Sunday, 23 June 2024

Corgi Tourist

 


A delightful product arrived this week from an auction in Kent. This would appear to date from late 1967, maybe more like 1968, as the Commer Camera Van seen in the image was not issued until December 1967 and the Lancia Fulvia only a few months earlier. It is a case which, as well as carrying up to 18 models, opens up to a garage service station and car park scene so that we could play with our Corgi Toys while away from home

 


It's made of strong card covered with Corgi-blue vinyl with a black plastic carrying handle.



I have only just realised that the 'Corgi toys' label on the right shown above is not just a label but a sign that can be placed on the roof of the service station. There is also an interesting reference to Corgi Cards which sound like something I would very much like to try and find if, indeed, they were, in fact, ever issued. I have found some issued in 1971 by Devlin which were included in packs of Sweet Cigarettes but, so far, none that might have been available in 1968. That might explain why I have yet to see one of these cases with any of the cards of the type described included



This case appears never to have been used at all, with the original stickers still in the John Dickinson & Co Ltd semi-transparent envelope they were supplied in.


The fuel pumps still have their display stickers.


Of course, I couldn't resist adding a few of my models to the display!



Of particular fascination for me, and the reason I hoped to acquire this item, is something extra that was included in the sale. It looks like an announcement or a draft Press Release maybe from Woolf Christie Laing & Partners to Mettoy Playcraft (Sales) Ltd in Euston Road, London. It has to be some sort of draft advertisement. The firm were, at around that time, agents for Fiat promotional work in the UK but I have been unable to find much more about them so far. It would seem reasonable to assume that Corgi, or Mettoy, were clients and this was an example of some early thoughts on how to promote the Corgi Tourist pack.

The text has a reference which, to my mind, suggests a date of March 1969. That seems quite a bit later than most other sellers say this might have been made available so maybe I'm wrong about that - or perhaps this is a later effort to improve sales. It certainly was not a big seller as few are now around on the market.


On the back of the draft press release is a photograph of the product. This is, however, missing a red 'bridge' which I have in mine. I am guessing that this fits over one edge of the box and allows us to drive our cars onto this layout.

At about 18" by 10" by 4" this is quite a big item - bigger than I had expected from the pictures I had seen before. With a full compliment of cars it would have been quite a weight too!

The price quoted 39/11d is one old penny short of £2, which is quite reasonable for a parent but beyond most of us receiving only pocket money at the time. I do not recall seeing any advertisements for this, and certainly not the item itself being clutched in any little hands that I saw on my holidays or outings and it does seem to be quite a scarce item.

Prices seem to range from around £100 for a slightly worn example to £400+ for something like new. If anyone is interested in acquiring this one, with the correspondence, get in touch. I can also fill it with the Corgis of your choice - for a fee, of course!

If you'd like a challenge, see if you can identify all the models illustrated, including those in the box!


Saturday, 15 June 2024

Artificial lack of intelligence

Have you noticed the spread of flowery language across sites like Ebay? Take this example:
This Corgi Jenson's Blue Morris Mini Minor Scale 1:43 diecast car is a must-have for collectors and fans of vintage vehicles. The car is beautifully crafted with intricate details and a stunning blue colour that is sure to catch the eye. The 1:43 scale makes it a perfect addition to any collection, and the code 3 ensures that it is a rare find.

The car is made by the well-known brand Corgi, and features the Morris vehicle make. It is a contemporary manufacture and falls under the category of toys and games, diecast and vehicles, and cars, trucks and vans. Add this unique and charming diecast car to your collection today.

As well as the model being artificial, which, to his or her credit, the seller does acknowledge may be a possibility, although it would have been better if they'd said certainty rather than possibility, the whole impression given by the phrasing of this advertisement is bizarre.

On the one hand it is grammatically correct and seems quite uplifting. But it has that unworldly quality, as if spoken by one of the androids featured in the Humans TV series or the film Ex Machina. It's almost unnerving.

Not being able to spell Jensen's made me smile, though, which just goes to show that AI can't do much about human low intelligence!

I do hope that it is now clear that these Jensen's Minis are all just normal Minis with some transfers added by a dealer or, indeed, anyone, as they reproduction transfers are easy to get hold of now (and there even used to be sheets of originals doing the rounds). There is just one Jensen's special issue and that's the light blue Hillman Imp.





Sunday, 9 June 2024

Corgi toys @ 60: A bus, a Buick, two giraffes and a Driving School car

 

June 1964 was a busy month for your local Corgi toy store.


Chipperfields Circus fans had something they'd need to collect when Corgi found yet another use for the Bedford cab casting and added a large and small giraffe to the box as well. This would later appear with the bigger truck-type wheels as well as getting a change of colour for the Big Daktari set many many years later. An odd little model that would stick around for ages, #508 Bedford Giraffe Transporter.


This was the month when a double decker bus would appear on many of our layouts and displays. #468 would be around about as long as the Giraffe Transporter. The first issue was the one with the Corgi banners and normal shaped free-spinning wheels. Whilst most of the world got the red London bus, Australians got a three-coloured #468, a very hard to find model now on this side of the planet, and probably there too.


In future years the red edition would get cast wheels and a whole host of other banners, the most common one being Outspan Oranges. It would retain the two jewelled lights for many years too, losing them at around the time that Whizzwheels get fitted but you will find editions with and without them but still with cast wheels. The lady conductor stays until the later Whizzwheels days too. 


A big favourite at the time was the Austin A60 Driving School motor, #236. You could steer this, with proper steering as on the Bentley and Mercedes, far superior to the swivelling axle affair that Dinky made, and it made a great toy. You really could 'drive' it, although preferably on hard surfaces rather than thick carpet as it had one of the smallest ground clearance of any Corgi Toy! The small wheels and the room needed to house the steering mechanism meant that the bottom of the car more or less scraped along the road and the poor suspension at the front didn't help.

That big red thing on the roof did look a bit ridiculous but worse was to come in future years with Corgi's Driving School motors.


Here in the UK we got the RHD version in pale blue and it was some considerable time later that I discovered that most of the rest of the world were getting a darker blue edition, #255, with left hand drive!


Lastly, June 1964 sees a real classic Corgi issue - the beautiful Buick Riviera. The previous American motor had been the Chevrolet Sting Ray in August 1963 so it was a big thing to have another remarkable looking model on the shelves. We also get those lovely spoked wheels again and lots of chrome and wonderful lights! Well, Trans-o-lite lights, that is. This time we get them not only at the front but red ones at the back too with the inside of the car hidden by the interior probably filled with pieces of plastic tubing. This was such a cool idea and we would spend ages hold our fingers over the panels back or front to turn off then on the lights. Nothing opened on the car but we didn't mind. It had nice soft suspension and felt like it was going really fast as it was pushed along.


First #245 issues were in pale solid blue and metallic gold. Later we would see metallic blue, all with spoked wheels until the later 1960s when cast wheels started to be fitted. It will be mostly the metallic blue or a more turquoise shade that gets the cast wheels. Gold models with cast wheels are to be found too, although not as common but the real surprise for me was to find some pale blue models with them too. They are definitely scarce.






All the Buicks had a grey plastic towbar. The first issues had a complex-looking 'grab' type which, in theory, could attach itself to tow something by reversing up to it. That was replaced at some fairly early point with a button style, used on several other models too, and less prone to getting damaged. Many models lose their hooks as there was not a great deal that the Buick could tow at the time. There would be a Riviera Gift Set in December but if you only wanted the boat and trailer you'd have to wait until this time next year! As a consequence, many hooks got bent, broken or deliberately removed as the car looked so much nicer without one!

There are also a few around with gold grille and bumpers and, in this instance, probably a factory sample in a much deeper metallic shade.





Corgi Model Club: Chrysler Imperial

 Here's the latest issue from the Corgi Model Club, the Chrysler Imperial, #246 with the surprise in the boot.


I don't have an original to hand to compare it with but I do remember the model well as I bought one for myself in August 1965 when it came out and remember being a bit disappointed with the 'surprise'. OK, so you could open the boot and take out the golf caddy. You could put it back again. But that was it, the wheels on the caddy didn't turn and it just sort of sat there. I have also very little recollection of the two figures, possibly because the small lady may have fallen out shortly after opening the box never to be seen again after mum hoovered the carpet.


This was a big model, heavy and very, very square-looking. Some huge two-door vehicle, for sure. It didn't have the charm of the Chevrolet Impala which was issued at the same time in classic coffee and cream two-tone finish with sparkling chrome of the old sort, The Imperial was the first, I think, to have the front grille and both bumpers made of solid bright metal as opposed to chrome plated plastic. The Jaguar Mk X had a similar idea but the metal was not as shiny like this one.



I didn't try pressing down on the front to open the bonnet. A little pressure at the back of the bonnet near the screen lifts the front edge slightly. Whilst suspension does seem to have survived on these models in original form I am not going to take any risks!



It really is very well-finished and looks just like I remember the original, with the chalky blue interior. Mine was a chalky-green colour but I know both were available.


The cast wheels are good. Early releases did have normal shaped wheels and can be valuable so I was hoping they might do that version and, of course, we all hoped there might be a kingfisher blue edition! To be fair, that was supposed to be a Bermuda Taxi replacement and had a hole in the rear to take the roof thing so the few that did make it to dealers were really a different model and the club probably did the right thing by reproducing this first. I am pretty sure we'll see the other one in due course now that the investment's been made and the casting is all done. The addition of a small hole and tweaking the interior is no big cost, assuming Corgi decide to get it right.



I honestly cannot fault this reproduction. I do wonder about the colour on first getting it as it seems a shade deeper than my mine was but that maybe the lighting. Similarly, the rear bumper definition is slightly different in these photos of my old one but, again, that may be just the lighting.















This particular model never really made my list of favourites. It was a bit hard to drive around corners on my layout with its quite tough suspension and the fat doors were a little unattractive. For me, this seemed to have a few signs of cost-cutting, with the cast dashboard and how the screen was fitted, which always looked a bit like it had just been replaced!

This reproduction, however, will be just what fans of the Imperial will have been waiting for and it will certainly look good on display.




Thursday, 6 June 2024

Corgi Model Club do the Batman

 This will please a lot of collectors and no doubt there will be double sales too as the Corgi Model Club have announced that they will be issuing a replica of the first 1966 edition of the Batmobile in matt black finish for members only in or around November 2024.


There will also be a gloss black version which can be purchased by anyone from the online store later this year.

This approach is similar to that for the next James Bond Aston Martin, due a few months later where the members will receive the 270 model with silver grille and bumpers, with the more common gold grille and bumpers variant being available from the store. No doubt the vast majority of us will be buying both each time!

I am also expecting there to be more issues promoted by Corgi directly, rather than the Club, of new variations of existing Club issues. It must surely be considerably cheaper to produce a few models in different finishes and maybe slight adaptation using existing castings than to design from the start. We have seen and will see several along these lines from the Club itself in respect of new issues: Land Rover Breakdown Truck / Land Rover, Corgi's Land Rover Breakdown Truck and the Club's Public address Vehicle,  VW 1200 East Africa Safari / European Police Car, Oldsmobile Sherriff's Car / HQ Staff Car, Chevrolet Impala Taxi / Fire Chief / Patrol Car, Walls Ice Cream Van (Musical) / Non-Musical, Mini Cooper Monte Carlo / Sun Rally and James Bond (gold) / (silver) have already appeared or are in the programme. Colour changes and some simple adaptations of some others are surely going to come too as we have seen with the four other models already issued separately by Corgi.