This year's theme is back to construction toys, a theme they (Fleet Historical Society) covered a few years ago, but it's mostly new examples, and I've ever seen the Phillip's sets before, or not so I've remembered?
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.
Saturday, December 10, 2022
E is for Exhibition - Fleet Library 2021
I noticed I broke 2020's down into parts so I could tag everything properly, but I'm chucking these up here as a single post because A) I just need to get them off the Laptop, and B) there isn't a key to all the exhibits, so it's more a question of what can you spot? What did you have?!
Last year's theme was wooden toys, and they often seen to loose their packaging/branding quite soon in their ownership, but a few do have their box, and for a four-shelf cabinet and small table in a local library, I think it gives a good overview of wooden toy over the last 70 [plus] years!
I'll try to get the other one up this evening sometime, but there's plenty here to amuse or entertain, not so sure about the educating or informing angle!
Thursday, December 8, 2022
S is for Solid Slime!
Further branded to both Diamond Select and Previews Exclusive (PX), who have been associated with a lot of the EMCE 'toy soldiers' stuff, the slime has, over time, set solid! The material is a sort of bouncy-ball rubber now, so I had to break them out physically, rather than just pull them gently away from the gloop!
The solvent for slime is apparently vinegar (discovered for a forthcoming post!), but I'm not sure it would succeed in re-hydrating these lumps! I kept a few of the larger lumps as a 'might be useful later' addition to the 'spares box'!
Of the six possible, I managed to end-up with four sculpts, which is not bad going, when I already have the standard ones, but there is a surprise here, in a sixth pose (a 'Facehugger'), as the previous issue only had the five adult Xenomorphs. It's not a very good sculpt, and out of scale (unless you collect Action Man/GI Joe dolls) but may - therefore - remain uniquely in the glow-material, as far as being a collectable goes. The Facehugger is not on the press image (left), probably because it's a bit shit, but the box clearly states "collect all six Aliens!". The box is shown as being apparently a 24-egg double-decker, while mine only has the one layer of 12 eggs, which also calls for a shout-out to eBay seller 'silver-acre' (Darryl Jones, Silver Acre Comics) who sent me the whole box with a multiple purchase even though it wasn't part of the offer - cheers dude; got a post out of them!S is for Snow Pictures in Fleet
Nothing to do with toy soldiers, or even nostalgia; when I was a kid you got snow piled in the corners of shop windows but that was about it, this is a newer craft altogether, and takes advantage of the techniques of the graffiti artist and the properties of fake snow-in-a-can, and I thought they were worth shooting and sticking-up here as we career towards the 25th with alarming speed!
On one level it's a bit formulaic, with the same tropes from picture to picture; four-pointed stars, a snowfield across the bottom, snowmen (all white!) etc . . . but also some skill in making each design fit the window-frame or shop-front, and as a form of advertising it's as good as any other, after-all I made the point of walking the whole high-street and photographing them, didn't I!
Mostly found on the smaller independent shops and boutiques, none of the multi-branch names have bothered, nor have the larger - national - estate agent chains, but a couple of the smaller ones have, along with a couple of the hairdressers and several of the coffee-shops, while some (the 2nd one down and the delivery van) reflect the nature of the business, most were just seasonal fare. Anyway, enjoy - Aliens later!
The hare is very feint in the last two images but he is there, down on the left in the first image and filling this one! There were also a couple I couldn't get decent images of due the the low, winter sun!
It's also reminded me I have a High Street post from last summer in the queue somewhere - animals again, along with last winter's exhibition at the Library, and I'd better get up there and see if this year's is up? I'll have to run them back-to-back!
T is for Two - Phidal's Latest
There were four that I could see, the Disney Christmas one Brian Berke sent to the blog a few weeks ago, a 'Cars' one (I have no interest in anthropomorphic vehicles!) and these two, sadly it's the Disney Pooh, not the original, but then we'll never see the original one again - Disney Pooh; insert you own acerbic joke here! Encanto was new to me when also in that Brian B post, from Walmart on that occasion; here's the Phidal set, and I believe a second movie (some underwater stuff) is on the way? Everything you need for a decent Pooh adventure in the 100 Aker Wood with all the characters except Penguin, who was a late addition and is not well known. The jar of honey though seems too big for a bear with even 'very-little brain' to get his head stuck in? Lovely Jaguar; Parce, is the highlight here, along with a large Capybara or Chiguiro; Chispi which is also preferable to the humans, in my eyes anyway! But then I haven't seen the movie . . . but I'm thinking along the lines of - they are quite realistic sculpts (for cartoon animals) and could probably be painted to be more so, realistic that is? Both sets are the new ten-count, but they are big, I struggled to get them in the standard archiving 4x5½ bags I use, and they both got 5x9's after this shot. Consider that the sets of 12 superheroes' back at the start of this Phidal odyssey would fit the smaller bags loosely!
Wednesday, December 7, 2022
F is for Faraones y Dioses
The front and back of the header-card; a high point of the clip-artist's Photoshop efforts and no mistake! We have a colony of pyramids, some movie undead characters who definitely aren't in the bag and a loose camel, just I case we haven't worked out where the set's set! Manufactured by Magic Toys and distributed by SHS Toys, we've got two new tags out of it! They actually have a charm which leaves them with an apparent age they just have't earned, being crudely painted/washed over a softish silver PVC-vinyl (a couple are a cream or black substrate) rubber type material, very flashy, and somewhat worn (whether in the bag, or due to the several removals from the bag in the past I will ever know), they look like they might be from the 1950's and gum-ball machine prizes at that!
I can't compare them, as I have the other sets as they appeared over the last two years (Safari donors, two K&M/Wild Republic sets and the recent Hing Fat set from Peter Evans), due to the current storage situation/excuse! So we'll return to all-five one day for a full comparison of them together. Oh, and there are no actual Pharaohs in the set, just a wrapped-up dead one! For all their pirated daftness I quite like them!




