From the desk of the Philosophic Toad comes this interesting snippet of research into the ephemeral days of space collecting. Weetabix issued two separate sets of 25 'Conquest of Space' cards - 'A' and 'B'in its cereal. The Toad has managed to collect one or two examples from both sets which shows some excellent early artwork of the space race at this early period of development. The Lunar Tractor has an especially 'bonestellian' look to it and the Lunar Module is a very streamlined version compared to the ugly 'bug' some ten years later.
As well as discovering this rare set of cards, Toad has also discovered a press advert from Express Weekly, 21st March 1959 to promote the series with a simple competion to win a princely sum of £100, just by naming the 'Deep Space Ship' from card number 20. Further research into the archives revealed a winner - the result was announced in Express Weekly for 6th June 1959, when the name chosen by lucky winner, Adrian Wilson, was revealed: COSMOPROBE.
We wonder now if Adrian is out there and reading this ?
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Tuesday, 31 August 2010
Feel the Force
This is such a cool old picture from the brilliant Vectis Auction Site. Amazing where Probe Force Three's turn up!
5 points for the name of the grey tripod toy to the left.
Monday, 30 August 2010
Ice Scream
Remember these?
Note that it's 'Ice Cream' and not simply an 'iced lolly'!
To Die for!
Please tell me that Iceland still sell them in packs of twenty for a squid!
Reader Andy B's Big Licks
"Paul, thought I'd strike while the iron is hot, or at least before the iced lolly has melted!
The first space-oriented iced lolly I recall was Zoom. Fireall XL5 was used to advertise it for a time, but there were no XL5 cards. Zoom did offer a model of Fireball, for which you needed several zoom wrappers and it was advertised in TV21, although the colour advert shown here is from another magazine (TV21’s was in black and white).
The first series of Zoom cards was Space Exploration like the V2 shown below, followed by cars, planes and “All Systems Go” on marvels of the future.
Sky Ray seems to have been issued to rival Zoom. It had a very good series of Space Exploration cards [cool spacex - like moonbase example shown below], with two albums to put them in. The first half of the series concerned itself with the then-current Apollo moon programme, the second half (in the second album) was looking farther into the future. This was issued around 1967.
A year or two later, Sky Ray had a series of Dr Who cards and produced an illustrated album for them. There's an example here 'Collision'.
Sky Ray also ran a half-page comic strip in Ranger and advertised the 'Moon Fleet Space Jacket' [anyone get one?], which was not well received (at least by me) as it meant that the excellently-drawn SF strip “The Trigan Empire” was reduced from two to one and a half pages!
Finally, before the lolly melt's completely, as far as I know FAB never issued any cards. For a time, Thunderbirds’ Lady Penelope was used to advertise it as you can see here.
Slurp!
Andy B.
PS. Woodsy says: nice one Andy! Very tasty! UK Readers, get down to Lidl and grab a box of Fab and Rocket Lollies before I get them all! More Lolly card pics welcomed!
FAB and Skyray comic strip: Andy B, Remaining pics: Ebay archive
Who Said There's Never a Taxi When You Want One?
It's one of those classic Bank Holidays - a mixture of car boot sale euphoria and jobs-around-the-house blues! I've just hoovered the car - it was covered in dog hairs and I'm sure each one had been super-glued to the seats! It's taken soddin' ages! And technology is failing all around me like Christmas in Ludditesville - the security button on my photo SD card has gone for a burton and now I can't take snaps anymore with it! What a pointless and infuriating device! Hopefully some bright spark online eons younger than me will have worked out a simple and blitzschnell DIY way of de-write protecting it with some bacofoil and a comb!
Better news on the booty from the Castleford boot sale front [no pics I'm afraid!]: Striker football game boxed, Subbutteo football game boxed, Star Mission Armoured Truck, Battery Op Godzilla from the 70's and a pile of Sindy furniture. I passed up on the following: MAC vehicle [incomplete], Dr.Dolittle Rex Harrison doll [too dear], Crossfire boxed x 2 [too big], Sid James Snooker Game boxed [too dear] and a full set of The Race Into Space Brooke Bond tea cards in an album for £2 [couldn't find it again!].
The sunsequent trip to Lidl, that tuetonic pleasure dome in everyone's town, proved fruitful as well. I'd read on the Cup o tea and a Biscuit and a nice sit Down forum that the long extinct TAXI wafer bar had surfaced at said Lidl. They were right! I bought several packets just to make sure I wasn't dreaming! No Bandits I'm afraid though Maverick! They also have their own-brand Zoom we've been mind-licking recently, called rather quaintly Rocket Lolly, nestling right next to boxes of Fab! I'll be finding packets of Instant Whip next! The Sixties never really went away, they just slapped a different label on it!
Well, back to the here and now. Our very scruffy house needs tidying everywhere for friends staying, the garden looks like a bomb's dropped on it after the weekend's storm and there's birthday cake to be scoffed! Bank Holidays ain't so bad.
BAND OF BRUDERS
Following on from the recent post on the small spaceships available in Kinder eggs and from cake decoration stores, ubercollector Maverick from Small Scale World, has sent across more images of vehicles in the range.
Apart from the few I showed earlier, there are apparently other additions to the range which have appeared in Kinder eggs made by Giodi and the standard range from Bruder. The cake topper range also include construction vehicles and tractors, boats and planes. All are well made and detailed and could easily justify a website on their own, theres so many of the damn things!
Apart from the few I showed earlier, there are apparently other additions to the range which have appeared in Kinder eggs made by Giodi and the standard range from Bruder. The cake topper range also include construction vehicles and tractors, boats and planes. All are well made and detailed and could easily justify a website on their own, theres so many of the damn things!
Raisin' the Bar
I'm back home now after a day with the family at Brimham Rocks near the Yorkshire Dales. A beautiful ancient rocky place. I've loads to catch up on on't blog - Bandits, Sky Rays and more. I'll post stuff readers have kindly sent in asap. In the meantime and a nightcap before bo-bo's I thought I'd post a pic of one of my own favourite choc bars from the 60's/70's - Cadbury's fabulous Old Jamaica! 9p's worth of raisiny chocolate heaven.
Officially extinct but allegedly enjoying a short reprise at Morrisons in modern purple garb [anyone found one?] I used to adore it. Saturday Night was 'pop'n'crisps' night when I was a nipper and the evening drive to the corner shop/offy was a real treat. Besides some Tizer or Iron Bru, Old Jamaica was extra good as it contained a snifter of rum flavouring, rather naughty at such a tender age I always thought!
Saturday, 28 August 2010
Cool Down With Lyons Maid
I'm currently at my daughter Kim's after coming back from a huge Italian birthday feast at San Carlo's in Manchester. La Dolce Vita! I'm full to bustin' and catching my breath in the spare room before stickin' kettle on! There's been some great Lolly comments and emails today and I'll catch up proper tomorrow. For now here's another cool You Tuber [that's the veg version!] clip of Yester slurps:
Lolly Gobble Choc Bomb
Just the thing for the late Summer Bank Holiday. My mate gave me a Dracula lolly the other day from his freezer. Wow! That took me back! I remember Wall's Dracula lollies from the Seventies - full of red goo! In fact the Sixties and Seventies were one long lolly-fest: Heart, Happy Faces, Kinky, Fab, Mivvi, Split, Screwball. Lolly Gobble Choc Bomb and the Thunderbirdesque Sky Ray. I found this old clip on YouTube of the Sky Ray - I don't recall the Dr.Who connection though. It must be the same for Eighties, Nineties and naughties kids with their 'own' lollies. I'm sure there were other lollies back in the 60's/70's but what were they called?
Friday, 27 August 2010
Apollo All The Way
Thunderbird 1 has a lot to answer for. It spawned countless clones and one of my favourites is the T Apollo 11 with it's translucent red tip. But as we've seen before T wasn't alone in producing an Apollo 11, there's a whole squadren of them! Above is a rogues gallery of the one's I know about. Anymore pics of Apollo 11's or TB1 clones always welcomed for the blog - toys, sweets, ice lollies, anything!
From left to right [source in brackets]:
Top row
Project Mars by Redbox [Pekoday]
Wonder L by Nomura [Alphadrome]
Apollo X by T [Woodsy]
Saturn 5 by T 'German version' [Arto]
Bottom row
Apollo 11 by Nomura [Alphadrome]
Apollo 11 by T [Woodsy]
Apollo X by Unknown [anyone know the logo?] [Vectis]
Apollo with Spaceman "La Parisienne, Made in Hong Kong, Joseph Makivits NY" [Ebay]
All pictures are the property of the owners in brackets
SWORD Summer SOLO Comic Strip Issue 28
Issue 28 of SOLO from 26th August 1967. Wonderful Prospector cutaway!
Just three more installments and the SOLO Summer of SWORD was [and is] over!
Same time next week [hopefully Thursday! I keep forgetting! Doh!]
Hearty Thanks to Toad for the comic scans.
Thursday, 26 August 2010
There's a Typhoon Coming
I'm currently suffering from an email blackout as the Orange UK server has crashed! But I can still blog! Last year I acquired this wonderful JR21 plastic Typhoon-type Bike combo. Sadly it was loose and I have still never seen the box.
Up to press the closest relative has been the superb Scalextric Typhoon combos, of which there are many colour variations including my own 'JR21' racing green as featured below.
Well, I may just have stumbled across an even closer non-Scalextric relation currently enjoying a spell on Ebay US [there's two!]. The blue combo below is a dead ringer for the JR21 version, although it may lack some facial detail like the goggles [hard to tell]. Knucklepanshovle07's [the seller] description is concise to say the least: "Motorcycle Combo Friction Drive 4" HONG KONG Circa 1960's". Fortunately the seller has sent me some further information. which is far more revealing albeit unconnected to JR21: "The bottom of the toy says MADE IN HONG KONG .The box has Motorcycle Combo friction drive Made In Hong Kong and has SONSCO stamped on it.This toy is on page 14 of Scotty's pictorial motorcycle toy price guide,1996.The toy works fine and is in very good condition.I have over 125 more motorcycle toys for sale .Thanks Brian."
SONSCO is a Japanese company who forayed into robots amongst other toys. Why stamped? Where they importers? Can't see the connection with JR21 other than Hong Kong. I haven't got access to the Scotty's guide. If anyone has I'd be interested to know what it says. Ideas please!
Wednesday, 25 August 2010
Reel Toys and Models
GERMAN TOYS
INTERNATIONAL TOY FAIR
MODEL MAKERS
Found the above clips on BRITISH PATHE! For more simply enter 'toy' or whatever in their search facility. Amazing!
Dyna Phwoar!
Is this the earliest Dyna Soar X-20 toy ever made? It precedes our friend the SWORD Dyna Soar Space Glider by a good five years! It doesn't have the classic Dyna Soar looks but it's still an X-20, by Transogram no less, dated 1962. On Ebay US, below the seller's description. Other than this I can't find a single thing online about this toy. Anyone?
"The yellow and red Dyna-Soar, from the 1960's, is made of plastic. The plastic is torn near the base of the wings and there may be a piece missing on each side but I don't know for sure. It's been a long time since the plane was used. The plane is about 8" long. It says "No. 3080-81" on the bottom. It also says "Copyright MCMLXII Transogram Company Inc".
That Sinking Feeling
Inner Space - Outer Space - both involve extreme environments and highly specialised exploration craft, so its hardly surprising that a lot of sci-fi involves a good sub. The Abyss was a real benchmark film in this genre and spawned a few imitators such as the rather lame Leviathan and the entertaining Deep Star Six. The Beeb is currently running the lacklustre series 'The Deep', which although it has some nice visuals, is overburdened with hollywood egos and predicatable plot.
Ive collected subs alongside space toys since I was a wee sprat myself and in the last few years have been able to realise a long held ambition to be able to have a tiny submarine that I could control under water by remote control! Previously, r/c had been an expensive and clumsy affair, requiring lots of tech and a huge lake. Developments in entry level and toy based remote control meant that scores of cheap toys came on the market from toys to planes and copters to boats and finally, submarines. I got my first, a few years ago - a simple little gadgetty toy of the kind that appears every fathers day or xmas now under the 'Big Boys Toy' section in stores. Powered by a penlight battery, I had many hours zipping around the bath before I braved it in a nearby river and realised the range of the transmitter wasnt as far as I thought and had to go wading in to perform a rescue! Since then, my collection of subs has expanded to cover all iterations of toy sub, some made for acion figures and some for toy soldiers. Heres a few from my collection - ill let the pictures speak for themselves!
ORIGINAL MEGA RIG POWERSUITS |
MEGA RIG SHARK SUB AND JUNGLE SUB |
CRUISER SUB AND X-SUB (very first r/c one!) |
CAPTAIN PLANET ECO-SUB (18" LONG) |
NEW MATTEL MEGA RIG SQUID SUB |
MATTEL MEGA RIG SHARK SUB (NEW RANGE) |
MAJORETTE MINI SUB |
CORGI BATMAN BATSUB |
KINDER EGG MICRO MINISUB |
BLUEBIRD ZERO HOUR SUB |
LARGE R/C SUBS (7 ") |
HONG KONGS FINEST R/C SUBMARINE |
U-BOAT R/C MINISUB (actually based on a real sub!) |
r/c TESCO SHARKS! |
R/C MINI SUB WITH FIRING TORPEDO (LEFT) MEGA MINI SUB (RIGHT 4") |
RANETTA ATOMIC SUBMARINE (seen previously on the blog!) |
Tuesday, 24 August 2010
IT'S A JUNGLE OUT THERE
Thunderbirds has a lot to answer for.Besides having a distinct formative influence on my childhood years and also on my inherent sense of design and aesthetics, it also spawned a million imitators of the core vehicles. The essentially unique look of each of the five main craft and the way that they all had a subtle colour code captured my imagination. The same style of design can be found in toys today - Power Rangers are a prime example, each team member has a base colour and attendant craft with a special function. The overarching theme of Thunderbirds however was always rescue - not saving the universe or battling exotic aliens and this theme has been echoed in toy lines ever since. One of the finest and best conceived toys were the Matchbox/Mattel Mega-Rig series. These toys have recently undergone a major re-vamp and are availalble today in a much larger scale with considerably 'dumbed-down' functions, using a much more flexible plastic and safer parts. The basic premise of the toys is interchangeability and this is still present although in a much reduced form.
Back in the 90's though, Matchbox began with a simple line of basic models - a jet, a boat, a helicopter and a truck. All the elements covered - sea, air and land with a basic theme of rescue where all other attempts fail. Throughout the entire range and up until the last three models, the series had a clever system of connectors - one small pin of about 2mm wide and a larger peg of about 15mm. This allowed the wing on one model to connect to the body of another - ship to copter, jet to truck etc. The full range would cover a website on its own - and it may be a project that i'll cover one day, but for now - i'd like to flag up some of the best of the range.
An early theme which came along around the second or third series was a 'jungle' setting, and this came with a Jungle Jet, Hovercraft and River Submarine. The large Jungle Jet was essentially a Helijet style vehicle and would not look out of place in Joe 90 or Thunderbirds as one of the 'background' vehicles.
MEGA RIG JUNGLE JET |
The first incarnation of the Jungle Jet was a large cargo plane fitted with massive turbofan under each wing to allow VTOL capabilities. The underside had a large cargo bay with more than a nod to Thunderbird 2 and a switch near the tail let the interior pod drop out and convert into a base or a stand alone river craft. On the back of the jet is another bay, this time holding a small hover vehicle. All the elements of the jet, tail, turbofans etc could be swapped about with the pod and the hovercraft, to change the appearance of the vehicle, dependant on mission. If you collected all the vehicles from the line, you could swap out with parts of the sub and large hovercraft to make even bigger craft.
ARCTIC RESCUE JET |
After the Jungle line came an Arctic adventure theme, with a variation of the Jet, a massive Polar Explorer Sub and an Icebreaker ship. The Arctic Rescue Jet was essentially the same as the Jungle, apart from a bright red livery and different crew. Alongside the Artctic Rescue came a Police Rescue series, comprising a big twin rotor helicopter, truck and the ubiquitous Jet. This blue version came along on the back of a big hauler truck fitted with working searchlight.
POLICE RESCUE JET |
JUNGLE JET ELEMENTS |
Custom Jet Payload |
The sub theme will be explored later as I venture into the depths of my sub collection soon!
Monday, 23 August 2010
X - Factored
Delving into the darkest recesses of the garage, amongst the spiders and mice, I came across a long forgotten box of toys ive had since I was about 7. In with my Spacex toys were three small plastic and diecast planes. These were bought at a seaside holiday - probably in Wales in the mid to late sixties. First off I got the X-15, a single piece body made of hard styrene about 2 inches long. Underneath is a die cast chassis, which I removed in order to make it look more 'spacey'! The chassis originally would have had four sprung suspension wheels, like the sort found on Hotwheels or Matchbox Superfast cars. A fine steel axle and a small solid plastic wheel. The aircraft would originally have been intended as racers, but i took out the wheels and added them to my space fleet. As I recall, they were sold in a counter top box, loose. The only three I ever saw were the X-15 and a year later at the same resort, the Starfighter (white missing tailfins) and the magenta Saab Drakken. Theres no indication of maker, only the ubiquitous 'Hong Kong' stamped on the base. Howere its unusual to note that the Drakken (or Draaken) and Starfighter have Royal Canadian Airforce livery!
As its my turn to drive the blog, im selfishly indulging myself and adding in a few off-topic toys which have no direct relation to Sword or the space theme, but are just plain good. In this vein is a Majorette Air Forces oo/ho metal and plastic, futuristic jet fighter. I love the sleek lines and folding wings. Its got retractable undercarriage, firing missile, dropping bomb and an ejectable pilot! At about 7 inches long, it came with a plastic desert display base and two soldiers. What more could a frustrated pilot like myself want ?