(part 1 by Paul Vreede)
Back
in 2005, the Great Matt Mason Patent Hunt (1) was staged after somebody
in the MMM online group found an online shop selling US patent artwork,
and somebody else discovered it could be downloaded for free fom the US
Patent Office. Provided it could be found, because all pre-1976 patents
can only be retrieved by number and nothing else.
So
a whole range of search tactics were tried and it was while searching
for references to "plastic figures" that I was completely amazed to find
a patent for one of my childhood toys - which I'd completely forgotten
about as well.
After
the chase for MMM patents had run its course, I came back to these
figures. The patent was filed in 1967, and stated the name of the
inventor, a Parisian by the name of René Ach. What it didn't state of
course was a brand name (so useful for finding things on the internet),
nor even a manufacturer. Monsieur Ach clearly was an independent
inventor.
But
he had an uncommon name, and that helped. A google revealed a sculptor
in Paris with the same name, whom I figured might be related. And then a
phone number. Where somebody answered at the first ring. To have what
afterwards may have seemed a somewhat bizarre conversation!
I
asked if he was Monsieur Ach. He was. The sculptor? Yes indeed. So I
said I was looking for a René Ach living in the Rue de Gobelins in Paris
13ème (arrondissement or 13th district) in 1967 and would he know this
person. Sounding somewhat puzzled he said that was him. Which had me
rather amazed, for the picture on his website showed the sculptor to be
sixty-ish or less - pretty young for somebody inventing toys in the
mid-late sixties.
So
I explained I found his name on a patent for a toy I had when I was
young, and then somewhat at a loss for words, had the wits to thank him
for inventing such a wonderful toy. I then learned he had indeed
invented these figures very early in life, amongst other ideas he had
(some of which I had also found patents for) that weren't (as)
successful.
And
then came the most important question: what were they called, and who
had made them. So I learned they were called Acrobates, made in France
by a company called Delacoste (2). And in Germany by somebody sounding
like Siemex. A Japanese company also made them, initially without a
licence, but was eventually persuaded to better their ways. Monsieur Ach
also confirmed the Acrobates came in three sizes.
Next
it was my turn to answer a few questions, for Monsieur Ach was curious
about how I had found his patent. Turned out he had been looking for a
patent a cousin (iirc) had been granted a long time ago, and hadn't had
much luck in finding it. With a browser in front of me, and having
discovered the EU patent site later on in the MMM Hunt, I asked the name
of his cousin (thankfully not a very common name either) and found him
the patent while still on the phone. I told him how to retrieve it, we
thanked each other and said goodbye.
And
then, in what must really be the biggest coincidence ever, I turned to
eBay France, typed in Acrobates Delacoste and would you believe it there
was a boxed set!
notes:
1) if interested, the MMM patents can be found on John Eaton's site.
-
Delacoste is best known for its "pouet-pouet" toys - rubber figures that
make such a noise when you squeeze them. The giraffe that sometimes
pops up from the company logo is called Sophie, their very first such
figure from 1961, and quite an icon in France. It even has its own
Wikipedia pages in french and english.
Re. eMail's; I think the set I saw in Herne was different to the one illustrated. I'd totally forgotten the ladders. our set had the ladders. but I don't remember wheels (?) and balls, also I'm pretty sure the British ones were all one colour - I remember red, black and green.
ReplyDeleteIf they were available in three sizes - they probably supplied the early Kinder ones?
We always assumed (when older) they must be spacemen as they had fish-bowls on their heads and could do stuff you can only do in Zero G (or an orgy!!).
'Ogynes'...What the Acrobates should have been called!
i never had any as a kid, but was familiar with them, but only the single colour version. I had some of the small version ones in the mid seventies, but they were a cheap rip off version that lost the arms after about three clicks. More to follow soon!
ReplyDeleteI did have them as a child, but not the ladders or wheels ... and not the horse, sadly. (Would have loved to have the horse!)
ReplyDeleteAnd mine were all a single colour too.
By the way, that's a super research story, Paul.
ReplyDeleteThanks.
ReplyDeleteAs a small update, I found out yesterday René Ach was born in 1940, so in his mid-twenties during his 'inventive years'.
Had a look at an online Kinder checklist, but nothing to be found for the years it covers (which seem to exclude the first two, as Wotan discovered).
Best
--
Paul
Paul - they are definitely in the U-ei'er 'sammler' catalogues, I can't get to mine without emptying half a shipping container or I'd send you scans, but you're better-off getting an old one as they are only a few quid for 300+ pages in full colour with lots of space stuff to boot!...Don't need to get the latest as Kinder are a bit shite these days!!
ReplyDelete'Watoid'...unidentifiable piece of plastic from a kinder toy!
Aha!
ReplyDeletethanks, Maverick. I'll have to make some enquiries then. And/or send some pics round.
Best
--
Paul
An awesome piece of detective work Paul, and rewarded with a bit of luck to boot!
ReplyDeleteAlso the date thing...you can now search by title/name/other word with the Google Patents search engine.
ReplyDeleteThat's true, Maverick, up to a point. The OCR Google has used produces many mistakes, and I've noticed it missing patents that I know exist due to that.
ReplyDeleteIt wasn't available yet back in 2005 either. Best tool that I know is the EU patent site, that -does- allow searches of pre-76 US patents. Except (sadly) for US design patents, which are the equivalent to our registered design and thus fall outside the scope of the EU patent office.
Best
--
Paul