About Me

My photo
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, June 14, 2022

News, Views Etc . . . Airfix Blog & Housekeeping

I've managed to get a few updates done today, over on the Airfix blog - there are now two new images at the bottom of the Bergan/Beton figure page, dealing with the full set of dogs and the two new spaniels;

http://airfixfigs.blogspot.com/2010/06/1947-1955-approximately-bergenbeton.html

Six images have been added to the 8-figure early toy soldier page, dealing with recent finds and the BR Moulds discovery of Plastic Warrior magazine and its team;

http://airfixfigs.blogspot.com/2010/06/1949-1960-approximately-early-toy.html

while the Space Warriors got four more comparison shots;

http://airfixfigs.blogspot.com/2019/07/1981-sci-fi-space-warriors-51577-3-9.html

More to come when I get the time!


*********************************************************

I had to deleate a comment earlier today, someone posted a spurious link to one of his recent posts which had nothing to do with the topic of the post on which it was left.

I am not your free billboard, and I just don't worry about fame, 'success' or SEO like you (and someone else I could mention); wherever I end up in google search results is down to my efforts to post original copy which I hope will be of interest, and the traffic that those [apparently interesting] posts generate.

When I post internal links (as above) it's because there's something new or relevant at the other end, not because I'm trying to duplicate my traffic, or falsify my popularity.

I don't need to ask obvious questions, don't chase comments, don't subscribe to idiot software for idiots and don't cross-post/re-post to or from duplicate Blogs, I do what is reasonable re. tagging and leave it at that!

You've been doing it for some time and I let the first few slide, then posted counter-links or better links to try to send you a message, but that obviously didn't work, so I'll just delete them . . . tin-man indeed - a cheat is a nothing.

Monday, June 13, 2022

E is for the Elephants in the Room!

This is a fun post, mostly new to hobby, Blog and Internet - except eBay, where they all came from! Credeco, a new name to me a year-and-a-half ago when I bought the first of these (a couple were on another blog years ago), and while these have mostly been posted elsewhere in dribs and drabs over the last year, the article folder has been on the desktop for most of it, slowly being added to!

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
Where we 're up to now were up-to when this post had 12 images! Although there are more to find, a strange mix of wholly original sculpts of some ingenuity or imagination, and crude cut-n-shut copies of Britains Trojan warriors, from this lesser Spanish make, in the bazaar/rack-toy style.

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
This was the first one in the bag, he came with two other non-Credeco lots, and the seller (Miguel Angel) included a freebie (some Italian swoppet Wild West figures)! How could I not buy a War Elephant I'd never seen before!

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
Following up the seller's other lots while leaving feedback for the first three purchases lead to two more! One has a hole in it and I wondered if someone had cut the rider out, but I've seen another one others, which are the same (and now have a second, see below), with a rider in a different colour, so they may seem to have had single-moulding and two-part lines?

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
Equally, I'm not sure if this was factory paint or home paint, but I wasn't convinced as to the latter, so deciding on the former, shot the hell out of it (in case) before sending it to the bleach vats for an overnight snooze. Either way it's not good painting.

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
Overnight snooze in the bleach vat!

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
Gives me a unit of 35mm Carthaginians! They're not terribly realistic, obviously, but no worse that certain Cherilea output I could mention - and often have! They are, after all, proper 'toy' soldiers first, and I imagine if not actual sobres, as least kiosko! The red soldier may be missing a spear-tip, standard or sun-shade of some kind? Also they fit quite well with the Rojas e Malaret board-game war elephant.

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
By now I was on a roll, or a quest, found the mounted ones I'd remembered elsewhere, and managed to grab these two with the blue one in the final image, obviously taken from Britains Trojans, one is just near copy ('Ulysses', right) with a head swap, but the other ('Ajax') has had his broadsword replaced with a rather crude spear.

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
The Ulysses knock-off has a hole in his shield which seems deliberate, but has no apparent function and may be something like a broken mould release-pin that somehow got stuck or fired into the figure?

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
'Paris', Troy! The archer gets the biggest makeover, losing his bow, arrow and quiver in favour of a sword and dagger, which rather leaves him looking like an over acting character hamming-it-up in a pantomime!

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
The final purchase (for now then) was these three, it was the Roman on a camel I'd remembered (or found in the archive folder for Creadeco, which is the same thing; that's the whole point of the archive!), 'Hector' loses his javelin in favour of an axe, and a wood-axe at that! He also gets a head swap, while 'Achillies' now has Hector's head and a move of his sword-arm, both have been given new hoplon shields.

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
The mounted figure is the best (and I love the elephants), and why not, the Roman empire had a vast desert boarder in North Africa/the Middle East, camels are recorded as coming west with Darius and/or Xerxes, so whether Roman or Greek (Carthaginian or Trojan) why not have him on a camel, especially as his protagonist is an Arab! He's half Britains 'Agamemnon', and half the Marx cut-and-shut with came out of Hong Kong courtesy of Giant and others!

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
Yeah, I seem to have taken and awful lot of shots of them for some reason! Checking the old Trojan post here I wonder if these aren't actually copies of the 'believed to be' French bazzaar rack-toys, some of which are in that post?

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
The above has been ready for publication for some weeks (some months for the early drafts), but I took delivery of what will be it for a while, the other day so we plow-on, although no 'family photo' as the rest seem to have gone to storage!

This is another of the elephants with the hole, and you can see how a little diminutive figure is just stuffed in the hole like a cheap Hong Kong turret crewman! I think the silver on this is factory-paint, and having stripped the other, will probably leave this one as it is?

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
A couple of close-up's really taken to help me see if he was 'meant' and yes, that's all tool-machined marks round the feet, not a figure taken from a base. The trouble is, with my eyesight these days he could be mistaken for a damaged figure, and while it wouldn't stop me keeping him as a sample/example if I found him, I bet a lot of loose ones have been chucked-out as being [or; appearing to be] both damaged and odd-scale.

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
The horse is a ringer, taken off of a wagon team, so I still need another camel, but the figure is lovely! Tumanbay eat your heart out, my General Qulan rides again!

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
A few recent sellers on Todocollection, I think the archer may be an Atlantic roman stuffed in the hole? Evidence, so far, seems to point to four slightly different elephants, being two pairs of similar variations of the same sculpts, the one providing two with separate crew (head-spike and no head-spike), the other two with integral crew (sword & shield and sword & spear/parasol/standard?), and all possibly being variations of an original master, with leg and trunk changes?

Ajax and Achillies; Britains Agamemnon; Britains Ajax; Britains Greeks; Britains Hector; Britains Paris; Britains Trojans; Britains Ulysses the Mermidon; Britains Ulysses The Myrmidon; Carthage; Carthaginian War Elephants; Creadeco Carthaginians; Creadeco Greeks; Creadeco Romans; Creadeco Trojans; Creadeco War Elephants; Elephant Troops; Hannibal's Elephants; Jecsan Roman; Punic Wars; Roman Auxiliaries; Roman Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Spanish Toy Soldiers; War Elephants;
Finally, not Creadeco - this guy was bought with the two red ones, as I figured he might go with them, but he's a lot taller and was obviously a copy of something else - he looked familiar? He was neither the Elastolin or Reamsa pointing chaps (which I thought of first) the former's holding a scroll in the left hand, the latter is pointing the other way!

In the end he turned-out to be a copy of the Jecsan Centurion! He also looks slightly effete, like he can hardly be bothered to point anywhere with any seriousness! "You! Soldiers! Err . . . go over there and do . . . something useful, but don't trouble me again"

Creadeco Punic Wars - box nicely ticked I think!

Sunday, June 12, 2022

T is for Two - Tinny-tin Tins from Tinslyvania!

Or; N is for Nostalgia - Look what I found! There's actually all sorts of stuff coming out of the woodwork, and not just from my late Mother's effects, I've started finding stuff I've not seen since it went into storage, or even things I couldn't remember having! But here's two tins, which are interesting for very different reasons, a third title could have been F is for From the Sublime to the Ridiculous!

My Grandfather's Princess Mary's Christmas Fund tin, 1914, not exactly rare, but some of the prices on feeBay, for poorer examples, suggests this is worth a half-dozen of your Herald swoppet knights, on horseback, equally, you can find copies for 15 or 20-quid! Issued to various groups and tranches of service men and women from 1914 onward, I won't bore you with the whole tale; you can read it all here - IWM.

The contents of Granddad's tin; the pipe has been used, and I guess the longer stem was his own and just kept in the tin as  a spare/fall-back? The tobacco pouch is missing, along with the photo's seen in the above link, but I know I've seen the little one of Princess Mary, and possibly the one of the King and Queen, while sorting so we will return to this as I reassemble it more fully in the future.

Indeed I know I have the bullet-pencil in my own collection (and always wondered whose 'cap badge' it was - it was sold to me by the late Eddie Audsley - vintage tool expert - as Trench-Art), the cards are in the envelope and we'll look at them in a minute, but the piece of scrap-metal is more interesting.

A direct translation of the German Brennstoft Übernahmevent is 'fuel takeover event' which I suspect transliterates to fuel cut-off valve? Something like that; fuel safety valve, and presumably came from an enemy vessel? But who's and when? 

Granddad served first on HMS London supporting the ANZAC landings in the Dardanelles ('Gallipoli'), where gunboat activity is known to have occurred, and mostly (early) German vessels re-flagged to the Ottoman's but with German crews or - at the least - German officers?

Equally there was activity in the Mediterranean in support of the Italian fleet, where again Motor Torpedo Boats and Motor Gunboats played a part on all sides, while the final hostilities of that period was Granddad's apparent participation (vessel currently unknown) in the Russian campaign of 1919, where both (all!) sides lost, captured or sank motorboats which might have been supplied by Germany, or taken from them in 1918?

And I'm only looking toward the smaller vessels as they would be most likely to have fuel cut-off valves (or their labels) easy to hand for a quick removal with a sharp implement for keepsake/trophy purposes?

The cigarette packet is quite small, now . . . I wondered if that was for space, or budget, but suspect they were often (even commonly?) smaller than the ones we are used to now, filters weren't introduced widely until after the Second World War, but it's about a half of the mass of a modern pack of filterless Camels - which this author has had cause to persevere-with, in the past, when filtered ones weren't around!

The two cards; and two points of note; firstly while the 1915 card is shown on the above Imperial War Museum link (and in the excellent primer - Tommy’s War: British Military Memorabilia 1914-1918 by Peter Doyle), neither source explains how a second (or subsequent?) card/s was/were issued/received once the recipient had been given his or her 2014 tin. Now I get that if your tin was one of the late ones, you might get a card for whichever year you received it, but how did you get a second, and why do they all seem to be '14 or '15, where are '16 and 1917 cards?

The other point is a bit darker, the dropping of 'Happy Christmas' from the later card; clearly someone pointed out, to the committee organising the fund, that it was impossible to have a happy Christmas under fire in a trench full of mud, rats and body-parts? Or on an Atlantic convoy looking for submarines which were looking for you, in an ice-storm? So the epithet was shortened to 'Victory' wishes only!

Anyway, that's the sublime, now I'll lower the tone considerably, with the ridiculous!

I found this in the garage; modern archeology -  Knickers in a Tin! I vaguely remember Mum's rather flighty Canadian friend Janet (of Perrier premium fame) giving it to her for a laugh one Christmas when we were quite little (Janet also took Playgirl magazine!), and it became a staple of my Mother's breakdown-kit, moving from car to car, and thence, eventually, to a damp garage where the conditions have faded all but the British Knickers, so I can't tell who made it, or when, but I think you can still get such stuff in Anne Summers or other adult outlets, as Stag or Hen gifts?

Realising it was to all intents and purposes gash now, I took the trusty army tin-opener to it, to finally reveal the supposed risqué contents . . .

. . . only to find slightly twee knickers, with a Union flag overprint on some indestructible faux-silk, metallic blue, granny-pants! What's left of the tin will be weighed-in with the next lot of scrap metal and the knickers have already gone to the clothing bank! More tins to come.

Thursday, June 9, 2022

F is for Follow-up - Babes in Toy Soldier Land!

A quick follow-up to this post on the Wilton copies of Marx's Disney figures, I found the two Marx I have!

Babes in Toyland, Cake Decoration Figures, Cake Decorations, Cake Guards, Disney, Disney Babes in Toyland, Gem, GeModels, George Musgrave, Guards Band, Guards Musicians, Guardsmen, Little Toy Soldiers, Marx Disney, Marx Toy Soldiers, Small Scale World, smallscaleworld.blogspot.com, Toy Soldiers, Wilton 1966 Catalogue, Wilton 1977 Catalogue, Wilton 1986 Catalogue, Wilton Babes in Toyland, Wilton Cake Decorations, Wilton Guards, Wilton Soldiers, Wilton's,
Private's Chivalrous or Courageous were the names for the two - identical - drummers, with no packaging I'll call him Fred! You can see (left of each shot) he's a tad bigger and slightly better detailed; in both etching and painting, while the Wilton drummer has a fat head!

Babes in Toyland, Cake Decoration Figures, Cake Decorations, Cake Guards, Disney, Disney Babes in Toyland, Gem, GeModels, George Musgrave, Guards Band, Guards Musicians, Guardsmen, Little Toy Soldiers, Marx Disney, Marx Toy Soldiers, Small Scale World, smallscaleworld.blogspot.com, Toy Soldiers, Wilton 1966 Catalogue, Wilton 1977 Catalogue, Wilton 1986 Catalogue, Wilton Babes in Toyland, Wilton Cake Decorations, Wilton Guards, Wilton Soldiers, Wilton's,
Marx did a forth pose which wasn't pirated by Wilton, to my knowledge; dubbed Valiant or Hooligan! I'll call him Bob! They - the Marx originals were sold individually in sentry-box shaped cartons with their names, or in various window-box combinations of three figures, nameless.

Babes in Toyland, Cake Decoration Figures, Cake Decorations, Cake Guards, Disney, Disney Babes in Toyland, Gem, GeModels, George Musgrave, Guards Band, Guards Musicians, Guardsmen, Little Toy Soldiers, Marx Disney, Marx Toy Soldiers, Small Scale World, smallscaleworld.blogspot.com, Toy Soldiers, Wilton 1966 Catalogue, Wilton 1977 Catalogue, Wilton 1986 Catalogue, Wilton Babes in Toyland, Wilton Cake Decorations, Wilton Guards, Wilton Soldiers, Wilton's,
Marx also reduced them for their 'Disneykin' range of Miniature Masterpieces, where the four got a window box, I don't know if they ever got the separate, single-figure Disneykin boxes, I suspect not. The forth sentry pose, here damaged in a feeBay screen-shot, seems to have been re-designed for the small scale iteration.

F is for Follow-up - Divers

Brian also sent me some diver stuff to follow-on from the recent post on that subject and I gained a few more the other day, almost by accident!

Bonkers Divers; Follow-up - Divers; Lik Be (LB) Cake Decorations; Lone Star Divers; Ryan's World; Cake Decoration; Deep Divers; Deep Sea Diver; Deep Sea Divers; Diver Cake Decoration Figure; Diver Figure; Diver Figures; Diver Figurine; Diver Figurines; Divers; Scuba Divers; Skindivers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
We've seen Brian's self display before (in another diver 'follow-up' post I think!), but there are new faces in the line-up; at that time it was the three whitish ones in the back row, they have been joined by two Lik Be (LB) cake decorations (they had a carded issue or two as well!) in red, a nice figure in front (metal?) and the larger chap at the back.

Cap'n Pugwash is still keeping an eye on his increasing motley crew!

Bonkers Divers; Follow-up - Divers; Lik Be (LB) Cake Decorations; Lone Star Divers; Ryan's World; Cake Decoration; Deep Divers; Deep Sea Diver; Deep Sea Divers; Diver Cake Decoration Figure; Diver Figure; Diver Figures; Diver Figurine; Diver Figurines; Divers; Scuba Divers; Skindivers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
Brian has actually found two of them, and using the stuff on the feet found them to be by Bonkers for the Ryan's World franchise. Brian reports the figures are solid with no movable parts which somewhat restricts play?

Bonkers Divers; Follow-up - Divers; Lik Be (LB) Cake Decorations; Lone Star Divers; Ryan's World; Cake Decoration; Deep Divers; Deep Sea Diver; Deep Sea Divers; Diver Cake Decoration Figure; Diver Figure; Diver Figures; Diver Figurine; Diver Figurines; Divers; Scuba Divers; Skindivers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
I have seen the gift eggs in various supermarkets and other outlets, and had even got as far as working out there are different themes to the different trays/counter boxes (boys, Girls etc . . . ), but the graphics are too 'busy' to work out if there's anything useful to us in which tray's eggs, so I've ♫ . . . walked on down the hall ♪♪!

Clearly they are worth a shufftie, and if anyone can enlighten us further, that would be grand. The Ryan's World 'phenomena' is best explained by Wikipedia for those who haven't encountered it.

Bonkers Divers; Follow-up - Divers; Lik Be (LB) Cake Decorations; Lone Star Divers; Ryan's World; Cake Decoration; Deep Divers; Deep Sea Diver; Deep Sea Divers; Diver Cake Decoration Figure; Diver Figure; Diver Figures; Diver Figurine; Diver Figurines; Divers; Scuba Divers; Skindivers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
In the meantime these turned up the other day in a lot I'd bid on for something else, and to be honest I hadn't really registered them in the evilBay images beyond maybe clocking them as 'better' or earlier Hong Kong copy stuff, but actually they are quite good paint Lone Star survivors and will need comparing with my 'master' sample, which we have seen before. Although I think most of mine are the James Bond orange ones, so these may be a very useful surprise?

Tuesday, June 7, 2022

F is for Follow-up - Split Screen Jeep

Keep yer' split-screen Beetle, it's a fire hazard now anyway, and treat yourself to an M38 Recoilless Rifle carrier! Following the six jeeps or part jeeps I spirited away from Plastic Warrior's recent London Show, Brian Berk was reminded of one he's seen back in march, and sent some photo's to the blog. Gratefully received as it's a while since we had a real vehicle here.

The subject is a 1952 Willys M38A1-C (for 'cannon') Jeep, with a distinctive split screen so the barrel of the recoilless rifle can be secured for travel. Note the round in front of the jeep, about the same size as the Wombat rounds regimental prisoners used to have to carry above their heads to and from the Cookhouse!

1952 Willys M38A1-C Cannon Jeep

1952 Willys M38A1-C Cannon Jeep

1952 Willys M38A1-C Cannon Jeep

The only model of this I've encountered is the Roco-Minitanks one, which is a standard jeep with a full windscreen and the gun sitting high on a rather fictional tripod, it was copied by Aurora and UPC and possibly Marx - so; as Brian pointed out in his eMail, "It would make an interesting customizing project". Note also the re-positioning of the spare wheel and Jerry-can from the normal places on the rear, to give the crew room to maneuver the weapon.

And thanks to Brian for the images - Real McCoy!