Let's sway, while color lights up the foxhole
Let's sway, sway through the line to a safe-throwing space!♪♫♫♫♪h
Links
http://biblicrafts.blogspot.com/2020/03/airfix-ww2-132-us-paratroopers-part-2.html
This page wouldn't exist in it's current form without the efforts and donations of Glenn Sibbald and Chris Smith, with supporting roles from John Begg, Barney Brown, Tom Clague, Norman Dunckley, Peter Evans, Adrian Little, Tadek Norek, and Danny O'Neill, so OSCAR (Our Soldier Collection's Airfix Reprobates) nominations to all of them!
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Definitely in production by 1949 (when they were advertised in Toy Trader & Exporter), I'm guessing the unpainted polystyrene figures arrived first with the painted Polyethylene versions following at a later date, but that is a guess.
I only have two of the hard plastic ones at the moment; 'Airborne' and 'Knight in Armour', more will be added as I find them.
In soft plastic we see from left to right; '18th Century Fusilier', 'Paratrooper', 'Airborne' again (as opposed to paratrooper!!?) and finally 'German Soldier'. The paratrooper is now identified as probably the Trojan copy.
These figures were also issued in Australia by a company called Pierwood Plastics under the Fethalite label in the unpainted hard plastic version. Some of the names/titles were however changed.
Smaller (copies/pirates?) have turned up and various mould variants of the Paratrooper seem to exist - both versions shown in the Plastic Warrior publication 'Airfix - The Early Days' have different arm-gaps from mine - and each other.
I won't edit the previous stuff, as I only had a few when this page started, so the story is followable as more empirical evidence has come to light, and it should all remain clear, even where it changes!
Here we see all my sailors, with two Airfix soft plastic (polyethylene), one New Zealand hard plastic (polystyrene) and a probably home-made figure, utilising the BR Moulds tool, but using some scrap plastic which hasn't stood the test of time! The paratrooper, self-explanatory, and I'm sticking with the Trojan attribution on this one, he keeps turning-up (I mean I've seen four or five over the years, including mine and Barney's) in paint which matches their other figures, equally I have seen examples which don't, and I suspect Trojan (who had their fingers in many pies) got hold of a mould. It's the only mould of all those listed by BR which I think Trojan utilised. Knights; two Airfix, one 'styrene (left) and one 'ethylene (right) and a New Zealander who is markedly smaller. Again labelled-up, and there's no suggestion Trojan had anything to do with this one. Two Airfix (in the middle) and an NZ, with the painted one having a question-mark, he's got a few differences (slightly shorter figure with a fatter head?) and might be another BR Moulds example? The sticker may be a collectors cataloguing thing, but I see no reason to remove it until I know what it represents, which I probably never will, so it stays! Peter Evans, roving reporter and joint-founder of Plastic Warrior magazine, had a go at making his own copies, using a mould-over copy process, his has ended-up slightly larger than everyone else's, and is manufactured in a kind of cold-casting (?) rubber which has the feel of PVC, but is probably a lot safer to work with! Slightly marbled in a red and white, giving mostly an overall pink, he's my Puce Pimpernel! Cheers Peter!