Jump to content

Shite in Miniature II


Split_Pin

Recommended Posts

Laser wheels were MEGA imo. They looked really futuristic to a 9 year old me in a late 1980s way. I had the race car, the Sierra and the Saab 9000 which looked great in metallic blue.

That story about the 'millionaire Uncle' is hilarious, I can recall similar stories like thar from school days!

Weirdly, one particularly troubled kid in Primary 5 said he hated Volvos and therefore me as my dad drove one at the time. By P6, he said he loved them, so much so that he said his (abusive) stepdad had chopped in his mum's Nova for a 'wee 340' with a boot spoiler. He even went into detail about how his tall stepdad's hair touched the roof. I passed his house on my bike a short time later and the dowdy D reg Nova was still there.

However the same kid had a lot of quite expensive GAMA 1/43 models and I got some good swaps in those days. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Years ago every street had a kid that couldn’t stop lying their arse off. We had one on ours, my mum used to call him Walter Mitty. He’d bullshit about everything and had the attention span of an orange, if he got anything decent he usually wanted to swap it after about 15 minutes which was convenient cause he usually had some good kit. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Tenmil Socket said:

Fantastically shite... are they Matchbox wheels?

 

2 hours ago, 155V6 said:

They're the ones it came with, that Escort also came as a Police car with lights on the roof 

Think the Maisto/MC Toy Escorts all came with those 'five spoke crown' wheels - I don't think they're quite identical to the wheels fitted to Matchbox cars, but deffo a very close copy.

What gets me is that some of the police versions appeared with Corgi on the base. I think that Corgi basically bought them under licence from Maisto and rebranded them, to have some light 'n' sound toys in their range without the expense of having to develop them in-house.

1259166713_IMG_20170418_101618(2).thumb.jpg.f8deb38f2d8d712a3e31ece68161f6df.jpg

I'm currently pulling together some material for yet another long post, this time on 'Matchboxes that weren't Matchboxes' - those 1980s oddities such as Key Cars, Glo-Racers and other weird things licenced from other toy manufacturers such as Kidco, but which were sold with Matchbox branding.

I may be some time.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, egg said:

Yes they are unloved. Yes, the rear axle is a little bent. But £4 posted? That's crazy. Had to have it.

1422548002_IMG_20190808_1111292.thumb.jpg.43607723f1be72755a600eb7e2d84069.jpg

That's fantastic value - well bought! A fifty-odd year old toy car, tidy and still boxed, for £1 plus postage. It really is crazy. Yours looks to be a mid-60s release, with the Version D-3 box and in British Racing Green.

Following Lesney's curious approach to colouration for the MoY range, initial batches of the Bentley from 1962 came in a sort of metallic mid-green, which apparently enraged influential members of the Bentley Owners Club.

2060553086_Y5-Bentley2c.jpg.70a41b35c2f737851b4369d7c4fcf968.jpg

Feeling the heat, Lesney agreed to reissue it in 'classic' BRG. Later versions, like yours, also came with separately cast radiators.

 

I'm starting to feel increasingly sorry for the MoY range - they really are quite delightful models (more so than Lledo and Corgi Cameos, I find), and it's a real shame they find it so hard to shake off their giffer-speculator image.

With Market Blokey offering out a tableful of 70s and 80s examples at £2 a pop, it can surely only be a matter of time before I also crack...

20190621_090630.thumb.jpg.7357ec98ccfb7ae8d7403163484e15d9.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My folks used to get me Lledo and days gone stuff from promotions.

The only ones I still have are the Tetley Transit and a Leyland Roadtrain.

Models of yesteryear can be nice things as long as its not a twee Model T Van in a heritage livery. They are quite heavy and have good detail, meaning they display well. I have a Silver Ghost I got from someone in here and it is a decent piece indeed.

What else I detested in the mid 1980s were the Corgi Classics Commercials from the 1920s and 30s. They were crudely detailed had rubbish wheels and naff liveries. I had a Renault van in Stanley Tools livery and my friend at the time had the AEC cabover lorry and a Thornycroft van.

Thank goodness for the 'proper' Corgi Classic Cars and small vans from 1986 onwards which were a revelation in terms of subject, liveries and execution. The Morris Minor, in my opinion has not been bettered before or since.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah, it's the dizzying range of interwar-era MoY/Corgi Classics/Days Gone commercials that singularly fail to float my boat - but I've certainly been eyeing up some of the cars lately.

The Matchbox castings in particular do have a pleasing crispness - that Silver Ghost has a lot of charm to it.

My mental block over models of this era possibly stems from too much time spent in fusty charity shops as a teenager, where loads of unwanted old tat seemed to involve depictions of vintage/veteran cars - transfers on mirrors, on fussy little drinking glasses, even chromed MoY models mounted on pen holders and ashtrays. Mostly dusty, dirty, naff and generally unwanted. The nostalgia of a generation that's now passed, and I find myself having to dig deep to look at these cars on their own terms.

Discovering the late-1980s Corgi Classics range was what set me on the road to 1/43 collecting too - with a dark blue Ford Zodiac MkII, bought from a model shop in York in 1988. I still have that one on display - wish I'd kept the box, though! I also have a Minor, in suitably restrained black with a red coachline, plus a Sage Green Ford Pop. At some stage, I'll go through all my models...

Anyone else remember the late '80s/early '90s Matchbox Dinky range? It certainly had its highlights, although some were a wee bit plasticky. The MGB GT was a nicely done model, especially the maroon V8 version.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I like the Models of Yesteryear from the 70’s era, the naff seventiestastic colours like a metallic pink Simplex or a gold coloured Hispano Suiza. Absolutely worthless now so probably a good time to build your collection if it’s your thing. Can’t stand any of the Lledo Days Gone though. It was the sort of shit old folks bought ‘cause it’s a collectors item you know!’. Happily they have to sit at Car Boots every Sunday now desperately trying to get £1.50 back for their investment. I think last lot I had I slung straight in the blue bin. Whenever I see them now I’ve got a real burning urge to stick them in the vice. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Datsuncog said:

 

Anyone else remember the late '80s/early '90s Matchbox Dinky range? It certainly had its highlights, although some were a wee bit plasticky. The MGB GT was a nicely done model, especially the maroon V8 version.

Yes, I had the 59 Caddy and 57 Chevy as well as a Beetle. Lovely things, I've been eyeing them up on eBay

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Datsuncog said:

I'm currently pulling together some material for yet another long post, this time on 'Matchboxes that weren't Matchboxes' - those 1980s oddities such as Key Cars, Glo-Racers and other weird things licenced from other toy manufacturers such as Kidco, but which were sold with Matchbox branding.

I may be some time.

I'd like to see that - especially if you include the blatant rip offs by Zee toys of Matchbox/Corgi/Hot Wheels!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Datsuncog said:

Discovering the late-1980s Corgi Classics range was what set me on the road to 1/43 collecting too - with a dark blue Ford Zodiac MkII, bought from a model shop in York in 1988. I still have that one on display - wish I'd kept the box, though! 

This one?

corgi_classic_cars_ford_zephyr_mk2_1956.

(library pic)

How strange! I used to go to a swap meet with my Dad, held occasionally on a weekday evening in a village hall in York back in the 1990's . One time, I was too ill to go, so bunged him my saved pocket money and asked him to pick me up something interesting (I collected anything that was a Ford Transit at the time, plus the odd period toy which took my fancy) - and he came back with one of these, which quite frankly bewildered me. That was only at first though, as opening it up, I got to appreciate it far more and the drab paint scheme actually did it some favours. 

It didn't make me buy any more of these types of thing though but I held onto it until my big sale of almost everything I'd collected, back in 2010. I also remember the Matchbox MGB of the same era in a sludgy blue and thought it looked pretty great when it was launched but its high price when new (for a kid) meant I never got one.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have the 'Dinky' MGB and I think it's a lovely model. It captures the real car pretty well I think. They are a bit more detailed than the Corgi equivalent but in my opinion the MG and the Triumph Stag are the only ones that interest me as the rest are too overmodelled by other companies.

Corgi did well with their 1/43 Classics range by covering everyday saloon cars and vans together with a few sports cars.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Anyway, here's some more unnecessary guff I've bought recently, from a car swapmeet:

 

48295568147_fd9112c577_b.jpg

I remember playing with a red one of these with black non-superfast wheels round at my grandparents but hadn't seen a later one in much more jolly colours, so I bagged this one for small change on the off chance it was a rare colour or something - which of course, it's not. I reckon the shades complement each other well though.

 

Then I found the stall of a guy who usually goes to a monthly market which was being held on the same day but seemingly he'd chosen to go where I was visiting too, which was very handy for me.  Some of his prices can be a bit challenging but I really don't know how/where he finds his stuff, so paying the odd shekel or more to cover his finder's fee is fair enough, I suppose.

 

48295566812_473df6e65e_b.jpg

Lowest price item I got was still quite interesting, as this S Class Benz was made in China, has no makers name but is very well put together, other than the bizarre paint job, which has overspray on the wheels and even the windows but none on the lights, grille or base.

 

48295566952_6a7b2844d5_b.jpg

Here you can see the mottled opaqueness of the windows, either due to crappy manufacturing or someone at some point using solvents to wipe away the overspray. It's definitely not a repaint and hasn't been taken apart, so is really quite baffling. Anyone any idea who may have made this, or made it originally?

 

48295461556_2f68446211_b.jpg

Next up was this Play Art Alfetta GT, chosen mostly due to the interesting front end construction! 

 

48295461806_3d84ab1bb4_b.jpg

The rear end is much more accurate and far less fussy but those bumpers are as fragile and wobbly as they look. I swear this is the same green that my Play Art Honda Civic is painted - that's the sole example Play Art I remember owning as a kid, bought in Windermere in 1991, so I hope it survives in my childhood stash.

 

48295569242_22c4ff0bac_b.jpg

Another Play Art and for once, the wheels they've used are actually to scale and suit the model!

 

48295463011_7934eb0360_b.jpg

I'm sure this must be the same casting as the CX Datsuncog had in ambulance livery a while back but I'm not sure if that was a Play Art too? Would be interesting to see how this fared with the Matchbox CX wagon and the Majorette CX saloon.

 

Finally, I couldn't resist another Tomica:

48295568602_89b332737e_b.jpg

There's something about their skinny wheels, sprung suspension and often unfamiliar casting choices that make them of interest, so I couldn't leave this Fleetwood Brougham sitting there. It seems like Tomica have re-released this casting but this looks to be an original one. Perfect for nipping down to the Guggenheim in.

 

48295568502_dbc59cd904_b.jpg

Or even for a night out, to somewhere that looks much like the Palace Hotel Ballroom, up north on Lake Wazzapamani.

I'll admit that the Caddy cost me £4 but prices for these do seem to be mildly crazy, so if I'm ever down on my heels, I know what to cash in!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

26 minutes ago, Jon said:

Anyway, here's some more unnecessary guff I've bought recently, from a car swapmeet:

 

48295568147_fd9112c577_b.jpg

I remember playing with a red one of these with black non-superfast wheels round at my grandparents but hadn't seen a later one in much more jolly colours, so I bagged this one for small change on the off chance it was a rare colour or something - which of course, it's not. I reckon the shades complement each other well though.

 

Then I found the stall of a guy who usually goes to a monthly market which was being held on the same day but seemingly he'd chosen to go where I was visiting too, which was very handy for me.  Some of his prices can be a bit challenging but I really don't know how/where he finds his stuff, so paying the odd shekel or more to cover his finder's fee is fair enough, I suppose.

 

48295566812_473df6e65e_b.jpg

Lowest price item I got was still quite interesting, as this S Class Benz was made in China, has no makers name but is very well put together, other than the bizarre paint job, which has overspray on the wheels and even the windows but none on the lights, grille or base.

 

48295566952_6a7b2844d5_b.jpg

Here you can see the mottled opaqueness of the windows, either due to crappy manufacturing or someone at some point using solvents to wipe away the overspray. It's definitely not a repaint and hasn't been taken apart, so is really quite baffling. Anyone any idea who may have made this, or made it originally?

 

48295461556_2f68446211_b.jpg

Next up was this Play Art Alfetta GT, chosen mostly due to the interesting front end construction! 

 

48295461806_3d84ab1bb4_b.jpg

The rear end is much more accurate and far less fussy but those bumpers are as fragile and wobbly as they look. I swear this is the same green that my Play Art Honda Civic is painted - that's the sole example Play Art I remember owning as a kid, bought in Windermere in 1991, so I hope it survives in my childhood stash.

 

48295569242_22c4ff0bac_b.jpg

Another Play Art and for once, the wheels they've used are actually to scale and suit the model!

 

48295463011_7934eb0360_b.jpg

I'm sure this must be the same casting as the CX Datsuncog had in ambulance livery a while back but I'm not sure if that was a Play Art too? Would be interesting to see how this fared with the Matchbox CX wagon and the Majorette CX saloon.

 

Finally, I couldn't resist another Tomica:

48295568602_89b332737e_b.jpg

There's something about their skinny wheels, sprung suspension and often unfamiliar casting choices that make them of interest, so I couldn't leave this Fleetwood Brougham sitting there. It seems like Tomica have re-released this casting but this looks to be an original one. Perfect for nipping down to the Guggenheim in.

 

48295568502_dbc59cd904_b.jpg

Or even for a night out, to somewhere that looks much like the Palace Hotel Ballroom, up north on Lake Wazzapamani.

I'll admit that the Caddy cost me £4 but prices for these do seem to be mildly crazy, so if I'm ever down on my heels, I know what to cash in!

Nice selection,the Mercedes could be a Yatming.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

@Jon nice pics - the Citroen CX is in front of Le Corbusier's Villa Savoye in the 2nd picture - when does that pic date from? It looks a bit of a ruin, whereas these days it is very good shape.

Also, please forgive a little related Lego digression - Villa Savoye was available...

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/LEGO-Architecture-Villa-Savoye-21014/323875463578?epid=149207020&hash=item4b687b619a:g:Ii4AAOSw~fpdRaJK

s-l500.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

43 minutes ago, egg said:

@Jon nice pics - the Citroen CX is in front of Le Corbusier's Villa Savoye in the 2nd picture - when does that pic date from? It looks a bit of a ruin, whereas these days it is very good shape.

 

I've rifled through my back catalogue of picture books, which I use as small scale backgrounds and found out that it featured in "An Introduction to 20th Century Architecture", first published in 1989, though I'm guessing the photo is likely older than that - perhaps up to 10-15 years or so older, as generic books like these often use library pics from any old time.

 

48491265391_c1c88dfbd0_b.jpg

Indeed, here's the book it featured in helping out with the photo shoot of the Dodge! I've always liked older, post-war photos, so finding images that match the scale and vintage of the shite in miniature is just as interesting to me as collecting the subjects. 

The cat however, is quite indifferent.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, 155V6 said:

Nice selection,the Mercedes could be a Yatming.

Bang on! It seems that there was an identical one issued by Yatming, as well as a gold/yellow one, so case solved.

 

Of course, in looking for similar things, I went down a few worm holes and found out about another manufacturer I'd known nothing about - Greek toy maker Polfi, who knocked off various (quite poor!) renditions of other company's toys:

 

Tomica+2+678.jpg

 

Citro%25C3%25ABn_CX_Model_Cars_a158fdc8-

!!!

 

 

Space_Car_Super_Model_Cars_7f1a60e5-fd34

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 

They also seemed to have a stab at making their own, including an Audi 100 (unless this is is a copy):

262924890059.jpg

 

And this excellent Opel Monza!

Z0ZAu02.jpg

 

3Bv6EM2.jpg

Strangely enough, the Monza seems to have body colour overspray over its windows, just like my Chinese knock-off 450SEL.

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, RoadworkUK said:

Quick, and somewhat gushing shoutout to Datsuncog: this is consistently my favourite thread on AS of late, and it's largely down to your fine work. Keep it up.

I'll second that.A lot of the things shown are from the period after I'd left school,and become more interested in other things,so it's good to find out about things I'd missed ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 hours ago, sierraman said:

Here’s my Laser Wheels. Missing a few though. 

Fantastic! I think I might just recognise a couple of those... ?

If I turn up any that you don't have, I'll be sure to let you know. While I have a really strong attachment to any diecast, last year's mega clear-out kinda concentrated my mind on what I really want to collect. The Lasers are awesome, but it's pure nostalgia for me - and I get as much from seeing your pics than if I still owned them.

It's great that this thread has so many folks collecting so many disparate things, and sharing that knowledge!

12 hours ago, Jon said:

This one?

corgi_classic_cars_ford_zephyr_mk2_1956.

That's the very one! My first 'proper' model, I think - a Solido 'Age d'Or' Chevrolet van (Beverley Hills Fire Department), and a Bburago 1/18 Mercedes 300 SL came not long after... like your library pic, the silver paint's worn off the hubcaps a little - and the front bench seat has come loose inside - but it's otherwise not too bad, 30 years down the line.

11 hours ago, Jon said:

Anyway, here's some more unnecessary guff I've bought recently, from a car swapmeet:

48295569242_22c4ff0bac_b.jpg

Another Play Art and for once, the wheels they've used are actually to scale and suit the model!

I'm sure this must be the same casting as the CX Datsuncog had in ambulance livery a while back but I'm not sure if that was a Play Art too? Would be interesting to see how this fared with the Matchbox CX wagon and the Majorette CX saloon.

Finally, I couldn't resist another Tomica:

There's something about their skinny wheels, sprung suspension and often unfamiliar casting choices that make them of interest, so I couldn't leave this Fleetwood Brougham sitting there. It seems like Tomica have re-released this casting but this looks to be an original one. Perfect for nipping down to the Guggenheim in.

48295568502_dbc59cd904_b.jpg

Or even for a night out, to somewhere that looks much like the Palace Hotel Ballroom, up north on Lake Wazzapamani.

I'll admit that the Caddy cost me £4 but prices for these do seem to be mildly crazy, so if I'm ever down on my heels, I know what to cash in!

The ambulance CX I found (now in Split_Pin's care) was made by Mira, and it seems to be a different casting from the Playart too - the heavy rubbing strip, cruder rear-window treatment, and cast-in badging to the rear of the white one seem different:

1723246862_20190111_092419(2).thumb.jpg.e6a7cc873371420bd93b743f5379ce44.jpg

Those Playarts are massively appealing though - much wantage!

And that Tomica Fleetwood is an absolute honey... £4 is pretty top value. I've no idea why they're so ferociously pricey on the open market either, but that's all kinds of win, right there.

Fantastically complimentary backgrounds, too - 10,000/10

10 hours ago, Jon said:

Of course, in looking for similar things, I went down a few worm holes and found out about another manufacturer I'd known nothing about - Greek toy maker Polfi, who knocked off various (quite poor!) renditions of other company's toys

Good sleuthing! Those are so dreadful they're fantastic - a whole new portal of utter tat has opened up.

The delightfully implausible Renault 17 Taxi is great, but the ripped-off MB Rolamatics Clipper fitted with a plastic box in lieu of a canopy is what takes me to the fair...

As an aside, I've also clocked some of those Brazilian Corgi Juniors on eBay this week - some fairly hefty prices sought!

I wonder if the 'window overspray' on your Merc and the Polfi Monza was some sort of half-arsed stab at tinted windows? I suppose that was coming in as a 'thing' on real-life cars in the early 80s...

8 hours ago, Noel Tidybeard said:

if they are there still i could find a home for the two yesteryear Crossleys

If it's the Market Tat MoY Crossleys in my photo you're talking about, I think he managed to move them all on as a job lot - but he seems to get a whole load in every few months, so if you're looking a Crossley or two around the £2 mark, I'll keep my eyes peeled...

 

And now... Friday tat?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...