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 Civilian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Civilian. Show all posts

Monday, November 5, 2018

1940's (Sometime?); [WWII/Civilian], 500 / 500M / 501 / 502 Motorcycles And Riders

Tipping a nod to Plastic Warrior magazine and their Airfix special for the codes and to the Editor - Paul Morehead - for the original ID, wherein lies a tale we'll get to in a minute, but first a look at the machines and their riders.

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
A heavily painted machine, and the first I found, although not the first I'd seen, pretty standard 54mm/1:32nd scale compatible machine. Not knowing much about motorbikes I can only obseve that it's not a 'V-twin' although what that makes it instead is up for grabs, and the knee-pads on the tank look a bit like some BSA ones?

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
Comparison with an unpainted machine, the pink one I will wax-lyrical on in a minute, but for now you can see how it's quite a detailed machine for its age compared with the machines posted on the Home Blog today (5th November 2018) where Pyro, Teixedo, Reisler and later Atlantic were producing machines with hinted-at engine detail, or imaginary engines!

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
The commonest form you will find these in is a 'primary' coloured, colour-fast, soft 'unbreakable' or 'beach-toy' polyethylene, usually with contrasting wheels and often without a rider, but we see from that reference in the PW 'Special' that they were sold four ways;

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types). Unpainted only . . all unbreakable and removable riders.
500M - Motorbike Only.
501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types)

All trade, per gross.

What any retailer would want a gross (144) of motorcycles riders [without bikes] for is anyone's guess!

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
Another, with one of the riders, this is the helmeted chap, the other has a peaked 'service-cap', of a rather squishy US style, but I'm not aware of this being a US mould-share or copy and the machine is very British in lines.

The listing given in PW's special is from an un-dated 1940's catalogue and it's not clear which rider is 501 and which is 502, but I favour this as the '2, due to seniority, the other figure having sergeants stripes!

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
So, to the sorry tale . . .

 . . . I first became aware of these about a decade ago, when working for JB, he got a bunch of them in a mixed-lot from somewhere, and we didn't know who they were by, but liked the look of them, and it happened that Mr. Morehead had come round for a 'working brunch' and identified them as Airfix, heavily painted by a loon, with a spoon! [I made-up the last bit!]

Anyway, JB asked me if I could clean them, and I said "Yeah, sure, I'll take them home and do it tonight". I can tell you it took three dips in Nitromores (this back in the day when Nitromores would take the paint off a car-body in 30 seconds and was worth using - now it's some 'elf-n-safety' affected, watered down, oven-polish with no power to speak of!), and a hour or so with a tooth-pick to get the thick khaki 'mud' off them.

Then, about four/five years later, I found this at Dave McKenna's Birmingham show! I've since seen others and although the catalogue in PW states "unpainted", and while most examples are unpainted, it looks like either Airfix or a retailer painted them at some point, with this thick gloss paint, and that we'd stripped 'factory-paint' off a whole batch! Hey-ho!

As the paint matches some examples of the early mounted (Horse Guard in service dress) and early 54mm figures (Airborne, Japanese and Paratrooper), I think it probably was/is Airfix?

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
Three parts of the bike and both riders, as [unpainted] riders are usually a different colour to wheels/motorcycle, the fact that the painted one is the same colour as the bike he came with is another sign that they were probably factory-/out-painted and then matched to machines with the under-polymer colours unknown.

There is a variation of the helmeted figure, with his goggles on his helmet, not his face, with the same pocketed tunic as the Sergeant and without the Sam-Brown/cross-belt, whether this was dropped early or added after the PW-referenced catalogue is unknown.

Equally it may be that someone forgot to include it in the catalogue listing, OR that the 'two types' are cap or helmet and that there was 'artistic' variance within a multiple-cavity mould/tool?

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
My sample to-date (Nov.'18), whatever the truth of the paint/no paint, I'm not stripping my one; just in case! But the one I really like is the pink one . . .

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
. . . and I can't tell you how much I love this toy - it looks like a fossil, dug from the pink sandstones of the Gobi desert, painstakingly, with a hat-pin and a soft-brush.

By some series of quirks, from the similarly-coloured plastic for the wheels and bike, some factory or home painting at various times, some cleaning and/or weathering/play-wear over time, it has developed a patina of 'antiqued' age you couldn't re-produce in a laboratory with the greatest minds in the universe working on the problem.

This is one of the ten to try and save from a fire! If it wasn't identical to the others in every way, you'd think it was from another company and thirty-year's earlier!

Under the patina, the bike is a pale pinky-flesh and the wheels a mauve-purple. The engine seems to have been gold at some point and the patina is probably a sign of the vehicle having been a darker-red with an unstable additive/colourant?

10th Dec. 2018 - Strangely (not! They're always following me!) a machine turned-up in Vichy over the weekend - a month after posting this - with traces of all-over gold paint!

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
Best of British!

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
Signs of the front number-plate being painted on the faded one, and a short-shot / miss-mould on the front number-plate of the red one, I also noticed the mud-guard bar on the blue one has gawn-missin'. . . I'll trim it off to make it less obvious at a glance!

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
A few more riders, all the same pose, they came together, so probably date from the same factory-gate batch, a later (?) stable pigment ethylene run, matching two of my machines, the red and silver exactly, the black a new colour.

The original image I used in a mixed motorbike post on the 'Home Blog' when I was hedging my bets with a 'probably/possibly' I think! Other colours seen in relation to these include a bright apple/grass green and a subdued yellow.

500 - Motorbikes & Riders (2 types); 500M - Motorbike Only; 501 - Motorcycle Rider; 501/2 - Riders Only (assorted 2 types); 502 - Motorbike Riders; Airfix Model Figures; Collecting Airfix Figures; Collecting Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Figures; Early Airfix Toy Soldiers; Early Airfix Toys; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Motorbike Toys; Motorcycle Toys; Plastic Warrior Magazine; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Plastic Soldiers; Vintage Toy Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage Toys;
So - I got them out and took the shot a few days later, but I'm not going to announce it on the home Blog, as I've posted a couple of links there (to here) in the last few weeks and I'm sure some people get sick of links to something they've only just read!

Therefore if you're reading this in December 2018 you're getting a 'sneak preview' of something I won't return to until something more substantial turns-up! Not that there's' anything new in it, just a nice picture!
 
Yellow is strangely brittle in the centre
but perfectly fine at both ends, reaction to a PVC rider? Britains?

The pair in the centre foreground have been chopped-about.

 More colours, more riders!
 
Added 2024, these are the findings of shows over the time since the last update (2018), but actually most were found in 2023 I think. But that's twenty-odd years since I discovered these, and it must be ten years since I wrote the relevant line above!

Again, signs of these having been factory painted (and if not by Airifx, by someone with a commercial bent), this being the third time, years and miles apart that they've come into my sphere, both blue plastic, with red wheels, underneath the paint, like the existing sample, so clearly a whole - matching - batch got the treatment.

All three figures as mentioned above, in close-up, the new one (here) is the red one with the goggles on the helmet and no Sam-Browne belt, so I suspect he's meant to be a civilian 'ton-up' kid? With two joining the fleet, they are looking to be as common as the other pair.
 
Just which pair was the catalogue referring to when it only mentioned two types? And why the discrepancy? Probably the art-department were shown all three but didn't register the differences between the two helmeted ones?

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

1971; [Civil / Sportsmen] Footballers Sports Series, 1835 / 51470 / 51470-3, 1:32 (54mm)

Along with the hard polystyrene plastic 'kit' figures 'Track Officials and Spectators' meant for the slot-racing system; these were the only modern civilian set issued in 1:32 scale, equating to 54mm.


Title / Titles
Footballers Sports Series


Catalogue number/s
Cat No. 1835 - Code No. 51470-3 (Type One box)
Code No. 51470-3 (Type Two box)
Item-No. 51470-3 (French box)

One Airfix website has credited the set with the following codes - 9-51570 for 1980-84, 14 figure 'small boxes' and 51570 for the 1986 equivalent; to this author's knowledge, neither set was issued and no second referee was tooled-up, as would have been necessary.

Catalogue entries
9th Edition
10th Edition
11th Edition
12th Edition
13th Edition
14th Edition
15th Edition

Meaning it was advertised (in all versions) from between 1971 and 1978 inclusively, whatever the retail availability and/or actual issue/batch date/s. The first version box seems no rarer than the second, so when the '73 artwork boxes actually got released is another question.

They say
"This new set of model figures will enable the enthusiast to stage his own football match. There are 29 pieces in the set - 24 players, in various poses, 2 trainers, 2 linesmen and a referee. In addition there are 2 footballs. We leave the choice of team colours to you as all the figures are unpainted." 9th edition catalogue, issued autumn 1971 for 1972

Box Types/Date of issue (with notes)

1 - Type One (no date, large box-end logo, herb green graphics, equates to brown box 'round logo' era, possibly available for Christmas 1971 but probably not issued until 1972)

2 - Type Two (possibly issued in 1973, but it looks as if they weren't got to market until 1974, small box-end logo, grass green graphics, equates to target box era, new 'Letrasett' style block-font)

3 - 'Le Redoubt' (French Language, 1974 issue, box; ©1973) The French version of the type two box, carried by the mail-order company La Redoute has a translation of the information panel, but drops the World Cup 1966 winners line and adds the winners of the 1974 Munich World Cup (Germany) after the Brazil/Mexico line, creating a new paragraph and letting us know the French issue was produced after the World Cup had been held, in late 1974, despite carrying a 1973 copyright, not found on the English box.

There are other differences in layout of that box rear and while the word footballers is on the front (and the four sides - leading to changes in the positioning of the figures on the long sides), on the back panel is has been changed to Footballeurs with a 'u', also the La Redoute logotype is to be found round all four sides of the box under the 'Footballers'.

Number of figures/accessories per box
The early box describes the set as containing 29 scale pieces, there are in fact 29 figures and two ball as one additional 'spruelette' moulding for a 30 or 31-count depending on whether they are found mint or loose.

Figure poses - by identifying number/letter codes
Figures are not marked.

Other notes
*The two figures above – reaching high & reaching low – are actually the same goalkeeper pose, placed in different attitudes vis-à-vis the base, prior to the final stages of the cavity positioning/cutting/mould-making process.

One of the two balls, if anything about this set is 'rare' (and it's neither of the box types if evilbeevilBay is anything to go by!) it is the footballs, which are tiny and easily lost, I've never checked but I think they may actually be under-scale?

Comparison between an Airfix figure and two of his clones; the Champions of Soccer board-game playing piece from Mike Orchard Enterprises, published in 1984 and a Hong Kong marked rack toy/cake decoration.

Vis-à-vis the HK one; the same source seems to have been responsible for the copies of the Airfix 1:32nd scale Napoleonic Infantry, being issued in the same colours and wearing the same, quite neat, base-mark.

Another of the Mike Orchard figures, it's easy to mistake the six Champions of Soccer players for Airfix if found in this colour, but he is both slightly smaller and a paler, wishy-washy creamy-white, rather than the full 'double-cream' of the Airfix originals.




The above are just four scans from the earlier box. There are more comparisons to come, more of the HK figures and better images of the 2nd version box - if I didn't sell them all in 2011, time will tell?

1:32nd; 1:32nd Scale Figures; 1:32nd Scale Footballers; 1:32nd Sclae Toys Figures; 54mm Plastic Figures; 54mm Toy Figurines; Airfix; Airfix Copies; Airfix Footballers; Airfix Model Figures; Airfix Piracies; Airfix Toy Figures; Association Footballers; Football Association; Football Figures; Football Players; Footballers; HK; HK Footballers; Hong Kong Airfix Copies; Hong Kong Copies; Hong Kong Footballers; Hong Kong Piracy; Hong Kong Toy Figures; Made in Hong Kong; Model Football Players; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Toy Football Players;
Update on the Hong Kong copies with four different poses. They have lost a bit on [probable] pantographing, but these were quite late as far as copies from the colony went, and compared to some of those third or umteysomethingth-generation copies of earlier figures (8th Army or Germans for instance) these have been done well and kept most detail to almost the same level as the originals. It may help that there's been no attempt to give them different or wacky 'landscaped' bases?

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); The Bergen/Beton Mounted Figures

Disclaimer

All or none of the figures in this post could (or could not) be by Airfix, or any of the other manufacturers mentioned in the text. Most of the horses probably are Airfix, those over-which a question mark remains are pointed out in the text.

First advertised in 1947 these are probably the first 'plastic' Toy Figures produced commercially in the UK as playthings...

Group Shot

These figures (where they ARE Airfix) were probably pirated from the Bergen Toy (Beton) company rather than licensed, after Nikolai Kovespachi (Nicholas Kove) came back from his reconnaissance to America sometime in the mid-to-late 1940's. The horse is deliberately different with it's tail slightly to one side and there are subtle differences in those figures which are duplicated, while the Life Guard seems to have been an Airfix original?

Doughboy in 'Brodie' helmet

This figure may be (and the horse definitely is...) a Beton product, but he comes within the scope of this article/post and ended up first in line because I wasn't too bothered about the order in which I uploaded the photographs! The horse is a dense cellulose-acetate polymer called Tenite, and while the figure is similar, he seems more clearly a polystyrene, so late US or European production?.

Staff Officer

Beton called this chap either M416; U.S. Cavalry Officer, or with a paint change; M418 Traffic Officer. Airfix called this the Horse Guard. Beton Horse on the left with a polyethylene Airfix horse on the right, The Airfix horse is marked 'MADE IN ENGLAND' withing the hollow underside/belly.

The red figure has probably only had his paint removed, you can see the figure on the left is suffering a crystalline reaction between the paint and the plastic, sometimes this reaction results in a sticky mess which is better removed.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) 'Mountie'

The Mountie, again not sure if Airfix produced this one, Reisler did, and as they produced the Life Guard, it's possible they got their figures (or a license?) from Airfix which would suggest Airfix produced a Mountie as well. Airfix horse again on the right.

The Mountie was also produced by Tudor*Rose, but as part of their wild West range and will be covered when I look at them.

Later - Yes they did, these are both Airfix, a later polystyrene one on the left and an earlier cellular acetate one on the right, see below..

Later still (several years later!) - Tudor Rose didn't do the Mountie.

Lifeguard in ceremonial uniform

The Life Guard, clearly aiming at the Tourist market, all these figures - when originating with Airfix - were supposed to stand up when removed from the horse, they rarely do! These are probably both Airfix with the horse in polyethylene and the rider in a styrene polymer.

Hunting party with both poses

The Hunters, Beton produced a female rider and a Jockey in racing silk, both in a larger size, neither of which - as far as I know - were part of the Airfix issues and don't seem to have featured in the Reisler inventory either.

Beagles


2013 - By Airfix - the hunters were sold in a boxed set with the two dogs above, these dogs were also sold in a kennel shaped box with other breeds. Early ones are cellulose-acetate, these are the later polyethylene run.

The dogs are marked internally in the same manor as the Airfix horses. The lower two are also ethylene, but in black. It would seem they come in the same colours as the ethylene horses, with some in the reddish/oxide browns.

2014 - Somehow I forgot the Alsatian? Well here it is and there's now a setter on the STS forum thread, along with a red-brown Beagle.

2016 - Now a setter (English? Not Irish...not shaggy enough!) joins the collection with a lurcher/greyhound racing type.


2017 - This has been added to the 'pack'; it's a duplicate but in nicer condition than the one I already had and it was a bargain!

2018 - Another random picture that was sitting in Picasa, it might as well sit here.

Academy Cadet/Circus Performer/Ceremonial figure

This horse is from a different source altogether (the Woolworths Crazy Clown Circus) but might be an Airfix original and this figure looks good rearing up on it! These are technically only 'Cadets' but they do look like simplified ceremonials or those generic Napoleonics that feature so much in early toy production, while he also works well as a circus performer!

The following will help identify these figures in greater detail;

Kent Sprecher's Beton page.
The Reamsa figure on JC's blog.
Reisler page click-on; SGI / Riesler then either 'I Soldater og Politi' or; 'III Sportsryttere' below the thumbnails.

Further reading

Plastic Warrior magazine have produced a guide: Airfix - The Early Years, which covers all this early production in some depth.

Any of Richard O'Brien's volumes on firstly 'Collecting Toy Soldiers' and latterly 'Collecting American Made Toy Soldiers will fill you in on the Bergen/Beton production.

Indeed, one of the main questions remaining comes from his work if an American reader can help...did Beton use both sets of codes or is one O'Brien's own system?

Added 20th November 2012

And then this turns up! Raising that whorey old question of who copied who? An original Timpo boxed-set, the horse is quite a lump of lead, and seems to be early enough to be pre-war, except that Timpo aren't supposed to have made lead until after the war...was it intended for the composition range?

And/So; did Timpo copy Bergan-Beton, or did the Americans have a stab at a British piece of hollow-cast but in plastic (albeit: cellulose-acetate)

Clues point both ways - The edges of the horse are a bit rough, so it could have been the copy, taken badly and not cleaned up, while the solid belly and hollow-cast nature of the piece would make copying almost has hard - thechnically - as making a new horse pose from scratch, suggesting it IS a new pose and not the copy.

While the figure stares at us inanely, giving no clue as to his parentage, being easier to copy either way, and being as clean a moulding here as he is in plastic?

Also, there were other poses than the Mountie produced by Reamsa, and other stuff has come to light on this much copied/licenced set, so I will update this post properly one day!

------------------------------------------------------------

November 2014

It seems that the Cowboy was an Airfix pose, so I will have to update the table above, and it means we'll probably end-up with the Tudor*Rose and other figures here as well...

So, a quick correction of the blurb for the Mountie post above and we can look at this little group, late - polystyrene - production with a quick splash of blue on the chaps/boots and brown hats. No Indian? But a cowboy, cowgirl and the Mountie (Royal Canadian mounted Policeman - RCMP). These is also a Hong Kong copy of the cowboy for comparison.

These are the standard Tudor*Rose horse, not always marked, but their saddles give them away with the arrangement of stars round the edge. All the producers of this horse varied the saddles, and when I get the rest out of storage we'll look at them all in more detail, but for now these are Tudor*Rose and have two open stars forward of the girth (?) strap and five squashed stars behind.

The Tudor*Rose mounted cowboys, next to an Airfix 'original'. At some point these was a re-design on the figure with a more complicated lasso/lariat (can any American reader explain any difference between the two, or is it just preference/local dialect?), possibly designed to damage less easily than the earlier one which was happy to brake if you as much as looked at it wrong and is often missing, especially from the earlier hard plastic figures - from all the makers of the pose.

Below them is a close-up of the full Tudor*Rose marking in the under-belly of the horses, you can see why I always write the asterisk in Tudor*Rose, they always put the little graphic Tudor rose symbol between the Tudor and the Rose!

Mounted on the Tudor*Rose horses they make a nice group, but is there an Indian or two? We will look at other peoples Indians in due course.

Added May 2017


Airfix Dogs; Airfix Horses; Airfix Huntsman; Airfix Model Figures; Airfix Toy Soldiers; Bergen Beton; Bergen Toys; Beton Co.; Ceremonial Troops; Early Airfix Figures; Early British Toy Soldiers; Early Toy Figures; F&G; Fox Hounds; Fox Hunt; Fraser & Glass Ltd.; Fraser And Glass Limited; Hunters; Lifeguards; Plastic Beagles; Plastic Hunt Dogs; Plastic Huntsman; Plastic Lifeguards; Reisler; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Wild West Horses;
Picture replaced a year or so later with F&G-updated captions

The above shot is trying to make sense of the more common (or what I have to hand!) figures found in the UK, and is pretty straightforward - apart from all the questions it raises! So don't take the labelling as anything more than a guide.

For instance, why are the cadets not listed in the Airfix catalogues referenced in the 'Aifix Special Publication' from Plastic Warrior magazine? As far as I can tell (from Kent Sprecher's site and Ponylope) Began/Beton didn't paint the trousers on theirs, while these - matching the Airfix Lifeguard would seem to be Airfix? It could be that they were in a later catalogue? Or that they bought them in from Bergan and painted them here?

Maybe they were for a specific contract with someone like Woolworth's and never offered by Airfix to the wider trade? They are - dare I say - even the commonest of the full-painted figures to find over here, with the unpainted versions (bottom right) equally easy to find - at the right show!

Likewise the two westerners seem more akin to the Tudor Rose figures and share the alpha-numerical, single-character codes (white text) on one foot, missing from the 'clearly' Airfix, indeed missing an all the other examples. I'm assuming there is not significance to the codes beyond mould/cavity markers, but it helps distinguish them. While they share the foot-marks, the painted pair has no locating studs - which further ID Tudor Rose in hard and soft plastic, so they both remain a second mystery.

The pink guy is also unmarked, but not Airfix, I suspect 'early Hong Kong pirate' to be his title and epitaph!

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Picture replaced a year or so later with F&G-updated captions

A similar treatment of the horse types, and again only take the labelling as a guide, also; the hard plastic version of Tudor Rose are absent, but they are to all intents and purposes the same as the polyethylene ones, with the dimples for the locating-studs on the riders calves setting them apart from Bergan/Beton and Airfix.

And we have a reciprocal question mark to the cadet above, in the two tenite type horses top left; which have the sword hanging from the left of the saddle and the [whatever?] bayonet, truncheon, cavalry musket hanging from the right. While it's hard to see in one of the Airfix press releases in the above mention PW publication, all the other horses illustrated are either hollow 'bent tails' or the later whole-bellied (with paint) we know are definitely Airfix mounts.

It may not look like it in the above two images, but a lot of the horses and riders are not compatible, the fit being either too tight to go together or two loose for the riders to stay-on. However, one of the best fits is the question mark cadets, with the Bergan/Beton horse. If it wasn't for the painted trousers you'd say they were US imports from old lists or since the advent of feeBay, but they are two common, they must have had a reason beyond recent purchase for being over here (in the UK) in numbers.

The four main horse types, from the top of both images; 'Bergan/Beton' with a part-hollow cavity, this is in a heavy, dense polymer which may be a phenolic or cellulose-based thermosetting material; Airfix late with full body sculpt in a lightweight polystyrene - made of two halves glued/heat-welded together; Airfix early with hollow body, flat, slab-sides to the cavity and MADE IN ENGLAND (with a single number), most are a dense'ish polythene but some are a heavier marbled 'scrap' plastic, finally; Tudor Rose late soft ethylene with the cavity scooped-out, and a letter 'c' in this case, others as we've seen above can have the whole logo, some having a number, others no mark.

It should be pointed out that both the painted and unpainted cadets (two shots above) along with the painted lifeguard and the two questionable Wild West figures are all in the same material as the pair of 'Bergan/Beton' horses, while the Horse Guard in service/working dress uniform is a lightweight polystyrene like the later red figures with blue legs.

Helping to prove some of the thoughts above; here they are on the horses they best fitted, with the question mark cadets fitting the question mark hoses, the other painted Airfix fitting the bent-tailed horse, those figures were too narrow to go comfortably on the solid hose, but the blue-legs fitted them snuggly (conforming to the trade sets uncovered by Plastic Warrior magazine's contributors), while the hard styrene Tudor Rose (identical to the same companies soft ethylene versions) fitted the soft plastic horse, it being also identical to TR's missing [from these pictures] polystyrene variant.

Another way of tying these together is matching-up the paint used by the factory/out-painters! The off-white of the cowgirl's hat is a perfect match for the socks of the cross-over horse (?)*, while the 'Mountie's ochre matches the saddles of the solid styrene horses.

* I think the soft ethylene horses pre-date the solid-bodied polystyrene ones, the producing and gluing in two halve coming after Airfix had gained experience in tooling-up for their kit range and infant toys, using the material they had settled on for that core production.

And while I've got my 'thinking' hat on; the very early 'cigarette-box' ships (miniature models rather than kits) by Airfix were in the same dense creamy-white polymer as the 'Bergan/Beton' horse above, but with Airfix advertising the hoses and motorcycles (which are all polyethylene) as 'unbreakable', I think it looks most likely the cadets and matching horses are Bergan/Beton imports painted to match our ceremonial cavalry's trousers, but still: imported by Airfix, or someone like Woolworth's?

These guys all fit the bent tail with the least common variations of both hose and rider to the right, I only have the one soft polyethylene figure, and the horse is as stated above a strange brew akin to a nylon/rayon or early polypropylene, having the rigidity of styrene but the soapy feel of an ethylene, and clearly being made from scraps, I guess an experimental mould shot/mould run, considered OK for retail release?

More of the same; if yer got'em, yer gotta' play wi'um! On the right are the big question marks; both 'as per' Bergan/Beton, neither found [yet] in Airfix paperwork, yet painted to the Airfix pattern, not Bergan/Beton's?

Combining with the few already here (mostly Tudor Rose), I'm still looking for the Airfix Archer and Indian holding a rifle (which he holds higher than the common Tudor Rose version), while I have a shortage of Tudor Rose hard polystyrene horses, but I think there are a few in storage. Also the spear-chap is (as always) broken and he seems to be an Airfix-unique post, not carried-through to the later Tudor Rose range.

Hong Kong generally seems to have gone off and re-done them with a new horse (taken from another US donor?) and upper-torso's from Britains and co. as seen along the bottom row and in the bag, the painted horse is cruder and a copy-of-a-copy. The Horse top left is probably from a French rack-toy (called bazaars - as they were sold in markets), several French brands had similar horses, usually as wagon-teams on simple polyethylene models. The blue one is a body-copy and we've seen it before (above a'ways), with the obvious locating studs on the feet of narrower legs and the pink one is at the start of this additional section.

In the preparation of this new section, the very early Airfix Horse Guard started to crumble like a biscuit, he'd already dried out like old bread and shrunk like a prune, so - sticking with the food-based metaphors - I coated him in plumber's sealant and done 'im up like a kipper! Note how handling over the years had protected the feet and lower legs from the worst of the damage, oils in the human skin serving to seal or lubricate/moisturise those areas.

This figure was definitely an unstable phenol- or cellulose-acetate or other 'phenolic' type, some react with their paint and go sticky, some grow a forest of evil-looking crystals; but in the end they all start to crack and brake-up. This coating them in plumber's sealant I've been trying seems to be a good way of getting a few more years out of them, but only time will tell?

The other point worth raising here - as I've run out of pictures and it remains unsaid - is that in the Airfix ephemera tracked down by Plastic Warrior, there is mention of a 'British Policeman' (listed with the RCMP 'Mountie'), while Lifeguard and Horse Guard are listed together. Now, assuming the khaki version of this figure with the service cap is the Horse Guard (Airfix describe "...the Horse Guards in their more sober Khaki..." and I've never seen 'Blues' in the same uniform/pose as the 'Royals'), and assuming that the Mountie is a Mountie is a Mountie; Who's the British policeman - where's the British Policeman? Did they sell the same khaki figure as a Military Policeman and barrack-dress Horse Guard, or is there a blue version of this figure to pass as a civilian mounted policeman?

Also; the Horse Guard is a different moulding from the US figure (Cavalry officer/Traffic Officer), was the airfix policeman a copy of this other sculp, and if so why is it apparently so uncommon compared to the others? And following on from that; there are gaps in the numbering of these early figures which could be occupied by the two cadets (painted and unpainted) . . .


Another pair of Lifeguards, the one on the left in a factory-painted pink polystyrene the one on the right unpainted in a soft, semi-transparent red polyethylene (already seen above), which I've just described elsewhere (on the home blog) as cherryaide-red! This is more cherry-cola red!

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Another line-up of Lifeguards - to date (2019). I think these are all Airfix with three early hard plastic (probably styrene) ones to the left and two later, soft polyethylene, unpainted examples to the right. You will notice the 'pink' one is redder where the paint wore-off at a later date on the boot shin and toe, I fancy also that the left-hand of the three is starting to fade, as with the HO/OO guardsmen; on reflection I don't think they left the factory pink, but that an unstable additive was used on some batches (middle figure is fine) which has leached-out/faded from red to pink. It may even be that on one (large? They're quite common) batch, a second additive - being a colour-fixative/setter - was accidently omitted?

Now . . . recent (July 2019) revelations in this quarter's and the previous-but-one issues' of Plastic Warrior magazine (issues 173/175) have thrown new light on some of the above figures and horses, and while I don't think there's any serious corrections to be made - as I was always clear to point out how little definitive evidence there was on either - there is a pinning-down of some of it to be carried out, along with attribution of the more 'phenolic' stuff to a 'new name'; Fraser & Glass (F&G; courtesy of Mr.Mig Bonnefoy), which I will probably do by numbering all or some of the above images and re-annotating them in a piece (below) in the near future. Suffice to say: the clown-connection hinted-at above somewhere, a few years ago, has been proven accurate.

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As some examples are finally ID'd; new versions turn-up! These are in the style of Tudor Rose but with a cross-piece or bulkhead which seems to have the job of preventing distortion or the splitting you get with some of these. They are unmarked and while glossy/shiny - in a late production sort of way - are well finished with sharp detailing to mane and tail and no obvious flash or other blemishes.

My thought is a late re-cut or re-design (new tool) for Tudor Rose (or one of their rivals), from the late 1970's or even post 1980? They are too 'professional' for Hong Kong! The riders remain 'unknown' as the horses came in this state; rider-less! But I suspect they will be one of the many lots of soft-plastic Wild West figures out there; probably equally 're-cut'?

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Recent additions to the pack made this shot inevitable! Expect another one in about eight or nine years with a pack of 12 foxhounds! I'm not sure the horse is original paint, he seems a little too good compared to all the others (made by whoever!), however, the rider is quite well finished as well, so maybe the really-early production by Airfix; which this is (bent tail), received a higher level of 'care' from painters than later batches would? Especially given that the 'Began-Beton / Early Airfix?' horse labeled (by me, above) is now known/believed to be F&G! Equally it could be dirt giving the impression of dry-brushing/shading!

Dogs are all soft polyethylene (unlike the rider and horse who are polystyrene) with three in black, one white, one cream and one (latest addition) a mottled charcoal grey, I've never found a polystyrene one, not even damaged, so it seems - as per musing above - that they were always PE, possibly because of the tails, which are a weak point in Polyethylene, and may have proved a nightmare in PS test-shots?

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How the hunters and dogs appeared in the catalogue shown by Plastic Warriormagazine in their Airfix Special Publication. As stated elsewhere in this post, I assume the six dogs are the two beagles and four other breeds; Setter, Pointer, Alsatian and one other - possibly a boxer type although a spaniel would fit equally well?
 
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2021 - It was a Spaniel! A nice Springer Spaniel; favored gun-dog, so another farm/working dog, and that's all four of the non-Beagles.
 
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2022 - They keep turning-up! The darker one was a Plastic Warrior 37th Show purchase, the red-brown came in a Sandown Part lot a year earlier I think!