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.
Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Zoo Animals - Error in the 1975 Catalogue

I spent ages editing the catalogue illustrations from the 1975 catalogue the other day, kindly scanned and sent in by Kostas from Greece, they contained a page of my favourite feature from the early catalogues, the painted sets, set-up on a card. However, what I didn't notice - tired, late at night - was that Airfix had miss-attributed the two illustrations, so although I collaged the correct margin entry for each picture, the animals were from the other set!

The errant catalogue entry above; to be fair no one told me they were wrong, and with only 20-odd hits on either thread since they went live a couple of years ago, I'm guessing it's of no consequence to most of you, and I probably could have got away with it if it hadn't been for this pesky Aspergic kid!

Still, I seem to recall other errors in the catalogues and there's the famous Guards box-art screw-up which will appear on the correct post eventually, but as this concerns two sets and one image they can have their own post for now. Both images have now been corrected on the two Zoo Animal's posts below somewhere.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

1947-1955 (approximately); [Civil] The Zoo Animals & Zoo Brix - No Scale

First advertised (as far as we know) at the same time as the Life Guard/Horse Guard set in 1947, this set and it's subsequent offspring present a few questions once you look at it in detail.

A whole card, when I bought this, the vendor had about 6 similar cards, the animals - which the original advertisement tells us numbered 12 different - were randomly assorted so that while there were never two animals the same on any card, they were not divided into two sets of 6, which would have made far more sense.

My set is of polystyrene plastic, the same as the later Zoo Brix, however it seems almost certain that like the contemporary figures, earlier production would have been cellulose-acetate, indeed . . .

. . . the three brown animals above and the yellow lion in-line with them ARE cellulose-acetate and their bases are the same as the carded ones, so it's fair to assume they are slightly earlier (actual 1947) production.

The 6 animals in the row above them are polystyrene again, however there are subtle differences in the duplicate animals, and the elephant is markedly unalike the carded example. Having only got the 'Brown Bear' in the Zoo Brix Series 'A' (below) this yellow one could be the plain 'Bear' (from the Zoo Brix Series 'C') but without seeing the Airfix animal in the flesh can't know if it's as close to the Airfix moulding as the lion or camel, but given the moulding variations in the Bergen/Beton figures and the early set of 8 soldier poses, it's likely these are all Airfix production or copies of/from Airfix mouldings. Likewise the slightly less defined elephant in pink.

The dogs have the same base style, and could originate with Airfix, but even if they did - I'd put money on their having been sold as playing pieces in a 'Totopoly' style dog-race game. Going to 'The Dogs' was far more popular in the fifties than now, and a fair few dog track board-games exist. The nice thing about these is that they are all slightly different and therefore each - unique. These days you would sculpt one, pantograph it in multiples and produce the same piece/pose in a half-dozen colours!

A close up of the lions and the 'wood-wasp' in the timber-pile; A donkey or ass/mule thing...stripe-less zebra? The dodgy-origin set has slightly thinner bases, however, as the Airfix ones barely stand up, they may be a first effort, but - if that's the case - why didn't the equine subject survive? Also, donkeys and dogs are not really 'Zoo' animals, but rather 'Domestic' animals.

The Logo hiding away in the Jungle foliage, if it's not a jungle, it's a very spacious zoo for the 1950's!! I'm guessing this 'Ape' is meant to be a Gorilla, although it looks more like a Sasquatch I encountered on the Brecon Beacons once!

A Year later the animals were used for Pattern No. 430 Zoo Brix; a boxed set of 6 infant's rattles/bath toys/building-blocks I first covered back in January last here; Bargain! which might be worth a read, however the pictures here are better, I was trying too hard to be clever with the Collage feature last time!

The bases were made wider and glued onto the base of the brick, they were also used in a similar capacity in the end of a baby's rattle/soother. As they would have stood-up better with this wider base, one wonders if they weren't also sold separately, or perhaps supplied as a premium somewhere?

I took these purely to show the size in relation to something more familiar to Airfix fans, one of the dancing para's with his space rifle and pockets stuffed with tissues! What WAS going on with that set, and why did people keep buying it - they must have or they wouldn't have kept churning it out?!

The little granules used to provide the rattle are small pieces of cellulose-acetate raw-material, which was being phased out at Airfix, and what better way to get rid of it than to flog it to the general public a thimble-full at a time! In the words of someone in the industry at the time (I can't find the reference, one of the TIMPO guys?) "Like the little stones in the bottom of a fish tank".

Here's a 'to be updated' chart showing the known poses and their position within the Airfix oeuvre. Which were the other four poses on the original cards? Where does the donkey fit in? Why two Elephant moulds? When - exactly - was the change to all-styrene polymers? Are the Dogs from the same source?

Ist Update.....

Airfix state in their 1947 toy trade advertisement, reproduced in Plastic Warrior magazine's latest 'Airfix Special' issue (2012) that;

"Zoo Set - A new line, 12 different animals. Many colours."

From the same publication, a 1940's catalogue shows the following animals mounting the ramp of a mocked-up card 'export' Noah's ark and disappearing inside;
  • • Kangaroo/Wallaby
  • • Squirrel/Mongoose
  • • Mountain Goat/Deer (with curved horns)
  • • Camel (two-humped dromedary)
  • • Penguin
  • • Elephant
  • • Monkey/Gibbon (on all fours)
  • • Lion
  • • Rhinoceros
  • • Hippopotamus (? picture not clear)
  • • Pelican
  • • Bear (assume brown)
For - indeed - a count of twelve. On my card we have an additional:
  • • Dog
  • • Ape/Gorilla (on two legs)
  • • Ostrich
For a count of 15, but the 1948 zoo bricks give us some further additional animals
  • • Crocodile (series 'A')
  • • Bull (series 'B')
  • • Bear (series 'B' assume Polar?)
  • • Sea-Lion (series 'B')
  • • Tiger (series 'C')
Getting us up to 20 animals, with loose figure additions in the questionable/possible pirate set (with different elephant):
  • • Donkey
  • • Cow (if not the same sculpt as the 'Bull')
For a final count, assuming all have some origin with Airfix of 22 animals which is a nice round number if nothing else! But then there's the second Elephant sculpt!


So: the question marks in the table can be disregarded; this turned up the other day (PW's show 2017), and confirms the slightly dodgy yellow set, the white one is the 'brown bear' this one is the 'bear', clearly a polar bear so that puts the bears to bed - just got to clear-up the different elephants, the donkey and the cow question, then hope no other new ones turn up and try to find the other greyhound poses described in the Plastic Warrior Airfix special!

In attempting to answer that last question! 5-06-18 This is the cow (which looks increasingly likely to be also the bull) from the 'Pirate' set, it was covered with a powdery mildew-like coating which came off easily to reveal either a factory-painted enamel finish or a very subtle oil-over-white-undercoat type professional 'flat' paint-job, but it was not damaged by the mould-removal so it's not clear and I wouldn't like to call it either way if my life depended on it, but it doesn't and I'll call for a very good home-paint.


These two came-in via Adrian Little of Mercator Trading at Potter's Sandown Park fair in September ('18), two more 'polar' bears, as per those above, but in two reds. After the pink one turned-up 16-months ago I now have more of these than any other animal!

Further reading;

Plastic Warrior's 'Airfix - The Early Years' again.

Tony over at the Airfix Collectors Forum has the same set (from the same seller!), but has tracked down a few of the other animals; Zoo Brix. Be careful as the Kusan bricks on page two are 'similar' but completely different and there's probably no connection between the two - other than a good idea!

1960; [Civil] Farm Stock, S4 / 01704 / 01704-8 - HO/OO

Only available in early boxes, but bought by the bushel for use on model railways, so not too rare lose, boxed they are quite desirable, but often on eBay...The Farm Stock;

The early or 1st version box, the beauty of the first boxes from a collectors point of view is that if one is starting out as a new collector, and hasn't encountered PSR, heard of the Airfix Tribute Forum or never met Eric Williamson's website, they give a complete list of the content on the back, allowing the newbie to start building complete sets from 50p bags, car-booty and eBay graveyard lots.

Eventually the new collector discovers PSR or - eventually - this blog, where he finds all the information needed to check sets. Once he/she has the sets (and boxes if he/she has gone that route), the desire to collect needs stoking with new angles, the first of which is colour variations, in this case only the two were issued by Airfix.

Once this new aspect has been fully sated, the collector will start to seek all other forms of the chosen field, and a lot of these early Airfix sets were issued as premiums with foodstuffs, comics or magazines, in the case of the Farm Animals this was Kraft (now Craft) Dairylea Cheese Spread. These are nearly always in a poor condition as they were firmly taped to the cheese box with a one-inch strip of Sellotape on three sides. I did have a better one, but felt it was greedy to hang on to all three, and made sure the person who most needed it - got it!
The fascinating question is - what does the "OO scale farm buildings and railings simple to construct...." look like? I'm guessing a card item? Maybe the same 'Attack Force' type card once shown in the Airfix Catalogue?

Once the terminal phase of collecting has set in, the collector having convinced themselves that they are embarked upon a task of historical research, of vital importance to the nation and wider world (guilty as charged M'Lud), the aim is to collect anything and everything remotely connected to the original target. Here we see Hong Kong piracies of the Airfix set from several sources, the bags bottom left contain only the Airfix poses, while the animals at the top came with the Airfix Zoo Llama and J & L Randall/Merit horses two shots below. The blue pair bottom right, may be from the bags, but in a different colour, certainly the sprue-release point is the same, while the brown horse, of particularly poor quality (and re-cut tail), comes from a third source altogether and the fluorescent pink Merit-copy cow may be unconnected with the others and appearing on this page under false pretence?

Courtesy of Kostas, a blog follower from Greece, we have this Piacasa'd collage of the image and blurb from the 1975 catalogue, I used to love these painted sets in the catalogues when I was a kid, although as a farmer I'd view this particular field as a bit of a handful!

An interesting colour variation; although all the set that aren't 'cream' are 'white', there is some variety within the white range, and here we see a set on the left from the blue spectrum, giving a very white white! With - on the right - a (very brittle) set of a warmer white from the brown or red end of the spectrum.

Another set of 'cattle' with a nice selection of different-coloured sheep-dogs and green horse...because every farmer needs a green horse!

The ready-reckoner line-up, these are nice sculpts, and would have made a nice change from the heavy-metal of Britains Lilliput or the Crescent farm animals available to model railway enthusiasts prior to the appearance of this set.

Size comparison between the - deliberately - confusingly-named HO-OO Airfix and the actual OO gauge animals from Merit/Modelscene...the Merit cows win best of show, the Airfix horse takes the equine rosette and the sheep match-up quite well in length/hight, but the Airfix animals seem to have been better fed with a width/girth that looks healthier, we'll put it down to different breeds!

Comparison between the domestic animals of Merten and Airfix's own Farm animals along with the shepherd. The two rather large piglets and the four equally large loose lambs may be from the O-gauge (40mm) Merten range, or they may not be Merten at all...I'm not too sure! The Merten HO range is very compatible though.

This comparison is with Marx farm animals and a set of dogs which I also think are Marx. The Marx 'Miniature Masterpieces' were described as HO but are far too big for British (or 'rest of the world') layouts, seeming to be more in line with the 1:64th scale 'HO' of Ertl and the slot-racing circuit in the USA.

Airfix sheepdog compared with a soft plastic fox from the Marx Miniature Masterpiece range, in soft plastic he came in Jungle play-sets, in hard plastic he was paired in Noah sets.

Comparison shot between the Airfix and late Hong Kong for Hornby Railways/Hornby Hobbies pigs, size wise they are slightly different, but the ears and snouts suggest different breeds, so they'd work together on the same model farm.

A series of Other Bugger's Efforts now, starting with pigs...in painting-Airfix-figures-land most pigs seem to be pink (or bright-red!), with just the odd hint of black, but piggy-wiggies come in lots of colours, so; more effort required...

...as has occurred here with these horses, a bit more variety, although I'm not sure about the gloss yellow ones! I like the slightly spotted attempt at a 'grey'...

...which is not a colour you think of when painting bulls? The cows are mostly quite good, I like the semi-gloss maroon one, flaked now, but he must have been show class once (that's cattle-show not model show!), again though we have a gloss orange-brown in need of some matt varnish...

...before returning to the gloss yellow! I think both the dogs work well here and the subtle little grey; top left.

I seem to have taken Preiser/Merten comparisons again! Well I added a couple of HK examples this time, and the Airfix blog is supposed to be a scrap-book format!

Blue Box mini-farm animals, also issued by Marx as part of their contract-manufactured Sunshine Series, as well as being issued under Tai Sang's other brand Redbox. Therefore - very common, but lots of sub-piracies so look for the neat HONG KONG marking.

Factory painted HR Productions, sometimes misnamed as HR Products which confuses with a US after-market white-metal manufacture of some standing, these were issued in similar blisters to Merit and would have been direct competition, they don't seem to have lasted long.

Some old images I originally posted on a toy animal-forum, might as well go here too; top image is one of each, full set bottom left and the cream issue to the right.

 Size comparison shot with an HE marked cow I'm presuming was a Comet or Authenticast railway accessory in an HO-OO gauge-compatible size? They (Comet) also produced a series of 1:100th scale architectural modelling accessories. It may just as easily be SAE or something older and Scandinavian?

This came in at the recent Plastic Warrior Toy Soldier Show in Whitton (35th show/2018) and seems to be the source of the other (brown) heavy horse (in the early image near the top of the post), being a lesser quality set of sub-piracies - Farm Animals.

A slightly smaller bag and card, with no room for silly over-sized fence sections! Notable also for being all the same colour, so probably a single mould-shot and more consistent contents than the assorted colours/poses of the 'Cattle' sets. If I find any more copies, they'll turn-up here eventually.
 
And a couple of years later, here's a few more! This set from National contains two of the Airfix heavy-horse, with a collection of Blue Box / Holly / New Maries clones, from the paint on some, the output of more than one source. The front right leg of the horse has been bent, but at the shoulder, not the knee or ankle/hoof, so it looks a bit stilted! It's one of the ones we saw in the collage years ago near the top of the post, now with an ID!

Another National, smaller, and overprinted to the importer/jobber Elgee, but still carrying an Airfix cart-horse clone.
 
 
And this lot are anonymous by being a loose sample, but probably came in the sets we looked at a while ago with the red animals? So far, none of the Hong Kong clones found, have run to copies of the laying-down sheep or calf?

I shot the Kraft Foods premiums again (in fact I've had a cleaner one come-in since I shot these, so that'll probably appear here, below, in a year or two!), but I also scanned the box to show the three information panels in glorious hi-res technamacolour!

Standard contents as shown last time.

A reminder of the full contents.


Cropped-out scans of the box!

Catalogue illustration from undated, but early AHM catalogue.