
Also please note that the Fat controller seems to have been borrowed from the Reverend Scouse-Beetle, a bit misleading as the contents of this set are - to a man; or woman - suffering from the post-war austerity diet of the 50's and all need a good feed!


As to the discolouration..."Careful with that mould-release agent Eugine!"
It is one of life's little annoyances that red velvet is just not the background for photographing pink'ish-white'ish-creamy coloured figures, so this little lot will need to be re-done, but for now, here is a full set 'on the sprue' and laid-out, the best thing about this set was that the various machines, loads and trolleys; when used as street furniture and barricades, made a Stalingrad carpet-war so much more realistic!!
Comparison between Airfix and Merten rail staff and/or loco-crew, this illustrates how Airfix - by calling their range "HO/OO" were covering all the bases, this set is perfectly compatible with the European figures of Presiser, Merten and others, but small for OO gauge layouts.
Another size comparison, on the left a current production Noch figure of a waitress, on the right a vague copy of a Merit porter from - I think - Moonbo Toys. Moonbo seem to have been connected to Kader, but at the budget end...they made cheap rack-toy clockworks, or straight 'push' train sets with soft plastic accessories (like this figure, trees, signals etc...) and harder styrene station buildings and the like.
OBE's, mostly gloss, mostly stab-and-hope with a free 'craft' brush by the look of them, but the charm is there and the nostalgia is there!
Sorting, with more OBE's, the pale, used chewing-gum coloured ones are the really early issues, and have faded like the red Guards Band and Colour Party figures of the same era, but without the colour to start with, they just go a dirty greyish! You will find sets on-runner in this condition, particularly the early header-carded bagged sets, it's not a 'differnt' colour, just non-fast dyes.
Colour variations, for the pale whitish-grey ones see comments for above image, there where also several shades of the later cream with warmer pinkish shades and cooler whiter hues.
The two weighing machines had the same stand, one (second row) being the coin-operated "I Speak Your Weight" type platform amusement, the other (bottom row) being a 'lolly-pop' sack-scale for the porters or Royal Mail parcel guys to use. I think the third machine down is a platform-ticket machine?
The machine at the top could be for chocolate or cigarettes, I can remember when every tube station platform had two or three of these with their own size of Cadbury's bar, in different flavours.
Comparison shot between the Station Accessories and the nearest equivalent pose from the later Civilians, although they joined the figure 'set' range earlier, they betray the improvements in sculpting that a few extra years brought to the process. Note how one snapped as the photo-shoot proceeded...old figures now, all of 'em!
Comparison between the Post Office/platform baggage/luggage/post-bag trolleys by (from the left) Wardie Mastermodels (BJ Ward) in blue powder-coated die cast mazac/zamak, Merit (J&L Randall), latter handled (to the present 2021) by Prichard Patent Products (PPP)'s Modelscene line in various colours of polyethylene and the Airfix versions.The Mastermodel comes with two equally die-cast barrels, while the Merit version originally came with two un-powered trailers (since reduced to one) and paint highlights, the driver re-modeled slightly. Loads were available separately and included coal sacks, parcels, trunks and suitcases, tallboys, churns, barrels, boxes and postal sacks.
AHM (Associated Hobby Manufactures [and importers]), carried the Airfix lines, proor to the establishment of the USAirfix office, and this illustration is from the 1972 AHM catalogue I think, being the Airfix 'line up', but rendered in Black & White rather than the usual colour of Airifx's own catalogues (see below).
The Station Accessories as seen in the marketing diorama which I think was first seen in the 1971 catalogue, but which was used for some time after, on and off, with different crops?
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