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.

Friday, May 19, 2023

H is for How They Come In - Chris - Everything Else!

Oh no, it's the last post! Being everything Sci-fi, fantasy, TV and Movie related, plus an animal which ex'caped the earlier post! And speaking of capes, as I managed to with some convoluted slight-of-English . . . 

These came in together! Now, I actually bought the Robin because I knew I needed his base, and in Chris's lot was both the Batman head/cape AND the Robin cape, which I'm not sure if I knew I needed! More than that, I don't really recognise the batman head/cape at all, so, while I thought I had a whole batman (needing base) and a couple of Robins' also needing bases, I think I may have had (prior to this lot) a bat man body, and a couple of robin bodies - who thankfully have a head!

What is also interesting is that the studs on this base are offset from each-other, symmetry-wise, while the one I got at a Sandown park a while back and showed here has studs with more symmetry, so they are figure specific . . . and I should now be able to produce two complete figures at some point in the future when - the now three - stashes are brought together! Indeed that, there, is a complete - Cherilea - Robin the Boy Wonder; it will just be a case of which one's got the best surviving paint!

Another of the articulated Dinosaurs! But this one is more 'monster-like, so ended up here with the premiums, which include two Weetabix stackable Poppit 'Puff-Kin' cereal premiums, and two of the Pop Pallino's from Raja ice cream. It's very hard to date the dinosaurs, the three that have turned-up so far, are all so clean they could almost be current (however, I've not encountered them?), but the styling is equally 1970's, gum-ball novelty/capsule-toy type, so . . . any ideas?

The King of the Seabed Serenader's, Neptune himself courtesy of Kellogg’s's Puffa-Puffa rice, found here in the UK, as a set of eight, and in Australia as a fifteen-pose count. Another of the 'Macrobot' astronauts we looked at a while-ago, a modern chap who might be Ben-10, and another polyethylene 'monochromatic' robot type.
 
He may go with those small spaceships we looked at recently - I saw four in eraser rubber the other day which mentioned Dunkin (not empirical, it was an evilBay lot!), but the lot included one of these mecha's, and I have several in both materials, so there may be more to come on the whole-lot; mini-ships and robots?

Three from Disney, a Marx full-size thief from 101 Dalmatians, along with a Disneykin Captain Hook, and a rather nice Peter Pan from JIM of France, damaged, but happy to take him as a first sample.
 
Another of the sucker things, I did get a name for them the other day, but I've forgotten it! Some current or near-current 'blind-bag' collectable though, with a Kinder (or Nestle?) Frozen to the far right, they flank a skeleton archer from Polotoy, hard to find, I still only have three or four now, but I think Shaun of the Fantasy Figures blog might have bought them all!
 
A LotR game piece and deform Star Wars pencil top, a Harry Potter (or knock-off) and a figure who could be a policeman, could be a chauffeur and has some of the look of a Gerry Anderson character about him are the middle row, that last one probably needs the trouser paint removed?

While the bottom pair are a Hasbro Action Man (new type) micro-figure and a Star Wars 'Twi'lek' from Wizards of the Coast, a line/range we will look at properly one day, I had a large tub of them from years ago, and bought a boxed set with extra figures not that long ago, but all currently in storage!

A couple of battered 'dime store' spacemen, but of interest as they are the smaller ones around 40/45mm (and I picked up another three at PW last weekend), I assume, from their UK purchase that they could be Tudor Rose or Kleeware, but it's by no means certain!
 

Finally, this chap missed the animal post, but cartoony stuff ends up with the above at first sort anyway! I love him because I think we had some when we were kids, possibly, therefore, a cereal premium I'll have to look-up on Cereal Offers at some point, not sure if it's the Pink Panther, or just a cartoon animal, but it's obviously missing its slot-in arm section.

As always, it's many thanks to Chris for everything we've seen in these posts, some sell this stuff at car boots, some give it to charity, a lot throw it away, but when I bring it all together at the other end, you'll see how it forms the whole and fills the gaps (that's a mixed metaphor, if ever I used one!) - Cheers Chris, lots of wonderful things!

C is for Canoes - 11 - Dulcop

In the continuing checking of stuff for these posts, I found the blue one from the introductory post (which was in the Hong Kong folder) was actually the Dulcop one from Italy, so I've corrected there, and we'll have a quick look here!

Quite a nice model, but still - design-wise - the sort of thing you find for hire in aluminium or fibre-glass reinforced resin at the lake/riverside today! I think these are the correct figures too, and unpainted like this, they'll be from the later production which included the stuff contracted/imported by our own Plastic Warrior Magazine, but I don't know if they carried this piece.
 
Re-crewed with Timpo's chaps, no knife out this time, but I don't think axe-fishing is a particularly successful technique! As this is a brief post, Brian's river/lake surface is worth a moment's study, I don't know what the surface is, painted wood, Vinyl/PVC or some other sheet material, but I thought Tom's varnished floor-tile was also quite good the other day.

Thursday, May 18, 2023

H is for How They Come In - Chris - Ancients & Medievals

So, we're back in time a bit from yesterday, with a look at the various bod's in armour, leather or chain-mail in Chris Smiths recent parcel to the Blog, only the two shots, but lots to cover!

Going vaguely clockwise from the big metallic maroon chap, who you may recognise as being the chariot driver (well; 'crew', he's hardly in control of a team of horses!) from the Hong Kong copies of the Thomas chariot, then we have one of the red copies of Airfix Romans, he's from the odd HK sets which come with a chariot but no wheels . . . and - sometimes - an ACW gun, in 54mm!
 
In the right-hand corner we have a Kinder Roman auxiliery cavalryman, with no damage (they can be brittle, as can the similar set of musketeers), and both halves of his horse! Below them the unmarked (smooth base) version of Giant Roman clones, seen here as Woolbro / Generics, with a Quaker/Tom-Smith gladiator's horse in the middle. So, it's all Mighty Rome in the ancients department this time, even if some of them are Trojan clones!
 
The Medievals are an equally interesting mix, with two of the Exin Castilos figures, these came with a Spanish Lego-likey building system, to add playability to an otherwise - really nice - infant toy.
 
But to their right, up in the corner is a very interesting figure, which I'm guessing is Eastern European, although equally he might be Portuguese, he's similar to those Starlux copy premiums, but isn't a Starlux pose? And I thought I already had one or two, possibly also from Chris, but I can't find them on the blog, so they may have come from somewhere else and gone to storage?

Below him is half a Kinder knight's horse, the other half is bottom centre! The other two on the bottom row are mentioned again below, while the silver/gray pair are the MPC small knights.

The white guy is also MPC, but from the larger set, and he's in one piece, I do have one or two in the 'master collection, ironically red and black ones I think, but they are scruffy and damaged, this chap is complete, they tend to break at the bow string or bow itself, so a very useful addition.
 
While the Lido clone (of which we have already seen hard and soft plastic copies with or without paint), is semi-flat to a thinness that qualifies as just 'flat'! Possibly a gum-ball capsule-machine prize? But might have had a rack-toy issue as well? I may have one or two in an orangey-red from years ago somewhere, so expect a return to these in a future 'odd flats' round-up!

C is for Canoes - 10 - Non Wild West

 A very eclectic mix in this post, and by no means all, or even most of those I could have found, but more of a taster of what's out there, if you're tempted by these posts into specialising in canoes!
 
I think this was a Charity Shop purchase about a year ago, i.e., some time after these posts had begun their journey to publishing! But it helps fit the next one into the oeuvre, and who doesn't have a soft spot for Snoopy! Marked as if licensed and made in Hong Kong, it's probably been manufactured for someone like Applause?

This was also a latecomer to fill this posts folder! Included in a previous donation from Chris Smith it was a mystery for a time, I thought maybe an eraser, but after finding Snoopy and noticing the Bully mark I have tied it into a similar Smurf toy!
 
We've seen these before I think, probably more than once as they are part of a bigger line which incudes or crosses-over into sports, beach and divers! Cheap Hong Kong rack toy copies of a Corgi original, they are in storage! The oars are always missing or broken!

Also not appearing in these posts, is a similar 1:70th'ish canoe, as a roof-load pair from Hobby Dax, which I got in Lidl about 20-years ago, in fact, there is a whole family of them from Majorette and Matchbox (both also paired), Guisval, Spot-On et al!
 
This is the now out of production - Canoe, MkII, 'Ard Bastards, For the Use Of - kayak, courtesy of Ronara Store, a Chinese outfit, via Brian Berke, who was wanting to reproduce the infiltration device of choice of the 'Cockleshell Heroes', it's manufactured in resin and is nominally suitable for 54mm figures!
 
Brian's finished model, I'll let him set you right on the model . . .  
 
"Recently on eBay out of China came what I hoped was the long-awaited canoe of my dreams. Listed as 1/32 it falls far short. Moulded in resin, it was difficult to glue and getting the arms to stay in the correct position to take the hands with paddles proved to be beyond my patience. So here it is. The real Mk II canoe was 16' long, 28.5" beam, the model is 4 5/8" long"
 
I thought I might have saved these from evilBay, but in following-up on the eMails for these posts I find Brian sent them, but he saved them from evilBay! It's the Renwal 'dime store' civilian pleasure boat, and the figures are about 30/40mm and look like they might have been sculpted by whoever sculpted the figures for Pyro's military vehicle sets? It also seems to be missing a clip-in oar?

Many Thanks to Brian for his input, lots more to come!

Wednesday, May 17, 2023

H is for How They Come In - Chris - Combat Troops

We've seen the paratrooper parachutists in the first post, but this is the rest of combat types, which is World War One to the present day, and we're starting with a bit of heavy metal; "Generals gather in their mass'ehhhhs . . . just like witches at black mah'has'ehhs!" Probably one of the worst lyrics ever, it's the sort of song lyric 14-year old Rock-dreamers write on the back of their geography text books! It's the same word Ozzy, you can't have masses twice, it grates!

The above trio are all probably home-cast piracies, with this quick-mix, soft silicone it's very easy to make short-life moulds now, and we have two Matchbox US Infantry clones and an older Lone Star who seems to have been painted as a German Fallschirmjäger?

But, below, are far more interesting, as they are a further example of the ones I got from Italy, as a follow-up to the plastic ones Chris sent in a previous donation? Royal Fail managed to break one, but they are die-cast, so a spot of superglue and the activator pen should sort that problem in an instant!
 
And all comments in the previous post about Peltro apply here too. There is some more to come on these at some point, but it'll have to wait for a 'bitty post'! Unlike the Germans, where each got a separate title, these are all dubbed simply 'US MARINE'.

A right old mix here, have we had the top left one before? I'm pretty sure Chris or Peter E have sent us one, and I think I had one somewhere, he seems to be from some kind of wire-slide thing, or possibly a helicopter rescue/extraction set, but could be a parachute toy? Odd anyway!

Another large scale tank commander (sand yellow), I was looking at them on eBay the other day and there's a lot of these 1:24, 18, 16th or larger models out there, but the budget required for that hobby is beyond me! Another of the seated US sailor/gunner . . . someone must know what he's from, he keeps turning-up, so there must have been a shed-load of them once?

Kit legs from some poor unfortunately eviscerated soul, two types of 'Payton' (et al) seated figure - we will do all the trucks one day and colour match the crews, but I haven't made a concerted effort to find and purchase the necessary lorries yet!

A nice Timpo swoppet first type US officer clone, a Supreme Russian and a copy of the Deetail Japanese Infantry, but it's not the Kwong Wah version, which have a separate, plastic version of the later style Deetail base, with rounded ends? This one has the earlier, oblong base, integrally-moulded.

The base of the Supreme figure is marked Fuliduo Toy Factory, which may give sustenance to one of my 'eemies', but I don't think there's much to excite, the figures were wildly announced in the Toy Press as Supreme back in the day, and I suspect this is either the full name (as in address) of one of Supreme's facilities or a subcontract/contractor? And they're not a Russian firm, they just copied a lot of the Zvezda-Italeri sets!

The two red figures are probably Italian firefighters from a large beach-toy fire-engine, a stable-mate of the Politoys (et al) DUKW? Some more shades of those funny flats of the Lone Star/Britains khaki infantry - I picked up a red one at PW! The gunner from the Corgi Dingo is useful, as is the Dunkin (et al) machine-gunner.
 
The kit figures (top left), Monogram and Aurora (I think), are also nice additions as there are often many colours of these kits, each production-batch being produced in a new colour, so building sets takes forever, while to their right we have another two commanders from battery-operated/radio-controlled/push-and-go or clockwork tanks, which will all be attributed one day, and having the figures is better on 'room used' than having all the tanks!

All good stuff and many thanks to Chris Smith for them!

C is for Canoes - 9 - Not Giant!

Actually Mikephil in the US and a generic here in the UK, and I've never known if that's pronounced as a rather clumsey 'Mike-Phil', the smoother 'Micky-phil', or something esoteric like 'Mike-a-phil'? Guidance from US or Canadian readers gratefully received!

 
We did actually look at this briefly many years ago, and it will need to go on the Giant blog at some point, but they aren't Giant, they use the two sets of six (and only six) Giant foot figures, possibly even the old tool cavities, but with the lesser, non-Giant mark (Made in Hong Kong), and with new connecting runners, joining them together in rows, one of cowboys, and this one of Indians.
 
The Mikephil (I'm now saying Mick-effhil in my head!) shots here are all courtesy of Brain Berke, the generics are from the collection, except the green one which was a fleaBay image I took years ago, as you don't often see the green canoe.
 
Note that the Mikephil one has a monochrome image in blue-and-white on the back mirroring the full colour image on the card fronts, the generics available over here just have plain, undecorated card backs.

These images might have been used last time? This shows how the strips of figures are attached in the bottom of the canoe; the connecting pieces routed in the base of the tool are wedged in the little forked/slotted studs, holding them long-enough (one or more connections often pop-out while still in the packaging) to further hold them in, with the angled blister!

Brian did a scaler, and I have a yellow boat with the figures, unusually, placed-in facing the other way! Commonly the figures are firing/moving to the right, except the cowboy on the other end, but someone reversed some!
 
I must assume all colours of figure can be found as boats and vise-versa, but some seem commoner than others, so maybe the missing ones went to a country/region where they were less likely to survive the tests of time, like Mexico for instance?
 
One of Brian's sets in situe, the boat seems to be another brighter chartreuse yellow, to my aged lemon, but it could just be flash, the teepee is looking darker in the other image? It's also a perfect demonstration of how most '54mm' totem poles are better scaled for 25mm figures! Thanks again to Brian, for his images/examples.
 
And note this post is really about the canoes, the figures are far more interesting, and complicated, and, while we did touch on them briefly, a long time ago, here, I will do them properly as a series of posts on the Giant blog another day. And, the boat is a scale-down of another we'll look at in these posts, itself apparently; a full-size copy of a third!

Tuesday, May 16, 2023

H is for How They Come In - Chris - Civilians & Scenics

I fucked-up earlier; I was trying to alternate between canoe posts and other things (which happen to be Chris's posts for a few more 'moves'), but managed to post back-to back canoe posts, and not notice until a few people had seen it, at which point sliding it back into 'Edit' became not-an-option! No matter, the Japanese stuff is bookending itself now, the rules are only mine and there's no real urgency behind them, so, now, here's a quickie on more of Chris's donation!
 
 
We actually used up most of the civilian stuff with the Introductory post, so this is the rest! Of particular interest is the chap next to the Gondolier (who we've seen before), the new one seems to be in the style of those 1950's Japanese celluloid trinkets, but he's clearly more of a Mogul warrior or guard, from the Indian subcontinent?
 
He also seems to be polystyrene and what I though might be an incorrectly re-glued umbrella/sun-shade, is actually a moulded-in shield - he's missing his weapon (possibly a spear or lance), and is consequently; another of the  'best of donation' figures!

In the opposite corner is a waving boy, also of Asian appearance and equally unknown to me, possibly from a kit . . . did anyone do a 1:48th Saigon Embassy, Heuy kit? Is he from a sampan boat kit? The other notable is the lady in white, bottom right, next to the Frog/Krugozor lifeboatmen.

She is, in many regards, the same as those other two (possibly sculpted by CC Stadden), and would appear to be captaining a longboat? Her arm resting on where the large tiller-arm would be, her garb, very outdoor and foul weather. Did Frog do a canal boat next to the lifeboat, I can't find anything on Scalemates? So, I'm guessing, possibly a generic sold as a ship modellers 'spare part'? Merit maybe, Peco or Slaters?

Other highlights include the golfer keyring, the little chap, bottom-left, and the blow-moulded baby who will join a growing pile of unknown Hong Kong babies, who fill several bags now; smaller, larger, PVC, copies of Thomas, and copies of Britains & Mettoy hospital newborns! To which end - identification - I bought a babies bared crib/day-bed at PW's show last Saturday! I buy (or get given!) this stuff so you don't have to!

Foliage; the rather leery orange seaweed/coral will go very well with the Magic Roundabout trees, in providing alien landscapes in future photo-sessions, which had occurred to Chris when he chucked it in the box . . . something missing from the blog are the bigger set-piece shoots I did once or twice in the first year or so (the Spencer-Smith/Tudor Rose advance to contact, and a similar ACW 30 v 40mm photo-shoot), and which I hope to return too soon, I have plans for a proper photography 'station' with permanent features - but that only raises the constant dusting/maintenance problem!
 
The two halves of fir/pine tree don't butt-up against each-other, as they are identical mouldings with no central line of symmetry, so are probably forward facing snow-globe accessories, or from some touristy box-diorama?
 
The palm tree is lovely, and will need to be compared with all the others, while the separate base version of the common'ish poplar is new to me I think, and they all (there are dozens of slight variants) go back to the Lego poplar I think?

This is also interesting and will hopefully be ID'd in a vintage toy catalogue at some point, it is similar to stations in sets by Kader (before they were a major European rolling-stock contract manufacturer), Moonbow, Blue Box and others, but while their little rural/suburban stations were stand-alone, this appears to have plugged into a larger component or base board, could it be the short-lived Tomy system with Lego compatible parts?

Odds and sods, you can never have too many bits & bobs for completing sets etc . . . and while the highlight here is the Starlux Totem Pole (as issued with 20 and 30mm figures) scaled down from the 54mm range's one, there are other interesting bits, like the plug-in horses-head which I think comes from a Hong Kong (or European?) copy of Timpo teepee/tipi?

The desktop PC eraser, carries a kid's 'wants list' of toys, sweets and erasers on its screen-sticker! While the temporary-tattoo booklet of waterslide transfers will join others in the novelty/cracker-toy zone!

And finally all four corner towers for a post-Giant fort copy, again they have to be compared with all the others to work out where they belong, and I have plenty of little bags awaiting that job, including lots of green and orange tower roofs with various flags, so one day we'll give them the same treatment the black plastic ones have already had over on the But Is It Giant? blog.

C is for Canoes - 8 - Knick Knacks!

I'm loving these! These are definitely toys, if you want hyperrealistic 'model' figures, then get your wallet out and go support the Russian War Machine like naïve kidults, but for those who collect 'toy' figures, they don't get much more toy-like than these!

All courtesy of Brian Berke, there is, or there were two versions, a three-man and a one-man, and they are probably celluloid. The packaging reminds me very much of those faux-glass animals which used to be given away as prizes at fairground side-booths; small, low-grade (crumbly folds) cardboard with miss-registered screen-print artwork, but oozing with a charm that evokes a time from almost before I was born!
 
Three-man version, look at that axe, that's for the necks of Henry's wives! Made in Japan, it's one of the ironies of history that a lot of the best novelties of the 1950's and 60's came from Japan and Germany, because while we were struggling to rebuild after the war, money was poured into both economies to rebuild the 'losers' as bulwarks against the permeable curtains of the Cold War!

Sometimes, at the Fair, if you fished-out two of your three ducks, or got two of your three hoops over, you got a smaller prize! Interesting in that he's a fourth pose, not one of the previous three, re-purposed.
 
Other colours are available and I'm going to have to track some down, there's a nice red one on at the moment but postage is silly. It's getting hard to bid on US stuff, purely from the shipping costs, and that's mostly the 'International Shipping Programme' (or 'program'!), there's no bother from Canada, from whence I've had a few bargains recently, and they will have these too, so in time . . . and those US seller's who still use USPost can be half the price of the evilBay-Pitney Bowes-Hermes (call us Evri because our old name is mud) scam!
 
In the meantime; Thanks to Brain for sharing these Knick Knacks with us.

C is for Canoes - 7 - Beeju & Similar Novelties

As the last post and the next post are 100% Brian's imagery, I thought I'd take the bow on this one, and one of the canoes segues nicely into the next post; we're looking at the less than realistic on this round!

We have seen these here at Small Scale World, more than once, as the collection grows, but still only the one with an oar, but the three together in the later shot. I think they must have been sold as bath toys, you can see a scaly deposit in the newest (blue) one, and the other's both needed a good clean when they first came in.

This was sold as a canoe, but could just as easily be a component of some piece of groovy Habitat interior decor circa 1972? If it is a canoe (joking aside I'm sure it is), it's an odd one, with a heavy shelf running round the gunwales, the whole thing having a sort of hippy-art-deco look! A note with my original eMail to Brian on this one says "Italian I think?", but I can't remember the significance now?
 
This is lovely and connects us to the next post, Japanese celluloid or paper-thin polystyrene blow-moulded canoe with cotton-strung swivel-arms, one clearly dislocated on this example which came off of that evilBay a while ago.
 
While this is modern to contemporary, being one part of a set of Haribo premiums I picked-up in a mixed lot from a charity shop a while ago. The set contained cowboys and American Indians, and unit price means this is bit of a 'super-deform', but then they all are here!

Monday, May 15, 2023

H is for How They Come In - Chris - Wild West

I think I'm right in saying Chris isn't much of a Wild West collector, excepting where that coincides with one of his core themes - Early British minor makes, so his parcels to the blog, and therefore the rest of you, always have a fair bit of Wild West in and a fair bit of that is interesting!

The small scale, as I've said before this all needs further sorting, and will appear, eventually, on the Giant or What? page! Two bags this time, one a right-old mix, the other quite a clean sample, and there were a few in the bottom of the box!
 
The forts too need further sorting as several people had a stab at them or copied/carried them, this isn't Giant as it has the Fort Chyenne over the gates, Giant's was unnamed.

Next size-up and we have a couple of Lucky Clover Indians, one of the - probably - French, reduced-size, premium copies of Jean's swivel waist figures. A pair of Marx, a trio of Blue Box, a horse divorced from its West German wagon, and two figures I've never seen before!
 
Both swivel waist, no more that 25mm and I think I found their horse, which may have come from Chris in a previous bundle. I suspect I have no more than one or two in all the - litaerally - tens of thousands of Hong Kong hollow-horses, sorted or waiting, and I think the other's might be a white one and a limp-green one?
 
But what a thing to find, in a donation! Both are damaged, I'm guessing yellow probably had a pistol on his left hand, and red might have been waving a rifle, but how many are there in the whole set, are they Hong Kong, or some minor make from Italy or Portugal or somwhere, has anyone else got any? Among the 'best items' in the parcel!

Next size up and inset are a small scale who missed the other shot and bits of a CGGC, Giodi or Kinder figure, with a Siku premium top-left in the main image, next to a Christmas cracker-toy of the old Marx moulding of Pecos Bill.
 
The lower row includes from the left, a semi-flat in soft ethylene who might be Hungarian, but wasn't in that bag, another of the ones I think are French premiums or bazaar toys, with the neat, parallel-sided, oval bases and two of a Hong Kong lot who turn-up so frequently I can't understand why I haven't seen a whole set (card or bag) on feebleBay yet . . . but it should turn-up one day!

Up another size for the Toumoulage originals, with - again - believed to be French, probably premiums, smaller copies, the larger unpainted (late production?) 'styrene, the smaller, the softer polyethylene. The green one, actually belongs with the larger figures and is a polystyrene original.
 
Chris has managed to find another three of the Lone Star shooting game figures, all yellow, in three different junk-lots/purchases! I have to confess with a few more come in, in the last year or two, I've lost track of them, but I think we're getting close to full sets of both colours, although they were issued alternating in the sets!
 
Below them, we have one of the Crescent/Lido poses we've covered here recently, and next to him a painted one, which from the clues on the underside of the base, has come straight off one of those W. German pencil sharpeners. Note he's larger than the standard figure, something which wasn't clear in the previous posts on the subject - I've said it before; Pantographing can go up as well as down!
 
Either side of the cowboy pair are a couple of matching hard plastic, painted Indians without bases which would appear to from a similar novelty line/item, but no clues as to what, or how many poses we're looking for?

A small bag of Hong Kong swoppet copies, same note as the canoe post the other day, a late, two-halves with belly-moulded Airfix horse, I'll give him the tail of one with a missing leg or two!
 
Three HK figures 'after' those Bergan/Beton-Airfix-F&G-Tudor Rose (et al) figures, my first Carzol premium, an MPC ACW clone, a hard 'styrene paddler from Thomas and a very interesting copy (unmarked) of a Crescent cowboy? 

Finally, a wagon driver, to which I said in my email to Chris - we always go over the highlights before I share them with you - "The Wagoneer looks modern, but might actually be older, 1970's? Although he's quite realistic, he may be from a comical wagon, or novelty?", only to be looking in the new (newish, I think I mentioned them in the autumn) thematic folders for something to send Paul M when I found him . . .

. . . bottom right! And although the wagon is almost as realistic as him (some whacky wheels action goin' down there), the artwork on the box is every-bit as cartoony as I was expecting, and I'm not claiming it for my abilities as a soothsayer, but more the old back of the mind being triggered!
 
This is lovely, he's missing his feather, but that's the sort of thing which will turn-up in a junk lot or on a tattier, loose figure, but having seen or mentioned Hong Kong, Russia, Dulcop and Kinder on these 'Charlie' figures, here's a Směr one, from the former Czechoslovakia!
 
Finally, this pair were in a lot from Australia, which won't be in these posts, as they are destined for greater things elsewhere! But these two are interesting for several reasons, first we're back with the Crescent hollow-cast/Lido set again with the chap on the left.
 
But he's clearly paired with the mounted figure who seems to be a copy of a semi-flat, possibly home-casting mould, which could be another Schneider or even something more local . . . there must have been Aussie metal manufacturers? The quatrefoil bases should be a clue?
 
And who made these, between the Australian end and the island next door (NZ) there are about a dozen names in the archive now, not all of them necessarily toy makers, not all of them shooting plastics? So tatty, and probably very old, but fascinating additions to the stash, cheers Chris!