Tottenham Court Road. Beefeater Restaurants themselves did (do?) have a Beefeater mascot, but a bearded one in the current ceremonial uniform, this is an older style.
It's one of those things where if you know
you know, so does anyone recognise him, or is he just one of a line of ice
cream sticks or something? AND . . . he could be an Elizabethan jester?
At some point last autumn Chris and I
either discussed an evilBay lot, or ended up bidding on the same lot, anyway at some
point I dropped out before the under bidder, or never bid (I can't remember
now) and Chris won it, kindly sending me the one figure I'd really been after as he already
had a better one, which puts my Trojan
Jap's up to five in four poses I think . . . slowly, slowly, catchee' raree!
I was chatting to someone today round at another
toy soldier mate's house, and we were looking at his Wants List . . . now, I
currently have five from friends on the laptop's desk-top and have only managed to
fulfill one item so far - a bunch of Brent
composition to one of the Russian supporters of the Blog, because - as I said in the conversation earlier
today, all the wants lists have pretty much the same figures/makers on them,
because the harder to find things are the same for everyone! But keep looking
and you'll find them in the end - because they were all mass-produced!
The real rarities are all the more
ephemeral things like flat Beefeater hangers, that went to landfill years ago, and it's thanks to supporters
like Chris that I can get to share them with you. Thank you Chris, we'll be looking at the equally interesting April lot soon!