Also in the Nabisco section of the folders (see previous post) was this from the 1950's, credited to Welgar, the original branding of the Shredded Wheat factory, Shredded Wheat being a US licensed product, which Nabisco bought, Shredded Wheat is now part of the Kraft group, while Nabisco is owned by Mondelēz. Welgar is a portmanteau word for Welwyn Garden [City], where the factory was established.
About Me
- Hugh Walter
- 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 Esquimaux. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Esquimaux. Show all posts
Friday, April 4, 2025
W is for Welgar
Monday, February 19, 2024
H is for How They Come In - Charity Shop Backlog - 2022, 2 of 2
All the two's! Clearing the backlog of stuff down in Picasa's 1960, except for 2023! Slightly more interesting stuff for the purists than the last post, but it all has its place, and I make no apologies for any of it, unless I apologise first!
A rather nice two-headed dragon, I don't know who it's by, and it went to storage ages ago, but I think it's the same line as the black one we saw recently with the two different wing arrangements, so someone like Toy major maybe?
Another of the Jada die-casts, again I'm not sure of the franchise (so far all their offerings have been licensed) but it could be Roblox or Blockworld or whatever they are called, I liked it, despite its chipped nose, as it reminds me of the morphing-cubes robot in the water world scenes of Interstellar, the movie!
Seen before I think, some things do tend to get more than one outing now I'm shooting stuff for other platforms, my latest Fontanini on his chunk of Carrara Marble, and a bigger one at about 100/120-mil.
Nappies in various sizes, the one on the right is the fun one, it's a well [home-] painted slush-cast tourist statuette! The other small one is a 'figure painters' whitemetal figure, I don't know the maker while the ceramic is a fairing type, which was going for a couple of quid rather than some Meissen/Worcester type, but a fun addition to the growing side-collection of naughty Mediterranean (remember the rules of French Warfare) corporals!
This was a 50p jobbie, and worth the read, probably collected articles from a history magazine or periodical or something, not exactly in-depth, and not revealing anything which isn't in AJP Taylor or Liddle Heart, but maybe a tad-less jingoistic.
This wasn't that hard to pin down, the artist being revealed as Eija Seras, a Canada-based Finnish artist of the 1960-70's, but the base mark with the 'H' seems wrong (the 'E' is as she did it), so it may be a maiden or married name from one end of her period of productivity? If you google her, you find lots of chess-set pieces, this doesn't seem to be one of them, so just a touristy piece.
"Seras produced a range of Inuit figurines, hand sculpted from terracotta
clay, in the late 1960s through the 1970s based on her four years
living at the U.S. Air Force base in Goose Bay, Labrador in the mid 60s
. The artist was awarded the Canadian Design of Merit citation in 1974 by
the National Design Council of Canada for her native figures"
'How they came in'! I forgot to load this picture in order, and if I slot it in now I'll have to rewrite the blurbs on the other two, and I'm intrinsically idle, so that's a big, fat no! I seem to recall they were a couple of quid each, from the BHF in Farnborough. Really showing the superiority of plastic in certain situations, as seen by those, back then, who couldn't foresee the pollution problem careering down the tracks.
Labels:
1:Mixed Scales,
8th Army,
Artist; Eija Seras,
Books,
Carrara,
Dragons,
Esquimaux,
Fairings,
Fontanini,
H,
Jada,
Make; Mixed,
Mixed Eras,
Napoleon,
Napoleonic,
Plymr - Mixed,
Robots,
TV/Movie,
WWII
Sunday, December 11, 2022
F is for Follow-up - Esquimaux Explorers
A quick follow-up to October's post on Kinder Arctic subjects, as I managed to pick up a colour variant on Friday, which we can have a quick shufti at! And re, that previous post's title, it's bloody cold now, they recon minus-7° tonight, which may be balmy for some of the Northern/Continental Loyal Readers, but it's pretty rare in sodding Hampshire!
Labels:
54mm,
Civilian,
Dogs,
Esquimaux,
Ethnic Dress,
F,
Ferrero,
I,
Inuit,
Kinder,
Plymr - Ethylene,
Polar Natives
Monday, October 17, 2022
I is for Is It Just Me, or Is It Getting Chilly?
We had two heat-waves here, the first
breaking three-year old 'new' records by 3°, a trend
which if it continues would render large parts of Europe, Asia and the SE of
Britain uninhabitable by humans - in a heat-wave - within about 20 years? But
after the second, not so hot but more humid, so equally uncomfortable heat-wave,
the weather has gone rapidly downhill, and it's got quite chilly, but then I
guess it is October, maybe the summer just lasted too long!
Anyway, seems like a good excuse to get the cold-weather gear out and check it over, these are all Kinder; 1980's/90's, and they are ready for anything the climate throws at them! 20/25mm at the top, 28/30mm compatible in the middle and a decet stab at 54mm with the 'steckfigur' at the bottom, who has lost the backs of his skis, and his boots . . . sniff! The silver blob was off some cartoon thing; long-lost. I have a blue/white one who has his boots, so if I ever find the missing ski sections I will be able to re-shoot them both in some sort of order? All polyethylene, and with moveable arms/articulated waist, they are a useful addition to Timpo and/or Britains polar explorer/Esquimaux/Inuit sets. There's the colour reversed version of this on evilBay at the movement, he's more of a novelty toy, and winter-sports rather than polar explorer or native hunter, but fun, Kinder, polystyrene and possibly a bit earlier, although still 1980's I think?
Labels:
25mm,
30mm,
54mm,
Civilian,
Dogs,
Esquimaux,
Ethnic Dress,
Ferrero,
I,
Inuit,
Kinder,
Plymr - Ethylene,
Plymr - Styrene,
Polar Natives,
Sleighs,
Sportsmen,
Sportswomen
Thursday, February 20, 2020
M is for Mushy-mush Mushington!
Before the winter's entirely over and after
seeing the story the other day about one of the big Northern 'mush' races
struggling to find a course of the correct length than was snow, not mush, I
thought these were timely after a fashion . . . or indeed a manner!
Not a patch on the sublime Britains Herald sledge team (which I
don't have!), but aimed at a different price-bracket and consequently cruder,
yet more robust, is the Timpo arctic
sledge with Esquimaux/Inuit musher.
13 pieces (unlucky for some . . .
especially if items are missing!) go together to make up the model, which was
sold assembled. One of my dogs is the wrong pose, but one of his feet lines up
with a hole in the base so I could bluff the assembled shot below.
It's a stunning piece, even it if lacks the
subtlety of the Britains one,
although you have to ignore the totally inaccurate arrangement of the dog-team,
who are always in-line, lead by the pack leader and spaced so that they can't
reach each-other with a bite!
The traces simply loop loosely over the
dogs heads and given that both horse leathers and these dog-leads are known for
their increasing brittleness these days, I was treating them with such care -
so's not to break them - they kept popping off; as I got a couple over the
heads one would come loose again, it was like a fiddly game of whack-a-mole!
The Britains
set was different from the others by depicting Western explorers rather than
native peoples, the green one is a Marx
reissue and I think the brown one holding a fish aloft was by Ideal, also an American
make, also a reissue?
The musher can take the same snow-shoes as
the rest of the line, and; once equipped with a knife, makes a good bar-brawler
or bear-fighter!
Labels:
1:32,
54mm,
Civilian,
Dogs,
Esquimaux,
Ethnic Dress,
Inuit,
M,
Make; British,
Plymr - Ethylene,
Polar Natives,
Sleighs,
Swoppets,
Timpo
Tuesday, February 20, 2018
T is for Toy Fair '18 Reports - Tactic Games
Continuing le theme du'jour! This was a new company to me, and they only had
three or four games on display, two of which contained the figural elements
Small Scale World craves, both of which will annoy anyone who groaned when they
saw the snails earlier, but for posterity and completion - I'll persevere!
Alias; not a game familiar to me, but it has little men who are half-way
between Rowntree's jelly-babies and
Tony Hart's Morph! And that fact
alone gets them onto the Blog!
Sadly the poses on the box are not repeated
in the counters, who look even more like jelly-babies and less like Morph! Likewise the smaller 'children'
on the box don't seem to have made it to the games contents, clearly a graphic
trope to get across the family-friendly nature of the game?
They are very much a case of
find-one-of-each-colour-file-and-forget as far as collecting goes, but they are
figural, you get a 'free' sand-timer and they are probably fun! I'll be looking
out for them in the charity shops in a year or two's time.
The same figures are included in the Junior Draw Out game seen in one of the background shots below. Also note
how one of the red figures doesn't have the small disc-base of the others;
earlier version left in the sales-team's display sample, or common variant?
They also had Cool Catch out on a table, this has . . . er . . . wooden flats I'd
clearly forgotten about when I mention cows (or a cow) in the previous post
(the problem of queuing these posts up on the laptop in random order!)
The reason I haven't collaged these is
because I didn't crop them tight as they have some of the other games from Tactic
in the background which I thought I'd leave visible!
A nice touch - especially for wooden flats
- is the addition of a faux-fur fringe on the hoods of the Esquimaux's suits.
And it looks from the box art as if the game was initially going to be for four
players, but there are six figures; brown and yellow being included.
And a polar bear! I think (I hope - given
the target age-range!) he only steals fish, and isn't in the business of eating
Inuit! I only got a bum shot I'm afraid,
but he was more realistic (for a wooded flat!) than the cartoony inhabitants of
the Arctic circle!
Again, it's not something I'm going to buy
as a grown man who is supposed to collect Toy Soldiers, but if/when I see one
going cheap I'll be getting it for completion, and to make sure samples are in
the archive!
And if I attend the fair next year I'll try
to remember to pay more attention to Tactic's
stand and see what else they've come up with; of a figural nature.
Labels:
1:No scale,
Board Game Pieces,
Board games,
Civilian,
Esquimaux,
Flats,
Inuit,
Make; British,
T,
Tactic Games,
Toy Fair 2018,
Toy Fair Reports,
Wood
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