Tuesday, 7 July 2009
THINKING INSIDE THE BOX
Supercollector and designer Ferryman has one again conjured up a piece of cardboard magic. After securing a loose Bandai Maximum Security Vehicle via Captain Scarlet afficianado Terry Harle, Ferryman felt that this super rare model, which would have originally been produced on a card back in Japan, needed a suitable resting place inside a Century 21 liveried box.
Part of a series of toys produced by Bandai in Japan, the toy has 'mystery' bump and go action and is at the same size and scale as the Imai model kits as opposed to the C21 toys.
As the toy had no original packaging, Ferryman took a pre-existing piece of artwork from the Imai range showing a dynamic shot of the MSV being escorted by an Angel Interceptor from a twin model kit. He then digitally retouched the artwork to remove the plane, the artists signature and add in an extended background on each side to fit the proportions of the newly constructed box. A line drawing of the MSV schematic was also needed for the side panel of the box, so Ferryman prepared a new drawing to suit.
Finally as the toy also sported some extra aerials and extraneous vent details, he removed these too in order to bring the toy closer to the model used in the series.
Compared to the vintage SPV box, its almost impossible to tell its a reproduction - apart from the lack of forty years of ageing!
Monday, 6 July 2009
MAGNIFICENT DESOLATION
'An upturned bowl we call the sky - trapped under which we live and die.'
What the hell happened almost forty years ago ? Its easy to overlook the import of that first manned lunar excursion all those dim decades away - especially if you weren't lucky enough to experience that fabulous period - the Space Age. It was everywhere, you could wear it, eat it, play with it and sleep in it. But oddly enough at the time, the actual event was something of an anti-climax. Compared to today when its possible to view almost any extraterrestrial object in glorious detail, via the internet or Google Moon or Mars or watch mission control on a NASA webcam - the moon landing appeared on tv as a hazy, indistinct blur. Ok, tv technology of 1969 wasn't exactly the high definition, 1080p widescreen, popcorned extravaganza it is today, and the tv in my house was still a black and white - colour didn't arrive there till a little later.
It turns out that the pictures we were shown from NASA were not actually live - the transmission was run through a compression routine to beam it back to Earth, received by NASA, decoded, displayed on a video monitor and then recorded - from the TV - onto 16mm cine film. this was then broadcast to the news agencies and main worldwide feed. Recently, it was revealed than NASA had actually lost the tapes of the original transmission and all that was available was this 16mm cine copy - but after an extensive search, the tapes have appeared in Australia, where they have been languishing for decades. If they can be used and haven't deteriorated over time, NASA plans to recover the footage and release it in time for the 40th anniversary.
With Transformers 2 riding high on the movie charts and also on a wave of technical excellence in terms of computer imagery, its easy to believe that giant, alien robots actually exist - such is the quality of the hyperreal effects in the film. When you compare some of the amateur videos shown on Youtube showing supposedly 'real' UFOS and alien contacts with the clumsy, fuzzy, almost comical video of Armstrong climbing down the ladder of the LEM onto what some people still insist is a movie set - its very easy to forget the magnitude of the event and the risks taken by three men to reach the moon.
At the time of the landing, Neil Armstrong was quoted as comparing his mission as a 'match lighting a bonfire' and that some people began to confuse the light from the match with the bonfire itself and he became the (accessible) focus of the media attention, rather than the event itself and the simple fact that humankind had for the first time in its entire history, escaped the jealous bonds of Earth and stepped on another world. It would appear that thanks to a modern Prometheus we are now able to make our own small bonfires and that blaze which was ignited forty years ago has now burned cold for want of fresh fuel. The moon was our closest neighbour and probably one of the least impressive objects in our system, lets hope that discoveries in the near future rekindle that sense of wonder and desire to leave Earth and a new Space Age will begin.
To get an idea of the extremity of the loneliness of the mission and the stark beauty of the lunar landscape, check out these Quicktime Panoramas, the Apollo Mission photograph archive and have a look at the project to restore and reprocess the original photographic material collected by the Lunar Orbiter missions, which paved the way for the first lunar landing:
http://www.panoramas.dk/moon/mission-apollo.html
http://www.apolloarchive.com/apollo_gallery.html
http://www.collectspace.com/news/news-111408a.html
Sunday, 5 July 2009
FAIRYLITE FIREBALL XL5
I was looking at your site and thought these images may be of interest. Before Century 21/Rosenthal were the main producer of plastic Anderson related toys, a company called FAIRYLITEe based in Merton, South London did quite a few bits for STINGRAY and FIREBALL XL5 including this friction toy. It is not thought to be seen very often so I was pleased to nab one, albeit unboxed, a few years back. It is a big toy at almost 13 inches long and I was surprised to get one in decent ‘nick’ considering the age. Fairylite did a great deal of licenced stuff for those early Anderson shows but I guess when THUNDERBIRDS hit, the real big names in the UK toy industry wanted in, as well as Century 21 themselves establishing a toy and merchandise arm of their own. However Fairlylite did do a THUNDERBIRDS slide viewer and of course the ACTION MAN-type dolls.
Jim Lewis
Being Neil Armstrong Tonight 9pm
Saturday, 4 July 2009
TARHEEL, EMPIRE AND EMPIRE MADE: the story so far
‘Tarheel Industries Inc. Tarboro N.C. - this company is now called Empire Industries Inc., P.O.Box 4000, 501 Daniel Street, Tarboro, NC 27886-4000 - no link to 'Empire-Made', which appears on C21 toys and boxes, which refers to the British Empire ( i.e. Hong Kong )’. Eleven years on I wanted to revisit this, in the light of recent toy discoveries featured on the blog and new theories about manufacturers’ logos, to see if it still lead me to the same conclusion.
My research into Tarheel began in the 1990’s after purchasing my first Tarheel PROJECT SWORD boxed vehicle. Tarheel SWORD toys, the closest relative of the original Century 21 range, stated the following on the boxes ‘Tarheel Industries Inc. of Tarboro, North Carolina, USA. Made in British crown colony of Hong Kong.’ In those days I only knew of the Tarheel versions of the Moon Prospector and Probe Force 1 and the two different logos, the T Globe and the T with Kids (both pictured below). I also mistakenly thought that the T in a Circle brand was also Tar Heel. Thanks to research by several blog readers T in a Circle has been shown to be a wholly separate company.
In 1997 I wrote to Tarheel Industries in Tarboro, North Carolina, USA and got a reply from their modern incarnation, Empire. Their letter reply, although disappointing, was at least evidence that they still traded albeit in a new name and a new US Flag Logo (there was also a kids trike logo on the envelope).
With the advent of the internet, research has been easier. However, virtually no information exists about the original Tarheel company. In the US Public Company Report for Empire of Carolina 1996, the following company history is given: “Empire has been a toy manufacturer for approximately 40 years. The Company's business experienced significant change in 1993 when substantial non-toy operations were sold. Following the divestitures of non-toy businesses, Empire's operations were focused on its toy business, including the Big Wheel(R) non-powered ride-on product line, which has been sold throughout the United States since 1970, and its plastic decorative holiday products business”.
7
The main Tarboro factory is pictured below:
The popular Plaidstallions nostalgia website remarks that ‘Empire Toys was never a house hold name but their products sold well, their product assortment is what seemed to give them identity problems most of the items featured in their 1979 catalog looked like staples from other companies’. The 1979 catalog cover (below) shows the company’s ’crown’ logo and the slogan ‘Toys Kids Love’ and includes many superhero toys to go with the popular MEGO range of figures. The excellent Megolike.com also details all the Empire superhero vans and packaging, including two versions of the Empire company logo, the full name with the Crown and slogan and just a capital E with the Crown.
Empire made a diverse range of products including children’s bikes, the Powder Puff Barbie Jeep, hundreds of different Christmas blow moulds such as the boxed Candy Cane (both pictured below).
In October 1994, Empire acquired Marchon, Inc. a toy designer, marketer and manufacturer. Marchon's core toy products included Grand Champions (R) collectible horses and Crocodile Mile (R)water slides. Marchon had substantial experience at sourcing toy products in the Far East. In July 1995, Empire acquired substantially all of the toy assets of Buddy L Inc. and its Hong Kong subsidiary("Buddy L"), one of the oldest toy brands in the United States whose core toy products included plastic and metal toy cars, trucks and other vehicles and battery-operated ride-ons (US Public Company Report 1996)
At January 20, 1997, the Company had approximately 600 employees in the United States approximately 100 of whom were salaried, and approximately 40 employees in Hong Kong and China. This represents a significant reduction in both full-time and temporary employees from December 1996 levels reflecting the seasonality of the Company's business and a reduction in the Company's permanent work force. Two employees of the Company worked in the Company's button, buckle and novelty item business. The Company is seeking to effect a sale of such button, buckle and novelty item business (US Public Company Report 1996).
PROPERTIES in 1996
- Tarboro, NC Toy & Holiday 1,200,000 sq. ft. of Business factory, warehouse and office space
- Tarboro, NC Toy Business/ 24,000 sq. ft. of Button factory space
- LEASED:
- Gloversville, NY Toy Business 636,000 sq. ft. of warehouse and factory space
- New York, NY Toy & Holiday 29,000 sq. ft. of Business showroom space
- Delray Beach, FL Executive Offices 16,000 sq. ft. office space
- Hong Kong Toy Business 2,600 sq. ft. office space
- Hong Kong Toy Business 1,200 sq. ft.
- Hong Kong Toy Business Warehouse space
- New York, NY 3,500 sq. ft. showroom
- New York, NY Toy Business/ 3,000 sq. ft. sales Buttons and distribution facility
- St. Louis, MO 100,000 sq. ft. warehouse space
Empire’s 1996 results were damaged by serious difficulties encountered at its Tarboro, NC plant. The 1996 plan required the plant to increase production during the third and fourth quarters to meet peak seasonal demand. At the same time, transfer of the production of acquired Buddy L products, from Buddy L's facilities in Gloversville, NY to Tarboro, NC, was in its final stages. Production equipment acquired from Buddy L, as well as new capital equipment purchased to meet the expanded production schedule, was still being installed. Problems created by the influx of Buddy L product, delays in the start-up of new and transferred equipment and the training of new workers led to the loss of production efficiency, product damage, and missed shipping deadlines.Further, in an effort to meet customer demand, production of some items was outsourced at an increased cost. Also, during the third quarter,the Company determined that a substantial amount of work-in-process and purchased parts inventories, obtained as part of the Buddy L acquisition, were no longer usable (US Public Company Report 1996).
7
By the new Millennium Empire was a sinking ship. In June 2001, the following appeared in the South Florida Business Journal “Delray Beach-based Empire of Carolina (OTC Pink Sheets: EMPIQ) and two of its subsidiaries, Empire Industries and Empire Toys (HK) Ltd, have entered into an agreement to sell substantially all of the group's toy operations to Alpha International for $5 million cash”.
7
The mention of Empire Toys (HK) Ltd did and still does intrigue me. Still trading according to the China Supplier Directory, under management of parent company Alpha International, Inc (Cedar Rapids, IA) Empire Toys (HK) is “the maker and worldwide distributor of such famous toy brands as Grand Champions(R) Collectible Horses, Gearbox Toys and Collections (R), Big Wheels (R), Crocodile Mile (R), Water Toys, Gearbox Pedal Cars (R), and Buddy L(R), Vintage Replicas. For over 25 years Empire Toys (HK) Ltd. has been creating products for the enjoyment of children around the world”. I can’t find the company logo but it is run from Kowloon by Mr. King, which is uncanny if you remember that the original company logo had a crown over the E!
As in the 1960’s there are still hundreds of toy manufacturers in Hong Kong, with strong connections with US companies, such as Early Light and Mattel.
7
Did Tarheel have a connection with Empire Toys (HK) in the late 1960’s, when most of the PROJECT SWORD line was sold? Besides the Tarheel and T logos is it possible that the phrase ’Empire made’ found on many plastic Space Toys referred to them in their Hong Kong capacity? It is true that mould and part-swapping was rife amongst the HK companies in the 1960’s, as we have seen with Tarheel/T in a Circle and JR21 previously on the blog. But did it mean anything more?
7
The clearest definition of the term ‘Empire Made’ is on the Camera Collectors Forum “Empire Made means made in the British Empire, of which Hong Kong was the last surviving territory. It's a hangover from the days when Britain had an Empire, and goods made in the British Empire enjoyed a lower rate of import duty into the UK than goods made in other countries. It was called the 'Empire Duty Preference Scheme', and was usually part of a reciprocal trade agreement to help our exports. Goods from non-Empire countries had to have either the country of origin or 'foreign' marked on them.” (PeterW 2007).
7
I recently asked a number of leading experts on JR21 toys, in particular, as to their understanding of the phrase ‘Empire Made‘. Dennis Nicholson, author of the definitive guide to Anderson Memorabilia, remarks “Empire made means made in part of the world then run by the (British) Empire, which in most cases (As far as toys were concerned), was Hong Kong, as Hong Kong was part of the British Empire in the 1960s (up until 1997). As was India until 1947-48. Australia still is part of the British Empire.” Empire Made appeared on a diverse range of plastic toys such as the ELM Donald Duck Jeep.
7
The proprietor of the online vintage thunderbirds toys, Steve, concurs and adds that the change from JR21 to Century 21 happened between issue 89 of TV21(01/10/1966) & issue 90 (08/10/1966). I suppose that this signalled the move the full assimilation of J.Rosenthal Toys into Century 21 Toys.
7
So , like WOTAN’s previously blogged and intriguing theory that ‘Tar Heel’ may indeed be ‘Tai Hing’ and thus connect it directly to the T in a Circle brand, not too mention the tantalising similarity of T in a Circle’s slogan ‘Toys Are Fun’ (blogger Arto) and Empire’s ‘Toys Kids Love’, it would appear my treatise is just that, an intriguing theory and that my original 1996 statement about Tarheel and ‘Empire Made’ being completely unconnected remains true.
Friday, 3 July 2009
THE CENTURY 21 AND FAIRYLITE STINGRAY FLEET
PLASTON SHIPTON SUPERCAR 1961
MPC FIREBALL XL5 SPACE CITY SET
Total Pageviews
Followers
MJ's BATMAN AND SUPERMAN SHORT ANIMATIONS
CHECKLISTS BY BRAND (FOR COUNTRY BY COUNTRY SEE TOP OF BLOG)
PROJECT SWORD SPACEX TIMELINE
- 1968 SPACEX LT10 CONCEPT
- 1966 SPACE GLIDER REAL THING
- 1969 LUNAR CLIMBER & MOONSHIP
- 1968 PROJECT SWORD ANNUAL
- 1968 TV21 #168 PROJECT SWORD PHASE 2
- 1968 PLEASURE CRUISER CONCEPT
- 1968 CENTURY 21 TOY MANUAL
- 1967 SCOUT 1 CONCEPT
- 1967 NUCLEAR FERRY TOY AD
- 1967 SWORD TOY AD
- 1967 SWORD TOY AD
- 1966 SPACE GLIDER CONCEPT
- 1966 HOVERTANK IN COMIC
- 1966 NUKE PULSE NEEDLEPROBE IN COMIC
- 1966 ZERO X FILM DEBUT
- 1966 MOONBUS IN COMIC
- 1966 SPACE PATROL 1
- 1966 P3 HELICOPTER IN COMIC
- 1966 SAND FLEA AND SNOW TRAIN
- 1966 MOBILE LAUNCH PAD IN COMIC
- 1965 SPACEX MOONBASE CONCEPT
- 1965 APOLLO FIRST UK TOY AD
- 1962 NOVA CONCEPT
- 1962 MOONBUS CONCEPT
- 1961 MOON PROSPECTOR CONCEPT
- 1953 MOLAB CONCEPT