meechum68 Posted June 7 Posted June 7 First kit was a 1:48 scale P-61 Black Widow, which is why I have a soft spot and several in my stash, I was 8-9 years old then. It started my love for models.
1959scudetto Posted June 7 Posted June 7 (edited) Must have been in 1969 (in Nov. 1968 we moved from a village in the Tyrolean Alps to a small town south of Vienna, which had two toy/hobby shops!) - my new schoolmates brought me to styrene models, mainly Airfix plastic bag kits: 1/72 WW2 planes, sailing ships and 1/32 car kits which I can remember some - glued together with tube glue, partially painted with Humbrol enamels, and bought another one when pocket money allowed it (NO stash back then!). I found some pics on the internet: This is where it started.... Edited June 7 by 1959scudetto
tim boyd Posted June 15 Posted June 15 I built my first model kit in the summer of 1962 at age 8 and it was a Revell 1/25th scale Dodge Lancer GT. TB ______.
Wickersham Humble Posted June 15 Author Posted June 15 Tim: Lancers and Valiants with Exner's 'European' styling: but beware Moostangers; he had the modern long-hood/short deck look nailed before Ford's guys co-opted it. '62 Ply/Dodge also. Didn't last long when Engel replaced him. In 1960, I used my meagre earnings from pumping gas at the local airport on weekends to buy car mags as well as 3-in-1 kits, and fell in love with his Plymouth XNR sports car; wish I could have found a kit of that to 'kustomize' back then. Very meagre areo, compromised for 'The Forward Look', but rakish and very dramatic in red! If I found a g-b for sale that was salvageable, I'd buy it -- except for all the dozen 65-year-old kits from my misspent teen years I'm still trying to finish up! Wick, at 80...
Junkman Posted Thursday at 11:09 AM Posted Thursday at 11:09 AM Munich, Germany, during the days following Christmas 1973. It was this kit.
Big Messer Posted Thursday at 08:57 PM Posted Thursday at 08:57 PM Sometime around early to mid-60's. A F4U Corsair, probably Airfix. Second an Airfix Rolls-Royce. Managed to glue one front wheel to the rear axle... Plenty of fingerprints also.
Trainwreck Posted Thursday at 09:11 PM Posted Thursday at 09:11 PM In 1967 my first build was a 1/32nd scale Pyro multipiece body '37 chev. drop top.
Wickersham Humble Posted Thursday at 10:21 PM Author Posted Thursday at 10:21 PM Doug, you are senior to me! On the Highway Pioneers models (which we bought ostensibly for my Dad, but... ) were they once marketed under the brand name 'Gowland & Gowland'?? Every time I think of them, that pops into my head. Of course, I lived through the 'sixties... Dad was an Asst. Sup. of County Schools, and very dedicated to his job; he was from a Dust Bowl family who homesteaded W. KS, and when his Pop died in a construction accident when he fourteen, he inherited the family Model T touring. He said it was the only car he could work on, but he knew it's every mood! Mom wanted to encourage him to get a hobby, so she footed the bill for each of we three boys to gift him with a T, or Stanley Steamer, or even a HP Rolls, of which I still have a few fragments! Usually, I was the one who spearheaded the builds, though; and if you recall how the wheels attached [the center slipped over the axle shaft, then one applied a heated screw-driver blade to melt a retaining hub on it ] and how usually I could expect two wheels of the four to still turn! Also, somehow the over-scale driver figures always looked a little drunk! Even in those early 'fifties days, I wished I could make a hot rod out of them! I have a '62 Revell product flyer that still lists nine HP kits, and something that I don't recall ever seeing on the shelves; two 1/16 kits, 1913 Maxwell roadster and 1917 Ford Model T coupe at $1.98 each! Are you or anyone else familiar with those? The '62 dealer's binder for plastic model kits (includes some earlier offerings, too) is a fantasy wonderland of possibilities for an avid modeler; how could I have missed out on buying a few of each -- other than only being able to afford one kit per month on my paper-route earnings!? Pretty dog-eared pages, but full of marvelous kits; glad at least that I was able to buy/build a smattering of what was 'out there' in my high school days!! Wick
bamadon Posted Friday at 06:04 PM Posted Friday at 06:04 PM My first was probably 1953/54. It was an Aurora Japanese Zero. i distinctly remember it because it was molded in yellow and I thought that was a strange color for a fighter plane.
NOBLNG Posted Friday at 09:41 PM Posted Friday at 09:41 PM I built my first model in my bedroom, and it was a mess.😳 1
Wickersham Humble Posted Friday at 11:51 PM Author Posted Friday at 11:51 PM Don, seems like Aurora's Spitfire was molded in medium blue, which would have been right, I think, for a high-altitude PRU Spit. Seems like the Me.109 and P-40 were both silver? I always wanted to get hold of some of the Aurora car kits, but had very few; they had a side-line of rather strangely designed 'custom' cars using those base kits,Jag, MGTC, Ferrari, and Cunningham. All, as I recall (I only had the Austin-Healey) were build-up kits, and fiddley for a kid. Ships, armor, and a slug of WWI fighters, figures, and even HO scale buildings, plus a few rifles, Indy cars, and bottled paints. Stores in our little N CA town just didn't carry them very often; mostly saw Revell and later AMT/SMP, etc. None of mine survived. Wonder if the molds for any of these are still hiding out there somewhere? Wick
The Junkman Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago I recall a number of Revell Whip-Fly It kits (F-105, F-84, F-100) in 1961/1962 era.
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