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 Miscellaneous. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miscellaneous. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

D is for Donation - Chris - Odds and Sods

It's always a bit sad to come to the end of these donation posts, as it's fun to cover so much eclectic, unknown, or odd stuff, in one post, let alone a series of them, but all good things come to an end, and here we are, with the 'odds & sods' of Chris's parcel.
 
Should have been in the vehicle post, and I can't remember why I shoved it in the odds' folder, so it might have been by mistake? Jig-Toy puzzles from Kellogg's, or are they, as with all things, premium, we've learnt over the years that there were usually multiple issuers, and often more issues than the first two editions of 'Cluck' listed, and given the detailed breakdowns of colours over the years, the fact that we see five different shades of blue here, would suggest they can't all be Kellogg's! But they are all the same polyethylene, probably UK made ones.
 
Another take on the little 'bears in bags' (fridge-magnetic bags!) were these broach-configured ones, although this chap is a cut above the blow-moulded versions, having four points of articulation at hips and shoulders.
 
Half of a rudie-nudie lady key-ring we've seen before here, and a golf tee, I saw a set of Gophers the other day which were an amusing reference to the movie Caddyshack, but these naked babes with their heads in the sand have been around much longer, and I'll be adding it to the 'Adult' post, with a few other bits which have come-in, soon.
 
A mix of Blue Box (Hidden Adventures), Blue Bird (Mighty Max) and similar micro-action-figures, and one which appears to be magnetic. I didn't shoot her well, but the beauty of this stuff is that we will see it again when we have proper overviews of their sub-genres.
 
"We want . . . a shrubbery!!", the rubber lump on the left is from the HG Toys cavemen sets, and I used to think it was Bata! The big fir is almost certainly from the same Tri-Ang railway set as the hopper-car in the vehicle post the other day . . . last month!
 
This is interesting; unmarked, the horse-stalls and walls are hard-plastic, the roof is soft 'ethylene, and the whole has a lot in common with the Jean Höfler buildings, from their carded sets, but the buttressing round the corners is very-much in the same style as the 'wall' jump in the Palitoy-Parker horse-jumping game? Not to say it's by either maker, it remains unknown to me, although Jean did do a Wild West town, that might have had a stable?
 
Kinder, Onken, and similar parts, from an early Pixie type (centre), to quite recent, and I've explained before how these go with all the other bits, to be built into whole examples from time to time, in sorting sessions, so all useful stuff!
 
This was a lovely find by Chris, but it's started to annoy me! I have done lots of Googling, and evilBay searches, over the month or so since it arrived, and while I've found all sorts of Plasticine sets and tie-ins with various licences, I can't find the farm-themed set I have to assume these fences were designed for, can anyone help?
 
A fine piece of 60's or early 70's key-ring, novelty tat! This seems to be a better, more robust version of the rather flimsy all-plastic ones I remember from our childhood, and which often turn-up on feebleBay, so I assume it's a bit earlier, with riveted construction and metal parts. Next job is to identify the correct pellets/bullets, of which there are numerous in the stash somewhere!
 
A cornucopia of odds to finish; the 'Snap!' picture dice and tumbler may be quite modern, and definitely Christmas cracker prizes, the bubble pipe seems to have had somebody try to use it as a real pipe - bet that tasted nice! Two score-spinners (also Christmas cracker fayre), a chromed knife, which could be cracker, gum ball, or something more like 12" Wild West dolls?
 
A windmill/whistle, traditional tin-plate clicker and a 'joke shop' severed-finger, complete a nice mix of novelties. The black fleck, might be off one of the hard-plastic, kit trains, I'll have to check!
 
As always, I feel I can never thank the guys enough for all this stuff, it really does fill holes, complete pictures' and ask new questions. So many, many thanks to Chris for the above, and to both Chris Smith and Peter Evans for all the stuff we've seen in the last couple of few weeks. This will be the 885th use of the Tag 'Contribution', which I didn't use for the first few years, so, some sixth of all posts have involved other people sending/saving other stuff, pictures, or data for/to the Blog, that's awesome kindness.
 
I don't know what my favourite was this time, possibly, strangely, the diminutive Marx/Blue Box rack-toy soldiers, simply because they were new colours and had both runners complete, but both the stable and the Harbutt's fencing in this post were good finds, and I've highlighted others - the WWI US bubble-stalk, the bobble-head tank, the pencil sharpeners? All sorts! While from Peter's lots, possibly the four colour/four 'team' Sci-Fi set in the MUSCLE style, or the China pack with Duke Kaboom, maybe the two wooden farm flats?
 
Thank you both.

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

D is for Donation - Peter - Odds and Sods

Isn't it typical? Last week I probably lost a few pounds working a six-day'er in that heat, with gardening at both ends, tonight I got rained on! Anybody would think the weather's trying to get rid of us . . . oh! Still, before we slip of this planet, there's still a lot to do, and this is the penultimate post of Peter Evans and Chris Smith's recent donations to the Blog, being all the stuff which didn't get put in the previous posts, and haven't been sent to RTM!
 

An assortment of novelty bits, parts, and what I suspect are the rubber caps from a clothes-horse or drainer? The pea-shooter brings back memories, and you can see from the damage where it was bent against the missing mouthpiece, the downfall of many such weapons!
 
Kinder horse, farm trailer, barbed wire and other scenics, this stuff all has a place, they all have a tub or box where they are sorted by type, annotated when ID'd or otherwise wait for more info' to turn-up, often in eBay lots or old catalogue shots, Argos and Index are useful, but so are the earlier home-shopping ones from Freemans, Grattan, Littlewooods and the like.
 
'Made in Hong Kong'
 
'Hong Kong'
 
'Blue Box'
 
'Superior'
(T. Cohn
 
I don't really want to be accruing this stuff, as I have no interest in doll's house accessories, except - of course - that they are part of the history of early plastic toys, and the companies behind them, and I was well aware that one or two members of the Higher Council of the Old Guard had a few shoe-boxes of this stuff, purely for research purposes, and now it seems I am fated to have some too! A car-boot job lot, if nothing else, it's a clear sample of the Superior mark, and Blue Box colours!
 
All brittle polystyrene, except the Superior items which are in the polyethylene soft plastic.
 


Various items of Britains Garden, and the original lead stuff, not the plastic, of which I also have quite a sample, more by accident than design, but it was almost the Lego of its day, fiddly, construction toy with endless configurations, and I think I'm right in saying it was a wider range than the later plastic set?
 
A lovely sheep with lamb, and a home-cast or penny-toy battleship, which has seen better days, but if it's the only sample, it's very welcome!
 
A cake-decoration Robin, needing foot surgery, but fascinating in painted plaster and lead, and more dolls house accessories, but with the sort of age which makes them ornamental, or decorative 'white elephant' bric-a-brac, rather than tacky-placky!
 
The two jugs (or jug and vase) are lovely, they are bisque, and probably German, although they could be Japanese, but very fine work, compared to the white glazed earthenware of British doll's china of the time (which you often find while gardening in older locations), while the smoothing-iron's stand seems to be die-cast?
 
This is fun, and an amazing survivor, from the 1950's or 60's? It actually works as a bell, is clearly a tree-decoration, but is also figural, with a Santa Claus handle, If I wasn't giving these things a home, they'd be lost!
 
We would have never been allowed something like this, our parents had a dim-view of plastic, and all things Hong Kong, and it's a bit kitch, but sixty-years later, it's pretty extraordinary!
 
These really should have been in the TV/Movie post, except the guardsman belongs in the Ceremonial and Historical post, so they ended-up here, they are all Phidal, and I can only assume the Guardsman is from some London/London Sights-related book?
 
This is also amazing, and I don't know if it's Hong Kong, something French, or even more local, it's marked on the sidecar R C I, of which I can find nothing, and in conversation with Peter when he showed it to me I said "I can shoot it in a comparison with the Airfix and the other one", but I can't remember who the 'other one' was by (Fairylite? Co-Ma?), and I was thinking of the ice-cream carts, while this is actually a motorcycle and sidecar, so I was talking nonsense!
 
Mostly Airfix, but mixed so they ended-up here, the yellow chap at the back is from a board game called Fortress America, which I haven't covered yet, despite having them in the stash, from MB Games, and a cross between Risk, Shogun and Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (which all play for zones or chunks of territory), it has recently been reissued in an updated form, from Ink Voltage.
 
Cones! There is a whole tub of them waiting a proper sort and ID session!

Sunday, February 15, 2026

A is for Another Collection? Mini Power-Tools

It's terrible isn't it, how this stuff builds up, while the planet burns? And we are, one way or another, all, equally guilty. There's no point thinking you're innocent, because of your fanatical, and diligent recycling, if you drive a bloody-great 4x4-SUV-Crossover 'people carrier', which had less cargo space than a Nissan Micra with the seats down, and never carries more than two people or the weekly shop . . . becasue 'Status, init?"!
 
We all have too much stuff.
 
Case in point (no pun intended, but it's there);
 

I inherited this from Mum, in the great sort-out of the Estate. When I was a kid, back in the heady days of the 1960's-early 1970's, tools like this were very expensive, quite rare and the sort of thing only professionals possessed, for specific tasks, or which were commonly only found in specific industries.
 
This is probably a 240v (actually 220 volt) export model, and with the odd tool change, and the additional stuff lying in the tray, is probably remarkably well-preserved, albeit, commoner in the US? The Handee portable power-tool, a solid piece of kit, existing many years before Black & Decker's mini-tools would be a thing!
 
I found this online, and it's a fascinating exercise in 1950/60's marketing/adspeak, well worth a read. I love the bullet points;
  • Shock-proof Bakelite construction
  • &
  • Patented protective sleeve, protects all parts
both mean . . . it's got a plastic case!
 
The last line 'Trouble-free radial type seven bar commutator' (a word spellcheck doesn't like), is pure technobabble, designed to convince the uninitiated that what they are thinking of buying, might help put a man on the moon! NASA being exactly the sort of people who would have had a few of these in their workshops!
 
The paragraph to the left is also interesting - "Accurately made from seasoned grey-iron casting" - what? Seasoned? Did they lay them out in the sun for a year, running out with little umbrellas every time it looked like rain, so they didn't rust? Or did they cook them in sausage-fat until they were blacked down! It's literally nonsense!
 
You'll spot a few others if you read it all, but faintly amusing, especially if you followed Mad Men (which I didn't), are familiar with Death of a Salesman (which I am), or saw Tin Men, which I loved. However a price of $19.50 in say, 1955, is the equivalent of $235/240 dollars today, a lot of money, a point we'll return to in a minute!
 
With the drill came a bunch of equally vintage (near 'antique') tools, among which, interestingly, wrapped in the rubber-band (well petrified, but set-in-place), included a quantity of dentists quick-release drill bits. I believe the drill came from 'Old Mr. Benning', after his death, he was a silversmith in Sleaford, near Bordon, but the dentist bits probably came from Mr. Benney, who first practised in Hartley Wintney and then moved to a new-build practice in Hook.
 
The brass case of grinding and fettling burrs, before cleaning, and after sorting by size/burr-head type; they just don't make stuff with this quality any more, each bit has its own compartment, 40, altogether, about 3mm square.
 
There was, also in my Mother's stuff, an actual dentist's drill, probably also from the practice in Hook, and with the quick-release head, a simple push button frees whatever tool is in the mechanism, and you can pull it out and replace it with another. If you find mini-drill bits with a chink taken out of them near the base of the shaft, it's for one of these drills.
 
And again, for many years, many decades, this was a technology, or application, only really made available to dentists, or very specialised workshops/research labs/facilities!
 
Now, of course, every mini-drill sold, comes with a flexible drive-extension.
 
A comparison between the old drive connector and the new, they will both work with the new chucks. The technology was with us, though, in strimmers/brush-cutters, although their shafts are sometimes a bundle of twisted cables and/or wrapped in a loose spring, to compensate for the vibration down the long handle/arm.
 
The other half of the case of my 'go-to' machine, it's an Aldi (or, probably, actually Lidl) bought machine, and returning to prices - was about 40-quid, twenty years ago, now they are £22/25 each, with both discount supermarkets (and the larger stores of most supermarkets), almost permanently carrying one version or another - mains, rechargeable-battery, or pocket types.
 
Lidl now brand everything Parkside, and it probably comes from China, but this one was made in Germany by Ferm, and is a bloody-good, medium-range machine, I liked it so much, on first try, I went back the next day and bought several more, as Christmas presents that year (1990's/early 2000's) for other people. The two wobbly lines (top right of the case) are where the little tools were kept.
 
Returning to the point at the top of the post, too much stuff, but it just, sort of collects! Each time one of these stores issues a set of tools, often in useful-looking little wooden boxes, you sort of convince yourself, there's one or two you don't have, and they are so cheap, it's worth the duplicates for the new ones, then you get few from a friend, grab a specific set of Dremel spares (collets and mandrels) in the January sale at B&Q, spot some bargain in an import-rich hardware store, inherit a bunch from a parent, and before you know it, you have a collection of mini-tool tools!
 
I've used some of them! I've even used a few to destruction, sanding drums and cutting wheels don't last long, and the smaller grinding stones quickly deform under use, but that only encourages further purchases - in case you're running short?!!
 
Top left are the diamond cutting wheels and milling-cutters, then clockwise in a spiral; the old bits, burrs and dental tools; the new bits, burrs and borers; nylon cleaning brushes; brass brushes for cleaning, polishing, and removing surface rust; sanding drums ready to go; large fibre-reinforced cutting wheels; round, shaped and small grinders; medium round-headed grinders; large ones; small drum grinders; medium and large drum grinders; shaped or reinforced disc grinders; saw-blades/cutters; small drum-sanders - ready and spares; flexible or paper sanding discs; standard-sized rigid cutting wheels; odd sized cutting wheels; and flat disc grinders.
 
Different companies use different colours, so I've never really known if there is a code, but I think as a rule of thumb, dark ones (black/grey) tend to coarse structure, for initial grinding/shaping, or removing heavy corrosion, buried nail-heads (which can't be cut at the shaft by finer tools), or similar tasks, orange is medium coarse, pink medium fine, and white ones are very fine, but so are some of the greenish ones, while a couple of reddish-pink ones, seem coarse. So, as far as I can see, there's no hard and fast rule.
 
I've literally just found this, here;
 
 
Which seems to half-support my hinted narrative, but with sharpness at one end of the spectrum and durability at the other, nor does it include/explain the orage ones?
 
A while back, Jan, over at the Site of Curiosities found an excellent video, which goes some way to explaining a lot of it!
 

Which leaves the polishers, polish and chuck/spindle tools & spares, in the lid of the other box, soft, floppy mop ones top left, the rest are felt-pads. The little stones are for cleaning/re-shaping the grinding wheels when they get deformed, or the surfaces get smoothed, with embeded soft metal, wood-pulp or something else, which prevents them grinding properly.
 
Because Mum was a silversmith, I have some proper rouge somewhere, in a big tub, while people who have larger workshops, use blocks of different grades, with which they can directly charge the polishing wheels, as they are revolving, mounted on larger lathes. At the hobby end of things, we tend to get two, the basic oxide-brown, equating to rouge, and the green which is a bit coarser I think? If you want a really coarse, 'first pass', use Brasso or automotive T-Cut!
 
And if you are polishing plastic, especially transparencies, like model aircraft canopies or watch-faces, use low speeds, light pressure and something fine like silver-polish, automotive window-cleaner (which fills micro-scratches with wax, when you wipe it off) or Windowlene, and move the tool around, so nothing heats up. 
 
There are intermediate heads, fabric pads, somewhere between sanders and polishers, I don't have any, but you can make them, or harsher ones, by cutting or punching discs out of scouring pads, sanding pads, or those surfaces scourers, fixing them to a mandrel, with a couple of washers, and then putting them in a clamp on full speed, and shaping them with a blade, the purple/brown sanding pads are good for getting surface rust off tools or garden implements, soft scourers will remove sanding lines in softer metal, prior to polishing/finishing.
 
Under the polishing heads, lays more amassed stuff, the yellow-one was some dirt-cheap discount store thing, where the accessories were worth more than the motor! My old Black & Decker (from the Minicraft rebranding), like the Handee, looking tired now, with a toothed key-chuck . . . it's so 20th Century, man!

Again some inherited (the duplicate Lidl/Ferm, being that Christmas present to Mum, many years ago), some acquired, on life's journey. The greenish-blue one is the Aldi version from a few years ago, which I thought I'd try, but which was a bit heavy at the back, pulling against the hand.
 
If it's a big job, requiring two tools in repetitive/alternate succession, I'll grab one of these and have two working at once. The Minicraft, or even the yellow one, are useful for very tight spaces, although I think the yellow-one is a single speed demented thing? Somewhere underneath is the whole shaft and motor from a broken one, which I had half a mind to convert into a static, mini bench-lathe, for shaping against, but I've yet to get round to it.
 
And that's the problem, we've all got this stuff, in sheds, drawers, attics, garages and cellars, waiting with hope for use, or plans of good intention, and really we need to be passing it on, or thinning it out, at some point there will be more stuff than people to use it!
 
Maybe then, we will escape capitalism, for something more community based, the kind of make-do-and-mend, each-to-his-own, wants-and-needs that the Native Americans have always espoused, that the Amazonians practice, that the Kalahari bush-people swear-by.
 
Not power-based 'Communism', not even socialism, but something more holistic, sharing and caring for the planet and each other. Or maybe we'll just "Drill-baby-drill", until there's nothing left, but there's nothing else out there, Musk won't save us, pissing-about on the Moon or Mars, if we can't save here, they'll be no use to nobody, and nobody is what they'll have.
 
At some point in the next ten or fifteen years, I will donate all this to some 'Men's Shed' community project, or workshop, so it gets the use I've not extracted from it, or which it still posesses!
 
Came in, in the last few months! I found the small kit lost/abandoned in a car park?
3-for-2 on the Parkside (Lidl), £1.98 for three packs - bargain!
 
That's two non-toy-solder posts in a row, whinging about the state of the world, or our part in it, but then, it's my Blog!

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

V is for Vanity Case

Here's something completely different. I was in TKMaxx the other day, still looking for the broken astronaut - I don't think that's going to happen! And I discovered they had some aftershave gel, a rarity these days, common as muck fifteen years ago, but bloody-hard to find these days (possible subject of a future rant), and while grabbing that, saw these;
 
Now, my first thoughts were, why on earth would young-men today, feel the need for a set of tools such as these? In the age of hot & cold running water, exfoliating facial scrubs and textured cloths, sponges, loofahs, pumice-stones and Japanese scrubbers, why would you subject yourself to medieval instruments, last seen in Edwardian bathrooms? My second thought (I'm not interested in the answer to the first), was five-quid for ten useful sculpting/fine-modelling tools?!! Take my phuquing money!
 
Ideal for sculpting Plasticine or modelling materials such as air-drying clay or Milliput, fine etching, particularly in plastics, and getting old paint out of tight folds and undercuts in otherwise stripped figures, and at a pound a tool, a bargain, I thought!
 
To which I've added these, mostly inherited from a bathroom which did have it's origins in the Edwardian era (my Mother's), although I suspect the two twisty ones (silver, or silver-plate) may be pipe-cleaning tools, subsequently used as tooth-picks? Below them are a strange, small, bladed-tool and a more conventional nail file, cleaner and quick-shaper, in ivory - I think? With a steel insert.
 
The former may be a surgeons bone knife? A once very sharp blade and now equally blunt chisel-end, but both thick, heavy blades, on a short, possibly stainless-steel, but substantial handle, suggest the finishing of bone, after amputation? While, on the subject of bone, I feel if the nail-file was bone it wouldn't hold that curved point, or the fine scoop for pushing back quicks, in the way the finer material presented by ivory can?
 
Anyway, they will be going in with the modelling tools, for what's left of my natural term! I wonder who else has unconventional modelling tools?

Thursday, September 4, 2025

I is for Irreverence!

Time for another collection of Internet memes I've sidled away for such a rainy day, and it was a very rainy day today! I nearly published than last night, but gave up and went and did something else, somewhere else (photographed toys), however I found the last one, just now on Faceplant, and it spurred me to action!
 
Can't shoot, won't shoot!
 
The revenge of Tim Mee was brutal!
 
There are several R2D2 one's like this kicking about, but Bungle is priceless!
 


Noooooooooo!
 

I love his grin!
 
One of my oldest friends is taking parcel after parcel of HO-OO stuff in, for his brother, so the brother's wife (no names, no pack-drill!) doesn't cotton-on to how bad it's got, they are both in their 60's, so it's no great crime, but I immediately thought of them when I saw this!
 
Ooops!
 

Hot off today's internet, I thought the following comment, from a Gary Karst deserved to be wider-shared;
 
"It's commemorating the courageous efforts of the U.S. Army Corp of Landscapers in this underwhelming battle. Semper Ficus."