Tuesday, 31 May 2016

SEEK & DESTROY: SKYDIVER SCRATCHBUILD

Here's Kevin D's latest creation, a stunning example of the Shado Skydiver.


The model is around three feet long, a similar size to the smaller studio model.


A CGI showing the model underwater.

Like the original prop it is two separate craft.


Submarine Diver 1 .


Supersonic jet Sky 1, 


MY QUERCETTI FIREBALL XL5

The Quercetti Fireball XL5 is one of my favourite Gerry Anderson toys and, apart from a Budgie Supercar , one of the  oldest Anderson toys I have.

As a collector I tend to be drawn to things that I had, or remember as a youngster.

I can’t remember a time when I wasn’t fascinated by space travel, and in the very early sixties, Fireball XL5 was one of my favourite series as a kid.


I was too young to bother collecting Zoom wrappers for a Kitmaster Fireball, and I was totally unaware of the Fairylite version. The only Fireball XL5 toy I really wanted was the Quercetti, which I knew about through its eye-catching advertisements.


I wrote about my early recollections on wanting this toy on the blog some years ago, and re-reading it I thought it might be time for another airing. 

Cue wavy lines and a journey into my past…


The Promise Of A Quercetti Fireball XL5.

During the mid sixties my family and I spent a week  at a Pontins holiday camp at Middleton Towers near Morecambe. It was notable for being the largest camp in the Pontins empire and for having a huge entertainment centre built in the shape of an ocean liner, named the  S.S. Berengaria.                         

But for me one of it’s main attractions was a gift shop selling toys.

In the shop one particular item stood out from the rest, a Quercetti Fireball XL5 spaceship.


Not many XL5 toys or models were available at the time.  I was never aware of the Fairylite version and the plastic kit from Lyons Maid Zoom was only available mail order. The Quercetti XL5 was extensively advertised in comics exploiting the colourful box artwork and it looked great.



For a holiday treat I asked my Dad for the spacecraft with the catapult. That was my mistake, I should have been more specific.  I was given the Quercetti Tor spacecraft. A fun toy, I’m sure you’ll agree - but it isn’t an XL5.
To make matters worst the spoilt brat in the next chalet to us got a Fireball, although, after one day of play he did lose it on a chalet roof!



Anyway, from that day on I promised myself that eventually I’d possess a Quercetti XL5 and fire it into space, avoiding chalet roofs of course! .

The years passed and life moved on. The next time  I came across a Quercetti XL5 was when I attended the first Fanderson Convention in 1981. During the charity auction a boxed example was offered. It went for far more than I could afford. - and dealers had a nice high book price to work with.

Fast forward to the present , and the evils of eBay.

All I wanted was a reasonable example of a toy that is, let’s face it,  nearly fifty years old.  I’d seen a few dog eared, well used and dubious examples of my target toy, but then a decent and apparently unused one came up. I bid and won it.  I probably paid too much for it but what the heck, I had been waiting for a long, long time.

And what do I think of the toy after my wait?



Well, considering it’s a flying toy it’s a pretty good representation of it’s TV counterpart. Any deviations are probably there to aid it’s performance in the air and to accommodate Quercetti’s clever parachute opening system  . The durable yellow Fireball Junior of which there are two versions depending on the weather, no doubt helps in finding the toy following landing .The instructions enclosed are very detailed, even giving technical notes about the working principles of the Fireball. The decals are quite adequate considering that the odd scratch would be unavoidable.  The only real downside is the Steve Zodiac figure which is simply a generic spaceman.


Much as I‘d like to fit the decals and catapult my Fireball way up to 200 ft in the air ,thereby finally fulfilling part of a promise made all those years ago, obviously that’s not going to happen.

The damn thing is just too precious now.

Still, in spite of that it was well worth the wait.

Mike B (age 6 years & 564 months)


As a bit of a post script, when I attended the Future is Fantastic convention last year, A.P Films and Century 21 merchandising maestro, Keith Shackleton mentioned the Quercetti Fireball during his talk and reckoned it was the best Fireball toy on the market at the time. He'd travelled all the way to Turin to meet the owner of the company, and strike a deal. He didn't think a child launching something 200 feet in the air was an advisable thing to do these days, but he was still thought it was still a clever toy.


JAPANESE OMAKE BOOK

If like me you're interested in Japanese Omake or candy premiums then you'll like this clip of a big book on the subject.

The book's called OMAKE (premium stuff) of Glico 80 Year History 1922-2003. Its in Japanese from 2003.

Monday, 30 May 2016

BANK HOLIDAY TRAFFIC

It's a bank holiday Monday here in Blighty, so the roads will be chocka with traffic as usual. 



There'll be loads of bikers weaving in and out.


And above!


LP ASTRONAUTS IN ARGENTINA

Here's an interesting article I saw online about Argentinian copies of LP astronauts. They appear to be basic greys that were hand painted.

http://eljuguetionista.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/astronautas-miniatura-argentina-copia.html

The global appeal of the LP astronauts never ceases to amaze me.

In discussing these copies the author, El Juguetionista, also 'borrows' heavily from this blog and particularly Paul V's pictures.

Sunday, 29 May 2016

SPACE ART

There are some beautiful pieces of space art collected together on the BibliOdyssey blog. It includes Roll Out by Bob McCall - the box art of the Project SWORD Cape Kennedy Set - but also many other stunning paintings and sketches by different space artists.

SHORE LEAVE

I will be on shore leave from Moonbase Central from tomorrow until Friday. 

Daily posts are scheduled to appear but I may not be able to respond to comments. It depends on the wifi in the B&B!

In the meantime Keep on SWORDin!




WALLS DRACULA ICE LOLLY TV AD 1981


Can't find the TV ad for Dracula's Secret but here's a similar fangtastic lolly from Walls in 1981 courtesy of You Tube.

Anyone recall this one?

I was 20 by then and lived abroad so won't have seen it.

SPACE MYSTERIES: A TURN OF THE CARDS BY TONY K

Space Mysteries - a turn of the cards


I picked up my first second hand UFO paperback by Brad Steiger as a kid. Since then I've been fascinated by the phenomena.  

I recently got my hands on an old set of cards which would have unquestioningly caught my keen curiosity back then.



These charming confectionery size cards, dating from the heady Space Race days of 1965, deal in the popular mythology of Ufology. 

The 25 card set, recreates colourful depictions of UFO sightings and encounters throughout the ages.  Barratt and Co dealt them to little earthlings, through packets of Space Man Bubble Gum Cigarettes. 



An opening card reassuringly introduces us to Kenneth Arnold, the pilot famous for coining the term 'Flying Saucers', after he claimed to have witnessed unidentified flying objects, over the Cascade Mountains in Washington State, on June 24, 1947.



Typical of the period, a handful of the illustrations draw upon an archetypal pop culture flying saucer, identical in design to the Venusian craft, photographed by George Adamski, in 1952.   



Opinion is divided.  Whilst some support him, others feel Adamski's controversial flying saucer was nothing more than a home made prop, created to illustrate his books and support his extraordinary claims of extraterrestrial contact and cosmic tourism.  

That said, back in the day, far from alienating himself, life must have seemed like dreamland to wildcard Adamski, who came up trumps through flush book deals and seminars.



Every pack of cards has its Joker, This one's no exception, with the dubious honour going to card Number 3.   Here, PROJECT BLUEBOOK gets a bit of a probing, or rather its unfortunate former head of project and whistle blower, Captain Edward J. Ruppelt, does... Ooooch.   

No, I simply mean the blurb on the reverse of this card is a tad flawed!  Reading the text, Captain Ruppelt's been stripped of his military rank... and if that's not punishment enough, his name's misspelled. He's wrongly referred to as Mr. Rupult.  

The card also states the project ran for five years. In fact it ran from 1952 to its dismantling in 1969-70.   

Why the disinformation ? Well the other-worldly world of ufology is awash with conspiracy theory, so I opt to think it was a deliberate sleight of hand to safeguard the writer against abduction by those mysterious men in black. 



It's interesting, from our contemporary perspective, to look at the topics covered by the cards. 

 Many of the genre examples which we're familiar with and would expect to see, are missing.  For example, where's the Roswell Crash? What about those huge flying triangles?  

Area 51 also seems to have vanished... and what about the little green men we call the Greys?   Of course, these things didn't really appear on the radar of popular culture until further down the line.  

All of the above goofy gaffs and omissions actually work for me. They define these kiddy collectible candy cards as unrefined, but wonderfully cool and simplistic products of an optimistic and adventurous time, when Martian's were from Mars and Venusian's were from... 

yep, you get the picture!   

Okay, who's hidden my tin foil hat...?

 Tony K

Saturday, 28 May 2016

Thats You Licked!

Dalek Death Ray lolly and Super spy with the codebreaker stick. You wrote with a biro or pencil via the stencil on one end, then flipped it round to get the other half of the code! Death Ray had something printed on the stick as i recall.

THOMAS SALTER STARCRUISER MISSION KIT MYSTERIES


I've blogged about this before.

The Starcruiser Mission Kit by Thomas Salter Toys, 1979.

Although arriving in toy shops over 10 years later than Project SWORD toys I have often wondered whether a SWORD version of this would have worked. Would you have wanted one readers?

The Starcruiser toy itself appears to be a generic Thomas Salter design as they used it again for Buck Rogers [I wonder who the kid is on the Starcruiser box? A Salter?]

I sometimes also compare Starcruiser with SWORD in terms of project evolution over at Century 21. SWORD was a toy range backed up by a comic 'strip'. As far as I know it was never considered as a TV show and certainly not developed as such in any way.

It began and ended as a toy line with associated comics and books. Pure and simple.

Starcruiser appears to be the reverse. Formed as a TV concept, it failed to materialise as a show and only then spawned the toys, models and comic strip. Is this right? Was this a way for Gerry to make at least something out of it? Did it work: were the toy sales driven by the strip?

A final Starcruiser thought is simply one of toy identification

This is the Dinky Space Battle Cruiser.


Is it the same as the Airfix Starcruiser Interceptor readers?

Does the Dinky toy mention Starcruiser on the box? If not, why not?

Anyone got both of them?

THE MYSTERY OF THE LADY PENELOPE TOY COSMETI KITS


The other day I posted this 1966 advertisement for a Lady Penelope toys competition.

Two things came to mind.

1. Does anyone have the results? They would be in a Lady Penelope comic after October 8th 1966?

2. It'd be fun to find out more about some of the more unusual toys in this advert -

That's were the fun really started!

Deploying Sacramento reader Jim's suggestion of magnifying the above picture and the description, below, I made a start.


I began with the "Cosmeti-Kit" pictured far right


This is the description


The description described two sets; skin cream and shampoo/bath. They allowed kids to make their own cosmetics. There are two boxes shown in the ad so presumably they're one of each.

So who made them?

Unusually the description doesn't say.

Web power stepped in at this point and I managed to find a reference to Cosmeti Kits.

This toy catalogue cover includes the words Cosmeti kit on it, so it would appear that they were made by Mettoy Playcraft in 1966.


I could find no other online information whatsoever about this toy and the above image was a googlewack, a single google result, a list of one!

This would prove to be a similar story for much of the more unusual stuff pictured in the ad, but more on that later

My conclusion would be that these Cosmeti Kits are seriously rare children's 'toys' nowadays, as hardly any have appeared online.

I know that making cosmetics would have meant that the box and contents probably got thrown away after use but I did expect some ex- shop stock to have survived and have been auctioned off somewhere.

Anyone got anymore info about them?

LOLLIPOP ROCKETS


I love these modern lolly stick spaceships!

Did you make anything out of lollipop sticks readers?

Friday, 27 May 2016

THUNDERBIRD 6 REMOTE CONTROL TOY BIPLANE


Caught this Japanese footage on You Tube. You don't often see a plastic remote control Thunderbird 6 toy. It's probably Bandai?

Was it even possible to get a toy Thunderbird 6 outside Japan back in the Sixties?

Thursday, 26 May 2016

MOON BUS DOODLE


My latest doodle.

Your art welcomed!

REMEMBERING 'FLIGHT OF FANTASY' GERRY ANDERSON EVENT 2014

Another excellent Gerry Anderson event was the Flight of Fantasy exhibition that took place  at  the RAF Cosford museum in 2014.

Organised by mega fan Chris King this was a little different to the usual Conventions and a chance for ordinary members of the public to check out the huge amount of puppets and models on display, as well as meet a few special guests like Matt Zimmerman and Shane Rimmer.


Here's a special guest that I like to see, the 'real' Steve Zodiac, who has spent his declining years as a bowling trophy. An excellent replica of Troy Tempest in the background.


An original prop of the Spectrum Patrol Car from Captain Scarlet and The Myterons.


Captain Black and Captain Scaret.


Joe McClaine meets Joe 90


Sky 1 original prop.


Jimmy Gibson and friend Zarin, with Mark Knopfler in the background.


The Starcruiser model built by Martin Bower.


Puppets from Terrahawks.

A short video I took at the event showing some of the models and puppets, with a quick run down of some of the guests.


CENTURY 21 LADY PENELOPE TOYS DISPLAY


You just can't beat original pictures of vintage Century 21 toys and their contemporaries. Its like historical evidence, priceless for toy researchers and collectors.

Here's such a picture from Lady Penelope comic. It crammed with multiple examples of Penelope toys such as make-Up sets and Fairylite dolls.

The Cosmeti-Kits are a new one on me with the photo box of a young girl's head. behind them is a cool colour picture of the rare Lady Penelope Tea Set. I just wish I had a bigger version of this image to see all the other goodies hiding in there.

The same goes for the blurb, which is too small for me to read.

Can anyone assist?

Wednesday, 25 May 2016

MINIATURE ZERO-X TOY FROM 1980: NEW TO THE BLOG

I was leafing through an old Japanese Andersonalia book today. It describes toys which came out there year by year,.

This page concerning new toys during 1980 caught my eye.


There's a wholly new miniature Zero-X toy I've never seen before. I've circled it in red.


I do not know the make but it's surrounded by plastic Thunderbirds toys in similar header carded bags.


This miniature predates the mini model by Morinaga by 12 years.

Does anyone know anymore about this 1980 Zero-X?