Tuesday, 14 February 2017
HAPPY BIRTHDAY KEN HOLT
ox and rocks art by bill b
Monday, 13 February 2017
A TRIO OF ZERO X 'S
The big Imai is very much a toy that wants to a model, but those big front wheels are a bit of a let down if you're looking for accuracy. It's a big kit and for some it might be worth trying to alter the thing to make it more screen accurate, but personally I prefer it the way it is as a kind of toy/model hybrid. I think most people are aware that the general rule is Japanese kits are great as long as you take on board that the makers like to include gimmicks like spring loaded firing missiles and battery operated movement. The Imai/Aoshima UFO Moonbase is a case in point - I think it looks fine as it was intended by the manufacturer, lots of fun features but not a lot like the one in the TV series. If I want something better, I guest gonna have to make it myself.
The Aoshima die-cast Zero X is much more for the model enthusiast who looks for accuracy, although I guess there'll always be nit -pickers who'll find something's not quite right. Personally I think it looks great, and that goes for the Captain Scarlet version too.
The highly sought after Century 21 Zero X toy. Not screen accurate at all, big wheels, friction driven lifting bodies and a battery operated remote control. All toy, but most collectors would give their right arm to have one!
Top secret dolls: for your eyes only!
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Postscript 2
I've just come across these pictures from Ebay in 2015 of a Marx JANE BLONDE doll.
remco hamiltons invaders home movie
Sunday, 12 February 2017
making massive missing missiles for my one man army toy: johnny 7 up
Memory Serves
A while ago, I discussed a colouring book I had as a boy, which I recalled as having the Project SWORD Moon Crawler in. The book was sadly left behind along with a Thunderbirds colouring book and a wooden spaceship launch ramp, my dad had made for me some months earlier, when we moved house from Dingle in Liverpool in the late sixties.
I recalled the title as Man on the Moon or some such and a quick Google revealed it would have been a 'We Land on the Moon'. A series of six colouring books originating in the states.
I contacted John Sisson, owner of the fabulous blog 'Dreams of Space', which features one of them and asked him to check. John reported back that it didn't contain the Sword crawler, but did show the MEV, courtesy of Ed Valigurskys illustration.
http://dreamsofspace.blogspot.co.uk/2010/03/we-land-on-moon-1969.html
I now wonder, whether my 8 year old mind distorted the memory of the illustration, to accomodate another of my favourite machines. The book also has the moonbase lander vehicles, directly from Valigurskys paintings in Man in Space.
FOCUS ON S.T.A.R. TEAM
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MJ's BATMAN AND SUPERMAN SHORT ANIMATIONS
Paul Vreede's New Spacex Toys Website
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