Saturday, 29 February 2020

Seeds of the Past


Original Britains Totem
Its funny how small events can lead to much bigger impacts over time. When I was a kid, my dad was always bringing me toys and models home, either with the intention of  encouraging my education, or as I would prefer to think, so that he could enjoy them himself too. One such toy was Britains and Timpo Cowboys and Indians. When I was about 6 or 7, TV was always showing westerns, such as Bonanza, High Chapparal and countless john Wayne films. Being a big space fan I always found these tedious and uninteresting and basically the same plot, rejigged and shown over and over again.
Brass copy of Britains Totem
Nevertheless, Dad bought me a handful of cowboys and indians to supplement the army of soldiers and spacemen that I already had. These toys, however I always found a bit misplaced, as I couldn't really engage with them, apart from standing them up and admiring the garish colours, or swapping about the torsos and legs to make even more garish combinations of bank robber or high plains drifter. The highlight of the series for me was the Indian canoe, which I could actually float in the sink and play with. This was accompanied by a wigwam, a chief figure in full headdress, a medicine man and a squaw with tightly bundled papoose. All these terms I had culled from tv and film westerns and which as far as I knew, were correct. Also, I assumed, every indian camp had to have a totem pole too, so my little plastic camp also had one of them.

  The original pole must have been self coloured plastic, as by the time I got it, my dad had fetched out the Airfix enamels and painted up the thunderbird and other figures on the sides, in suitably vivid colours - most notably a bright cobalt blue, which came in a lovely tapered bottle with a screw lid and sat in his paintbox with another bottle of bright yellow. I suspect these were probably left over from his kit building days, making Kitmaster railway kits. The pole, as it wasn't a figure, always bemused me slightly, as apart from looking a bit weird, with its monster like figures, it wasn't much use in terms of play. So for years, it languished in the toybox along with the wigwam.

Fast forward about 15 years and my aspirations had moved on to artistic pursuits and other weirdness. My mum was always keen to encourage my pursuits as much as my dad and having visited the local market in Speke one day, she spotted a little statuette on a junk stall and bought it for me for a few pence. When I got home from work that evening, she gave it me and told me it was a totem pole, like she had seen in Canada, some years before. It was black resin and carved in a similar fashion to the Timpo one, with big eyed creatures and sinuous figures. I displayed it proudly on a a shelf with my other nick-nacks. It was perhaps twelve months later, that I found another from the same series, inscribed on the base with the makers name, 'Boma'.

Around about the same time, with the advent of the 'New Romantic' movement in music, Spandau Ballet released their second single 'Paint Me Down', which apart from disappearing into the bargain bins, included some wonderful west coast Salish art on the sleeve.
I was intruigued by the strangely contemporary and fluid style of art and tried to find out a little more about it by visiting the local library. Needless to say, there wasn't much information available in 1982. I did manage to locate a single book, the excellent 'Primitive Art' by Frank Boas, but the dense and academic text didn't really tell me what I needed to know.


Marx Totem
Marx HK Copy
Fast forward another decade and the advent of the internet and ebay, meant that the dark and dusty corners of my collecting habits could be examined in much greater detail and one day, feeling a bit bored, I searched for 'Boma Totem Pole' on ebay. The doors of my perception were not exactly blown off, but were certainly oiled and given a slick new coat of varnish. Suddenly, I discovered that the little black totems were part of a range of tourist gifts, sold in Canada and Alaska and that the majority of totems were not found on the plains of Arizona and Utah, but on the shores of the Pacific West Coast of Canada. The style of art as exhibited by the Haida, Kawakiutl and other peoples was amazingly modern and sophisticated, given its history and these model poles were as ubiquitous as representations of the Statue of Liberty, Eiffel Tower or Empire State

So another rabbit hole yawned before me and before I knew what was happening, I had dived in and was picking up model poles for a few pounds on a regular basis. Almost all of them are made of a black resin composite, designed to look like the mineral 'argylite', a soft black slate like material, used by the indiginous peoples to make jewellery and other artefacts. Other pieces were a brown or amber resin, to reflect wooden carvings. Very rarely, I found an carved wooden piece, with a name inscribed in the back, some of which were practice pieces and others made purely for the tourist industry. The workmanship is always very fine and meticulous and some of the artists can command high prices on the current market.
Original Boma Totem
As with the little Timpo pole, other manufacturers made toy totem poles to supplement their figure ranges and after I had exhausted the ready supply of Boma pieces on ebay, I began to look at toy versions. The Timpo model had been copied endlessly by Hong Kong and Chinese makers and I even have a brass version of the same design. Marx made a simple yellow and red pole and many other rack toys included an odd looking pole in with a handful of cowboy figures. Kelloggs included a small stackable totem in their cereals in 1970, Avon made a fine ornamental bottle for their 'Wild Woods' aftershave and Playmobil included four different modular totem poles with their figures.
Kelloggs / R & L Totem Tribe Premiums
So the possibilities of collecting totems, toys or otherwise went from very small beginnings to a huge range of memorabilia, which is still very popular today, with Boma still producing products today.


Playmobil Modern Totems

Avon 'Wild Woods' Aftershave 1974
Japanese Mi-Ken Clock Totem
 The very latest addition to my burgeoning collection arrived just today, from the extremely generous Tony K, a rare and unusual plastic totem from the Madelman toy range, and item which has somehow managed to elude me for several years!

Tony K's Madelman Totem Potlatch

Britains Indian Camp

Swoppet Cowboys and Indians


THE JERSEY REX COLLECTION PART 2

Hi Woodsy, 
As I said in January, while taking down the Christmas tree, I noticed that I had not one,but two T Rex ornaments.That got me thinking "Just how many T Rexes do I have in this house?"

The hunt is on,and here's what I have so far. 
 Part 2.

BrianF 
NJ USA









DAYS OF OLD


I collected key rings as a kid.

One of them was a metal knight in armour a bit like this one.

Mine though was chunkier, shorter, fatter.

Anyone know what I mean?

Friday, 28 February 2020

LEWIS'S LATEST FROM OZ: SPACE MODEL HQ

Hi Woodsie, 



I've been kinda out of the loop for the last month. An old friend asked me to make some models for Australia's new Space Agency HQ, so I came out of retirement and into 30 days of intense activity! 

Here's a 1/2 scale model of Australia's first satellite 


a 1/15 scale model of a Europa launcher as fired from Woomera


and two life-sized Dust Experiments as designed by an Australian and flown on Apollo 11


and everything packed up in two custom made travel crates, complete with logos! (I resisted the temptation to stencil "Ark of the Covenant; Direct to Berlin" on them!)

Lewis
Oz





1960's Childhood Memorabilia Gift Pack

Not wanting to plug this set but if like me you liked Ellisdons Mail Order of Liverpool when you were a nipper then this maybe for you. 

This set, which used to be sold in Pastimes shops [where I got mine years ago] contains lots of high quality repro copies of catalogues and cards and stuff.

There's Action Man, Sindy and... a complete vintage Ellisdons catalogue copy.

For pure nostalgia its worth the price as I don't think you'd get an original for the same. Anyways, just letting you know:

https://www.sweetandnostalgic.co.uk/1960s-childhood-memorabilia-gift-pack-793-p.asp

Bray Studios - Thats Your Lot

 Woodsy was looking at an image of Peter Cushing on his blog and enquired as to whether the stage lot used in Dracula, Prince of Darkness, which was re-used by Hammer in Rasputin, appeared in any other Hammer films. A quick quick of one of these two excellent volumes by Wayne Kinsey revealed that it does appear again in Plague of the Zombies and The Reptile. See below for more!
Image Copyright Wayne Kinsey

I DUG UP A WEREWOLF PACKET


I used to collect ephemera.

TV and film related paperwork of any kind: wrappers, leaflets, labels, bags, posters, small boxes and small cereal premiums and cereal boxes.

I found a bundle of modern ephemera I'd stashed away for posterity. There's Spider-Man, Godzilla, Pocahontas, Caspar, Sooty and more. All neatly flattened.

I used to have folders of this type of stuff on my old toy fair stall, which folks could leaf through and choose what they wanted. Some of the stuff was really old like Aurora model instructions and board game instructions.

To satisfy my appetite for TV and film ephemera in the 90's I used to look for crisp packets on a small tip area under trees near our last house with our old dog Gem. Stuck in the ground I found a Jaws, a werewolf, Space Raiders and more old crisp packets. Cleaned up they looked great. I still have some of them somewhere. I think I framed the Jaws packet because I was so chuffed!

This is what a complete mint packet would look like [seen on an old 80's forum]


Do you like ephemera like this?

Thursday, 27 February 2020

TERRANOVA47: DAN DARE, BATMAN AND ROY ROGERS ON DISPLAY


Terranova47, NYC, USA

[From my old photo archive!]

Ralph Morton's Aircraft Carrier: Another of My "What if" Projects!

Growing up in the early 60s I was lucky enough to be given some Triang ships.



These metal models covered both the Cunard liners Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary and warships like the new County class destroyers (as featured in an episode of “UFO”).

At the same time in the “real” world the Royal Navy was supposed to be getting some futuristic new ships.


Unfortunately the Government decided that the new aircraft carrier and its escorts were too expensive.

I always wondered what a Triang version might have looked like


A good friend of mine who is a modelmaker agreed to help realise my dream.

Would have been a good Task Group to take on some UFOs in 1980!

Ralph Morton

BRAY STUDIOS

I've been trying to work out if this shot of Peter Cushing - see link below - is in the same set as the sunken garden seen in the Hammer horror The Gorgon at Bray studios - can't find a picture of it though.

http://petercushingblog.blogspot.com/2013/01/on-back-lot-at-bray-studios-peter.html
Looking at Imdb's list of films filmed at Bray Studios it would seem to to be the case.

I do love films made at Bray. Their castle frontage set was just spectacular and my fave film from it has to be Dracula Prince of Darkness starring Christopher Lee and Captain Scarlet himself, Francis Matthews.


I think they used it in Rasputin The Mad Monk as well, in which Francis Matthews appeared too. Can you think of more films using this set?

Does it still exist?

THE JERSEY REX COLLECTION PART 1

HI Woodsy, 
in January, while taking down the Christmas tree, I noticed that I had not one,but two T Rex ornaments.That got me thinking "Just how many T.Rexes do I have in this house?"

The hunt is on and here's what I have so far.
Part 1.

BrianF 
NJ USA




Wednesday, 26 February 2020

HAVE YOU A CAR STICKER?

Here's a question for your readers.

  "Do you have a sticker on your car?" 

 I nearly bought a Space Battleship Yamato sticker for my old car, but the "new" one is so massive, I've taken to calling it the SPV!

So this Spectrum logo (with a bit of extra typography that I did myself) seems very appropriate!


Keep on bloggin' 
Lewis
Oz

THE FRANKONIA TOYS SEAL

Frankonia is an old toy brand I mention in my new JR21 Toy Bunnies on Plastic Scooters book. Here's a nice example of its maker's mark on a Sparky Robot box I saw online [vintagespacetoys.com]


You can see that the f  for frankonia forms part of a seal nuzzling a red ball. The 'seal' idea is repeated in the marketing tag 'seal of approval' below it.

Have you any frankonia toys?

Tuesday, 25 February 2020

PAUL ADAMS'S HOT WHEELS CARTOON CARS

Hi Woodsy

Hot Wheels have included a number of Star Car models based on cartoons and comic strips in the Mainline in recent years, mainly from television. Originally, they were just part of the normal Hot Wheels line-up, but in 2014 and 2015 they were grouped into a sub-series called Tooned (a name now used for caricatures of real vehicles). 

From 2016 they were included in the Screen Time sub-series devoted to film and TV models. There have also been a number of models from animated shows in the Batman sub-series.

1 - The Mystery Machine van from Scooby Doo, released in 2012, with flower power graphics.


2 - The Fred Flintstone Flintmobile was released in 2013 in yellow and orange; and in 2014 in grey and brown. The model has small wheels hidden inside the front and rear rollers.


3 - The Jetsons Capsule Car, from 2014, runs on clear plastic wheels. Card length affects the size and layout of the artwork.


4 - The Homer was designed by Homer Simpson himself, it only appeared in one episode of The Simpsons. The model is from 2014, and was followed by a model of the Family Car, a pink sedan, in 2015.


5 - The Beatles Yellow Submarine from the 1968 animated film, which runs on concealed wheels. Released in 2016, it is smaller than the earlier Corgi version.


Paul Adams from New Zealand