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More About Scrounging FiguresThis is a followup to our article on Choosing Figures for your Garden Railroad". Actually, it didn't start out to be an article, just a paragraph in our Newsletter, but I figured it would take up too much room there. Actually writing this article was more of an accident than anything else. I stumbled across two unusual sources for Large Scale figures and figured I needed to report on them SOMEWHERE. So here they are.Reminds me of the woman who was asked if her teenage son was an "accident." She said, "No, but he WAS a mistake.. . . " Sorry, here's the content: One very strange source, one very cheap source, and a footnote about a very expensive but nice source. Accoutrements Figures
Subsequently I realized that someone on eBay has been buying these sets and piecing them out as "Large Scale figures," usually for $5@ starting bid and $5 shipping. You don't have to pay $10@ to get these, though, if you buy them by the set. They are silly, they are shiny plastic, and they are more toy-like than models, but you might just have a use for them. For example, if you stage a scene of a mob of railfans taking photos of a train, the Paparazzi set below could come in handy. Three silly, but potentially useful sets I found are shown in the table below. If you click on any of the photos below, you will be redirected to an Amazon page where you can actually buy these sets.
Import Your OwnAnother unusual source is a Hong-Kong-based eBay seller who manufacturers or has access to bulk "sets" of plastic figures in several scales. When I first saw these on eBay and recognized the obvious resemblance to several well-known LGB and Preiser figures, I assumed that someone had bought the name-brand figures, made rubber molds, and was making resin knockoffs of the name-brand figures. Later I heard that a garden railroad club had bought a "wholesale" quantity of their unpainted figures for a project and had cut-up, reglued, and painted enough figures to populate a city. So I thought I might as well investigate for myself.Few Figures, Many Quantity Choices - When you vist EveryDayGoodz' web page, you'll realize in a hurry that they sell a lot of different-sized packages of the same handful of figures. For example, they make ten 1:25 figures, so if you order a 20-piece set, you supposedly get two of each. On the other hand, they only make six 1:30 figures, so if you order a 20-piece set, you'll get three or four of each, and so on. So you have to pay attention. Painted or Non-Painted - You can order the same sets painted or unpainted. Since there's only about a 15% price difference between the two, I ordered the painted. After all, I reasoned, if the paint jobs suck, it's still easier to touch up a figure someone else had painted than to paint the whole thing from scratch. What I Ordered - The day I ordered, it was almost $3 cheaper to order the set in "Pounds Sterling" than it was to order it in dollars, so I ordered a set of twenty 1:25 painted figures, which cost me about $14 with shipping all the way from Hong Kong. The set should have included two of each figure shown to the right. That comes to about 70 cents a figure, which would represent a good value even if a couple were unusable. As an example, I wasn't sure I understood the "point" of the skinny girl/woman with the ridiculously short skirt and (if you trust the paint job), no shirt.
Unlike the manufacturer's photo, in which the figures are painted carefully in a nice flat finish, most of the paint is shiny, and it's not all applied very carefully. Also, some of the "flash" (extra material left from the molding process) remains on the figures, so if you want to touch them up, you should have an Xacto knife handy, too.
All of this was what I bargained for, with one exception. Instead of getting two of the standing woman with the camera, I got two extra of the skinny woman with the ridiculously short skirt. Because of the way she is molded, she is even less useful in person than she looks in the photo. Incidentally, one of these figures had her arm broken off, but that's not a huge problem. Second in relative uselessness is the girl with the cookies or whatever. I can't see using more than one of these anywhere on my railroad. Benchwarmers - I was glad to get all of the sitting people that were supposed to come with the set, since I would like to populate some of my coaches. Also, there's no compelling reason not to hack-saw some of the standing people's legs off and use them, too. Or maybe I could order a 100-piece set, keep the benchwarmers, and sell the figures I don't need at the next train show. Ooops, I just gave some of you ideas . . . . Club Hint - The best use for these might be for club purchases. The cost for figure goes down a little every time you increase the size of the package. So if you buy a pack of 100, you're getting them for about .50 each. It's hard to beat that. . . . Finding the Figures - EveryDayGoodz sells figures in a wide range of sizes. Once you know what sizes they have, the easiest way to find the sizes you need is to go to their web page and enter the size in the search box. That said, here are the links for the most useful sizes they have for bigger-than-HO readers:
Note: I have no business relationship with EveryDayGoodz at all, except that I have bought some of their product. If you order something from them, pay by PayPal, so you have recourse if something doesn't work out. I HAVE asked them to consider adding 1:20 figures to their offerings.
Frequent Garden Railways contributor Kevin strong recently reminded me of some of the nicest figures you can get, from $10@ unpainted to $133@ finely detailed like the fine fellow at the right. Check out http://poe.o-honua.com/orderform.html
. Thanks, Kevin
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