waynepoo
Colonel
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2012
- Messages
- 9,729
Cheeky sod, I'm relying on the movie thread.:wink2::wink2::wink2:{sm4}{sm4}I hope you are not relying on this post to get promoted as it is not long for the forum!
Wayne.
Cheeky sod, I'm relying on the movie thread.:wink2::wink2::wink2:{sm4}{sm4}I hope you are not relying on this post to get promoted as it is not long for the forum!
Cheeky sod, I'm relying on the movie thread.:wink2::wink2::wink2:{sm4}{sm4}
Wayne.
I have a one BIG word (sorry two) reply to that - CLIVE PLAMER!.Use of insulting language - that's another strike!
Here is a filty, disgusting, in the gutter Australian insult for you -
You like soccer!
I have a one BIG word (sorry two) reply to that - CLIVE PLAMER!.
{sm2}{sm2}{sm2}{sm2}
Wayne.
I have a one BIG word (sorry two) reply to that - CLIVE PLAMER!.
{sm2}{sm2}{sm2}{sm2}
Wayne.
Tom, mate you'll be pleased to know that we nappy people met up today at the Sergeant Majors, at one stage there was six of us there and with some other paying customers you couldn't swing a cat in the place (it ain't that big a place). But my point is we out number you by two to one, if that is any sort of point, any way the S/M did a brisk trade.:rolleyes2:Now now Jack and Wayne settle down, go down to the local TS store and kiss and make up ^&grin
To add my 10 cents worth to this thread, i think you would have to categorize this thread further to define the overall hobby. If you include every brand and item that's on this forum then yeah, i think there would have to be millions of collectors around the world, but if it's just 1:30 or 1:32 matt or glossy metal figurines and military vehicles, then i think it's a relatively small group of people. Im pretty sure here in Darwin there are very few people that collect the later and i think this is the case Australia wide. I know my local dealer in Brisbane doesn't know of anyone else other than one other person in Darwin that collects metal figurines.
Tom
Tom, mate you'll be pleased to know that we nappy people met up today at the Sergeant Majors, at one stage there was six of us there and with some other paying customers you couldn't swing a cat in the place (it ain't that big a place). But my point is we out number you by two to one, if that is any sort of point, any way the S/M did a brisk trade.:rolleyes2:
Wayne.
"Now now Jack and Wayne settle down, go down to the local TS store and kiss and make up"
I'm pretty sure I saw this happening up the back behind the Nile boat.
"I didn't know Brett was running a Porn shop as well Larso??"
Well not quite, though it must look like it from the outside judging by all the men who go in trying to shade their faces.
Well, Chris, here is where we differ. I don't cast such a wide net. I agree that metal, plastic, composition, 54mm, 60mm (and other sizes), glossy, and matte, qualify. However, I do not personally believe that war gamers, for example, are toy soldier collectors, per se. As for GI Joe--they are dolls for boys as conceived by the marketing department of the company that introduced them to supplement the dolls for girls they were already producing. Your comment that "then you exclude glossy collectors..." is at variance with my view that the 54mm glossy collector is the traditional, historic heart of 20th century toy soldier collecting. That would be the last group I would exclude. I was collecting before Andy Nielson, by accident, launched the 60mm matte craze that is now so popular with collectors; I had a fairly decent collection of K&C glossy, 54mm sets. So, the 60mm matte collectors are johnny come latelies in the long history of toy soldier collecting. But I am glad they are here.
I believe your estimate of several million is wishful thinking---I wish it were true. I was using the subscriptions to the two afore mentioned toy soldier magazines as a way of gaging interest in the hobby. I figure that some collectors subscribe to one of them, others subscribe to the other, while many do not subscribe to either. So I combined both subscription bases and doubled to get a wild guess as to the number of toy soldier collectors. One can also consider the attendance at the Toy Soldier Shows. On average, it is somewhere around 1,000 for the larger shows. In fact, I am hoping it will be that high for next week's West Coaster---it has been about half of that number for the last couple of years.[/QUOTE
Nope, I guess I aint a toy soldier collector.25,000 troops and Not a glossie to be had. I wonder if HG Wells was a toy soldier collector? He played war games I hear.Made and painted some of his own figures too.
Well, Chris, here is where we differ. I don't cast such a wide net. I agree that metal, plastic, composition, 54mm, 60mm (and other sizes), glossy, and matte, qualify. However, I do not personally believe that war gamers, for example, are toy soldier collectors, per se. As for GI Joe--they are dolls for boys as conceived by the marketing department of the company that introduced them to supplement the dolls for girls they were already producing. Your comment that "then you exclude glossy collectors..." is at variance with my view that the 54mm glossy collector is the traditional, historic heart of 20th century toy soldier collecting. That would be the last group I would exclude. I was collecting before Andy Nielson, by accident, launched the 60mm matte craze that is now so popular with collectors; I had a fairly decent collection of K&C glossy, 54mm sets. So, the 60mm matte collectors are johnny come latelies in the long history of toy soldier collecting. But I am glad they are here.
I believe your estimate of several million is wishful thinking---I wish it were true. I was using the subscriptions to the two afore mentioned toy soldier magazines as a way of gaging interest in the hobby. I figure that some collectors subscribe to one of them, others subscribe to the other, while many do not subscribe to either. So I combined both subscription bases and doubled to get a wild guess as to the number of toy soldier collectors. One can also consider the attendance at the Toy Soldier Shows. On average, it is somewhere around 1,000 for the larger shows. In fact, I am hoping it will be that high for next week's West Coaster---it has been about half of that number for the last couple of years.[/QUOTE
Nope, I guess I aint a toy soldier collector.25,000 troops and Not a glossie to be had. I wonder if HG Wells was a toy soldier collector? He played war games I hear.Made and painted some of his own figures too.
That is an impressive number of figures you have there Fubar. You must be a war gamer with that number of figures. I know several war gamers in Southern California who have thousands of small-scale figures that they paint. They regularly meet to play war games with them. Several of them are members of the group I founded eight years ago, the Southern California Toy Soldier Collectors Society. Not one of them has ever bought or owns a set of toy soldiers, as we use the term in the hobby, to the best of my knowledge. I don't consider them toy soldier collectors. I am sure there are others out there who are both war gamers and toy soldier collectors (Warrior?). Although I am getting up there age wise, H. G. Wells was before my time, so I will defer to you on that question.
I am not sure what you meant by "Not a glossy to be had" since I included matte, plastic, composition. etc. in my earlier comment.