About Me

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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, February 25, 2025

P is for Puckator - Birmingham NEC

Having been quite pleased with my five shots at the London Toy Fair, it came as a bit of a surprise to see their stand at the NEC, where I managed fifty-odd photographs which I've only managed to boil-down to forty-six!
 








As mentioned in a previous post, this was the second lot I shot, but I saw other similar displays, so clearly a coming trend, but the 60th anniversary of the movie will be next years, so that makes sense, there's bound to be plenty of terrestrial/BBC schedule filling crap on the subject.
 
Flamingos and Unicorns, two recent trends, only cacti missing!
 

Buger, fries and a drink . . . AND pizza? Greedy git! A current trend, hanging on the coat-tails of blind-bag novelties like Shopkins and others, we'll have more on a similar theme soon, here at Small Scale World.
 


A few fuzzy images have been deleted, or I realised at the time and took a second, better one (some of the knights below), but this is the only shot of the other members of the set, from which the Panda we looked at earlier today came from.
 
Private Atkins is going, under the heat of the display lights, but he's keeping his back nice and straight! I shot the resins again too, but it was one of the now deleted fuzzy images!
 


Two lots of cartoony Dinosaurs, both involving over-moulding (as many of these pencil tops do), with the zonal colour-layers on the semi-flats, and a more Timpo-style colour-over-colour on the fully-round figures.
 
Aa-Haarrrrr! Poirates!
 
I think these are jiggly-dancers, probably hit the black (heat?) pad, to get them wobbling, and as well as dancers we have a royal family (including a ghost!) touristy subjects a cat, and an aforementioned cactus!
 

Space, again trends we've already seen here, some more than once, includes red-white-&-blue pulp-rockets, and big-head astronauts! I blame Funko! I'll be looking out for the eraser rocket, to join the two we saw the other day, and the one we saw back at Christmas.
 
Chunky flats!
 
More over-moulds!
 

In the style of the Keycraft/Senmsory Place mouse we saw the other day (and probably from the same factory, in China?), another trend, and one casting its references back to 1970's novelties . . . what goes around, comes around.
 


These weren't the only glittery, fantasy items I shot on the day!
 








Stately-home or historic building gift-shop fayre! There's some nice pieces in the above, but mostly resin I fear, which is very hard to keep undamaged, particularly in the hands of little-ones. I didn't handle them though, so hope some of the smaller stuff, like the key-rings is manufactured in a more substantial polymer like a PVC-substitute?
 

Witches cats! Four poses.
 

We saw these as generics in The Works many years ago!
 


A bit of religious stuff to finish-off. More like wedding-cake decorations!

So quite a line-up from Puckator, seen in Birmingham, but it's finding it out there; that garden centre I found the other day only had a very small proportion of this stuff, so it'll be tourist attractions, 'end-destination' leisure-facility gift-shops, seaside & novelty boutiques and the like, for locating most of it?
 

P is for Puckator - Kensington Olympia

Puckator had a small stand at the Toy Fair this year and I managed to shoot a few figural subjects, mostly of the touristy or pencil-top variety, and I think it was the first time they dipped their toe in the Toy Fair waters, they don't seem to have attracted my attention in previous years?
 
Space novelties and Easter stuff, some of it Funko-likey!
 
Pen tops, pencil tops and highlighter tops!
 
To be honest, these Mr Bean caricatures look more like President [elected free and fair against Russian interference, unlike Trumpy in 2020] Zelenskyy, leader of the illegally invaded [by Russia] Ukraine!
 
Rubber eraser heads!
 
More conventional hard plastic or resin, I think?
 
Paddinton Bear, Mr Bean and London ceremonials, Britain through tourists' eyes!

More to come, much more! Link - https://www.puckator.co.uk/

P is for Puckator's Polymer Pencil Perchers!

Rather out of sequence, but the next couple of posts will reveal why, I picked these up at a garden centre over Wokingham way, somewhere near Arborfield. Those following the blog for the last few months, will have realised I've discovered garden centres to be a font of many things which have otherwise disappeared from the high-street, but then these huge 'mall' garden centres are why the 'High Street' is disappearing!
 
Pencil tops from Puckator, a name which has gone from near-generic to regular appearances here over the 18-odd years since I found the first dig-your-own-pirate crew! Two more Moomins, not long after the mini-torch, but the author's recently died, so now the money-men can really start making money for themselves rather than her, a phenomenon you often see after the death of a celebrity - capitalism stinks for the rotting carcass it's become. Note that one is an over-moulded semi-flat in relief.
 
And what is my third tree-climbing Panda, I think, and I know I've seen a couple of others? There's a single-issue collection idea there for someone with both limited space and a limited budget; you'd have to scour Alibaba and Amazon regularly!
 
Close-ups - Puckator!
 

Monday, February 24, 2025

L is for Lots of London Loot - Three IS a Few!

The other half of Peter's August donation, and another eclectic collection of odds and ends, figural and vehicular, structural and peculiar, aqueous and funicular! I know, I shouldn't be allowed!

This was rather ironic, as I'd had one, we may even have seen it here at Small Scale World, if we did I probably mentioned it was incomplete but still eminently playable-with, and would go back to Charity (from whence it came), and which it did . . . now, here's a fully parade-ready example which can go in the collection!

I can't remember if someone ID'd it, or if it's a generic from a big-box action figure play set of the sort you find piled-high in Smyths or B&M, but it's a nice model in a sort of interim M38/Wrangler style, which may be aiming for one of those 1970's Toyota designs?

 
Kinder Barbies, I have had several sets groups of these come in now, more from Peter, some from Charity, probably a couple from Chris, and Brian Carrick may have given me a handful too, the trouble with them is that while, at first glance, the bases look the same, they are all slightly different with specific feet/shoe holes or holds, depending.

And, as you can see, I managed to match-up two before I gave up, not because it was that hard, but because I'd already failed spectacularly to match up a larger sample, last time we looked at them! When they are all together, I'll sit down, make the effort and get them up here, pristine!
 
The earlier sets (covered in Plastic Warrior magazine at the time), had figure specific bases if I recall correctly (they're all in storage again), each base had two figures, or was reused in the series two or something, but there have now been four or five series', and we'll look at them all in an overview one day, with the similar Superhero sets.

Incomplete, but a useful sample, it's one half of an O-gauge level crossing, in tin-plate and die-cast, I don't think it's 'Binns Road' (Hornby), and it doesn't look like Crescent (the other make I'm a bit familiar with, so maybe someone like Chad Valley, or 'Foreign'? I stand to be educated on this one, by someone who actually knows?

A handful of the Supreme/SP Toys 'Silver Knights' a slowly growing sample, which when they are all brought together will have most of the elements now, I think, and hopefully enough weapons and shields to equip that sample properly!

We've seen WOW Eggs before, I think, and there is a mini-season of capsule toy updates in the medium-queue, but I thought a near 54mm (I don't think you count the tail beyond where the feet should be?!!), articulated-waist Mermaid was a bit of fun!

I had a quick root-through the donation box while still at Peter's, but having a train to catch, when I saw these, and realised what they were, just said to Peter, "Ooh, mail-away boxes, I'll save these, to open as a surprise when I get home", which I did!

Rather exquisite, if historically anachronistic, or unrealistic (?) N-gauge train, branded to Nabisco (now Nestle/Kraft)'s Shredded Wheat! Obviously I don't have sections of powered, N-gauge track lying around here, so I can't test it, but I don't need it, as the locomotive is weighted in the engine-compartment, but unpowered. Issued in 1989, the loco' and coaches were manufactured by Graham Farish (Grafar/GF), and the two wagons are different, with one having a guards-compartment.
 
Couple of hours later - "Have you come across a good transport marketing gimmick?" - Well? Have you, readers! Hee-hee, you can almost hear his brain whirling! Except he clearly hasn't got one, always following, never leading!
 
To enhance the above, and the tray of mini/micro-railway samples, were these floor-runners from Dinky, I well remember Mum trying, with the blue Mallard from this set (or was it Matchbox?), to take the wheels off damaged Lone Star Treble-O stock, in order to get it to run on that track!
 
I seem to remember, as a small boy, some of the underground trains still having that crescent-corridor join, to help them go round corners, before someone worked out that distancing them from each other, like surface trains, was easier! But that may be a false memory and I stand to be corrected on that, too!
 
An incomplete, probably Kinder moped and a wooden erzgebirge station building, round-off the odds in this donation.
 
While this could have been kept for Rack Toy Month, but I'm not minded to look that far ahead, given the fluidity of my life at the moment! Many Thanks to Peter, as always, for all this grist to the twin mills of sample-stash and Blog!

S is for Sluban

Along with the Chinese Pantasy we saw the other day, another Lego-likey with a notable presence in the Toy Fair at Kensington Olympia, was this outfit, Sluban, indeed they had a bigger stand and a glossy catalogue, with a varied range, some being Cobi-like military subjects, some more obviously seeking tourist destination traffic. 
 
Sluban is another Chinese brand, with the European opperation based in the Netherlands. Second shot's a bit fuzzy!
 




Not a lot I can add, Google will reveal to you, the same data it would allow me to parrot. It's compatible with Lego, looks - aesthetically - more like Cobi and is something I won't be collecting personally, having off-loaded half my modest collection of Lego on friend's kids over the last decade or so, the other half to Timpo-Dave but I might hang on to any figures or accessories that come my way in the future, as I also have to my Lego and Megabloks figures!

Note the flowering plants, on the bottom left shelves, Lego are now doing flowers too, not the first time it's followed where it's rivals lead!
 
European website;

Sunday, February 23, 2025

V is for Vitrious

You may have noticed I'm trying to alternate Toy fair and Gift Fair posts, between London Loot's, it won't last for long, but in the meantime here's the next post from Birmingham's Spring Fair; Parmy Ltd., a maker of glass ornamentals, including these exquisite little figurals.
 
Smaller.
 
Bigger.
 
Close-up!
 
Made from hot rods of coloured glass, it's like working with scalding cheese or something, but the finished articles are very clever. There were several similar companies at the show and I shot various other lots, so we'll be returning to the new 'Vitrines' tag!

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