A recent visit to the lovely North Yorkshire town of Bedale found me mooching in a toy shop.
This display of military action dolls and vehicles drew me in.
Would you have readers?
A recent visit to the lovely North Yorkshire town of Bedale found me mooching in a toy shop.
This display of military action dolls and vehicles drew me in.
Would you have readers?
I recently found this old plastic seated knight seen here on the right. He's got a shield and a lance.
As soon as I saw it it reminded me of a cast metal seated Samurai I got as a youngster seen above. He's got a long spear and remained unpainted.
Both riders require a horse and the Samurai's is waiting at the back. I can't recall exactly where I got the Samurai and horse from but it was definately mail order using a ..... postal order! I did it a lot in the early 1970's.
It may have been the only way to remotely pay back then for a kid like me without a chequebook. Did you send postal orders?
Thinking about it, Argyle Models rings a bell.
I shall have a dig in my old stubs.
Did you have a Samurai or a Knight?
One more platoon I found in my junk drawer!
Back left are two modern Lanard CORPS! from 2005. The larger group are Chap Mei troops with three unknowns at the back near the pole.
The seated group on the left are odd - five fully articulated softish soldiers by what looks like a firm in Heyuan in China. The lettering on their feet is tiny!
Do you know them?
Me and the Missus caught a flick the other night called The Dig.
Its a modern film recreating how the Sutton Hoo horde was unearthed in Suffolk in 1939 as the Second World War broke.
Its certainly not an action film and takes on the pace of soil being slowly scraped away but it was very enjoyable and interesting.
The champion of the dig, on whose land it is, is one Mrs. Edith Pretty ably encouraged by her young son, who in the film is a Back Rogers nut. The archaeologist or 'excavator' as he called himself is Mr. Basil Brown.
What they find under the mound is magnificent: an entire wooden ship bursting with Anglo-Saxon treasures like coins, swords and all sorts. Oddly the famous helmet isn't shown.
It would appear from the flick that the 'authorities' took credit for the find and for years Basil brown was unknown. It was only relatively recently that his work was formally acknowledged.
I remember reading about Sutton Hoo as a kid and being entranced by the majesty of the gold torques and the shining helmet. I don't think I had any specific toys relating to Hoo but I adored plastic armour and swords. I really did. So much so that I find myself staring at them in Museum shops were they always seem to be. One of my favourites was a plastic mace made from brown plastic. I also loved digging up pottery and the like in my parent's garden. I even buried some coins in a biscuit tin.
On a whim I googled Sutton Hoo toys and lots of stuff appeared. I didn't even need a trowel. I was most surprised by a Timpo Viking figure wearing a Sutton Hoo helmet.
Did you have anything like this or any plastic arms and armour?
I've just discovered what these figures are readers. Get your thinking caps on and tell me what you think they are! Hup!