Sunday, January 31, 2010

Toy OTD: Nathan Jurevicius, Kid Robot's Scarygirl City Folk Figures: Crossing Guard, School Girl (2007)

Nathan Jurevicius is not only a cool illustrator, but a prolific toy designer as well! TheScarygirl City Folk collection probably isn't his latest line, but it's certainly one of his more recent ones. It's a blind boxed mini-fig series with a wide variety of characters. I only bought a couple of them, so I'll review just those two here.

Kid Robot's toys are of a consistently high quality, and this line is equally good. The sculpts capture the playful, graphically strong designs and interpret them into three dimensions very well! They're planned to be cast in multiple parts, and the assembly seams are strategically chose to blend into the design without disrupting it. The construction itself is fine, making the characters look solid. The use of materials is clever, such as the transparent plastic for the Crossing Guard's staff, and the mounting of the book stack on the School Girl's head.

The paint work is also nice and clean - there's not a ton of detail on these designs, but the color borders are sharp, small paint areas are tidy, and the broader paint areas are smooth. Details like the School Girl's eyelashes are crisp. The color palette is limited by design, not budget.

Mini-figures rarely (if ever) have articulation, so it's a non-issue here.

Balance for both designs is fine: School Girl has a back wheel to steady her; and the Crossing Guard has a broad, flat base. Mr. Jurevicius is very conscious of this aspect of manufacturing and addresses it well, regardless of the figure scale. Either small stands are included, or the designs are well balanced on their own.

Packaging for this line is terrific, both in terms of the individual boxes and the larger case. Both are heavily decorated with Mr. Jurevicius' graphics, but they're not overwhelming. The color use here is tasteful, but punchy enough to attract attention. All of the boxes are unified with a similar palette of black, pink, green and white - it's easy to keep track of this series!

There's fifteen different characters in the set, and at least two paint variants (a black-faced School Girl, and a black Jelly Cat). You can get blind boxes for $9.73 + shipping each at overkillshop.com, and a few of the characters are on eBay right now: The School Girl chase and both Jelly Cats for $19.99 + shipping each, and the Doctor for $29.99 + shipping. These prices seem a bit high, so you may want to be patient and poke around at the next Vinyl Toy Network or something. Good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Friday, November 27, 2009

Toy OTD: Bounty Hunter Plush Doll: Pete (2007)

Bounty Hunter has always been at the forefront of art toys - they arguably created the first designer toy, Kid Hunter (an appropriation/steal/homage of "Dave" from the Cap'n Crunch commercials) in 1997. Ten years later (well, twelve now), they're still at it!

I don't know if this plush is a licensed Disney product or not, but it's very nicely done. Often art toys portray a lascivious or scatological side of a cute character, but rather than repeat themselves, BxH decided to make a toy of Pete (aka 'Pegleg Pete', 'Black Pete', etc.) 'disguised' as his nemesis Mickey Mouse. Since Pete's a villain already, the take is a lighter touch, more mischievous. It's a really appealing design with loads of nice touches.

First of all, Pete's sculpted likeness is great - not simply a cold, technically accurate mimicry, but a sweet, retro-interpretation of the character... in other words, what Pete would look like as an old-school toy. The scale is a good call - a medium-sized toy that won't eat up too much space, but big enough to feel like a substantial teddy bear.

The use of materials is especially good here, with vinyl head, hands and feet - straight from the '50s plush playbook. The furry body gives Pete cuddliness, texture and volume. The fabric pants are just the right weight to make them seem baggy and ill-fitting.

BxH didn't throw anything into the packaging - they usually bag their toys, and Pete is no exception. I opened mine some time ago, but if I remember correctly, it was in an undecorated bag.

The only real minus is the balance issue - it won't stand reliably on its own, though it has a better center of gravity (not to mention the vinyl shoes) than many plushes. You'll still need to lean Pete against something in your display case, but he'll at least pose well in the process.

These plushes sold out some time ago, and I can't find any for sale online. I paid about $80-$100 for it originally, and I imagine it'll cost more than that now. Jump on that eBay favorite search, and good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Toy OTD: Michael Lau x Fingercroxx Xlarge Figure: Fxbuster (2007)

I love Michael Lau's toy work, but since his figures are getting increasingly expensive, I try to prioritize and get the designs that really stand out to me. Some of his crazychildren characters tend to blur together for me a little bit, so happily I'm not driven to get every last one! The Xlarge figures, though, had some great toys that I couldn't ignore!

This one (both from its look and its name) seems to be inspired by Ghostbuster's Sta-Puft Marshmallow Man, which starts pushing nostalgia buttons in addition to the toy and design buttons. It has touches that definitely evoke the character without turning it into a parody or a rip-off. If I remember properly, there were more than a couple color variants - different cap colors and body colors, too!

The sculpt is really strong - the shapes are crisp and intriguing enough to work without much color. There's almost no paint passes at all, but what is there is nicely done - the eye work and logo are sharp and clean. I think the cap color is dyed vinyl (as opposed to more paint), but regardless it looks great!

The packaging may not have been the greenest thing around, but it certainly is sharp looking. It's an opaque plastic blister molded in the shape of the XLARGE logo. I seem to remember mine being black, so maybe even the packages had color variants! Aside from being as hard to get into as those sealed blister packs that hold electric razors from Wal-Mart, the toy is well protected. You get a little blind-box action concerning which variant you'll get - which is pretty common for Lau figures.

This line isn't completely sold out, but if you have a specific variant that you want, it'll be tough. It looks like you can still buy this orange-circus-peanut-colored version for £45 at dpmhi.com. That variant's also for sale here at 24-kts.net for 65.00 €. I can't find anything else online right now, so you'll have to bust out an eBay Favorite Search if you want one of the other colorways. Good luck!

As is common with art toys, there's only about six points of articulation - and that's counting the hat separation. There's almost no posability at all - I think the 'joints' are more a result of manufacturing than any real desire to give the figure play value. Since the character's seated, there's no balance concerns - it's about as stable as a figure gets!

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Toy OTD: Upper Deck All Star Vinyl Figure: Brett Favre

I thought it might be interesting to post the only sports figure that I own as a Toy OTD! Generally, I find sports figures to be pretty dull - either they're poorly made, or technically impressive but not very imaginative. Fortunately, Upper Deck took notice of the designer toy movement and decided to incorporate that look into a line of sports vinyl! Sean Galloway is the artist behind the NFL toys.

His design work is certainly a breath of fresh air in the rather conservative world of sports toys - I'd say it's sort of a cross between Bruce Timm and Jack Davis. There's some nice stylization and exaggeration going on here, so it definitely made me want to support the brand!

Compared to current designer toys, this is still a pretty conservative approach, but it's a huge step in a new direction for the genre. The color work, stylization and posing are somewhat restrained, but the forms are getting sleeker and more dynamic. At eleven inches tall, the figure will definitely have a presence on your shelf, too!

The technical side is quite nice - the paint work is tight with some good subltety to set off the larger expanses. The 'grass stains' are a little half-hearted, but in general the color and paint apps are confidently executed.
The hand plants seem a bit awkward, but the construction overall is solid and clean, befitting the design. While a figure base would've been a nice bonus (green plastic with an astroturf texture?), the balance of the toy is good and makes this less of an issue than it might've been.

The packaging is slick and sturdy, though not particularly eye-catching. While it's great that the box design prominently features the original design turnaround and opens to reveal the actual figure, it still comes across as more cluttered than punchy.

This was one of the early figures released in this line (a limited edition of 1000), and now there's more variants available - there's a white jersey version limited to 1500 pieces (with a helmet), a black and gold edition of 250 pieces, and a retro uniform edition of 500. I think I originally paid sixty dollars for mine, which I think was pretty close to retail. It's long sold out from Upper Deck, unfortunately, but you can get this version on sale at imaginegate.com for $29.99 + shipping! The white jersey version goes for $29.39 at underbid.com, the retro variant sells for $74.95 at bigboyztoyz.com, and the black and gold colorway is on eBay right now for $90 + shipping. Bargain hunters can get the white and retro versions loose on eBay right now for $21.99 + $13.45 shipping. Good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Toy OTD: Mindstyle, Cameron Tiede 13 Tomadachi Figures: Edgar, Oswald, Agatha

It's so great to see a new design aesthetic emerge in the world of art toys - granted, these figures debuted two years ago, but Cameron Tiede's style still feels fresh and new! He had the good sense to team up with Mindstyle, one of the best in the designer toy game. The results are really special!

The sculptor did a wonderful job of bringing Mr. Tiede's very flat graphics into three dimensions. The chunky shapes are drawn into bold relief, and emphasized still further with color - faux highlights and cast shadows both create more dimension, yet also call back to the 2-D feel of the source art. The colors are appealing and true to Mr. Tiede's palette. Parts are separated along color lines for easy assembly, and to make the overall figure even richer in dimension.

The paint work is a skillful blend of large paint areas, dyed vinyl and smaller apps, creating a striking effect. There's some bleed-over here and there, but nothing too significant.

The characters are good choices for vinyl figure work - all of them have sufficiently low centers of gravity to minimize balance problems (display bases really aren't needed here!). I do recall that at least one piece was broken off upon opening the box, but in general the toys ship well with minimal damage.

The packaging is sturdy and quite attractive - you'll be tempted to keep (or re-purpose) the brightly-decorated drums that protect each figure. If not, they're made of cardboard, so at least they recycle easily.

These toys had a pretty small run - only three hundred of each! It looks like you can still get them (including the dog Roofus, which I decided to pass on) here at artoyz.com for €39.90 each. Good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Toy OTD: Gama-Go Tigerlily Vinyl Figure (2006)

I think this toy may have been Gama-Go's first foray into vinyl figures, but I'm not sure. Tigerlily is an early Tin Biskup design, named after (and I'm assuming inspired by) his then-tiny daughter. She's decorated many Gama-Go items, so it makes perfect sense that she'd be the first toy.

It's a really great figure! The 'costume' is flocked in order to distinguish it from the vinyl 'skin'. Interestingly, the proportions are more extreme than the original design, which is incredibly rare. I think it was a good call, as it makes her look more childlike.

The color work is very nice, but overall the toy is much yellower than the 2-D version. It looks fine, but I'm not sure why that change happened. Could it be they couldn't get the skin tone that they wanted? Unlikely, but possible. Otherwise, the paint and flocking apps are excellent!

The articulation is what you would expect from the source art: neck, shoulders, hips and tail. It's another display/design piece, so that's a reasonable number of joints if you take that into account. Tigerlily does come with her pistol as an accessory, so the weird cute/violent contrast isn't lost.

Even taking the tail into account, the toy does have balance issues. Perhaps with a bit of tweaking to the hip joints, she'll stay upright, but a pegged display base might have been a good idea here.

It's been a while since I purchased this figure, so I don't remember the package design all that well - I think it was a box with a cellophane window. Naturally, Gama-Go produces terrific graphics, so it was good-looking! I simply can't keep all the boxes and the toys too, so I recycle almost all of the packaging.

Unfortunately, this toy has been sold out for quite some time, and I can't find one for sale anywhere. You'll need to set up a favorite search on eBay to find it. Good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Toy OTD: Mindstyle Dark Crystal Vinyl Figure: UrRac The Scribe (2007)

Dark Crystal fans have waited a long time for character figures - twenty-five years - but MINDstyle has finally given us a toy that's worth the wait (no offense to Plan-B Toys, who has also produced some fantastic mini-busts). This recent Mystic figure is simply gorgeous!

Everything about this vinyl figure is top notch - the sculpt is beautiful and extremely accurate. The pose is straight out of the movie, and the paint apps are on-model and appropriately complex. If you want a vinyl version of this character, you simply couldn't ask for better!

Granted, there could be more articulation, but I think to maintain the design integrity, MINDstyle could have gone the jointed-figure-in-a-cloth-costume route, a la Hot Toys. To get hair that isn't sculpted, they could've gone the hard-core-clothed-resin-figure route, a la Sideshow, but both of those routes would make the figure much more expensive. Now you know I love both of those approaches, but to make a figure this accurate and this detailed for under a hundred dollars is really terrific!

And then there's the box. Even the box is incredible! Its design is on theme to the film's style, and it's covered with lovely photography and eye-catching foil passes. There's even a front-panel-door that allows you to check the figure out if you're one of those mint-in-box types. I think it had magnetic fasteners, but the may have been Velcro. Either way, the packaging is stand-alone great!

This toy sold a year ago for $70-$80, but you're in luck! It's available for sale at toynk.com at the lower price of $59.99 + shipping - grab one now, before they wise up!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Monday, January 05, 2009

Toy OTD: Bathing Ape Vinyl Figure: Baby Milo

This is an early find, back from when I first started collecting designer toys. I began by buying Michael Lau, Eric So, and Bathing Ape figures. I always liked Baby Milo, but I missed out on his initial release, and had to look around for a while. Eventually, I found him at Toy Tokyo (a great toy store and online shopping site) and picked him up there. I think he cost about eighty dollars at that point.

This is a really nice design - simple, streamlined shapes. Since that can be a real challenge to sculpt, it's executed in three dimensions very well. The color palette is also appealing and tasteful - the manufacturer used a combination of dyed vinyl and paint to achieve it. There isn't an excessive amount of paint here, which is always nice.

Since the figure is top-heavy, balance is a bit of an issue, but the sculpt is solid enough to minimize problems. Also helpful is the relative lack of articulation - the neck, shoulders, and possibly the waist, but there's no awkward hip or ankle joints to throw off the toy's center of gravity.

Packaging consisted of a sealed plastic bag decorated with text, and a looped cap on top for hanging. The bag graphics were nice, but otherwise things were pretty minimal in that department.

This toy has been out of print for quite a while, so I doubt you'll find one for sale easily or cheaply. I can't find one online at all, so brace yourself for a lengthy, pricey search if it's a must-have (expect to pay around $120 if you find one). Good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Toy OTD: Spanky, Headlock Studios' Spunk Figure (2002)

Here's a great toy that I've had for a while (six years, but it seems longer than that). It was made by Headlock Studios, home of the Spanky vinyl figure.

These companies have a strong design sense, and Spanky-punk (or Spunk) is a clean example. Snappy colors, clean shapes, and as little extraneous detail as possible. As with other subculture/fringe movements, the shoes get a lot of attention - they have the most detail, but the color use keeps it from being distracting. The key chain-material (used here as a wallet chain) is a really nice touch.

The paint work is very good, though not as tight as the top companies. Still, it serves the design just fine, preserving the graphic intentions. Aside from the neck, shoulders, and possibly the hips or ankles, there's not much articulation or posing potential here. Otherwise, it's the typical amount for a designer figure. Spunk also comes with an extra head - it has a full top of spiky hair, just in case mohawks aren't your thing!

This toy is probably long sold out by now. Originally, they went for around $65.00 + shipping, but I can't find it anywhere online these days. Another eBay favorite search is in order. Good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Toys OTD: Critterbox, Dave Cooper's Pip And Norton Vinyl Figures

The run of this set was a larger edition - 3,000 pieces. As usual, Critterbox has done a stellar job interpreting Dave Cooper's creepily cute designs. The sculpts are gorgeous, and the color work is extremely faithful to Mr. Cooper's artwork. The painting on both is quite tight, adding to the high level of finish on the toys.

Pip is beautifully packaged with his little friend Norton. The box is sturdy, and it's decorated so meticulously that you'll be tempted to keep it - if the art doesn't do it, consider the four vinyl leg accessories that transforms the package into a vehicle for them to ride! Wow! Very clever, and pure Cooper.

Critterbox saw their toys more as art pieces than playthings, so articulation is very low here. Pip's shoulders, neck and hips have joints, and I'm not sure that Norton has any at all (maybe his neck). Pip balances well considering his top-heavy design, and Norton is extremely well-planted.

Will we ever see more releases from Critterbox? There hasn't been anything in quite a while, so I have to assume the company went under some time ago.

If you're interested in buying this set, you can still get it at dolltv.com for $49.99 + shipping. Get to it!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Toy OTD: Wonderwall, David Horvath Flatwoods Monster Figure

Wonderwall has made a great line of figures that's still going on - a series of kaiju characters created by some of the best designers in toys today! This character was designed by Uglydoll's co-creator, David Horvath. Some are inspired by movie monsters, while others by documented-but-unconfirmed-cryptids.

The Flatwoods Monster is the latter, a creature that was purportedly first spotted in West Virginia in the fifties. The described event seems closer to an alien encounter than a Bigfoot-esque zoological rarity. Regardless, this is David's interpretation of the being.

Like most of his work, this design is minimal in its shape and color use, but still describes the monster well. Between the pupil-less eyes and darker colors, it manages to be cute and somewhat ominous at the same time!

The construction is simple (with very few parts), but well-executed with no warping, bubbles, or irregularities. The paint work is similar - sparingly applied, but effective and neat. There's not much articulation here, but I don't think that's what this kind of design is about - you don't really get this kind of toy for posing.

(I think) that this is the first version of this figure, but there's a great many variants, both in paint and vinyl colors. Some even have pupils, if you prefer a slightly cuter look. There's even a cheaper version that's packaged with a Horvath Mothman (like those dime-store army men), if you want to save money.

I'd advise you to do a lot of homework before buying anything (so you can get the one that you like best), unless you're a completist and want to try and get them all! The pricing ranges from $15 - $150 each, depending on the variant, with the median price being around $60. Happy hunting!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

How Do You Contact Michael Lau?

I sent an email to him a long time ago, but both his website and email link seem to have disappeared. I wanted to write to him again because I love his new Kubrick-film-inspired figure set, and had suggestions for additional sets. Wouldn't you like to see these characters refracted through the Lau filter?:

* A set based on characters from The Shining - of course, the first trio to spring to mind would be Jack (with axe, naturally), Wendy (with baseball bat), and little Danny. But there's other characters that would make great, creepy figures, too - the hallway twins, Dick Hallorann (with a slot in his back for the axe), the Weird Bear Suit Guy, or Lloyd the bartender.

* A
Dr. Strangelove set with all three Peter Sellers characters - President Merkin Muffley, Group Captain Lionel Mandrake, and the good doctor in his wheelchair. "Buck" Turgidson would make a great chase figure, too.

* A
Lolita set with a sweaty Prof. Humbert Humbert, Lolita, and Clare Quilty. Each set comes packed with a different color of lollipop!

You could also make figures of Kubrick himself, Colonel Dax from Paths of Glory, and - last but not least - Spartacus.

I'm writing all this down in case sending it out into the ether gives it a better chance of coming true. Maybe John K. will make the Spartacus figure if Michael Lau doesn't!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Friday, July 18, 2008

Dylan Sisson's New Vinyl Toy!

Check out Idle Hands, a nifty ten-inch vinyl toy that'll be premiering at Comic-Con! It's the creation of Dylan Sisson, and you'll be able to get any one (or all) of three colorways at the Toy Tokyo booth (#5237). See you there!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Toy OTD: SEG, Tim Biskup's Alphabeast Figure: Red Pollard

tim biskup's red pollard vinyl figure

I've heard that this is Tim Biskup's first vinyl figure, and that could well be true - I can't remember the timeline of his toy releases, but I think that it was the first Biskup toy that I bought.

Regardless, it's great - a small vinyl originally in a retro-kaiju bag with a header card (also designed by Biskup)! Also included was a 350-piece, limited edition mini-print, which was very nicely done.

The sculpt is simple but appealing - very much in the style of Mr. Biskup's 2-D work. This toy is clearly meant to be an art piece - there's only one point of articulation (at the neck). The color more than makes up for it, though - again, not very many colors, but very well coordinated and applied.

This version of the Pollard is four inches tall - keep in mind that there's many other colorways, not to mention a 10" version in still more colors. Do yourself a favor, and do some research so you can pick a favorite before you buy!

This toy has been out for a while, but there's one for sale right now on eBay - it's currently at $26.00 + $4.80 shipping. The auction's going for five more days, so keep a close eye on it if you really want one. Good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Toy OTD: Bwana Spoons x Gargamel Sleeping Killer Vinyl Figure

I can't remember where I bought this toy - I think I got it at Double Punch. Regardless, it's a very cool vinyl - one of my favorite Bwana Spoons designs!

The toy came in bag-with-hang-tag packaging, decorated by the artist. I thinks it's appropriate, since the whole design evokes the kaiju-toy stylings of the sixties and seventies. There's at least six colorways - pink (above), yellow/green, 'dark chocolate', 'milk chocolate', a blue custom, and black/yellow.

I'm not sure that I see the 'killer' part of the equation, since the sculpt is such a cute, peaceful mix of whale and coelacanth, with just a pinch of Godzilla for good measure. It's a simple paint job, but the great color use really makes it stand out! There's no articulation at all, but it's more art piece than action figure, so that's fine with me.

This figure originally cost sixty-five dollars, but it's become hard to find these days - most of the colorways are long sold out. You can buy a pink one here at knunt.com for ninety dollars + shipping.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Toy OTD: Sony Creative Time Capsule Toys: Jim Woodring's Imperial Newts

I'm not sure exactly when or where I picked these up - I may have ordered them from KidRobot, or eBay. Regardless, someone at Sony had the great idea to ask themselves, "How cool would it be if we made toys that look like they should be dispensed from those quarter machines outside your local supermarket, but were actually designed by really talented artists?" Not only did they ask that question, but they answered it!

This series is comprised of six different newt designs, all created by comics great Jim Woodring. Each toy comes in its own little dime-store egg. Half of it is clear plastic, so you can even pick the figure that you want! Nice.

The sculpts are strong and detailed, very faithful to Woodring's designs. The paint work is a little shaky, but acceptable for the scale of the figures. They're sold disassembled, but building them is pretty trivial - the figures are reasonably well designed for post-purchase construction.

They've been sold out for at least a year, so buying them online might be tricky. There's three of them for sale on eBay for roughly $20.00 + shipping each, so you'll have to keep looking for the other three. Good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Sunday, March 02, 2008

More High-End Henson Swag On The Way

MUPPETNEWSFLASH.COM: MINDstyle to Make "Fraggle" Figures and More "Crystal" Collectibles
Tuesday, February 05, 2008

In celebration of the 25th anniversary of "Fraggle Rock", MINDStyle has announced plans to releasing a set of Fraggle Rock figures. The series of vinyl figures based on the beloved characters are planned for released later this year.

MINDstyle has licensed several properties from the Jim Henson Company and has already produced several successful product lines, including the Jim Henson's City Critters and a series of high-end "Dark Crystal" collectibles. More limited-edition figures in the "Dark Crystal" line are currently in development. The third collectible, a replica of the Skeksis' castle, is planned for release this spring with more "Dark Crystal" products planned to follow.

Initial offerings of many new MINDStyle products, plus sneak-peaks at others upcoming figures, is planned to take place at the International Toy Fair in New York later this month. I'll be sure to keep you updated as soon as more information on these, and other pieces of Jim Henson merchandise, becomes available.

*************************************************************************************

Image and tip-off courtesy of toysrevil and his "I Like Toys" blog.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Monday, February 18, 2008

Coming Attractions

* I got an email today from Gorbachev Philipp, the director of Plastic-Fantastic.ru (a designer toy retail site in Russia), expressing interest in my toy!

The extra-wild thing is, they're already going to be sold in Russia - one of my Flickr friends, Sergey Safonov (aka iron _Lung) bought some of my "Happy Beaver" toys to sell at his web shop, lunohod-1.ru. I can't wait to see it 'in the store'. Hopefully, I can get a picture of my toy somewhere in Russia, too - cool!

* This past Sunday, I wrote my responses to an interview for flipanimation.net, an online magazine by animator Steve Moore. Steve and I went to the same college, but I think he graduated in '83, and I arrived in '84. Anyway, he was interested in asking me about my toy collection and my ongoing "Happy Beaver" project, so he wrote me up some questions, and I... answered them. The interview will be in the March issue of Flip, so keep your eyes peeled! Better yet, subscribe for free today!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Toy OTD: Critterbox Uglydoll Vinyl Figures: Tray & Uglydog

It's a shame that there aren't more Uglydoll vinyl toys, as Critterbox's initial offerings were very appealing and affordable! Several of the original characters were made before they lost the license.

The sculpting, construction and paint work are at the typically high level I associate with Critterbox. One or two characters had sagging/balance issues, but that's not the case here. Adding Uglydog's face to his license tag is a cute touch!

I picked up all of my Uglydoll toys right away at San Diego Comic-Con, and it turns out that it's a good thing I did. Uglydog was a casualty of the Critterbox/Uglydoll split, and only twenty or thirty Uglydog toys were made. By chance, I happened to snag one of these very rare pieces!

I think I paid twenty or thirty dollars for Tray originally, and it doesn't appear that he's gone up in value all that much - he's currently selling for $49.95 + shipping on eBay. Not surprisingly, Uglydog isn't showing up anywhere online - an eBay favorite search or a chance discovery at a toy show are probably your best options. Prepare to pay big money, and good luck!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Friday, November 02, 2007

How to Start Your Own Toy Line, Circa 2003

ACTION-HQ.COM: HOW TO BREAK INTO THE DESIGNER TOYS MARKET?
Interview with Casey Lau, Head of HyperChild

Everyone's heard about the cool designer toys that are coming out of Asia but how does one actually break into this market? What does one need to do to produce and market their own line of toys?

John Wong, the head of Action-HQ.com, sat down with Casey Lau, head of HyperChild to find out just this, in this exclusive interview for the good people at Action-Figure.com.

John Wong [Action-HQ.com] > Hey Casey, thanks for doing this interview with us and Action-Figure.com. For those who might not know, can you tell us about your company?

Casey Lau [HyperChild] > HyperChild is a think-tank and development company that creates and develops new entertainment properties such as toys, animation and character goods. We were founded and are based in Hong Kong, and are made up of a collective of writers, artists and designers. Our goal is to create new properties for a new generation of audience. We are launching two new properties lines this year with The Deviants and Garage Robots.

John Wong [Action-HQ.com] > Can you tell us something about your background so that the readers knows where you are coming from?

Casey Lau [HyperChild] > My experience is expansive with over 10 years in licensing, design, Internet development and the comic book industries. Some of my works include creating such properties as Virtex and The WonderLanders and, as you know, co-founding that little web-company called ActionAce.com. I would call myself a "designer" first and anything else -like writer, businessman, dishwasher - second.

John Wong [Action-HQ.com] > Cool! So tell us in layman terms how to get started in the designer toy industry?

Casey Lau [HyperChild] > Okay....to make your own toys you need a few things- if you can do them all yourself, great -if not you will need to put out some cash to have others come in to help you. As an aside, I could write a book on how to self publish your own comic book which is a lot cheaper than making toys, but perhaps next interview, haaa.

Anyway, the first step is DESIGN. Design your figures with good ol’ pencil and paper, and work out your designs in various poses until you’re are happy with one.

Then you basically need to draw out what we call “TURNS” an animation term for front, side and back views of a character. This is for a sculptor to see what it is you want to do. Obviously if you sculpt it yourself you wont need these but its usually always good to have a guide of what you want to do.

The next step is the sculpting. You can use various materials to do this: clay, sculptey, wax etc. whatever you are comfortable with. If you don’t know how, you will have to find a sculptor that you can work with.

Then you need to decide on color callouts and figure out the Pantone number for each of these colors.

Once you have devised a prototype you are happy with you then need to get it to a factory for costing and talk about numbers.

John Wong [Action-HQ.com] > How does one locate a factory?

Casey Lau [HyperChild] > The factory you will use will most likely be in China but your best bet is to talk to a factory’s agent in Hong Kong. That way communication is no problem and Hong Kong has been the center of toys for so long that they will know more about putting your product together than you will.

There are a few places to start sourcing factories and all are online and in English. Point your browsers to these websites to start surfing for the best factories:

www.tdcenterprise.com
www.alibaba.com
and look to come out to Hong Kong in January for the Toy Fair:
www.hktoyfair.com
Also a good place to look for exhibitors and getting in touch via email.

[HyperChild, Action-HQ.com and Action-Figure.com does not endorse any of the companies/information found on these sites. Deal with them at your own prerogative.]

John Wong [Action-HQ.com] > How would you know which factory to go with as there are so many?

Casey Lau [HyperChild] > In choosing a factory the most important thing is quality. Any factory can make a product but the quality of the product is a different thing altogether. So don’t go for the cheapest price but the best quality you can for the best price you can afford.

John Wong [Action-HQ.com] > What about costing and quantities?

Casey Lau [HyperChild] > Your negotiations will take time but have the factory send you some samples so you can see their work. Most factories should be able to point you to their work that can easily be found in the U.S., U.K. and throughout Europe. Don’t expect to find the same factory that Hasbro uses for your limited edition toy. You will need to find a good, stable, medium sized company that can handle the work for you.

Once you find the factory you will need to send them your prototype for costing. This is where you need to part with your original so make sure you make at least 2 of them. Within 2 weeks of receiving your prototype you will be able to get a cost for your figures. Depending on how many you want to make will determine the cost per piece. As most rotocast figures are done under 1000 pieces and looking at the retail price of HK vinyl today you can see that the costs are quite high.

The production process takes about 6-9 weeks, wax mould, master moulds, paint masters and production moulds all come next and there is a lot of back and forth between you and the factory to get it the way you want it. So again finding a good quality factory is # 1 as this will help with any aggravations created in the road of production.

From there you get your packaging design done to fit your toy and have that artwork sent to Hong Kong so they can print and package your toys. You tell the factory how many you want to pack in each case and they will then arrange to ship back to you.

Not as easy as it sounds but extremely gratifying when you open that sealed case of figures YOU created.

John Wong [Action-HQ.com] > Okay, here is the most important question, how much does it take to get started if all you can do is design the product? Can you give us a cost for sculpting as I think not many of us are competent to do that and how much is it to make 1,000 rotocast vinyl figures?

Casey Lau [HyperChild] > Well, like anything, costs break down by quality and negotiations. Sculpting can go from anything from $1,000 to $5,000 per figure in my experience -if you want someone famous to do it, it can go up to $10,000.

And then the price per piece depending on quality and size, articulation, number of parts - wow there are so many factors that come into pricing a figure that it could range from $1-$20 per piece for 1000 pieces. One thing I have learned is that to meet price points you have to be willing to let things go from your original ideas as some things may be too costly to do.

John Wong [Action-HQ.com] > Thanks, that was very informative. Let's talk about the other major component which is the market. In layman terms again, I think our readers would like to know how many pieces should someone starting out make and how do they sell it?

Casey Lau [HyperChild] > Well, there are online shops and brick and motor shops and the toys distributors to go too. This is a big question and you should figure out who your target audience is before you begin. In Hong Kong we have a very tight knit toy community of shops and shows where toys are sold and bought, as has the rest of Asia - in the U.S. or U.K. I would gather you would find some specialty shops that would be clued in to this scene.

John Wong [Action-HQ.com] > Thanks again, Casey. I think the readers now have a good and basic understanding on how to start. Any last words?

Casey Lau [HyperChild] > Just a plug. You can check out my line of figures at www.hyperchild.ws for a look at that will be available in June 2003 and are available for pre-order now at www.action-hq.com.

----- Please check out our sponsor and contributor of this content at www.action-hq.com for special deals, giveaways and discounts on their new category of Asian Designer Toys.

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Toy OTD: Eric So Estate Figure (Chapter 6): Waiter B

Here's another great Eric So figure from the Estate series! The usual strong design, sculpt and paint work are in evidence. For whatever reason, many So figures have shoes that are removable (or at least appear to be), which isn't great for their balance. Beyond that, this is a spiffy looking piece!

These used to sell for $80, but they're long sold out. Xl-shop.com doesn't have it any longer, so I think you'll have to hunt on eBay for a while until it turns up! As usual, expect to pay more.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Toy OTD: Medicom, H8Graphix Vinyl Collectible Doll: Spider-Man 3 Figure (Black Costume Variant)

Recently, Medicom has started to produce highly stylized superhero figures as part of their Vinyl Collectible Doll line. They're not chibi-style, but their proportions and features are very exaggerated.

This is my current favorite of the new additions - the stylization and posing complement each other really well in the sculpt. The color palette is pretty simple, but the paint apps on the costume's webbing are very nice. There's a traditional, red-and-blue costumed version, but I like the simplicity of this colorway better.

You can still get either version at ningyoushi.com for $65.00 + shipping each.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Friday, August 31, 2007

Toy OTD: MINDstyle, Frank Cho Monkey Boy Vinyl Figure: NYCC Exclusive

Here's a terrific piece from one of the best figure-makers out there, MINDstyle. I've been very impressed with the level of quality of everything they do - if I don't want to buy it, it's usually a taste issue with the designer - and that's really rare, too!

This sculpt utterly nails Cho's drawing style, and it's a nice, solid, sag-resistant pose. The paint apps are really tight, and I like the color scheme a lot. If these colors are too loud for you, there's at least three other colorways, so you've got options.

This figure was exclusive to the New York Comic-Con earlier in the year, and I got mine for about $60. It might be a little trickier (or pricier) to get now. There's one for sale on eBay.ie for £74.99 (or about $150 USD).

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Toy OTD: Nami Iwata's Project Gregory Horror Show Figure: Gregory

Here's a really interesting toy made from a video game character with virtually no adaptation in the process. I've never played this game, but from the stills that I've seen, it's as close as you can get to a vinyl version of a low-res polygonal game figure!

It's a unique way to preserve the integrity of the original design, the graphic strength of the shapes and forms. It's almost five inches tall, and the construction and paint work are very strong.

You can get this figure (plus the other two characters in this line) for $12.99 + shipping each at UniToyzone.com.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Monday, August 20, 2007

Toy OTD: Brothersfree Figures: Ah Gum & Ah Aun (2000)

These are two cool designs that I bought soon after I discovered the joys of urban vinyl. They were created by a toy group called Brothersfree, who've been designing toys for seven years now.

The articulation on these figures is almost non-existent, and they're somewhat fragile in the bargain, but the design, sculpts, color and paint work are super-cool! There's lots of great variations in these seemingly identical designs.

I think I've found a website where you can still buy these, but it's hard to be sure. They seem to be for sale at micromania.co.kr (Korea?) for 160,000 Won ($169.71 + shipping USD).

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Toy OTD: UNKL Tinpo Figure: Sync 5

Here's another great Tinpo design from the UNKL brand of mini-figures! I can't remember if these were blind-boxed originally or not (I think so). Each figure came with a capsule and an extra part - if you got all of the series 1 figures, the extra parts could be assembled to form a pet!

These toys first sold for $8.00 each, but series 1 figures like this one are long sold out - more than likely, your only hope is the dreaded secondary market. eBay favorite searches are your friend in this case!

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Toy OTD: Strangeco, Super 7's Neo-Kaiju Figures: Seonna Hong's Kara Kara Tako Girl (2004)

Today I'm featuring another figure from this great, artist-filled toy line! All ten characters are great, but this is one of my particular favorites. Super-cute, but with a nice, offbeat quality to it. Nice sculpt and paint apps for a capsule toy - each came in its own beautifully labeled egg.

These have been out for a few years now, so they may be tough to find. They do show up on eBay, priced between $8.00 - $20.00 each. You can get this figure right now at designertoystore.co.uk for £7.99 (about $16 USD) + shipping.

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Monday, July 23, 2007

Happy Beaver Write-Up @ I Like Toys

My friend toysrevil posted a great promo piece/interview on his i like toys blog! You can't ask for better virtual ink than this - thanks, Andy!

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

New Color Model Pictures!

Here's the latest pictures of the beaver toy color model. I think it's pretty much ready to go - I e-mailed Gentle Giant to ask them about which colors could be cast in vinyl, and which couldn't (as opposed to painting the entire figure). Ultimately, I'd like the body and tail to have more of a softer matte finish than they do now - not quite as shiny as they currently are. Other than that, I think it's ready to go! Let me know what you think... last chance...

Labels: , , , , , ,

Friday, March 16, 2007

Silly Title, Good Article

LA TIMES: Watch out, Malibu Barbie
With his tattoos and goatee, the Lost Angel collectible doll embodies L.A.
By Steve Baltin, Special to The Times

As Southern California natives, Super Rad Toys founders Jonathan Cathey and Sid Richlin wanted someone to design a collectible figure that, to them, captured their hometown. "In our scene you get a lot of representation of New York," said Cathey, illustrating his point, perhaps, with his Ramones T-shirt. "There wasn't something representative of Los Angeles."

To remedy that, there was really only one go-to guy: "The fabric of L.A. is intertwined with Cartoon."

That's Mister Cartoon to you (real name: Mark Mercado). The artist — whose counterculture design empire extends from tattoos (he's inked the likes of Eminem and Busta Rhymes), album art, cars, Nike shoes, a T-Mobile Sidekick, gallery shows around the world — has created what can be described only as the very antithesis of that old-school icon of pert plastic perfection, the Malibu Barbie.

Meet the Lost Angel — Super Rad Toys' new superstar — a bald, goateed, tattooed and shirtless Latino with angel wings and a load of accessories: two pairs of Nikes, a "diamond" chain, a tiny tagged boombox and a Sidekick that flips open to say "New Message." Eat your heart out, GI Joe.

"Real personal, this is how we dress [the doll]," Cartoon said. He's seated in an office adjacent to where he and his business partner, Estevan Oriol, keep their obsession: a collection of restored Chevys. "This is us, our day-to-day stuff. It's so much different than doing an abstract fantasy character."

Apparently, reality is a good thing. To date, of the 1,300 Lost Angels produced, 900 have sold out through online presales, with the final 400 being held for a signing/street party Sunday at Meltdown Comics. "The party is in the afternoon because Cartoon is a family man," said Cathey, who is expecting 500 to 1,500 people — many of them kids.

For Cartoon, 37, the desire to design a figure goes back to his childhood. "I owned a Steve Austin 'Six Million Dollar Man' doll with the flip-around face. My most favorite of all was the Evel Knievel doll," he recalls. "I can remember the ones I couldn't afford and my friends having every one of them."

Dolls are not just for kids anymore, of course. Figures by artists such as Frank Kozik and Dalek are hot adult collectibles. And the work of street artists has filtered into the design of sneakers, cellphones and more. Does Cartoon worry that commercial exposure will stifle the gritty authenticity of the next generation of street artists? "As long as there's drugs, poverty, child abuse, as long as all that stuff exists, which I think will never go away, right, you'll always have those raw artists."

He also isn't bothered by people who think the look of his 15-inch creation (which sells for a not-so-kid-friendly $130) promotes gang violence. Anyone who thinks that probably doesn't get Cartoon's world. "I look at this guy and see someone who owns a home, drives a Mercedes, pushes a stroller at the Beverly Center with his Coffee Bean cup in his hand," said Cartoon, who has three kids and another on the way. "The guy is a big old square."

So is Lost Angel perhaps ... Cartoon? "He doesn't use drugs, he doesn't drink," said the artist. "He helps kids, does outreaches. The whole reason he's able to help kids is they think he looks cool. That's my life, what I just told you."

weekend@latimes.com

What: Signing of the Lost Angel figure by Mister Cartoon, with special guests
Where: Meltdown Comics, 7522 Sunset Blvd., L.A.

When: 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday (signing, 5 to 7 p.m.)

Info: (323) 851-7223

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Saturday, March 03, 2007

New York Times Designer Toy Article, 2004

NY TIMES: Cult Figures
By ARTHUR LUBOW
Published: August 15, 2004

On Sept. 29, 1999, in the Wan Chai neighborhood of Hong Kong, a line of people, snaking from the street to a fourth-floor showroom, awaited admission to an exhibition of 99 customized action figures by a young designer named Michael Lau. In the combustible world of Hong Kong trends, this was something seriously new. Transforming hard-plastic, 12-inch action figures into pop-culture icons -- that was a familiar pastime for Hong Kong toy collectors. It had even become a little boring.

But Lau's grown-up toys were different. Using bodies he scavenged from dolls like G.I. Joe and molding original heads, hands and feet out of hard plastic, Lau had created skateboarders, surfers and snowboarders, decked out in baggy shorts, camouflage jackets, tentlike sweatshirts and of-the-moment sneakers, adorned with chains, earrings and tattoos, their hair in dreadlocks or pressed beneath bright-colored caps. ''Street culture and hip-hop culture and skateboard style were coming up,'' Lau explained when I met with him not long ago in Hong Kong. ''The culture included fashion, music, graffiti. It seemed really fresh. It is just like a uniform -- people in Hong Kong and Tokyo and Britain and the States all look the same.'' Sharply observed, exuberantly imaginative, Lau's collection of 99 ''Gardeners'' (named for comic-strip characters that he created the year before) looked just like the local hipsters who were looking at them, or the way those people wanted to look.

Lau's 99 Gardeners inspired other Hong Kong comic-book illustrators, graphic designers and ad-agency artists to start making their own figures. While a few Japanese cult boutiques had previously issued some limited-edition collectible toys, the Hong Kong designers engendered a craze. Over the next five years, riding on the wings of the Internet, such ''toys,'' as their enthusiasts call them, spread from Hong Kong, first to Japan and then to the West. Typically issued in limited editions of a few hundred, these toys are meant not for play but for display. They are valuable enough that many buyers leave a new purchase untouched in its box, hoping to preserve its resale value, which for a sought-after toy can quickly double or triple on eBay. Prominent toy artists in Japan, the United States and Britain, as well as those in Hong Kong, attract devoted fans -- typically, young men in their 20's and 30's who are ready to plunk down $100 or $200 for a toy, a small fraction of the original cost.

At one of the main outlets for these limited-edition figures, the two-year-old Kidrobot, which has stores in San Francisco and New York, toys often sell out in a few days -- or a few hours. Limited editions in different colors, typically in runs of 100 to 500 units, can be made for particular countries or specific stores. The perception of scarcity fuels the designer-toy market. Savvy toy retailers know how important it is to heighten that anxiety, but they turn the pressure tactic into a game. ''There was one toy that was available only if it was raining out,'' explains Paul Budnitz, Kidrobot's president. ''Another toy was available on Mondays only. It makes it really fun. I suppose it is good marketing for everyone. Everything here sells out.''

Youth-oriented fashion and entertainment companies like Nike, Sony and Levi's picked up on the fad, sponsoring exhibitions and licensing the artists' figures. The trendsetting Paris fashion-and-design store Colette has staged two exhibitions of designer toys, the most recent in June. Over the summer, Visionaire, a New York art-and-fashion publication, mounted a gallery show of designer toys; it will devote a characteristically lavish issue to the subject in November, with dolls customized by fashion designers, including Karl Lagerfeld, Marc Jacobs and Dolce & Gabbana.

Grown-up toys are making it big. But the positioning of a factory-made toy as a limited-edition art object is a particularly delicate maneuver. For artists designing toys, commercial success is a potentially fatal problem.

A 34-year-old with a ponytail and the wispy suggestion of a goatee, Michael Lau looks like an artist, and he seems to think of himself as one too. Lau is one of six children born to a chicken farmer in Hong Kong's New Territories; the family later moved to a public housing project in the capital. They couldn't afford store-bought toys. ''I sculptured Yoda out of cheap soap or made furniture out of newspaper,'' he recalled, as we sat and talked in his apartment overlooking a soccer field. (He spoke to me in Cantonese, and his girlfriend, Mickey Cheng, acted as a translator.) A talented draftsman, he found work after graduating from high school as a retoucher in an oil-painting factory, as a window-display designer for a department store and, finally, as a ''visualizer'' at an advertising agency -- the person who converts a concept into a sketch or a storyboard.

The visualizer he replaced at the Japanese-owned agency was named Eric So, who had also grown up poor in Hong Kong. So and Lau shared an enthusiasm for G.I. Joe dolls. Customizing toys was pure play, a way of expressing artistic talents that they were pursuing more ambitiously by painting in acrylics. In 1996, each exhibited at the Hong Kong Arts Center. The next year, Lau won a drawing prize in Hong Kong for the most promising artist. His career was going well, but he couldn't tell where it was going. ''I am looking at so many references,'' he said. ''It is hard to be the best in any area. It is difficult to find a point to break through.'' Unexpectedly, playing with toys would become his vocation.

Long a center for toy production, Hong Kong factories were, in the 1990's, succumbing to competition from cheaper labor on the Chinese mainland. As toy manufacture declined in Hong Kong, toy nostalgia flourished. At the high end of the market were Japanese airplane models, original ''Star Wars'' figures and first-generation G.I. Joes. All of these were vintage or antique toys, which, in the toy world, usually means an item that dates from the 70's. That decade, in Asia as in America, glows like a distant golden age for those who were children then, and the iconic figures date from the era's movies (Darth Vader), cartoons (Ultraman and Gundam) and cereal boxes (Cap'n Crunch, Franken Berry and Count Chocula).

All the prominent players in the Hong Kong designer-toy scene began as collectors of vintage children's toys, driven by a nostalgia for childhood and a delight in quirky design. One of the biggest collectors, Neco Lo Che Ying, staged a flea market in the summer of 1996 for fellow enthusiasts to trade and buy toys, and invited a few friends, including Lau and So, to exhibit their collections of vintage toys. Two years later, Mr. Lo -- as he is generally known, in deference to his pioneering role and relatively advanced age (44) -- gave Lau and So space to display their customized creations. By then, So was obsessively making Bruce Lee dolls, sculpturing the heads so that they better resembled his martial-arts hero and accumulating old magazine photographs to recreate Lee's authentic 1970's outfits. Lau was doing something more original. For a photograph that became an album cover for a local heavy-metal band, Anodize, he transformed five G.I. Joe dolls into cartoony renditions of the band's members.

More than his art shows, the album cover made Lau an insider's celebrity. In 1998, old friends from the ad agency where he'd worked invited him to contribute a comic strip to a trendy magazine, East Touch. Lau's strip depicted kids dripping with tattoos and attitude. He named them Gardeners. ''They are a group of people with their own culture, and they ignore other people and enjoy what they're doing,'' Lau offers by way of explanation.

That spring, he and Cheng used the prize he won for most promising artist: a trip to Paris. It was his first visit to Europe. In France for three weeks, he discovered with delighted astonishment a book about Jean-Marie Pigeon, who makes stylized sculptures of Tintin and other comic-book characters. ''Coming back to Hong Kong, I thought maybe it would be a good idea to try to turn the Gardeners into a 3-D format, the Tintin face on top of action figures,'' he says. He spent two months completing 10 figures for the convention, which Mr. Lo was now calling Toycon. He finished at the last minute and then collapsed with a high fever. It was worth it: the response was ecstatic. He was so pleased that, for his next art show, he decided to expand the Gardener population. ''It was supposed to be a painting show,'' he observes. ''I said it was 'mixed media.''' Because the year was 1999, he made 99 figures, which he worked on for nine months. The show not only made Lau's name; it also positioned toys at the center of Hong Kong street culture.

There was only one problem. None of the 99 unique 12-inch figures were for sale. Twelve-inch figures are made of hard ABS plastic, which is solidified in an expensive mold -- making them too expensive to custom-fabricate anything larger than heads, hands or feet. Another way to produce plastic toys is the rotocast vinyl method: vinyl plastic is injected into a cheaper mold and spun, producing a hollow object, which is then painted. Although rotovinyl toys can't exhibit the fine detail of ABS plastic, they are far cheaper and easier to produce. Because the mold is less expensive, designers can reconfigure the entire shape; they then have the advantage of not being constrained by the 12-inch anatomical form. Looking to transform the designer-toy movement into something commercially viable, Lau landed on vinyl.

Collectible vinyl toys were popularized in 1996 -- eons earlier, in this fast-moving universe -- by Bounty Hunter, a cult boutique based in Tokyo that combined the production of limited-edition urban clothing with a fetish for 70's pop music. That year the design gurus behind Bounty Hunter began selling limited numbers of vinyl toys that bore a discernible resemblance to such cultural landmarks as Franken Berry or a sailor on the Cap'n Crunch box. On the day of a toy's release, devotees would line up for blocks outside the store; the next day, in the resale market, the sold-out toys would be going for several times their original cost of $50. Still, that was in the street-culture hothouse of Japan, and these toys were a promotion for the coveted Bounty Hunter brand. Lau wondered anxiously if small vinyl versions of his 12-inch Gardeners -- standing on their own artistic merits -- could fetch 150 Hong Kong dollars (about $19 U.S.). ''He was so worried,'' recalls Wong Kim Fung, a manufacturer of high-end toys. ''I said: 'If you can't sell, bring it to me. We sell for $180.' Of course, all sold. Eventually on eBay they are raised to $1,000 [$128 U.S.].''

Taking advantage of their proximity to factories on the mainland, some Hong Kong collectors were already manufacturing 12-inch hard-plastic designer toys, and easily moved into vinyl toy production. Among the first were Wong Kim Fung, who is known as Kim, and Howard Chan. Both were toy retailers who, in early 1999, brought to market G.I. Joe figures that they had customized and accessorized into Hong Kong riot-squad policemen. The market responded favorably, rocket-powering the launch of their toy manufacturing companies: Kim's Three Zero and Chan's Hot Toys.

For a brief, brilliant moment, the future seemed unbounded. Starting in 2002, there were three Toycons a year, each lasting three days and playing to packed houses. The indefatigable Lau would introduce two vinyl toys on every day of each Toycon. It was a profitable business. Although Lau declines to comment on his income, the arithmetic is rudimentary. ''If he made 500 pieces for each style selling for 500 Hong Kong dollars apiece,'' -- about $64 -- ''he makes 250,000 Hong Kong dollars for each,'' estimates Raymond Choy, a toy manufacturer. In a sellout of all six at Toycon, he would take in 1.5 million Hong Kong dollars ($192,000 U.S.). For three annual Toycons, that adds up to almost $576,000 U.S. The cost of making a rotovinyl figure is a small fraction of the sales price, and Lau's Toycon figures were less than a small fraction of his total production. He was well on his way to millions.

In 2000 Lau signed a three-year contract with Sony to license his Gardener figures in Asia; and with Sony's help, he mounted a five-city exhibition of the Gardeners in Japan. Eric So was right behind him, turning his hand from customized action figures to vinyl toys that, notwithstanding their experimental flair (spindly arms and legs, unorthodox magnetic attachments) clearly owe a debt to Lau. These high-quality rotovinyl figures based on street-fashionable youth became known as urban vinyl. Soon it was as if every ad agency visualizer and comic-book illustrator in Hong Kong were designing toys -- all of them hoping to make it big.

The most successful Hong Kong toy designer after Lau and So is a three-man collaborative that calls itself Brothersfree. The Brothers zeroed in on uncharted territory -- Hong Kong working-class life. Their first customized action-figure in late 2000 was the team leader of a construction crew, a type they would see from the bus window as they went to their jobs at ad agencies or graphic design firms. The extraordinary detail in the Brothers' high-priced action figures (averaging about $200) sustains their popularity: a bank robber carries individually wrapped bundles of printed bills; a war correspondent totes a camera with interchangeable lenses. The Brothers' later vinyl toys, at a comparably high price, have sold less well. Customers perceive value in detail work more easily than they see it in creative design. They also know that action figures, with highly wrought accessories, are much harder for bootleggers in China to knock off.

As the field became crowded, with some 50 or 60 designers in Hong Kong alone, newcomers needed distinguishing styles or gimmicks. After designing some hip-hoppish figures that came too close to Lau for commercial comfort, Jason Siu began making dolls that resemble (and, in some cases, function as) stereo speakers. ''I want to make it my symbol -- speaker is Jason, Jason is speaker,'' he explains. ''I want my work to be famous and popular.'' Elphonso Lam, who in addition to his day job as a comics writer is the singer and lyricist for a Hong Kong punk band, has designed a vinyl toy of a chain-saw-wielding ghost and action figures of punk musicians. He is releasing his band's next album with a toy and a T-shirt.

Another toy designer, Colan Ho, says he hopes that his robot and spaceman figures will generate interest in the characters in his sci-fi graphic novels. Simon Wong, who has designed fashion collections for Esprit and CK jeanswear, is producing 12-inch figures that sport bead-laced string purses and leather-faced down coats. (Recently he obtained ''original 1970's polyester'' to line a denim outfit.) ''The goal is to attract fashion companies that would want to collaborate with me to do something -- a promotion item to put in the window or give away as premium gifts,'' he says. He says he dreams of eventually having his own fashion line. Meanwhile, pursuing a better-trod path to fortune, the brother-and-sister team of Wendy and Kevin Mak -- children of a manufacturer of plastic water guns -- have concluded that their toys, known as 2da6, are priced too aggressively. They produced their first toy, a teahouse waiter, in late 2001, as an adjunct to an online game. The game collapsed, but the toys persist, despite anemic sales. ''The cost of all these figures is too high,'' Wendy Mak says. ''Our future plan is to go for mass production, to Toys 'R' Us or Kmart.''

The mist of money has changed the atmosphere of the Hong Kong designer-toy scene. With eBay, price appreciation that in the traditional collectibles or art market takes years can occur overnight. ''In Hong Kong you have all these companies now that are mass-producing but trying to make it seem as if they're putting out limited-edition collectibles,'' says Jakuan, a New York toy designer and collector whose 360 Toy Group, a quiet storefront on the Lower East Side with a vibe very different from Kidrobot's, has been displaying designer toys since 1999. ''The market is saturated. You don't know what's good and what's not. That's what killed the comic-book market and the 'Star Wars' toys market. I think they're deceiving the customers. They're trying to market it as collectible, when it's really just a toy.''

Raymond Choy, 39, is typical of the new breed of Hong Kong designer-toy manufacturer. Like Kim and Chan, he began as a collector, with a special interest in the American toys based on the X-Men. But right from the start, what really drove Choy was the speculative frenzy. ''I am hooked on it, because a toy starts as $9 and then it is $100 U.S.,'' he says. ''It is like business. EBay also is turning into a very big support for the toy revolution. I see in the magazines how toys can be so much money in the secondary market.''

Unlike Kim and Chan, who aspire to fulfill a designer's vision, Choy searches out new artists who will be willing to collaborate on a profitable toy. Like other manufacturers, his company, Toy2R, makes use of technological advances that permit a factory to interrupt a run to change colors and create limited editions. For most of the Hong Kong artists, however, limiting the edition was a way to present the product as an art object and to maintain quality control. At Toy2R, a limited edition is merely a marketing ploy. There are so many different versions of Toy2R's Qees that the profusion becomes bewildering.

At the very moment the designer-toy trend is building strength in the West, it is already flagging in Hong Kong. ''I don't really buy toys anymore,'' says Takara Mak, who goes by TK and is the 25-year-old founder of two trendy Hong Kong magazines, Milk and Cream. ''I still spend time going on eBay, checking out what's going on, but I don't have the time or the force behind me to say I have to buy them every week. You used to see a photo and say, 'I have to get that tonight.' I don't feel that way anymore. I still like them, but there's too many of them.'' TK is reclining in his studio, which he calls Silly Thing -- a converted ground-floor warehouse that could double for the loft in the movie ''Big.'' It is decorated with customized skateboards and the cardboard stand-up figures that normally reside in cinema lobbies. A tall cabinet is filled with vintage ''Star Wars'' toys, and a flat-screen Fujitsu monitor lies beneath a glass-covered cutout in the polished plank floor.

Just two years before, at the height of the Hong Kong toy craze, TK inaugurated Playground, a 36-page toy-focused insert in the weekly Milk. ''It was the first time somebody did something on toys on that scale in a fashion magazine,'' he says proudly. Last December, he downgraded his coverage of toys. ''We thought with Playground, people twisted the idea we had in the first place,'' he explains. ''We don't want people to take toys in the wrong way. People buy to resell them. It's more like an investment than a thing you want to keep.'' Designer toys, which initially incarnated a youthful alternative culture, have been subsumed by the ruling, money-driven Hong Kong ethos. Still, Tomm Wong, the mastermind of Playground, resigned his position as editor in chief of Cream to start a new monthly devoted to toys. In homage to Lau, he plans to call it Garden. ''We want to build up a culture of how to play with toys, not how to buy and sell,'' Wong says bravely.

The highly motivated Lau continues to produce vinyl figures at a breakneck pace. He is working his way through a complete vinyl edition of the Gardeners (12 have been issued so far), as well as inventing another series of characters that he calls Crazy Children. Resourceful and ingenious, he has explored the potential of vinyl, innovating with rough surfaces that resemble wood or cardboard and creating a group with removable attire. He maintains that the word ''toy'' is misleading. ''We went to the Saatchi Gallery in London,'' he says. ''It's all toys, but in big size. If it's miniature, it's toy. If it's large, it's art.'' Who can argue? The stainless-steel bunny and the floral puppy of Jeff Koons, the anatomically perverse manikins of Jake and Dinos Chapman, the oversize child's firetruck and the naked family of Charles Ray, the whimsical clog-wearing dog of Yoshitomo Nara: aren't they just Brobdingnagian toys that have marched into art galleries and pasted labels on the wall?

Toys don't exhaust all of Lau's artistic powers. Over the summer, he designed the program for a local production of ''The Glass Menagerie,'' and he says he would like to do a theater piece of his own. ''I want to go back to painting, but Hong Kong is not the place for painting,'' he says. ''I want to do animation, but the cost is so high and you have to include too many people.'' This year, he inflicted a grievous body blow to the Hong Kong toy scene: he stopped appearing at Toycon. ''It is very boring,'' he says. ''I repeat it eight times already. I want to make a change.''

Lau now exhibits his work in his own gallery, located on the sixth floor of a commercial building in a popular shopping area that is worlds away from the crowded stores of the Mong Kok toy district. One afternoon in late June, there were six small toys on display, each on a plinth in its own vitrine. Nine toys from the series were being offered for sale, priced at a little more than $60 apiece. (Some other Lau works were also available.) Hip-hop music played softly. An attendant spoke on the telephone behind a counter. There was nobody else in the gallery. ''This is not the main market for the customer,'' says Chan of Hot Toys. ''He can just keep the old fans. You cannot get the new customer.''

Lau appears less determined to attract new customers than to dissociate himself from his fellow Hong Kong designers. He is a prophet appalled by his disciples. ''These people are always saying that they are doing exhibitions, but it is just a trade show -- an exhibition to take up orders,'' he says. ''They're riding on my style. They're lucky. It's easier.'' A mention of 2da6 brings first a look of nonrecognition, then a grimace. Brothersfree he dismisses too. ''It's just building models,'' he says. ''It's a toy. It's not creative, it's just cooperation.'' His most surprising criticism is directed at So. Still friends (they play soccer together occasionally), the two men when together carefully avoid the subject of their work. ''I don't think Eric is an artist,'' Lau says, highlighting their genuine differences with a bit of hyperbole. ''Eric likes to build up a lot of relationships and be friendly with a lot of people. I just like to work. He is tired of making figures. I created over 300 characters. And he has created 20, and the style is not changing.

''In a very boring world, something happens and people hook on it, and Michael Lau created it,'' he says, speaking of himself in the third person. ''My aim is to challenge myself and not think of how famous I can be.'' Then, a little shyly, he asks, ''Is Michael Lau really famous in the West?'' Not so famous, he is told. ''I have to work harder,'' he replies.

Arthur Lubow is a contributing writer for the magazine. His most recent article was about the New York Philharmonic.

Correction: Aug. 29, 2004, Sunday Because of an editing error, an article on Aug. 15 about designer toys from Hong Kong and elsewhere misstated the relationship between the cost of manufacturing them and their retail price, $100 or more. The cost of making them is a small fraction of the sales price.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Coming Soon: Cool Tenacious D Toys!

A great team-up between John Kricfalusi, Thunderdog Studios and STRANGEco. I love the retro colors and oversprayed paint work. Can't wait to buy 'em!

Thanks to Vinyl Pulse for the photos.

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Wikio