
toyboxdx toy blog brog: is graceful art of daily expressing japanese toy
February 25, 2010
February 21, 2010
Nakajima: Ready to Rumble
Bought my first Nakajima Tiger Mask Standard Size Vinyls:
Great Zebra & Mr Question
I always had an eye on these crazy looking Wrestlng guys,
but didn’t dare to start collecting them. I know why!
These japanese Luchas are pure funk and you want them all ;-)
After cleaning them with all kinds of plasic & car paint cleaners
they look very good again. I also tried a Ultra sonic Cleaner
the first time for cleaning the face, boots, hands etc.
Worked very good! Only water with a bit soap, leaving
them a few minutes in the Ultra Sonic Bath and the dirt has
gone without destroying the paint.
I already won a few other of these psychadelic wrestling guys Yahoo.
The good thing is that they pop up quiet often. Only getting them
complete with all “accessories” (sash, cape, boots etc) is a bit tricky
and pushes up the price for them. The Tiger Mask Bug bite me !
More stuff etc in the BBS.
cheers all
February 14, 2010
The Collection or Warren Schwartz part 2
It was a good day.
Regan and I went to have lunch, and spend some quality time with Warren and to see a few of the recent, and remarkable finds he has picked up in the past few months.
You may recall the “infamous” article Matt and Alen reported on Warren all those years ago, on May 5th 2002.
http://www.toyboxdx.com/gallery/wc/warren2article.html
I consider this part two.
( Robot angels began to sing when Uncle W began to take out the big guns)
Coming soon!
February 1, 2010
Robot from Okinawa

Your heart races in the closing seconds.
There has been a lot of talk of grails as of late.
There are grails… Then there are Grails.
First seen in the Metal Box brog, the giant Red baron is head and shoulders above his other vinyl brothers and in actuality sits nicely in scale with the Villian Machinders at 18 inches tall.
http://www.metal-box.jp/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/blog090520a.jpg
But where did it come from and is this in fact a store display as some have suggested? Since there are so few to begin with, and as of yet no packaging has been located, that debate will certainly continue for some time.

But perhaps Warren’s email exchange (below) with the original owner might shed some light onto the origins of this amazing toy.

“Dear Bev,
I’m very excited about this piece ~ thank you so much for listing ‘him’.
I would appreciate it if you could give me any information about how you came by it –
For instance, are you a toy dealer? Was it part of a lot? Was it a gift?
Do you collect or have other Japanese robots?
Or do you have particular ones which you plan to auction in the future?
Did you travel to Japan to get him?
Who owned him before you did… i.e. what is his ‘provenance?’
Any other information you have would be great! And finally, thank you for putting this up for auction!
All the best,
Warren.
“Dear Warren:
I’m happy to tell you about this toy. It’s not a particularly unusual story. We lived on Okinawa from 1973 to 74′. My husband was with the US Dependent Schools there. Our kids were age 8, 10 and 12.
Our 8 year old liked to watch Japanese cartoons on TV and liked to spend his allowance in the shops in our village of Ishikawa. Someone asked me about how he was packaged when we got him but we believe there was none because the stores were so small, they probably took it out of the box. Actually, they weren’t stores that you could go into at all – just the front of a building where the family lived in the back. At night they would have a metal door that would cover the shelves.
From Okinawa, we went to Germany for 4 years and the US taxpayers shipped all of our belongings, including 5 large boxes of toys, around the world for us. Finally we settled in Litchfield, Illinois near where my husband and I grew up and we have been storing the toys, narrowed down to 3 boxes, for the next 30 years.
In November, I decided that it was time to clean the storeroom. So, our son was forced to decide which ones he really wanted to keep and the rest had to go. He’s still sentimental about the toys because it was a wonderful adventure in the life of our family. Mostly, I think he just kept some of the smaller German toys. Since the 2 robots were large, they were the first to go. I listed the red robot at $4.99 because it never occurred to me that anyone would want it. I hope he is a good addition to your collection.
Sincerely,
Bev
“Dear Bev,
Thank you so much. It explains the circumstances of the toy, and why there is no box, and how it came into your possession. You’re right, it’s not particularly unusual that you were stationed in Japan and your son enjoyed toys bought from his allowance. But the environment in which the toy was sold is interesting to me.
My wife has been a member of the Boston Symphony for 35 years, and because the orchestra had a conductor who was Japanese he took the orchestra to Japan on tour. In 1986 I accompanied her for the first time and spent time in a number of cities visited by the tour. During rehearsals I would roam the town centers where the toy shops caught my eye, and particularly the shops which had vintage robots from the golden era of Japanese toys. I collected many of them, and shipped them back home where I have an expanding collection. I am an architect in Boston and have fallen in love with the forms, colors, and history of the Japanese creative mind, and the toys!
All the best,
Warren”.
“Dear Warren:
I mailed the robot this morning. I sent it parcel post (which should be 6 – 10 days delivery time) with insurance. By the way, since you said that you were interested in it’s “environment”, the name of those little stores were “mama-san” stores. Because Ishikawa was a small town, that’s all we had.
Bev”

Scale as compared to missile firing red Baron
There is something to be said about the rarity of a toy, and perhaps the story behind it’s manufacture and company history. But to me there is something even more charming about the actual “history” and story each of these objects have through their journey through the years. Much like children’s names written on the bottom of the feet of many vinyls, there is a humanity that goes with this hobby that can be sometime forgotten if you don’t look carefully. Much like all of us, each of these toys has their own unique past.
The auction certainly was an exciting one, and the toy is really a work of art, but I find it even more beautiful knowing its humble beginnings, and who and where “he” came from.

January 30, 2010
Tekkaman vs Tekkaman
Nakajima Tekkaman Mini Size versus Eidai Grip Tekkaman.
Which Tekkaman is the better toy? I’m trying to find an answer today.
I know that any serious robot collector asked himself that question ;-)
Lets start with the Box.
The Nakajima Small Size version comes with a very beautiful box, same artwork style as
his bigger “standard” size brother. Ok, same artwork style as all Nakajima gokin boxes.
Nice combination of illustration-style on the front and foto elements on the other sides.
The Grip Tekkaman comes in the usual Grip “plastic-dome” box, with “instruction sheet art”
on the back and a nice colorful illustration inside.
Two different styles of packaging.
I really like the Grip “you-see-what-you-get” style, but the Nakajima box is a bit more “practical”
and the artwork is very nice…with “practical” I refer to the very small size of the box. Thats an
advantage when your display is cramped with robots ;-)
So I would say 1:0 for Nakajima.
Quality & Details
Both Tekkamans are made nearly enirely out of metal. Only the heads and
the forearms of the Grip version are plastic. The build quality of them is
very good. Also they are both very movable, with all the joints they have.
Detailing is very nice too.
So, in this category there is no real winner. 1 point for both.
Nakajima still in front with 2:1.
Now Accessories & Action Features
The Nakajima Tekkaman comes with a yellow whip and a stylish golden stand.
Grip’s Tekkaman only with his silver spear and 2 plastic fists/forearms.
The stand is a nice feature for displaying Tekkaman…but the fists of the Grip
are worth one point! You could shoot them.
2:2, we have a tie.
Sounds like a happy end? Yes, why not.
So the question which one is the better toy is answered. If you like Tekkaman,
you have to buy them both. If you have another opinion, let me hear it in the BBS.
January 27, 2010
Gai-Lightan
Actually this was an auction for a lighter, where the buyer wanted to know the scale as compared to five deadstock GA -51s
January 25, 2010
Dim Sum-mit
This past Sunday, Alen wanted to get together with a few locals to hand off and unveil the ever so sexy Nekosaur Sofubi.
Of course we were all excited to get ours and also have an opportunity to catch up and eat some killer dim sum in the interim.
Alen( “Godfather”) , Warren( “Uncle”) , Josh B, Melanie, Mason, Jessie, Dave, Sanjeev, Regan and I all met at 11 am in Woburn at China Pearl, for what proved to be some killer nerd talk and devastating DX pork buns.
Warren and Dave confer while the Nekosaurs keep watch.
It was a great setting to exchange toys, have show and tell, and discuss future plans for world domination through toys.
Alen and Sanjeev discuss how to steal Warren’s Ultra “Father” when “Uncle” is not looking.
Warren of course, brought rare and wonderful toys to share, among which was a beautiful clear Ultraman Father vinyl, as well as Red Baron clear vinyl on card and an AMAZING Calculator Robot with actual Doll/Teddy bear eyes. This of course gave everyone great ideas for future Neko offerings and made great table displays for our ever increasing plates of Dim sum. Although I threw out a few ideas/concepts that raised eyebrows and certainly made a few people not so subtly inch their chairs away.
Apparently no one wants a clear sofubi with sea monkeys in it. ;-/
“No”…”I am your Father”.
One major topic of discussion was the “Orange Variant” Bazolar. A topic brought up a few weeks back which certainly intrigued more than a few collectors. It was after a little time that the general consensus was that it was simply a factor of age, sunlight, paint or post modification, and not an official mutant of years gone by. Somewhat disappointing for a Gaiking completist like myself, but cool looking none the less.
Josh tries to hypnotize me with the Bazolar
While Alen almost mistakes the toy for a Pork bun.
Warren then astounds us with the Teddy bear eyes sofubi.
It is times like this that remind me of how many solid folks there are in the community , and how the toys now are simply side distractions to the friendships that have cultivated over the decade or so together.
January 24, 2010
Grip: Condorman
First time I got in contact with Condorman was 1981, the Disney movie.
Loved that movie as the kid, specially the black Porsche’s of the villians.
But that movie had nothing to do with the Condorman…
…of the japanese tokuatsu series from 1975. Created by Kohan Kawauchi (aka Yasunori Kawauchi),
who also created the first japanese superhero television show in 1958 , Moonlight Mask (Gekko Kamen).
Lets start with the little Grip Condorman!
Condorman comes in the typical Grip stype packaging. The one I bought
only came with a small Grip catalog. There are 2 more Condorman toys
made by Grip. The Mach Condor (Condorman’s cool Datsun) and the
Condorman Base.
He’s made out of diecast and his head is soft vinyl. The quality of this little
toy is great. Arms & legs are movable and he has many nice details.
That’s it for the little Condorman.
You still could get him for small money…go and get one!
More fotos in the BBS.
January 23, 2010
The Sounds of Old T-Rex
At a party thrown by mecha-maniac blogger Yaco last night, the T-Rex folks were kind enough to show us the intricately sculpted 1/60 Zentraedi figures that they will be selling at next month’s WonderFest. Designed to be in scale with Yamato’s similarly-scaled toys (and sculpted by the same guy who designed Yamato’s revised 1/60 YF-21, Ghost Booster, and Moto Slave toys), they are cast in resin (colored as-is, as seen in the photos above). They’ll be going for 5,000 yen a piece.
Good luck getting your hands on one: their one-day license limits them to selling just twenty units. “They’ll disappear during the ‘dealer dash,'” lamented Yaco as we drunkenly attempted to fit the prototype into a Matchbox Officer’s Battle Pod he had inexplicably lugged to Kabukicho for the occasion. Meanwhile, his incredible, totally customized vintage Gakken Legioss toy wowed us with an impromptu airshow over the table. Unfortunately, this one of a kind artpiece isn’t for sale.
Grendizer go…home.
I felt I needed to add another post…there were 666 posts today in the Brog. I knew Erik’s collection was evil…
Anyway on to 667.
Last time I posted about the cost of focus. Sometimes good toys go to better homes for the right reason, and I can’t think of a better place or home for it to go to.
But I would be foolish to say like those that went before him, this won’t hurt a little. ;-)
So like any end of a good relationship, I hope to keep some photos and remember it fondly.
