tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3985121092777596782.post2835949010812454580..comments2024-03-26T08:09:21.773+01:00Comments on Tiny Tin Men: Imaginations in 42 mm (14)Bart Vettershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13113805481100294725noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3985121092777596782.post-71549958117751545032019-12-14T12:39:24.470+01:002019-12-14T12:39:24.470+01:00Thank you for identifying these figures! Interesti...Thank you for identifying these figures! Interesting ... I'll have to paint them in their original intended uniforms after all ;-)Phil Dutréhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13607941040736764291noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3985121092777596782.post-64866013183854791922019-12-12T15:05:49.061+01:002019-12-12T15:05:49.061+01:00Hi!
This are castings from a SCAD mould from 1975...Hi!<br /><br />This are castings from a SCAD mould from 1975. A small series of rubber home casting moulds from a company named 'SCAD Apex Spiel und Hobby GmbH, Nürnberg'. The Figure here is mould number 202, labeled 'Cuirassier of the Brandenburg Regiment'. The Series had only 25 moulds and produced Figures for the Napoleonic Wars and the French-German War from 1870/71. Nice moulds, nice figures with a lot of details but the series was very incomplete.<br /><br />The Company folded like so much others with the downturn of the 'creative hobby market' at the beginning of the 80s.<br /><br />There are signs that the figures that were used to make the moulds may be have been licenced from a french miniature series. But nobody knows.<br /><br />rwAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com