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, October 21, 2023
B is for Blast Off!
Friday, October 20, 2023
S is for Sometimes . . . I Can be a Fuckwit, Twice in a Fortnight!
Thursday, October 19, 2023
B is for Big Box! Two of Two
More cavalry mounts, always useful as the riders often come separately, sans-weapons and the wholes have to be reunited as a kit of parts, three Deetail, one Herald, one Timpo and quite a good-quality Hong Kong copy of Timpo at the back.
Donkeys, asses, mules and/or ponies, including a daft one from Kinder (heay, they all have their place!), the one with a ribbon is a MEG 'Pocket' pony I seem to recall, and the brown on white should have been in the first image?
Rabbits, I am really looking forward to sorting the rabbits out; in addition to the large lot I got for a song on evilBay a couple of years ago and Blogged at the time, I have found a similar sized lot, a smaller lot from a charity shop and had several purchases of useful individual rabbits (and a plastic version of the hollow-cast family - Taylor and/or Barratt?), so there will be a serious page on rabbits one day! The two brown ones here are the cleanest I've ever seen?
This is the 'lovely' thing! What a thing to find in a parcel of someone's collection sorting! Those who have followed the Blog for a while will know I have a bit of a thing for cable-drums and cable-drum carriers, specifically set-off by my childhood Hornby-Triang one, this is the full-on Binn's Road O-gauge version, in wood with paper overlay detailing, mint-in-box!
Two modern farm people from China, one probably to go with a boxed show-jumping set of quite large scale, the other more toward the Elastolin 70mm, and in their style, all will be ID'd from the animal forums in the fullness of time.
Odds & sods including Kinder bits, a fluffy dog (who might be a badly-drawn cat), a Playmobil horse and a goose which truanted the poultry-shot! I know I have the late Herald charioteers, placed on bases, but I don't think I have the chariot, so half of one is a start, and I'm sure I'll find one with a complete drawbar and broken wheels for a bit of cut-n-shut surgery?
A super lot of bits here, mostly Britains Herald, with some Swoppet stuff and plenty of spares, the two green bits bottom-left, are from the farm fencing, specifically the style I think? The crawling Indian was always one of my favourites!
B is for Big Box! One of Two
Some riders for those horses at the top of the post, not sure if the Athena (Greece) ceremonial's horse was in the lot (might be in part two?), but I may have a spare somewhere. The policeman is Corgi and the race-rider is an unknown - to me - Hong Kong chappie I think, the rest are Britains production of various generations/sets.
Many thanks again to Jon, it really is all useful grist to the mill, and fun to share with the rest of you, while I'm slowly building a decent sample of the Life Guards mounted musicians! Thank you Jon.
S is for Sometimes . . . I Can be a Fuckwit!
Double fuckwittedness lead to me not shooting the figures because even before last week, I thought they HAD been on the blog (I'm pretty sure one figures was in a donation report from Peter or Chris, but I obviously didn't tag it!), so both these have been cropped out of the image above and one of the .gif stills!
Tuesday, October 17, 2023
F is for Found Objects - Six of . . . It's Stick!
Dad's Borneo formation sign, sleeve badge, Mum must have sewn the poppers on, so it could be removed in the jungle, as it makes a nice upper-torso target! I was a baby at the time and totally unaware of the life & death connotations of everyday life!
Anyway, she had enough to make my Brother and I a cushion each, and I've always liked the jolly guardsmen in their orange and red uniforms, it's - like the dowel animal puppets in an earlier post of this sequence - very redolent of the 1970's design ethic, and you wonder if there may have been other colourways?
F is for Found Objects - Five of . . . Merchandise
F is for Found Objects - Four of . . . More
This used to be in each car's 'emergency kit' when we were kids. It's an unmarked generic, probably British rather than Hong Kong, but you never know, it's a lovely memory-thing to find, we used to love fiddling with it when we were kids.
Back then there were two standard promotional items from the tyre manufactures, small model-tyres like this with a compass, sometimes as a key ring, and larger replicas as ashtrays, with either a glass or tin-plate insert as the 'wheel', they would be marked up with Goodyear, Michelin, Pirelli etc . . . sometimes, even depicting a specific tyre type, or new range.
This is obviously a mid-century, rear, tractor tyre, so may have come from an agricultural equipment firm, and with farmers on both sides of the family back then, could have come to us via either?















