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Name 5 iconic Toys
#51
(17-08-2020, 17:59)Onetruebaggie Wrote: The NatWest piggies! When I was about 17-18, my mom did a car boot sale and I said she could take my collection of pigs (5 at the time). She came back with them as a collector said at the time they were worth £250-350 in good condition, which they were. I have now kept them and nearly 35 years on, their in a box somewhere for my family heirlooms. I've got quite a soft spot for them and hopefully they'll be worth a mint one day! We can dream!!

COYB

I should check and be careful, some are worth more (a lot more) then others. Keep them safe  Thumb up
2020 the year the bubble burst  Doh
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#52
airfix models?
i assembled the HMS Belfast when i was 9 took a while
and decided to have a bath with it
totally fell apart

anyway i recently re purchased it and completed it 
and i wont`t be putting it in the bath
@Kristien 1965
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#53
Anyone else get the big Airfix Saturn 5b rocket, moon landing one. Huge that thing was for a model.
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#54
(18-08-2020, 10:03)Salopbaggie Wrote: Anyone else get the big Airfix Saturn 5b rocket, moon landing one.  Huge that thing was for a model.

Yep that was a thing of beauty. 
They also did the moon lander if my memory is still functioning.
2020 the year the bubble burst  Doh
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#55
(18-08-2020, 12:15)Blue Baggie Wrote:
(18-08-2020, 10:03)Salopbaggie Wrote: Anyone else get the big Airfix Saturn 5b rocket, moon landing one.  Huge that thing was for a model.

Yep that was a thing of beauty. 
They also did the moon lander if my memory is still functioning.

If memory serves they did two moon landers, one was a stand alone model in a bigger scale, the other was actually part of and fitted in the Saturn 5.
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#56
(20-08-2020, 00:24)Salopbaggie Wrote:
(18-08-2020, 12:15)Blue Baggie Wrote:
(18-08-2020, 10:03)Salopbaggie Wrote: Anyone else get the big Airfix Saturn 5b rocket, moon landing one.  Huge that thing was for a model.

Yep that was a thing of beauty. 
They also did the moon lander if my memory is still functioning.

If memory serves they did two moon landers, one was a stand alone model in a bigger scale, the other was actually part of and fitted in the Saturn 5.

Yes your correct sir.
2020 the year the bubble burst  Doh
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#57
This has been a fascinating read for me considering my tender age in comparison to some of you chaps. <cough> Vicar <cough>

I grew up in the nineties and early 2000's and I remember that I used to love Action Men. I used to have a new one every month pretty much. My late Mother also bought me a big teddy bear when I was like 11, which I chose in the shop, that we called Arthur and I still have him now 18 years later. She even created a backstory for him and how he came to be in the shop when she bought him. Having Arthur is still one of my favourite memories from my childhood because it reminds me of my Mum, the way her mind worked and the world that she created that she could escape to.

When it comes to toys later on in my childhood, physical toys were replaced by electric toys and eventually games consoles. I remember my older brother introducing me to computer games and we still play them together now.
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#58
(20-08-2020, 15:37)WBA-Josh Wrote: This has been a fascinating read for me considering my tender age in comparison to some of you chaps. <cough> Vicar <cough>

I grew up in the nineties and early 2000's and I remember that I used to love Action Men. I used to have a new one every month pretty much. My late Mother also bought me a big teddy bear when I was like 11, which I chose in the shop, that we called Arthur and I still have him now 18 years later. She even created a backstory for him and how he came to be in the shop when she bought him. Having Arthur is still one of my favourite memories from my childhood because if reminds me of my Mum in her element, the way her mind worked and the world that she created that she could escape to.

When it comes to toys later on in my childhood, physical toys were replaced by electric toys and eventually games consoles. I remember my older brother introducing me to computer games and we still play them together now.

I think it was about 1967/68 when I had my first Action Man, i remember having it before we won the cup in 1968, because Action Man scored that goal over and over again that evening.

Its lovely when you have a toy like your Teddy, I remember about 30 years ago I had been in Switzerland on business and had not had the chance to pick up a little something for my son, so I got him a little Swiss Air dog at the airport, as he got bigger he passed it on to his little brother, who it turn passed it on to his little sister. As you can imagine after 30 years of love he was looking a little grubby, so recently my daughter who had him full restored before passing him back to my eldest son for his first born and the saga continues.

(20-08-2020, 16:09)Salopbaggie Wrote:
(20-08-2020, 15:37)WBA-Josh Wrote: This has been a fascinating read for me considering my tender age in comparison to some of you chaps. <cough> Vicar <cough>

I grew up in the nineties and early 2000's and I remember that I used to love Action Men. I used to have a new one every month pretty much. My late Mother also bought me a big teddy bear when I was like 11, which I chose in the shop, that we called Arthur and I still have him now 18 years later. She even created a backstory for him and how he came to be in the shop when she bought him. Having Arthur is still one of my favourite memories from my childhood because if reminds me of my Mum in her element, the way her mind worked and the world that she created that she could escape to.

When it comes to toys later on in my childhood, physical toys were replaced by electric toys and eventually games consoles. I remember my older brother introducing me to computer games and we still play them together now.

I think it was about 1967/68 when I had my first Action Man, i remember having it before we won the cup in 1968, because Action Man scored that goal over and over again that evening.

Its lovely when you have a toy like your Teddy, I remember about 30 years ago I had been in Switzerland on business and had not had the chance to pick up a little something for my son, so I got him a little Swiss Air dog at the airport, as he got bigger he passed it on to his little brother, who it turn passed it on to his little sister.  As you can imagine after 30 years of love he was looking a little grubby, so recently my daughter had him full restored before passing him back to my eldest son for his first born and the saga continues.
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#59
We did have games consoles when I was a kid, but you had to crank them up by hand, and beating the boss was a bit trickier if the needle stuck in the groove. Still, we had hours of fun playing Subsonic The Hedgehog, Super Mussolini Brothers, Grand Theft Horse-o, Hedley Verity's Ashes Cricket and Command & Conquer: Anglo-Zanzibar War (though I always felt that was a bit of a rip-off considering it was only one level long).
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"I would rather spend a holiday in Tuscany than in the Black Country, but if I were compelled to choose between living in West Bromwich or Florence, I should make straight for West Bromwich." - J.B. Priestley
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#60
That's lovely Salop.

Have you tried any of the current consoles Ska'd? I'd highly recommend buying a Playstation or Xbox to play Red Dead Redemption 2. It's a sandbox (open world) game about a group of outlaws in 1899 trying to escape the people after them including the Pinkerton Detective Agency.
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