Tuesday, 30 April 2024

My First Breyer Horse

 I was so excited when I found this plastic Breyer Horse in the Diakonie. My first as an adult! Just 2.50 Euro! 

I did have some as a kid I'm sure.

I love the pose it has on its stand. The brown beast recalls my Action Man horse too and maybe the Aurora Black Fury kit.

Along with my Pferde I bagged a few plastic Matchbox-style German advertising trailer canopies and a trailer. 70 Cents the lot.

Alongside was a mint 1974 Rolamatics Weasel tank for 30 Cents.

Anything here you like?


For a bit of fun, here's the Aurora Black Fury box art circa 1969 courtesy of eBay images. It's a lot like my new Breyer! Are they connected in some way?



My Moonship: The Icing Problem

Work on my copy Moonship is painfully slow not being at home. Very little progress to report.

I've borrowed some lighter fluid off a chum and cleaned the plastic body thoroughly to remove the old decal adhesive.

I've snagged my corn plaster box to whittle a new transparent green windscreen from.

I've sourced a box of cake icing products by Ernesto that contains perfect-fit nacelles, which I will repaint in Blighty. The set was 50p in a charity shop here in Germany.

Trouble is, ideally I need another set to get that really long double nacelle look on both engines.



I'm now trying to find another cheap Ernesto icing set!

Paul's Aurora Prehistoric Scenes


The most recent Auckland model fair proved an amazing day out, and included several vintage kits. Among them four of the Aurora Prehistoric Scenes snap-together kits from the early 1970s.

This series included dinosaurs, mammals, and early humans, and all were made to 1/13th scale, the same as the infamous Monster Scenes kits. All included diorama bases, and a choice of limbs.

The bases were designed to fit together like a giant jig-saw puzzle. One of the box sides showed two glimpses of a Prehistoric world, each made up of several Aurora Scenes.

The four kits I found had all been put together, and partially painted. All were missing a few minor parts, such as the name-plates for the bases, but the figures themselves were complete.

The loose parts for all four models had been placed in to two boxes. According to the Thomas Graham book on Aurora, all four of these kits appeared in 1972, and remained available until 1976.

Of these four, only the Saber Tooth Tiger (that is the spelling Aurora used) has been re-issued, by Atlantis in 2024. The three human kits have not been available since the 1970s.

These are the first actual Aurora kits I have ever owned. The fact that they had already been made up and painted, means that I can re-store and re-paint them without destroying a pristine 1970s kit.

First up, a closer look at the beautiful Aurora box art. All my kits and boxes carry 1971 copyright dates, and the box tops say Printed in Canada, Made in U.S.A.

The boxes I have are for the Cro-Magnon Man and the Saber Tooth Tiger, but I found some photographs of the Neanderthal Man and Cro-Magnon Woman on Worthpoint to complete the line-up. I was also missing the instruction sheets, but managed to find images on-line, so I know what parts go with what kit.

729 Neanderthal Man - there were two versions of the box, with the early one including the head of a dinosaur - Mr Neanderthal is throwing a big rock at it. There were two sets of arms and legs, and an assortment of weapons and accessories.


730 Cro-Magnon Man - again there were two full sets of arms and legs.




731 Cro-Magnon Woman - two full sets of arms and legs, and a strange two-headed snake. She is very modern looking, and could easily be painted up as a second Victim to go with the Monster Scenes.


733 Saber Tooth Tiger - two full sets of legs, in different poses. There were two different boxes - with or without the snake, with the second version also having an extra base section.




Nine photographs, including two from Worthpoint.


Paul Adams from New Zealand




I R O N f E s t: Alive and kicking

Well, Ironfest is alive and kicking in Portland NSW (the town that built Sydney...) No jousting this year, but all the WW2 vehicles, Blacksmiths and robots are present!

The Missus and I threw on some old stuff we had lying around...

Plenty of Medievalists, Steam Punkers, Recreationists and Furries wandering around beneath the concrete grain silos that have been turned into giant paintings!

The robots are back with R2's and Daleks marching our of the Stargate!

All in all, a fun time had by all!

Looey
OZ Base















I R O N F E S T: Do you feel lucky (steam) punks?

It's time to dress up nice...

The Missus and I are off to the restored Ironfest now being held at Portland NSW. Aparrently It's smaller now, wirh no WW2 vintage armoured vehicles, jousting or Sydney Robot Makers this year!

Still, Portland is a lovely village, so we'll make the trip to see what's on offer.
First up is polishing my shoes. I used to have liquid polish for my school shoes, but I don't remember the brand.

Did you use this stuff, way back when Moonbasers?



THE TARHEEL JAMES BOND SPY BATH: THE DOSSIER


One of the stranger things in my old toy picture archive is this plastic Lotus Esprit James Bond 'Spy Bath' from 1977.

I posted it on MC years ago in 2015 and haven't really thought about it since.

Till now.

Looking at the box art the wheels of the car actually turn!

Intriguingly I recall that this was released by one Tarheel. Is that the Tarheel from the US who released American Project SWORD toys? I thought I'd have another look for further pics using the new-fangled Google lens I didn't have back in 2009.

And here's the new googles from 007 collectors online.


Further googling throws up the fact that the bubble bath was released in Australia!


Many sales sites describe this as a kit!


Incredibly I've seen one sold online for £440!

Still no evidence of the Tarheel brand yet, so I went back to source and that very first image. The Worthpoint sale gave up two further pictures.


And there it is .... on the label on the cars undercarraige are the words TARHEEL HOLDINGS.


I had originally thought that the T logo on the left-hand side of the box edge was the Tarheel logo we know from the Tarheel toy company as was in Tarboro, USA, pictured here ....


... but I now think its this old 1970's United Artists logo ....

So, taking all this into account I'm now sure that this Tarheel Holdings of Australia are a completely different firm to the old Tarheel plastics company from Tarboro, USA, who released Project SWORD toys in the US.

So, who are/ were Tarheel Holdings of Australia?

Monday, 29 April 2024

The Morrinsville Visible Cow

I was telling a friend about the recent Auckland Hobbies Fair, and the amazing Renwal Visible Horse kit that I found. She mentioned that there was a life-sized Visible Cow down in Morrinsville.

Morrinsville is a town in the Waikato, to the south of Auckland, NZ, where there are a lot of dairy farms. In celebration of these farming links, there are several life-sized, or larger, statues of cows in the town.

This one has its ribs and internal organs, and a calf, painted on the outside of the body - with a painted on zipper along the side. Wow.

Among the kits in the Renwal Visible series was a cow, which dates back to the 1960s. It was re-issued by Skillcraft in the 1990s.


Thank you to Jeanette Cole for the photographs.

Paul Adams from New Zealand



TERRANOVA47's TV Western Cards

Hello Woodsy

Further to Ed having discovered the TV western 'Trackdown' starring Robert Culp here are scans of my full set of Western Bubble Gum cards from 1958, printed in the UK.

I never saw Trackdown, WANTED: Dead or Alive, Yancy Derringer, The Restless Gun or The Californians as they were not to the best of my memory broadcast in the London Region. A pity about Yancy Derringer as it starred Jock Mahoney an actor that I liked from an earlier western series where he played The Range Rider. Jock Mahoney was a stunt man as well as an actor, as a result he was cast as Tarzan for possibly the worst two Tarzan movies ever.

Boots and Saddles was a fun show, sort of Rin Tin Tin without the dog. For TV cavalry based westerns nothing came close to the best one; F TROOP. A sort of western version of Sgt Bilko from The Phil Silvers Show.

Terranova47
NYC