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 Soviet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soviet. Show all posts

Sunday, December 31, 2023

J is for John Piper

A strange one this, for a short while in the late 1970's and early 1980's, this firm - John Piper - seemed to flourish, with smart, well illustrated adverts across the modelling press, railway, naval and military, I don't know if the aircraft modellers were similarly enticed?

Yet, the paucity of stuff they seem to have actually left behind, the lack of familiarity people have with their products compared with, say, Scale Link or [Françoise] Verlinden, suggests they didn't actually ship much product for the cost of all that glossy advertising?

And one has to assume there was a major investment by someone, a backer or the eponymous Mr. Piper himself? The trouble is, even the model railroad hobby, much bigger than vintage toy soldier collecting, can only support so many small, 'garage' businesses, with those that start to struggle in the regular downturns, selling to one of the slightly bigger concerns, so that they might ride-it-out with an increased inventory, while the small guy escapes, hopefully with a small profit, or breaking-even, or at least still with his shirt?

Courtesy of Jon Attwood
(I love the Lettraset font!)


I may have a few of the figures in the unsorted/unknown section of the whitemetal tub in storage, but don't recognise any of the above, off-hand, while I lusted after the AFV's, as they would have gone with the Roco and Roscopf stuff, Dad's instructors had given me in Neuhausen! The 'Grey Goose' apparently turns-up occasionally, usually for a lot of money! The choices of odd scales can't have helped with the military sales?
 
I have a feeling John Piper over-extended with the launch and marketing, found the markets weren't that big and folded with the sort of debts that require the assets being weighed-in for scrap? Does anybody have any solid info' on what happened to them, or their tools, how much business they did, or what their history was? Is there anything in G2 or On Parade in the back-catalogue of Military Modelling? For now at least, box ticked.

Monday, April 18, 2022

P is for Polish Roundup - 3 - WWII / Cold War

The third lot of PZG that's come-in recently was this little lot (plus the two figures from 'Four Tanker's & a Dog' we saw a few days ago here in other mixed post) and consists mostly of British production knock-off's, but there are some original Polish sculpts too.

Airfix Russian Infantry; Airfix US Infantry; BR Moulds Toy Soldiers; Cold War; Polish Copy; Polish Paratroopers; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Polish Infantry; PZG Toy Figures; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG US Infantry; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Timpo GI's; Timpo Solid GI's; Trojan Khaki Infantry; WWII Toy Soldiers;
Two ex-Airfix WWII Soviet Infantry, one compared with his donor (grey), all seven Airfix poses were copied, and the clones are a little smaller than the figures they're aping.

Airfix Russian Infantry; Airfix US Infantry; BR Moulds Toy Soldiers; Cold War; Polish Copy; Polish Paratroopers; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Polish Infantry; PZG Toy Figures; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG US Infantry; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Timpo GI's; Timpo Solid GI's; Trojan Khaki Infantry; WWII Toy Soldiers;
Also a pair of US Infantry, again; ex-Airfix doppelgangers, again all seven poses were lifted, and they are painted to match the Soviets, whether this means they were sold as a set of 14 from the same side or two sets of seven I don't know, but the PZG website separates them.

Airfix Russian Infantry; Airfix US Infantry; BR Moulds Toy Soldiers; Cold War; Polish Copy; Polish Paratroopers; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Polish Infantry; PZG Toy Figures; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG US Infantry; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Timpo GI's; Timpo Solid GI's; Trojan Khaki Infantry; WWII Toy Soldiers;
A Polish copy of a Trojan / BR Moulds rendition of an older Crescent hollow-cast figure, painting is quite (six-colour-) colourful on this chap, almost as if the painter liked the figure as much as I do!

Airfix Russian Infantry; Airfix US Infantry; BR Moulds Toy Soldiers; Cold War; Polish Copy; Polish Paratroopers; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Polish Infantry; PZG Toy Figures; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG US Infantry; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Timpo GI's; Timpo Solid GI's; Trojan Khaki Infantry; WWII Toy Soldiers;
Timpo also got the pirated treatment, with the 10 of their larger GI set joining two other (ex-French - Mokarex - production?) figures for a 12-count, these yellow bases can be shared with the previous Airfix clones, as can the paler green paint job on the other crawling chap. From the fact that some of the poses weren't copied by the British plagiarists, suggests PZG took these straight from the hollow-cast originals.

Airfix Russian Infantry; Airfix US Infantry; BR Moulds Toy Soldiers; Cold War; Polish Copy; Polish Paratroopers; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Polish Infantry; PZG Toy Figures; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG US Infantry; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Timpo GI's; Timpo Solid GI's; Trojan Khaki Infantry; WWII Toy Soldiers;
Original sculpts of Soviet-era stuff here, and while the No.2 on the bazooka is missing, they still make a nice vignette of an anti-tank crew or 'brick'. Technically post war/cold war Polish infantry, they can pass for WWII Soviet infantry.

Airfix Russian Infantry; Airfix US Infantry; BR Moulds Toy Soldiers; Cold War; Polish Copy; Polish Paratroopers; Polish Toy Soldiers; Polish ZW; PZG Plastic Toy Figures; PZG Polish Infantry; PZG Toy Figures; PZG Toy Soldiers; PZG US Infantry; PZG ZSP; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Timpo GI's; Timpo Solid GI's; Trojan Khaki Infantry; WWII Toy Soldiers;
Compatible with the previous set and including the same bazooka, these are painted as Paratroopers, but you can find them with black, blue (UN), green or khaki (above) berets. Both sets are quite large so I have a ways to go, but I've made a start!

Sunday, January 16, 2022

F is for Follow-up - Progress WWII Russians

I managed to find a full set of the Progress Russian Infantry (going very cheap or I would have waited) a while ago, and while I only needed the three Chris helped-out with last time we looked at them, I thought "When will I see them again?" so grabbed them!

Проƨрес; Пpоrресс; 70mm Figures; 70mm Toy Soldiers; Bulgarian; Officer; Plastic Officer; Plastic Toy; Plastic Toy Soldiers; Progress; Progress brand; Progress tradename; Russian brand/tradename; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic; Russian Soldiers; Russian Toy Soldiers; Russian Toys; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldier; Soviet Era Toy Officer; Soviet Era Toy Soldiers; Soviet Infantry; Soviet Russian; USSR Infantry; USSR Plastic; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Soviet Figures; Vintage Soviet Toys; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage USSR Toys; Cold War; Warsaw Pact Era;
We saw the backs of most of them when we looked at them last time, so just a re-hash from one side, they have faint traces of paint on them (a pale flesh on hands and faces, no other apparent colours), so earlier (?) sets seem to have carried paint, but I've seen them on packaging (near mint) without.

And as Chris suggested last time, still only the nine poses, I guess they considered it a set of ten items with the flag, not that any set of toy anything has to have round numbers and many don't, but with toy soldiers you tend to look for six, eight or ten &etc!

Проƨрес; Пpоrресс; 70mm Figures; 70mm Toy Soldiers; Bulgarian; Officer; Plastic Officer; Plastic Toy; Plastic Toy Soldiers; Progress; Progress brand; Progress tradename; Russian brand/tradename; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic; Russian Soldiers; Russian Toy Soldiers; Russian Toys; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldier; Soviet Era Toy Officer; Soviet Era Toy Soldiers; Soviet Infantry; Soviet Russian; USSR Infantry; USSR Plastic; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Soviet Figures; Vintage Soviet Toys; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage USSR Toys; Cold War; Warsaw Pact Era;
Having accepted I would have a bunch of duplicates, they came in a darker, flat green than most of my existing metallic ones, or the pale-jade above, so I will probably hang-on to most of them for a fuller sample in the near future at least, right now they are still in two places so I haven't had time to fully-compare them.

Проƨрес; Пpоrресс; 70mm Figures; 70mm Toy Soldiers; Bulgarian; Officer; Plastic Officer; Plastic Toy; Plastic Toy Soldiers; Progress; Progress brand; Progress tradename; Russian brand/tradename; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic; Russian Soldiers; Russian Toy Soldiers; Russian Toys; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soldier; Soviet Era Toy Officer; Soviet Era Toy Soldiers; Soviet Infantry; Soviet Russian; USSR Infantry; USSR Plastic; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Soviet Figures; Vintage Soviet Toys; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Vintage USSR Toys; Cold War; Warsaw Pact Era;
The best of the bunch, he can be holding it in a brisk updraft (right-hand pair) . . .
. . . or on a slightly breezy day!

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

U is for Unknown Russian Kids Fantasy Figures?

These are fun, and if any of the Russian or Russian-speaking loyal readers from the former Soviet Bloc can fill us in on them, even a decent link to a Wikipedia page or something, I would dearly like to know more.

Big Nose; Cartoon Characters; Cheburashka; Eastern Bloc Toys; Fantastical Creatures; Fantasy Figures; Kid's Fantasy Toys; Kid's TV Characters; Russian Plastic Toys; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Cartoon Characters; Soviet Plastic Toy; Soviet Russian Kid's Characters; Spanner Man; Tin Man;
I can only assume they are from some Kids TV thing like The Magic Roundabout or Fabulandia, even Sesame Street, or the current In the Night Garden . . . with a fantastical setting and things which look half recognisable, and others which are wholly surreal?

We used to get some kid's stuff, from Czechoslovakia or East Germany I think, often quite scary puppet stuff (I wasn't too keen on) but also cartoons or stop-motion animations similar to The Magic Roundabout, but I don't recognise these figures.

The spanner-man (top left) even has features in common with one of Mattel's MUSCLE men, while the next is clearly an onion, followed by a figure bearing a passing resemblance to the Tin Man of Oz, and a Micky take-off completes the top row.

The bottom row has someone in a large sun-hat or halo, or is it the actual sun? The next is a wooden doll maybe (she (he?) reminds me a bit of Zeberdee), a normal'ish/human-looking fat lady with a huge nose and the most human of all, who looks a bit like Vicky the Viking.

And I use the comparisons not to suggest plagiarism, but because they are my closest cultural references - I'm sure these were all unique designs with full back-stories, fitting their Russian heritage? I believe this eight sculpts is a full set, although I may have seen some of the characters as larger blow-moulded toys, PVC figurines or soft toys, while searching for other stuff on feebleBay?

Big Nose; Cartoon Characters; Cheburashka; Eastern Bloc Toys; Fantastical Creatures; Fantasy Figures; Kid's Fantasy Toys; Kid's TV Characters; Russian Plastic Toys; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Cartoon Characters; Soviet Plastic Toy; Soviet Russian Kid's Characters; Spanner Man; Tin Man;
I have one set in plain scarlet and another in multiple subdued/pastel colours, again a set of eight, I didn't shoot all of them and noticed that while some have a fully-round disposition, some are semi-flat / demi-ronde, but don't know if it reflects the actual TV characters (if it's even a TV thing!), or more of a production/sculptor thing?

Big Nose; Cartoon Characters; Cheburashka; Eastern Bloc Toys; Fantastical Creatures; Fantasy Figures; Kid's Fantasy Toys; Kid's TV Characters; Russian Plastic Toys; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Cartoon Characters; Soviet Plastic Toy; Soviet Russian Kid's Characters; Spanner Man; Tin Man;
A few close-ups to show the subtle surface detailing, the odd noses on the 'tin man' and fat girl (her's looks like it might be a pencil-stub?), 'Mickey's' big ears (similar to the better-known Russian cartoon charcter Cheburashka but also very different) and the hat/sun/halo thing!

Like I say - they're fun, around 45/50mm and a softish soapy polyethylene, similar to the mono-block AFV's we've seen here at Small Scale World. Do you know more about them . . . character names, production name, era, even the toy-maker? Odessa's Kultbyttovarov used the same colours on their small scale ships, 'planes and AFV's?

*  **   ***    ****     *****      ******     *****    ****   ***  ** *

Later the same day - not in pink 'cos there's too much! Chris Smith got on the case before work this morning and nailed it!

". . . had sneaky look at your blog and finished down a google worm hole! This must be the onion headed one, not sure if the others are characters from the film or other popular children’s stories?"

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2474800/

". . . looked further. More interesting than work! Your hunch on Cheburashka was right after all. Your description in red."

Петрушка (Parsley) Vicky the Viking (a clown puppet a bit like a Russian Punch)
Буратино (Pinocchio/Buratino) Tinman
Незнайка (Neznaika/Dunno) Sun Hat/Halo
Чебурашка (Cheburashka) Ditto*
Дюймовочка (Thumbelina) Wooden Doll
Самоделкин (Samodelkin) Spanner-Man
Карандаш (Pencil) Fat Lady Big Nose (If you look her nose is hexagonal and pointed)**
Чиполлино (Cipollino) Onion Boy

* This character is currently in talks with Disney, but now - in poplar culture -  looks more like a monkey than the above toy, which is probably why I saw a similarity with the ears, but not the body!

** I was closing-in!

So it's a Russian take on old folk/fairy-tales, mashed together under the central Cipollino (who IS an onion!), some of the characters also having been covered by Disney in different guises, it was also apparently popular in Italy and so successful behind 'the curtain' that we got a set of toys and, later, a full ballet production! And the 'Tin Man' is actually a wooden boy. It also explains why I thought I'd seen them in other sizes and materials, because I must have!

Cheers Chris! Magic!

*****************

Later still - It is originally an Italian story; Chris sent me another link I hadn't seen . . . 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cipollino

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chipollino_(film)

*****************

Even later!

I don't think most of the above characters are from the movie (the apparent absence of king/mayor 'Tomato' was bugging me), I think they are from the Russian kid's books 'Expanded Universe? And it looks like Pencil is a boy!

https://flomaster.club/18407-karandash-i-samodelkin-illjustracii-ivana-semenova.html

Sunday, July 25, 2021

S is for Soviet Space Tanks!

You know I like the odd space tank and you know we often see early Soviet toy AFV's here, so let's combine the two!

These are clearly trying to represent the old air-mobile Russian BMP (or at a stretch the regular-force's BMD) and the ASU mini assault gun, but by using running-gear more reminiscent of an MT-LB's or the BTR50 (fully-tracked cargo trucks)'s and using identical superstructure, what we've ended up with is a 'new' family of space tanks . . . bargain!

Airborne SPG; Airborne Tank; Airbourne Self-Propelled Gun; Alien Novelties; Aliens; APC; ASU-57; BMD-1; BMP-1; BTR-50; Bug-Eyed Aliens; Giant Aliens; Giant Corp N.Y.N.Y.; Giant Of Hong Kong; Giant of New York; Giant Plastics Corp.; MICV; MT-LB; Russian AFV's; Russian Tank; Self-Propelled Gun; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet AVF's; Soviet Plastic Toy; Space Tanks;
Waiting for the 'Off'

Crewed by gum-ball copies of Giant Aliens (shades of 2000AD's Invasion and Bill Savage fighting the Sov's to liberate Scotland!), the BMP-alike is in the foreground, the ASU-alike behind, you can see that both have too many road-wheels for either real life vehicle, while the identical superstructure is clear.

Airborne SPG; Airborne Tank; Airbourne Self-Propelled Gun; Alien Novelties; Aliens; APC; ASU-57; BMD-1; BMP-1; BTR-50; Bug-Eyed Aliens; Giant Aliens; Giant Corp N.Y.N.Y.; Giant Of Hong Kong; Giant of New York; Giant Plastics Corp.; MICV; MT-LB; Russian AFV's; Russian Tank; Self-Propelled Gun; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet AVF's; Soviet Plastic Toy; Space Tanks;
Airborne Infantry;
'Seek & Destroy' missions

The fact that they are bright blue (Soviet 'Airborne' blue?) helps with the off-world theme and here supported by Giant originals (note the better quality of the mouldings).

Construction is a simple clip-together and the hard polystyrene equivalent of Airfix 'readymades', but with less accuracy! I don't have a maker for these yet, they are unmarked, but I haven't looked for them on the two main forums yet, so that will probably come with time.

Airborne SPG; Airborne Tank; Airbourne Self-Propelled Gun; Alien Novelties; Aliens; APC; ASU-57; BMD-1; BMP-1; BTR-50; Bug-Eyed Aliens; Giant Aliens; Giant Corp N.Y.N.Y.; Giant Of Hong Kong; Giant of New York; Giant Plastics Corp.; MICV; MT-LB; Russian AFV's; Russian Tank; Self-Propelled Gun; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet AVF's; Soviet Plastic Toy; Space Tanks;
'Bivouac'

I love them, clearly recognisable as Soviet armour, they are also and undeniably 'Space Tanks'; yeay! I've marked them up as 28mm, but their fictionalisation makes them what you want them to be.

Some Wiki-pages so you can make up your own minds;

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMD-1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASU-57
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MT-LB
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-50

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMP-1

Sunday, November 1, 2020

T is for They Were Verh'verh'ry Drunk!

This one took me a while to locate and pin down, but I am now satisfied enough to share it with you, despite the fact that I may be wrong, but given how little we seem to know about some Western manufactures, researching the Eastern ones is no easier!

The following was - I now believe - manufactured by The People's Soviet Socialist Republic of Russia's Medical & Labor Dispensary .1 Tambov Region, Zelenyi Settlement but I stand to be corrected . . . and may have extended the title somewhat, for comedic effect!

First, however, a rant; a small rant! We have all been lied to, and are continually lied to by those in power, and those who control the media or have other 'vested interests'. There is no difference between 'them' and 'us', which is not to say there aren't differences in funding, or finance, in political will or behavior, in economic model or philosophy, but ultimately the Russians ("the 'Commie' Sov's") and us were far more similar than you might think from what we were told.

Today's toy (below) was basically manufactured by recovering alcoholics, they could just as easily have been disabled people, or ex-servicemen, but that 'meaningful, gainful employment' by way of therapy or as a means to aid convalescence - in the Soviet Union - is (was!) no different to the work being done by the blind at PZG in Poland, by ex-servicemen at Enham Alamein or Linburn (both latterly: Remploy) or (because a lot of the drunks were at Tambov custodially) Prindus (Prison Industries).

Now, there are two points to take away from this, the first is that the Soviets had a rehabilitation system for habitual drunks . . . they didn't send them to Siberia, they didn't 'disappear' them out of helicopters (a trick of US backed/funded/trained regimes in Central and South America), no, like any normal, day-to-day society, they had a rehabilitation program for troubled (or troublesom) citizens; just like ours.

The second point is that the facilities at Tambov (which is how I'll refer to it for the rest of the article, as otherwise their title - any other way you cut-it - is a mouthful!) are now derelict, as PZG seems to have ceased producing toys, as Linburn disappeared, as Enham was swallowed by civilian (state funded) 'charity' bureaucracy and has now lost it's Remploy unit. So the parallels of good programs under social responsibility are mirrored in the later neglect of today's Thatcherite-Raganomic 'free-market' Capitalists . . . everywhere!

All simplistic (and a bit muddle-headed), I'll grant you, but you know what I'm trying to get across and to do the above properly would require a wordy tome on nuanced-parallels of socio-economic conditions in differing political systems, which only academics would read! But, if Tambov, PZG, Linburn and Prindus were still making toys; what a nicer world it would be!

And if Remploy (all units, Britain-wide, closed without warming by the Cameron-Glegg administration) were still going last December, they could have scaled-up and been producing the PPE we needed, before we needed it, negating the need for Boris to give £122m for PPE to a company with no assets formed seven or eight weeks ago . . . by someone he gave a peerage to!

You see, as well as there being no difference between us all at the bottom, there's no real difference between them all at the top!

Лечебно-трудовой профилакторий-1; A.A. Kosyakov Chemical Plant; Artillery Cannon; Artillery Gun; Artillery Piece; Artillery Tractor; Field Artillery; Field Gun; Medical and Labor Dispensary; Medical Dispensary Tambov; Moscow Factory 'Spetsstanok'; Roshal Chemical Plant; Russian AFV's; Russian Plastic Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Plastic Toy; Spetsstanok; Tambov Clinic; Tambov Region; Towed Artillery; Tracked Tractor; Tracteur Remorque; USSR Plastic Toy;
This is the item in question, a towed field-gun with caterpillar-tractor, all as a one-moulding 'readymade'. Similar to the solid ones we looked at a while ago from Chris (both rockets and large howitzers being towed on that occasion), but hollowed-out to lessen material costs, and the heat shrinkage.

Лечебно-трудовой профилакторий-1; A.A. Kosyakov Chemical Plant; Artillery Cannon; Artillery Gun; Artillery Piece; Artillery Tractor; Field Artillery; Field Gun; Medical and Labor Dispensary; Medical Dispensary Tambov; Moscow Factory 'Spetsstanok'; Roshal Chemical Plant; Russian AFV's; Russian Plastic Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Plastic Toy; Spetsstanok; Tambov Clinic; Tambov Region; Towed Artillery; Tracked Tractor; Tracteur Remorque; USSR Plastic Toy;
It was in a mixed lot with some other stuff, among which was this chap, who being the same semi-transparent polymer which - after recent conversations with Polish collectors - is probably nylon66 (what in the past I have called a nylon/rayon type or Polypropylene!) and a similar scale, is I suspect part of the same set? They go well together anyway!

Foreshortening from the camera-angle has made him look a lot smaller than the Airfix figure, he's not, but he is only HO-compatible to the Airfix 1:76th scale.

Лечебно-трудовой профилакторий-1; A.A. Kosyakov Chemical Plant; Artillery Cannon; Artillery Gun; Artillery Piece; Artillery Tractor; Field Artillery; Field Gun; Medical and Labor Dispensary; Medical Dispensary Tambov; Moscow Factory 'Spetsstanok'; Roshal Chemical Plant; Russian AFV's; Russian Plastic Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Plastic Toy; Spetsstanok; Tambov Clinic; Tambov Region; Towed Artillery; Tracked Tractor; Tracteur Remorque; USSR Plastic Toy;
This was the logo, and it wasn't in the list of 160-odd I use as a first point of reference for these things (many thanks to Nazar Marchenko for that heads-up), so I had some days looking, but in the end I think I've called it right . . .

Лечебно-трудовой профилакторий-1; A.A. Kosyakov Chemical Plant; Artillery Cannon; Artillery Gun; Artillery Piece; Artillery Tractor; Field Artillery; Field Gun; Medical and Labor Dispensary; Medical Dispensary Tambov; Moscow Factory 'Spetsstanok'; Roshal Chemical Plant; Russian AFV's; Russian Plastic Toy; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Plastic Toy; Spetsstanok; Tambov Clinic; Tambov Region; Towed Artillery; Tracked Tractor; Tracteur Remorque; USSR Plastic Toy;
. . . for the Tambov 'clinic' (on the left here), while other contenders were both too circular and the toy-vehicle's mark lacks anything which might be the tree's trunk (Roshal Chemical Plant 'A.A. Kosyakov')* or the lettering of the Mercedes/Pizza Hut-hat (Moscow Factory 'Spetsstanok'), so I think the rather crude mark on the toy (carved with an engineer's chisel straight into the tool?) is the one we're after? But . . . I stand to be corrected!

* Also now derelict (I like the construction guide-board for a noddy-suit respirator, all laid-out like an O-Level lab-rat!) and like Tambov; known for colourful sets of blow-moulded figures; manufactured on an armaments site!

Monday, September 28, 2020

Савельев, Борис Дмитриевич is for Savelyev, Boris Dmitrievich (1928 - 2019)

Following an interesting fortnight on the Friends of Plastic Warrior Faceplant page, in which mostly Polish-produced stuff has been the center of attention, there was a sort of side-bar, which went-off to look at Russian flats at one point, in the course of which I found two pages which seem to reveal someone who could be considered as important to Soviet-era toy soldier production as say our own George Musgrave or the Scandinavian Holgar Eriksson.

This is not to ignore any or all the other well-known sculptor's, of which there are lots now known, we've already looked at another Russian one (Lev Razumovsky) here but to compare him with two who were A) prolific and B) left their mark on the products of many brands. And I must credit Wojciech Gudaczewski with pointing me toward the two pages, by mentioning Mr Savelyev in the first place.

Борис Дмитриевич Савельев, Борис Дмитриевич, Savelyev, Boris Dmitrievich, 1928 - 2019, Friends of Plastic Warrior, Soviet-era toy soldiers, Toy Soldier Production, George Musgrave, Holgar Eriksson, Lev Razumovsky,  Ilya Barkov, My Collection,  Shakhovskoy Museum, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev, The Battle of Stalingrad, Soviet Union Toys, Mechanical Clockwork Toy Factory, Moscow, The Ostashevskaya Toy Factory, The Malysh Factory, The Astretsovskaya Factory, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Horsemen of 1812, B.D. Savelyeva, URA Brand, Cavalry, Red Cavalry, Warriors of the Soviet Army, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Borys Dymytrowicz Sawlejew.

The first link is an article on a recent (2016) exhibition on the great artist's work juxtaposed with the modelling-clay efforts of a young man - Ilya Barkov - who is obviously (one hopes) going to go far himself!

Original article (in Russian) is here . . .

https://sh-rikm.mo.muzkult.ru/news/12156600

. . . and translates thus;

"News

06/09/2016 The works of the oldest toy sculptor in Russia are presented at the exhibition "My Collection" in the Shakhovskoy Museum.

The exhibition "My Collection" has started in the Shakhovsky Museum.

The exhibition features collections of two masters: the novice Ilya Barkov and the oldest toy sculptor of modern Russia, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev.

Ilya Barkov is a 13-year-old schoolboy from the village of Dubranivka. He makes his soldiers from plasticine. In 2014, his panorama “The Battle of Stalingrad” won first place in the “Modeling. Embossed Modeling "in the category" 10-12 years "at the regional exhibition-show of arts and crafts" Craftsmanship and Inspiration ".

Now Ilya has presented 35 of his works, including: French and Russian soldiers of the Napoleonic Wars era, Soviet soldiers during the Great Patriotic War, medieval warriors, as well as an Afghan war veteran and two characters from the Stalker game.

Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev during his life created hundreds of models of soldiers (and not only them), which were issued in millions of copies, and became known not only throughout the Soviet Union, but also in other countries.

The toys created by Boris Dmitrievich were produced at the mechanical clockwork toy factory (Moscow), the Ostashevskaya toy factory, the Malysh factory, and the Astretsovskaya factory of metal products. Perhaps the most famous items of the master are the sets of soldiers "Cavalry" (six red cavalrymen and a tachanka), "Warriors of the Middle Ages" (four Russian horsemen and four Teutonic knights), "Horsemen of 1812" (17 different figures of Russian and French cavalry).

Now the soldiers B.D. Savelyeva launches the URA! Brand

On June 14, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev will turn 88 years old. The exhibition "My Collection" is timed to this date.

See the work of B.D. Savelyev and Ilya Barkov are available until August 12, 2016.

In preparing the material, the article by Timur Zamilov “The oldest Russian master. To the 85th anniversary of Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev "// Old Tseikhgauz.- 2014.- №1 (57). - S. 93-96."

Борис Дмитриевич Савельев, Борис Дмитриевич, Savelyev, Boris Dmitrievich, 1928 - 2019, Friends of Plastic Warrior, Soviet-era toy soldiers, Toy Soldier Production, George Musgrave, Holgar Eriksson, Lev Razumovsky,  Ilya Barkov, My Collection,  Shakhovskoy Museum, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev, The Battle of Stalingrad, Soviet Union Toys, Mechanical Clockwork Toy Factory, Moscow, The Ostashevskaya Toy Factory, The Malysh Factory, The Astretsovskaya Factory, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Horsemen of 1812, B.D. Savelyeva, URA Brand, Cavalry, Red Cavalry, Warriors of the Soviet Army, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Borys Dymytrowicz Sawlejew.
The other link is to an obituary written shortly after his passing last year

Original article (also in Russian) is here . . .

https://labuda.blog/434405

. . . and translates thus;

"Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev. Toy soldiers

4 September 2019
Labuda
History
1
581

In memory of the master of our childhood. Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev. He died on August 30, 2019. He was 91 years old ...

Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev.

I guess many older and middle-aged people are familiar with these figures? With them passed our childhood (and not only ours), with them we had our first combat experience in battles on the carpet, in the sandbox or on the school window sill.

What is a soldier? This is a tiny visualization of history and our understanding of it. Small plastic and zinc-aluminum symbol. Whether it was successfully implemented by the heavy Soviet industry or not, we understood this much later, growing up. But when we were five years old, these were our fighters and they fought and died bravely.

It seems to me that this familiar one, "Cavalry", "Red Cavalry", more rare "Warriors of the Soviet Army", "Warriors of the Middle Ages" are very successful fighters.

As experts of soldier construction rightly point out, this is a real “patriarch of Soviet toys and soldiers”.

I admit that I am not an expert in toy soldiers at all, but I appreciate excellent authors of all genres. It was thought that finding out the name of this well-known and unknown person to all of us would be interesting to many former children of the USSR, well, to the envious young generation.

Unfortunately, everything related to the production of soldiers and the legendary personalities of the world of soldier building is more like rumors and myths. As far as it was possible to find out, Boris Dmitrievich, until very recently, continued to do his wonderful work and new fighters came out of his hands, produced in small editions of a firm known to collectors.

Undoubtedly, Boris Mikhailovich Savelyev is a part of our history.

Source: tt-762.livejournal.com"

Борис Дмитриевич Савельев, Борис Дмитриевич, Savelyev, Boris Dmitrievich, 1928 - 2019, Friends of Plastic Warrior, Soviet-era toy soldiers, Toy Soldier Production, George Musgrave, Holgar Eriksson, Lev Razumovsky,  Ilya Barkov, My Collection,  Shakhovskoy Museum, Boris Dmitrievich Savelyev, The Battle of Stalingrad, Soviet Union Toys, Mechanical Clockwork Toy Factory, Moscow, The Ostashevskaya Toy Factory, The Malysh Factory, The Astretsovskaya Factory, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Horsemen of 1812, B.D. Savelyeva, URA Brand, Cavalry, Red Cavalry, Warriors of the Soviet Army, Warriors of the Middle Ages, Borys Dymytrowicz Sawlejew.

The second one is a Blog and there is other useful toy soldier stuff on there but I found it hard to navigate around and some of it seems to be composed of dead-links or dead image files, despite being quite recent, so some reblogging going on I think, my Russian is non-existent!

For Polish speakers, he can also be written - Borys Dymytrowicz Sawlejew.

Also you will see from the links he is credited with the figures we looked at the other day, courtesy of Chris Smith and there's two more poses and another colour!

Six days later; and it's nice to see that TJF was paying attention - he'd be lost for ideas without me!

May 2021; The figures used to illustrate the above are now recognized as the output of Malysh, one of the Moscow toy collective factories!

Friday, August 21, 2020

F is for Follow-up - More Russkie Raspberry Reds

Although actually, these are a tad more mauvey-purple than the two lots I was thinking of. I know; a day of action figures wasn't on you menu when you got up this morning, so here are some proper toy soldiers courtesy of Chris Smith!

Bulgarian Toy Soldiers; Demi-ronde; Flat Figures; Plastic Flats; Poland; Polish Production; Progress Flats; Russian Rack Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Russian/Soviet; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Collective Era; Soviet Era' Flats Semi-flats; WWII Russian Infantry;
I felt there should be more poses, but by co-incidence both the sets I found the other day were the same four that I already had, so began to think that was it. Chris thinks these 10 may be a complete set of poses.

Bulgarian Toy Soldiers; Demi-ronde; Flat Figures; Plastic Flats; Poland; Polish Production; Progress Flats; Russian Rack Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Russian/Soviet; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Collective Era; Soviet Era' Flats Semi-flats; WWII Russian Infantry;
I really like the pose with the 'potato-masher'; stick-grenades come as drums, separate from their sticks, and are unioned immediately prior to action, or the patrol or whatever. At some point, mid-war, both the Germans and the Russians started strapping a daisy-wheel of extra canisters to the central one to produce more bang-for-the-buck! It was also used by brave fools to tray and disable tracked AFV's, which meant getting too close to many-tons of un-cooperative metal!

Bulgarian Toy Soldiers; Demi-ronde; Flat Figures; Plastic Flats; Poland; Polish Production; Progress Flats; Russian Rack Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Russian/Soviet; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Collective Era; Soviet Era' Flats Semi-flats; WWII Russian Infantry;
Several of the poses have been used twice on both upright and kneeling figures, and I'll have to track the rest down at some point, but for now - thanks to Chris for rushing these over to Small Scale World's command center (read; cluttered desktop!).

Wednesday, August 19, 2020

M is for More; Russian Rack Toys

Except I suspect most of them aren't actually Russian, and they may nearly all be actually from satellite countries, but they are from the Soviet 'collective' era, so; you know what I mean!

3rd October Revolution; Bulgarian Toy Soldiers; Demi-ronde; E. German; East German Toy Soldiers; Flat Figures; Hungarian Manufacturer; October Revolution; Plastic Flats; Poland; Polish Production; Progress Flats; Russian Rack Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Russian/Soviet; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Collective Era; Soviet Era' Flats Semi-flats; WWII Russian Infantry;
Chris Smith sent me a few shots as a follow-up to something posted here about a year and a half ago (the Russian/Soviet mini-season?), and I never got round top posting them at the time, in part because I'd had a thought on them. Some of the shots he sent are still waiting for another day, and a full follow-up on something-esle, but these were the others.

Now, it happens that maybe none of them are actually Russian, the four red ones have the look of Progress's flats about them which could make them Bulgarian or East German, who both had a Progress factory, but who either copied the Russian originals (Bulgarian factory's October Revolution cavalry flats, seen here passim) or made original designs (E. German factory's AFV's)?

While the two MG-gunners, have the same bases as Wild West and ancient Roman flats attributed to an - as yet - unknown Hungarian manufacturer, those distinctive 'Zulu shield' bases having been linked to Hungary by several commentators in the hobby, and most commonly found in the stock of Hungarian ebayer's? Although a Latvian seller on feeBay often has the same pointy-based figures? I think - size wise - these tie-in with the blue sailor set we've seen here from Rasnoexport at around 65mm, which would make them Russian.

So, the above could all be non-Russian production, in the meantime the thought I'd had on them was that "I've got some of those red ones somewhere?" . . .

3rd October Revolution; Bulgarian Toy Soldiers; Demi-ronde; E. German; East German Toy Soldiers; Flat Figures; Hungarian Manufacturer; October Revolution; Plastic Flats; Poland; Polish Production; Progress Flats; Russian Rack Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Russian/Soviet; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Collective Era; Soviet Era' Flats Semi-flats; WWII Russian Infantry;
. . . . except that when I'd dug them out a few weeks later, they (my sample, here) were clearly different, and while they can be called WWII Russian Infantry, have some of the signatures of Polish production; heavy bases and a more demi-ronde than flat sculpting, so may not be Russian at all!

At the time of writing (August 2020) there are two sets of these on feebleBay, both in a lovely shade best described as 'pastel heliotrope' or 'raspberry yogurt' , and both lot's consisting of the same four poses, so this may be a complete set? They are also both rather pricey, so clearly this would appear to be a 'rated' set back in the former USSR? 

3rd October Revolution; Bulgarian Toy Soldiers; Demi-ronde; E. German; East German Toy Soldiers; Flat Figures; Hungarian Manufacturer; October Revolution; Plastic Flats; Poland; Polish Production; Progress Flats; Russian Rack Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Russian/Soviet; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Collective Era; Soviet Era' Flats Semi-flats; WWII Russian Infantry;
Which leaves the silver guy we've seen before who happened to be left in Picasa for some reason . . . his flag reads 3rd October Revolution (I think?), and some have attributed his whole set to Poland, but they do fit the same 8-figure carriers as the Russian Napoleonics, which we know are Russian because the have the prices in kopeks and rubles marked on them in Cyrillic script! So he may be the only Russian in the post!

A size comparison with my may-be-Polish and a close-up of Chris's probably-Hungarian machine-gunner finish this brief look at a regular here - 'Soviet era' flats and semi-flats! To be fair, I really suspect the two MG's of being Hungarien, the rest probably are Russian in Origin!

A few days later - many thanks to Theo van der Weerden's wife for translating the flag, it actually reads -
"за власть советовъ" = 'For the power of the Soviets'

R is for Russki Rack-toys of Red Russians from Russ!

Arriving just before I lost Internet, but in time for Rack Toy Month, are these fine examples of the oeuvre from Russia's Biplant, a newish company who have taken Hong Kong's baton of piracy and run with it!

БИПЛАНТ; ВОЕННАЯ СЕРИЯ; НА СТРАЖЕ ВОДИНРІ; Afrika Korps; Airfix Afrika Korps; Biplant; Publius; Pvblivs; Russian Biplant; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Era Toy Officer; Soviet Era Toy Soldiers; Soviet Infantry; Soviet Russian; WWII Russian Infantry;
With all the hideously expensive figures coming out of that part of the world, these ship anywhere in the world - with postage - for less than 20-quid (they were £7-something, all-in to me I think, as $6 plus post) and were here about two weeks earlier than the estimate!

БИПЛАНТ; ВОЕННАЯ СЕРИЯ; НА СТРАЖЕ ВОДИНРІ; Afrika Korps; Airfix Afrika Korps; Biplant; Publius; Pvblivs; Russian Biplant; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Era Toy Officer; Soviet Era Toy Soldiers; Soviet Infantry; Soviet Russian; WWII Russian Infantry;
You get eight figures and two scenic accessories, the later being two sprigs of synthetic fish-tank pond weed with separate bases, while the former consist of five figures clearly copied from Airfix's Afrika Korps!

Stripping off the personal equipment, adding jackboots and converting the helmet to one of more Russian lines hasn't worked terribly well, as the Mauser rifles haven't been touched and the split-tailed jackets aren't terribly Soviet-looking!

БИПЛАНТ; ВОЕННАЯ СЕРИЯ; НА СТРАЖЕ ВОДИНРІ; Afrika Korps; Airfix Afrika Korps; Biplant; Publius; Pvblivs; Russian Biplant; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Era Toy Officer; Soviet Era Toy Soldiers; Soviet Infantry; Soviet Russian; WWII Russian Infantry;
With five of the figures being poorish copies, one had to assume these too would be from someone else, possibly King & Country or Del Prado, but in fact they are direct copies of otherwise expensive figures from Pervublivus (or whatever they're called these days!), and plastic versions of metal (or overpriced plastic) figures are a boon to our collections, not that one should encourage piracy . . . but once it's happened . . . !

Winter troops (against the 'summer' kit of the other five) we have a chap in a quilted jacket, and officer (who is a bit Starlux-like?) and another soldier in the loose snow-suit. Other sets have the figures in reversed plastic colours from this set.

БИПЛАНТ; ВОЕННАЯ СЕРИЯ; НА СТРАЖЕ ВОДИНРІ; Afrika Korps; Airfix Afrika Korps; Biplant; Publius; Pvblivs; Russian Biplant; Russian Infantry; Russian Plastic Toys; Russian Toy Soldiers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Era Toy Officer; Soviet Era Toy Soldiers; Soviet Infantry; Soviet Russian; WWII Russian Infantry;
All together; I like these! They are proper rack-toys, proper 'toy' soldiers! They tick all the boxes - cheap, copies, two colours, naff accessories, header-carded bottle-bag . . . I hope we see more from Biplant in a similar vein - I know of knights and a set of more modern Speznaz / internal security types from the same maker, also eight figures but all one colour with three bits of pond weed!