garage sales

Discussion in 'Whatever' started by Slack, May 24, 2012.

  1. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

    ^^ Cheers . . . . some of them were on little springs which i assume was for putting on your car dash so they bounce around.
    I think the woman who sold them to me was Thai.
     
  2. Slack

    Slack Mini Boss

    can someone tell me what this print says and/or maybe explain a little? why is the kid hiding, what's the story here? what's up with the red stamps?

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  3. ultrakaiju

    ultrakaiju Die-Cast Staff Member

    Haha, maybe he is sneaking up to steal the sake he isn't supposed to have :) (though I think this might actually be Chinese).
     
  4. Kevlo9

    Kevlo9 Super Deformed

    Found this guy on Craigslist for silly cheap :)

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  5. ultrakaiju

    ultrakaiju Die-Cast Staff Member

    Great table Kevin. Amazing the things you can find sometimes. Also, my folks have that same gramophone or one very similar (by all outward appearances at any rate).
     
  6. Kevlo9

    Kevlo9 Super Deformed

    Nice! It was an estate sale bargain! I picked it up from the orginal owner along with 80 diamond records.
     
  7. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

    Seals are also often used on Chinese calligraphy works and Chinese paintings, usually imprinted in such works in the order (from top to bottom) of name seal, leisure seal(s), then studio seal. Owners or collectors of paintings or books will often add their own studio seals to pieces they have collected. This practice is an act of appreciation towards the work. Some artworks have had not only seals but inscriptions of the owner on them; for example, the Qianlong emperor had as many as 20 different seals for use with inscriptions on paintings he collected. Provided that it is tastefully done (for example, not obscuring the body of the painting, appropriate inscription, fine calligraphy, etc.), this practice does not devalue the painting.
     
  8. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

  9. ultrakaiju

    ultrakaiju Die-Cast Staff Member

    Haha, Andy Capp! What a great find Moog. We had an Andy Capp book when I was a kid, but I definitely think we didn't understand it (of course). What a bizarre idea to use the character as talcum powder bottle.
     
  10. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

    ^^^ Haha yeah, if Andy Capp was a real person there's no way he'd use Talcum powder. That's for soft-as-shite Southerners, he'd say.
     
  11. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

  12. greg

    greg Line of Credit

    Oh man my son would love that Cryptkeeper. There's one with the outfit at a local comic book store but wayyyyy to much money. Awesome find. The detail without the outfit is so cool.
     
  13. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

    Squishy-headed Skeletor 1981 . . . . 20p at a boot-sale :)

    I assume he had a sword and various attachments originally . . . i dont know very much about masters of the universe toys.
    . . . . although, i did watch the cartoon like every other kid my age!

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    Skeletor by The Moog Image Dump, on Flickr
     
  14. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

  15. Greasebat

    Greasebat Side Dealer

    haha! Growing up our local newspaper ran the comic, I never really understood it until I got older and got married....
     
  16. ungawa222

    ungawa222 Mini Boss

    Some great scores, moog!
    That caterpillar is fairly nightmarish!
     
  17. gutterutter

    gutterutter Toy Prince

    i loveeeee those bootleg ugly balls.
     
  18. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

    Another boot-sale buy . . . i think it was 20p.

    Does anyone remember what these are called?

    You put your fingers in four holes in the back and then you can bend the face into weird expressions. I used to have a few of these when i was a kid.

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    Squidgy Face by The Moog Image Dump, on Flickr
     
  19. ungawa222

    ungawa222 Mini Boss

    I don’t know if they’ve ever had an official name, but they’ve been made in China for decades now. I think there are three main faces in this “line”- the face above; the Angry Bald Moustache Man, used by Anthrax as their “NOT!” mascot for a time in the 80s; and a third that looks like a drunk Stan Laurel, freshly punched in the mouth. Interestingly, there have been some changes in the details and sizing of both over the years, while the basics have stayed the same (much like the Martian Popping Thing of yore versus the version produced today). The ones I had when I was a little kid look very different than the ones that I came across in the late 90s, when my son received a set, and yet another re-tooling is being sold today (apparently at Cracker Barrels all over the country… that’s where my mom bought some that she sent up for Xmas a couple years back). Wish I had comparison pics to post!
     
  20. Waiting...

    Waiting... Comment King

  21. gutterutter

    gutterutter Toy Prince

    ^ i have some zombie ones.
     
  22. greg

    greg Line of Credit

    I just bought my son one from Cracker Barrel last month in Florida. They are much thicker now so harder to move the face around.
     
  23. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

    ^^^ Yeah, thats it . . . the 'NOT' man Anthrax used is one of the versions i had as a kid.

    I also had the 'Drunk Stan Laurel' too.

    Its funny how some weird but innocuous toys last generations and never seem to fully go-away.
     
  24. Geekabilly

    Geekabilly Addicted

    They are called Flexiface but we always used to call them Puttyface Guys
     
  25. The Moog

    The Moog Die-Cast

    ^^ Cool, thanks for the info!
     

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