The Aurora, Revell, Monogram Models Story

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  • čas přidán 26. 09. 2019
  • Credit to oldmodelkits for the use of their images. www.oldmodelkits.com
    Here is a version with no background music • Aurora, Revell, Monogr...
    another update www.usatoday.com/story/money/...
    A run down on the three big kit model companies from their humble beginnings to their eventual demises.
    A German Investment group created the company Blitz, with the purpose of buying Revell USA and Revell Germany. This happened in April of 2018 when the companies of Hobbico were divested through liquidation. Blitz put the offices at Revell Germany in charge of both companies. They got it for a song, both companies together were valued at something like $18million, and was purchased for less than 1/4 of that, appox. $4million, a large chunk of that to purchase inventory at Revell USA. Looking at the numbers on paper, Revell Germany as a whole was bought for just under $1million, the tooling at Revell USA (worth approx. $3.5million) was on paper purchased for the tidy sum of $50000, licensing, trademarks and copyrights made up a bulk of the remaining costs of purchase.
    Now just called "Revell", Revell Germany side of the business, kits are still produced in Poland, and the Revell USA side of the business kits are still produced in China, with the same usual cross pollination of ROG and RUSA kits winding up in each other's boxes for different markets.
    Revell in the US was slow to get back off the ground, basically ended up being a warehouse with one employee where the RUSA and ROG kits would come into, and then sent back out to distributors. They have since expanded their footprint in the US, by bringing back Ed Sexton into the fold, and that is basically where we are at today.
    Most of the Aurora and Renwal molds, as well as some of the older Revell and Monogram tools, have since be sold to Atlantis Models, whom are having a grand time reissuing them. Subsequently the line of Monogram Nascar kits (most of them) were sold to Salvino JR Models (through Atlantis), and are living on today.
    Just thought it would be prudent to tell everyone that how the video ends, is not the end of the story.
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Komentáře • 3K

  • @larryaldrich4351
    @larryaldrich4351 Před rokem +262

    As an old man, I'd still like to build them, but I can't bring myself to pay fifty bucks for what I used to get for ninety-eight cents.

    • @anvil5113
      @anvil5113 Před 3 měsíci +28

      Amen to that.

    • @Tipman2OOO
      @Tipman2OOO Před 3 měsíci +2

      Yooooooooooo

    • @roysheaks1261
      @roysheaks1261 Před 3 měsíci +20

      I’m weaker than you guys. I retired a few years ago, and moved overseas with my wife. Before going, I bought and shipped 29 model kits. Some were over $50, but I couldn’t pass up the original boxed Boothill Express.

    • @michaelcarlisle5403
      @michaelcarlisle5403 Před 3 měsíci +19

      When you and I were 10-12 it was as had to scrape together.99$ as it is to afford $50.00 (on fixed income)

    • @richierugs6544
      @richierugs6544 Před 3 měsíci +25

      and at a time when getting 2 cents for a returned bottle actually meant something

  • @kevininny2625
    @kevininny2625 Před 3 měsíci +22

    I miss the America I grew up in. The local hobby shop was better than Disneyland. From arts and crafts construction paper and pipe cleaners. To plastic model kits and Estes rockets. I remember the glow in the dark monster models and my F15 Eagle best. Thank you for this trip down memory lane.

  • @robertcombs55
    @robertcombs55 Před 3 měsíci +49

    Built my first Model in 1956...a Revell B-25....I am 77 and still love building models!

    • @ShawnStafford-1978
      @ShawnStafford-1978 Před 3 měsíci +3

      That's awesome I have a B-25 Mitchell bomber model kit. Its a bigger scale.

  • @bonedigger666
    @bonedigger666 Před 3 lety +181

    I shoveled snow all winter back in the 70s and spent it all on models, and I'd do it again if I was 11 or 12.

    • @jaybrown1828
      @jaybrown1828 Před 3 lety +13

      Yep !!! From 1958-1962 I spent ALL the money I earned on 3 things, comic books,baseball cards,and 1/24 scale model cars by Jo-Han,Amt,and Revell. Fantastic times they were !!!

    • @brucegibbins3792
      @brucegibbins3792 Před 2 lety +10

      1960 I stopped buying kits in favour of dating girls. Not the best move I could have made, but there you go. In the early 1990s it was back to assembling plastic kits again and it's been steady building right up to this day.

    • @russellponder940
      @russellponder940 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I got my models in the early -mid 60s.
      I had most of the Monster models and of course Batman and Superman and Superboy. My paint jobs were pretty bad 😂

    • @kathybrown504
      @kathybrown504 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Shoveling snow proves what a dedicated model builder you truly are! Bless your heart.

    • @kathybrown504
      @kathybrown504 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@jaybrown1828 A man after my own heart! Where were you when I was spending MY allowance on the same things? You gotta be a great guy with a last name like Brown! I’m a Brown also...Kathy B. 3/31/24

  • @rexmyers991
    @rexmyers991 Před 3 lety +49

    EXCELLENT summary of the American plastic model companies. As a kid growing up in the 50s and early 60s, I built over 100 models spread out from the three company catalogs. They hung from my bedroom ceiling - sat on my dresser - adorned my window sills and were physical representations of my hopes and dreams. I am now long retired from the cockpit of my Boeing 767. but I wonder what I career i would have had if it weren’t for those models.

    • @jstravelers4094
      @jstravelers4094 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Excellent!
      I went on to be a Union tradesman.
      I think my passion for building models fueled my passion for building the real world.
      When I fly over Minneapolis at night....I can pick out lights I made happen.

  • @johanneduardschnorr3733
    @johanneduardschnorr3733 Před 4 lety +87

    Great documentary! As a kid in the early 70’s, I was a voracious builder! Flash forward to today, I suffered a serious spinal injury, leaving me barely able to walk, and with serious problems with my manual dexterity. After trying all sorts of physical therapy, with very limited success, I found 1/72 Sopwith Pup model in a box of my old toys left from my parent’s house. It was unbuilt, in the blister-pack from @1970. Long story short, I built the tiny thing, with a great deal of difficulty. Soon I was buying kits from E-Bay, my dexterity became exponentially better! Best physical therapy ever!!!

    • @Tipman2OOO
      @Tipman2OOO Před 3 měsíci +7

      No way! Thats amazing. Thanks for sharing, maybe it can help my dexterity as well! Wow!

    • @JohnPatterson-kz8jr
      @JohnPatterson-kz8jr Před 3 měsíci +4

      I almost forgot about Lindbergh Models as well.😮😅

    • @kathybrown504
      @kathybrown504 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Wow! What an inspiration to us all. More Power to you!

    • @jstravelers4094
      @jstravelers4094 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Cool story bro.....no sarcasm intended!

    • @forrestlindsey3947
      @forrestlindsey3947 Před 3 měsíci +1

      God bless you, buddy - you have courage and we all benefit from your story

  • @stagesixx
    @stagesixx Před 3 měsíci +25

    I really liked the ending where the founders were credited with enriching all of our lives. When I think about how much I learned and how rewarding the hobby was, and how it propelled my career paths, I was reverent in seeing the pictures of the people who made it happen. It became a personal connection.

    • @ralph5450
      @ralph5450 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I just went to the comments as I watched this. As usual I don't read many comments till I watch. Just as I got to your comment the part you mentioned came up. I feel the same way.
      🙂👍

  • @dennisduran8500
    @dennisduran8500 Před 3 měsíci +23

    When we were kids in the 60's we built the monster kits. The Mummy, Frankenstein, Wherewolf, Phantom of the Opera. My parents gave me an Aurora slot car set for Christmas in 67. Thanks Mom and Dad !

    • @markdinkel-uh2je
      @markdinkel-uh2je Před 3 měsíci

      Loved the monster kits but had the 1966 Batman model. Cool times.

  • @greg7656
    @greg7656 Před 3 lety +44

    The Aurora monster and character models were such a huge part of my childhood. For three or four years there I built every one of them, but my dad finally put his foot down when I asked for the guillotine. Beginning of the end

    • @larryaldrich4351
      @larryaldrich4351 Před rokem +7

      That Aurora guillotine kit was a scream. They should have come out with the gallows, electric chair, gas chamber, and leathal injection gurney!

    • @WilliamCook-mm9ks
      @WilliamCook-mm9ks Před 3 měsíci +6

      The Frankenstein kit was one of my first builds in the early 1960s. I enjoyed every moment.

    • @russellponder940
      @russellponder940 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I had most of the Monster models I'm thinking 1962, I was 4 years old my paint jobs were pretty bad 😂 And of course Batman and Superman and Superboy when they came out.

    • @kevininny2625
      @kevininny2625 Před 3 měsíci +4

      I miss the America I grew up in. The local hobby shop was better than Disneyland. From arts and crafts construction paper and pipe cleaners. To plastic model kits and Estes rockets. I remember the glow in the dark monster models and my F15 Eagle best. Thank you for this trip down memory lane.

    • @davidmacphee3549
      @davidmacphee3549 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@russellponder940 I met Curt Swan and shook his hand, THAT HAND !

  • @born2bbald12
    @born2bbald12 Před 3 lety +117

    I really appreciate this video. My father was Vice President for International Operations for Revell back in the '60s. I was a young kid at the time. Two favorite memories: 1) I assembled a plastic model of the _Santa Maria._ I went through great pains to paint that beautiful ship. I taught myself how to "age" the wood. I even stiffened all the rigging! Well, my dad was impressed. He took it to work. It ended up on display at his office! That was over 50 years ago! 2) Since my dad was in charge of International stuff anytime a foreign visitor arrived at Revell corporate he had to entertain them. We would take the VIP wherever they wanted to go in Southern California! _Guess_ where 103% of them wanted to go! YUP....Disneyland! So, mom and dad would pack up us kids in the car as we made the personal sacrifice of going to Disneyland! I have lost count. But I do remember having a shoebox __full__ of the old A B, C, E - unused ticket books!
    So, for me this video was a nice trip of nostalgia! Thank you!

    • @lenshilt
      @lenshilt Před 3 lety +2

      Was that the Revell factory in Venice, Ca.?

    • @born2bbald12
      @born2bbald12 Před 3 lety +8

      @@lenshilt Yes, we lived in a new city, at the time - Hacienda Heights. That was back in the '60s. We moved from Los Angeles to a newly built home. The commute was about 40 miles or about an hour and a half...or more!
      Ironically, later in life I had a similar commute, to a brand new city at the time to cities an hour to an hour and a half away!!!

    • @colorin81colorado
      @colorin81colorado Před 3 lety +5

      Well sir you are one lucky guy! I remember some of this same models as I wished I could afford one of the largest sets!
      I use to visit the toy shops' model sections just to check out the new model kits

    • @born2bbald12
      @born2bbald12 Před 3 lety +9

      @@colorin81colorado Ricardo (by the way, I _LIKE_ that name!), I was very fortunate. There was an endless supply of model kits coming my way when I was a kid. I could ask my dad for any kit in the catalog and I would get it - free. It wasn't in a pretty box (fresh from the factory floor) with all needed parts and instructions. Also, I now remember my dad giving me kits that were being tested. They weren't out in the stores yet. Anyway, I was asked to build them then give my opinion. I don't think I was allowed to keep them thou. (trade secrets!) I wish could remember which ones.
      My dad was a wonderful dad and provider. He worked very hard.
      I'm glad we share so memories! I hope you were able to build Revell kits. I recall that the detail on them was pretty good compared to the competition.
      Thank you for sharing!

    • @colorin81colorado
      @colorin81colorado Před 3 lety +4

      @@born2bbald12 hey thanks for commenting back! I did get to build a few models but I moved on to Lego when I started to have children of my own so we could build them together and not mess them up!
      I'm glad you had a good dad, many young people nowadays do not have one and we all suffer because of it.
      Make sure you leave some diary or record behind to tell your children or just to share good memories with us all!
      Cheers from Brisbane Australia!

  • @Thomas-pq4ys
    @Thomas-pq4ys Před 3 měsíci +12

    Model building was great fun as Boomer kid.
    My dad was a railroad hobbyist with HO trains... I built military kits... and a ship.
    When I first got into slot cars, Strombecker, then Monogram in 32nd scale were on the track my dad built from Masonite. Sincd he was a train guy, he built authentic scenery, pit area, hand made guard rails, great attention to details...
    Slot cars got more complex and very fast quickly. Dad and I were on it. Dad worked part-time at a small hobby shop, brought home magazines of the lastest equipment and tech. I sucked it up like I was starving... got to building.Dad and I built a bigger, faster track, foregoing the scenery.
    I couldn't wait to get home from school to build faster slot cars from scratch, frames from piano and brass plate and wire.
    When a commercial track opened in town, I was ready... I won the first four races. I was an instant celebrity.
    I had graduated HS, and was off to college... slot cars gave way to social interests, and eventually, guitar playing, which became my occupation ever since.😮
    I did get back into slot cars in the mid 80's. I loved building the newer cars, was good at it, but my dfiving skills had waned.... Still had a good time though.
    I still have these cars, but have no interest in investing time and money into it... I'm a homeowner now..😢. and a lifetime of accumulation to sort, get rid of.... probably the slot cars and all the parts and equipment go too. Sure had some good times building.
    Great video...Thanks.

    • @Thomas-pq4ys
      @Thomas-pq4ys Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@dleifteHsemaJ
      I've built partscasters, a Tele and a Strat...
      Next is a "Greenie" Les Paul...
      Retirement has made my life busier than ever... What I like best is no loaded alarm clock next to my bed.
      I'm still playing, solo acoustic, and in a trio... mostly Swing, with upright bass, sax, me on the Tele. Maybe I'll have my own band... all I need is time... sheesh!

  • @davidgolinsky
    @davidgolinsky Před 3 lety +50

    I grew up in 60's and these were my Go-To kits.

    • @georgeshelton6281
      @georgeshelton6281 Před 3 měsíci

      I'm someone who's going for something that's adult like.

  • @dwaynestimpson5449
    @dwaynestimpson5449 Před 4 lety +53

    I hated Revell models as a kid and built many Monogram models. Now with Covid and staying at home, at 53 Years Old I am trying to get back into model building.

    • @davidrobinson7112
      @davidrobinson7112 Před 3 lety +7

      It is very hard to accept the fact that model built is not a part of an individuals life anymore. I wonder how many have grown up to build the real thing. I feel this activity should be restarted. Maybe, just maybe fewer youngsters would be in trouble were prone to build models....

    • @farmboypresents9977
      @farmboypresents9977 Před 3 měsíci +3

      I hated revell too. Too basic. I was an Airfix kid.

    • @jstravelers4094
      @jstravelers4094 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@davidrobinson7112 WHY?
      Sport, I grew up in the rough part of town in the 60's and 70's.
      I knew lots of older kids who got into lots of trouble.
      The most talented kit builder in the neighborhood (BY FAR) grew up to be on the FBI's most wanted list.
      He was extremely talented.
      Extremely smart.
      His divorced Mother couldn't keep him on the correct road to success
      A bitter shame!
      He could have become anything.
      I wonder if he's still alive?

  • @warrendubeau851
    @warrendubeau851 Před 4 lety +209

    My oldest brother bought the Guillotine back in the 60s. Grandma was horrified. For the following decade, it was handed down from one brother to the next until I inherited this piece of awesomeness. The body of the victim was hollow, and you were supposed to fill it up with red dye, so the blood would pour out into the basket when you chopped his head off. Oh, the good ol' days....

    • @BobSmith-dk8nw
      @BobSmith-dk8nw Před 3 lety +7

      Ha! Ha! That's Great!
      .

    • @1339LARS
      @1339LARS Před 3 lety +8

      I still have it!!!!!!

    • @cindysue5474
      @cindysue5474 Před 3 lety +12

      My Husband told me about theses torture models sold in the early 70s the rack iron maiden etc and they would fit together like a giant chamber of horrors they got shut down real fast by concerned Mothers and feminists because it showed all Women in them and they are hard to find just like an old comic book series in the 60s called witches Tales it only sold so many and got shut down also because it was so graphic.

    • @gadsdonflag4289
      @gadsdonflag4289 Před 3 lety +4

      I built one of those too.....very cool!!

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify Před 3 lety +1

      Used to have the Polar Lights re-issue, but it disappeared in a move, alas. Nearly unavailable now.

  • @Tube_America
    @Tube_America Před 3 měsíci +14

    I remember how it was in the 60's as one of three young brothers. All within 3 years of other. We made hundreds of models of different kinds. After years of learning our craft we all finally agreed on building 1/72 scale models of aircraft all with gear up. 1/72 was great because big planes were available. Making models gear up and doors closed was extremely difficult make to look perfect. I remember closing the door where it almost looked perfect, only to have it pop inside slightly, making it impossible to pull out without getting glue everywhere! We hung them from the rafters in a well-built wooden shed, all facing the same direction. They are still there to this day!

  • @jduff59
    @jduff59 Před 3 lety +3

    I worked at Revell Models about 40 years ago. They had a guy who would "professionally" build all of their models - and these were displayed in their showroom. The detail on the battleships was amazing - even some rust in the right areas. They were a fantastic company to work for, and a lot of good people worked there. One thing we'd do is get models that had damaged packaging, but were still good inside, and give those to some of the kids in the neighborhood. Kids would show up out back on Fridays and always said thanks, regardless of what we had to give them.

    • @amtrakjohn
      @amtrakjohn Před 3 lety +1

      Amazing recollection- thanks for your part of the Story, Gringo. ✔️

  • @andrewheffel3565
    @andrewheffel3565 Před 4 lety +96

    I must have built over a hundred plastic models when I was a kid. Mostly military aircraft, but also rockets, a nuclear sub with all the internal details, and a 3' long aircraft carrier. I spent many an evening assembling and painting them. Monogram was my favorite brand.
    Many years later I was in DC for a one week marketing assignment, and we had a half day at the end to just look around. I did a quick tour with one of the managers, ans we visited the Mall and the Smithsonian Air Museum. I could name most of the aircraft and tell her their histories as we walked thru the place. She asked me how I knew so much about aircraft, and I was a little embarrassed to admit it was from building all those models. Monogram included information on the model, and I still remembered it as an adult.

    • @erichanhauser3190
      @erichanhauser3190 Před 3 lety +3

      You definitely picked the right museum, and that's a cool story.

    • @christianorr1059
      @christianorr1059 Před 2 lety +2

      @@erichanhauser3190 Indeed! I myself learned a lot about WWII warships and warplanes I built in my 6th grade year (1986-87).

    • @DavidRLentz
      @DavidRLentz Před 2 lety +2

      I had a series of surprisingly similar experiences. First, Revell 1:72nd-scale kits of 1) USAAF and USN combat aircraft, predominantly of the Second World War; 2) and U.S. Navy warships (to my exasperation, not in the same scale; I am poor at maths!). Also, Star Trek models, especially of the Starship Enterprise, NCC-1701. I like contemplating the military's future.
      Decades later, some veterans in my apartment complex went to the USAF museum in Vandalia, Ohio; to my deep gratitude, they had a remaining seat (I just had learnt of it even as they were boarding the bus!). When we had arrived, I asked the volunteer escorting me round (the place was *enormous*, and I am significantly myopic!) not to tell me the names of any of them, as this was my chance to test my knowledge; over the following two hours or so, I had not missed one! I recited from memory the manufacturer, the designation, the nickname, the service branch, and the type (e.g., Boeing B-17G "Flying Fortress" USAAF Heavy Bomber). I even was able to distinguish between a Lockheed P-38 "Lightning" USAAF Fighter -J and -L variant! All thanks to Bert Kinsey's Detail and Scale books, round thirty of which I had packed into my satchel.
      Maybe we are polystyrene cousins.

    • @jstravelers4094
      @jstravelers4094 Před 3 měsíci +2

      When I was 12.....early 70's.
      I could tell you the brand, model, and year of 80% of the cars driving down any busy street.

  • @phineasrumson3116
    @phineasrumson3116 Před 4 lety +202

    There are a lot of us still out there who remember the pleasures of building these old kits during the rainy afternoons of our youth; the enjoyment that we derived from these hobbies are forever in our hearts.

    • @PaleRider54
      @PaleRider54 Před 4 lety +8

      It was the detail painting that I got the most fun from, being very careful to remove any brush hairs from the model's surface.

    • @michaelweizer7794
      @michaelweizer7794 Před 4 lety +9

      @@PaleRider54 Since I've been into cars my hole life I still build models of the classics and muscle cars, Building models actually was a start towards working on real cars. And since I always try to build my cars stock I have to study the real cars to get the details right, I could go on about this subject, Building models helps when it comes to critical thinking, and since I have over 300 models in my collection along with alot of diecast models I can honestly say that Revell monogram kits are about the best for the money !

    • @wallace11824
      @wallace11824 Před 4 lety +7

      Larry Wilson
      Some of the best times of my life. My twin brother and I would save up our .78 cents to buy an Aurora or Monogram. It was the early 60’s and a great way to tune out the assassinations and the nightly body count from Vietnam.I still love to build them and still hang them from the ceiling!

    • @michaelweizer7794
      @michaelweizer7794 Před 4 lety +7

      @@wallace11824 my problem is finding new plastic cases to put my cars in you see that for over ten year's now I haven't been able to find them at the local Walmart and when I did find them at the hobby shops (also disappearing) they used to cost an arm and a leg, so when I dust those I have to be careful. Of course Hobby shops disappearing bothers me also, I guess its beacuse of the internet and Amazon but still that was something special and a part of my life that I enjoyed!

    • @michaelweizer7794
      @michaelweizer7794 Před 4 lety +3

      Shame we gotta get old!

  • @lucabrasisleepswiththefish77
    @lucabrasisleepswiththefish77 Před 3 měsíci +7

    Nothing matched my childhood elation like walking into a well-stocked hobby shop in the seventies. My personal forte was military vehicles and especially tanks...mostly revel. I went for the battle hardened look...weathering, dents, a little rust...Not immediately, but eventually they all succumbed to firecrackers in my backyard. As it pains me to say, watching their demise was almost as satisfying as building them. Thank you for such a wonderful video.

    • @sclogse1
      @sclogse1 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Your parents allowed you to play with firecrackers? In their yard? My folks never indulged in any fireworks. And we lived in suburbia.

    • @jamesfields2916
      @jamesfields2916 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Every report card we got a trip to the hobby shop for a new model and then pizza.

  • @k.b.tidwell
    @k.b.tidwell Před 3 měsíci +14

    I was a Revell kid in the '70's, and often poured over the extensive color catalogs they published, dreaming about my next build. I'll never forget my 1957 Nomad, which was so large it fully exemplified the "shoebox" Chevy's lol. I had that same cutaway sub Mr. Blazer is holding in the video, and I had the U.S.S. Missouri. Bought that at a department store called Murphy's in my hometown that was a sort of Walmart-esque small chain.
    I had the B-52 from that 1:32 line, and it was HUGE! My family was a low-mid middleclass finance family, so we didn't have central A/C. We used box fans in the warm months, and I'll never forget lying in bed and seeing the big silhouette of that B-52 hanging from the ceiling, swaying gently left to right in the dark. I flew a lot of bombing sorties lol.
    I'll say that I also built a lot of Monogram models, and my third place choice was Tamiya. Their kits were usually smaller scale, but VERY detailed.
    I can't remember ever having an Aurora kit, but since I did build Monogram...I guess I did! I recognize so many of my old models from your video. So many great memories! I hope that even though the companies are defunct now, somehow someone had the love of history to preserve the molds. Their destruction would be a big tragedy.
    You got my sub.

    • @otisarmyalso
      @otisarmyalso Před 3 měsíci +2

      Thxs for memories forgot the ships and subs grand stuff

  • @robertstubbs1508
    @robertstubbs1508 Před 4 lety +439

    I remember going to the hobby store to get a model. I would build it and hang them from my ceiling in my room. It was a much better time and I miss it.

    • @thebernicelshow7408
      @thebernicelshow7408 Před 4 lety +18

      It was a much better time, and I miss it as well.

    • @johncooper7663
      @johncooper7663 Před 4 lety +24

      100% with you Robert. I spent 50% of the money I made shoveling snow, mowing lawns on models. I loved to build tanks and funny cars

    • @trevorjameson3213
      @trevorjameson3213 Před 4 lety +14

      Yes, it was a great time back then. I used to buy the model cars, planes, and ships at Gibson's. I remember the car models were only about a dollar and a half, but it took me a while to save that much. I had a lot of those model cars, I wish I still had them.

    • @jonm5796
      @jonm5796 Před 3 lety +16

      And heating up pins to make bullet holes.

    • @davidho2977
      @davidho2977 Před 3 lety +15

      I used to build model airplanes, then hang them up in the backyard then shoot them with a bb gun. I know. Unexplained destructiveness.

  • @iowafarmboyoffroad4718
    @iowafarmboyoffroad4718 Před 4 lety +248

    I used to draw the instruction manuals for the Revell / Monogram kits around 1990-93 as well as the kits made by Ertl toy company. It was pretty cool going to stores and seeing the kits on the shelves and show people all the kits I had drawn.

    • @tyrssen1
      @tyrssen1 Před 3 lety +12

      Hey, that IS cool! Must've been a great job.

    • @whatyoumakeofit6635
      @whatyoumakeofit6635 Před 3 lety +7

      Thats pretty neat

    • @williamgrimberg2510
      @williamgrimberg2510 Před 3 lety +23

      Molded a lot of Revell models in the 70s at our molding company in Santa Monica when we had openings in one of injection molding machines. It was pretty cool and gave me a brake from molding some uninteresting parts for other companies. We were custom molders for 47 years .

    • @cwlong9667
      @cwlong9667 Před 3 lety +13

      As an old draftsman, I envy you! That is awesome! Into model trains now andd would love to have met the Train Miniatures and Athearn artist! Chances are I saw your instruction but plastic models were fading into my N and HO trains!

    • @brianjob3018
      @brianjob3018 Před 3 lety +5

      @@williamgrimberg2510 The nostalgia over all this hurts, doesn't it, friend?

  • @jimhenry7173
    @jimhenry7173 Před 3 lety +12

    I grew up in the 50's and 60's and spent a great deal of my childhood building plastic model airplanes, ships and cars.
    Great memories!

  • @rickj1983
    @rickj1983 Před 3 lety +5

    It's amazing that the kits I bought as a kid around 1970 were $2.50 for a Revell kit ($25 last I checked). which I thought was the best at the time (it also had the best decals). Monogram was good too. Hot wheels. Tonka trucks (The all metal trucks), Cox gas powered aircraft and cars. My dad was Air Force and brought home large posters of military jets that he'd hang on our bedroom walls. My brother and I bought model airplanes and hung them from the ceiling and displayed model cars on top of our dressers. We could easily spend a full day in our room building a single model. My brother got an HO slot car racing set for Christmas one year and that ended up being a huge hit. My friend across the street had one too and his older brother (I think 10 or 11 at the time) would take lighter fluid and douse a car with it, light it and drive the car around the track on fire. We thought he was crazy. My kids now (as is every kid) are into video gaming. My youngest son saved (from doing chores) enough to buy the components to build a high end video gaming PC. His older brother helped him build it and he still uses it to this day (he's 14 now).

  • @outbackcountry512
    @outbackcountry512 Před 4 lety +18

    As a kid I built alot of Revell and Monogram, Aurora as well as AMT , Tamiya and several others , stopped in my mid 20s due to ex inlaws looking down on it as waste of money and time , I sure did enjoy those endless hours building and painting , into the we hours of the morning . This vid brought back lot of older memories .

    • @davidorr6627
      @davidorr6627 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Since they are ex-inlaws, what's stopping you from getting back into model building? I'm back into it now after a 20+ year hiatus. I'm building all of the kits my father bought in the mid 70's, inluding a few Revell kits and one Aurora. I've also got my own stash from 20+ years ago to finish off, and I seem to keep buying new kits. They range of paints and tools available now is amazing. You can certainly blow a few bucks on materials, and the kits are not particularly cheap in New Zealand, but it's a great hobby.

  • @jamesmarshall9420
    @jamesmarshall9420 Před 4 lety +74

    I love an "Old School" documentary that carefully tells the stories of a "Golden Era"...

    • @georgeshelton6281
      @georgeshelton6281 Před 3 měsíci

      The 1/24th Santa Maria plastic model is very rare. That was Christopher Columbus' principal wooden exploration ship. 🚢 😳 😍 😍 😍 😄 😄 👌 😅 🚢

  • @tocolormemucsic44
    @tocolormemucsic44 Před 3 lety +56

    I bought my first plastic model in 1952, I continued to build models all through my school years , to this day I still build and fly model airplanes, I'm 76 yrs old now , and still buy and build a plastic model, many thanks to those companies that kept me interested in model building. The hobby has grown immensely. So glad I was a part of the early history , great memories..

    • @bigmikelongwood3276
      @bigmikelongwood3276 Před 3 lety +2

      I know the feeling I'm in my late 40s an still build an fly model airplanes as well every time I fire up one of my old os max engines I still get a rush.. An of course I lov the exhaust smell lol

  • @williamgerkens573
    @williamgerkens573 Před 3 lety +19

    It's three a.m. and I'm reliving my childhood. Thank you.
    Now I'll have to wake up in reality.

    • @maxsmodels
      @maxsmodels  Před 3 lety +1

      ah for gteh sweet escape of nostalgia

  • @RickaramaTrama-lc1ys
    @RickaramaTrama-lc1ys Před 4 lety +48

    I really enjoyed this Doc. as a man of 74 yrs. I was in the big middle of this time when many of us boys in the late 50's and 60's, before we noticed cute girls, used to buy a model about once a week if possible. One of my favorites was a plane called The Pogo-Stick with dual props and took off straight up. Revel's car kits in the 60's seemed to be a favorite. We also spent a fortune on all the little glass paint jars by Testors. I am so thankful I grew up then where we rode bicycles for miles and miles everyday and sold pop bottles to get our money for the kits.
    Seems like a much better time to be alive and would go back in a heartbeat if I could. Thanks for this great visit to happier times~!

    • @dandexinventor
      @dandexinventor Před 4 lety +1

      I agree...people had a desire to treat each other well then. Today, with all the claims we have "progressed", look at how much drama and politics has destroyed what is good. I hope we learn to treat each other better and get rid of the drama and politics as a form of entertainment for the bored and foolish who don't even realize they have a much more to live for, many more talents to hone. I really think this simple thing (deciding to treat each other better) is the solution to most of today's troubles.

    • @rjm145
      @rjm145 Před 4 lety +1

      I was happiest listening to the Beatles while building models and racing slot cars with my friends and Dad back in the day.

    • @andrewheffel3565
      @andrewheffel3565 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes to all three posts. Yes to the Beatles, and all the other great rock groups. Yes to building lots of model airplanes. And yes to freedom to ride our bikes far from home. Just be home for dinner.

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Looking at all those boxes with the unforgettable artwork, reminds me of just how many of the models I built. At one time a model of most of the allied (and some axis) military planes of WWII. About 40 or so. Piper Cub and Storch to Coronado and Mariner.

    • @jstravelers4094
      @jstravelers4094 Před 3 měsíci

      It's your past guys.
      Times were good for us because we were white and either affluent enough....or young enough to avoid Vietnam.
      I know people who had it bad in the 60's and 70's.
      My kids grew up in the 90's and 2000's.
      They had great childhoods!
      I made damned sure of that.
      But to sit around and go on the internet claiming life was great back then....and terrible now is just pathetic.
      You guys don't understand that you lived "privileged" lives.
      I lived in the poor part of town in the 60's and 70's.
      I still had a great childhood....but make no mistake.
      I had friends from broken homes....lots of drugs and alcohol used by their parents.
      They don't see these as "GREAT TIMES"
      I also remember some of the older boys going off to Vietnam.
      Some never came home!
      It wasn't the times that were great.....it was your parents that were great.
      They were able to raise you in a safe and stable area.
      Kids today who have great parents.....are doing JUST FINE!

  • @scottouellette9411
    @scottouellette9411 Před 4 lety +16

    I have over 6000 models of every description in original factory sealed boxes. I find the artwork on the boxes much more satisfying than the model itself. I have transportation cars,trucks,aircraft,ships,monsters ,t.v.stars etc.

    • @maonponce986
      @maonponce986 Před 2 lety +2

      Wow 👌 can you sell me a car or truck so I can built one 🤔❓please.

    • @brantardrey7360
      @brantardrey7360 Před 3 měsíci +4

      I thought my cousin had the largest collection he has a 24 by 24 garage that's full he can just get the minivan in he bought some models recently last month he has nowhere to put them he has no more space no more nothing he's got like 2000 model car kits military plane and otherwise in about 19,000 Matchbox Hot Wheels dinky and Corgi are display cases and such but 6000 my cousin would go nuts he loves the old boxes so do I

    • @davidcollin1436
      @davidcollin1436 Před 3 měsíci +1

      We need a museum of culture to house them.

    • @chriscarll2159
      @chriscarll2159 Před 3 měsíci

      Yes, the artwork was very intriguing, especially on the Aurora monster kits. I often would wonder how well the plastic kit was going to match the artwork before opening the box. The plastic never did seem to match all that well, but that was ok because I saw the artwork as a technical challenge to see how well I could paint the kit to match as close as possible.

  • @PatrickCallahan-wg2sh
    @PatrickCallahan-wg2sh Před 3 měsíci +6

    Man, this brings back memories of childhood in the 1960's and early 70's. I remember kids my age all building model ships (to start with and airplanes later) and placing them on the floor of a bedroom with other kids ship models to form fleets. Most were Revell models that involved different size scale ships which was not always appreciated in those same size boxes. This model building was fun and kept us off the streets for a few years. After leaving the military and before he died my father gave me a box of models I had built decades before. It brought tears to my eyes.

    • @65gtotrips
      @65gtotrips Před 3 měsíci

      Absolutely true ! See my comments in the main section

  • @scottleitch2957
    @scottleitch2957 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I can remember riding my 10 speed 5 miles across West Jacksonville to buy the Thunderbirds set, and precariously ride back home with this giant box. This bittersweet place we find ourselves now.....

  • @patrickroeill8746
    @patrickroeill8746 Před 4 lety +9

    I was born 1960 and Aurora was a big part of my child hood.Aurora cars and track was the cat meow.They made some great stuff,Batmobile,Good Humor ice cream truck and a lot more.The track suck some times with guide pins and clips but it was racing at it's best.It was good to see this and learn more about a great era and time in life

  • @kentpurrington2645
    @kentpurrington2645 Před 4 lety +315

    Absolutely OUTSTANDING video, this is what I'm looking for when I watch youtube. This is the standard that should be met! Great job!

  • @dianebongo1328
    @dianebongo1328 Před 3 lety +5

    My husband has been building models since he was young I cant wait to show him this video thank you

  • @michaelhorning6014
    @michaelhorning6014 Před 3 lety +37

    Aurora monster kits were EVERYWHERE when I was a kid.

    • @tolfan4438
      @tolfan4438 Před 3 lety +4

      And so we're model shops. most of them had models in the window and monsters are always part of that display

    • @classicgalactica5879
      @classicgalactica5879 Před 3 lety +1

      Yep. I had them all.

    • @raymondramirez9177
      @raymondramirez9177 Před 3 lety +2

      I built the Frankestein Monster in1962, the Mummy in 1964, and Dr. Jekell/Mr. Hyde in 1965. I saw the Hunchback, Creature from the Black Lagoon, Phantom of the Opera, and Dracula kits but never bought them. A friend asked me to help him build and paint the Superman kit but I don't remember the year.

    • @djx64
      @djx64 Před 3 lety +3

      Please to say I still have most of them, inc prehistoric, monster scenes etc. Even some boxes in decent condition.

  • @MrJest2
    @MrJest2 Před 4 lety +37

    My childhood flashes before my eyes. I had sooo many of these kits when I was younger. In my teens I migrated to the more detailed kits and diorama building... but Aurora, Revell and Monogram started it all.

  • @naturalobserver6130
    @naturalobserver6130 Před 4 lety +35

    I built my first model at the age of six and I've never stopped building them. I'll turn 67 in April. P. S. Loved the history lesson!👍

    • @dansanders653
      @dansanders653 Před 3 lety +6

      My first as the original Revell X-15 at five years old. It was, naturally, a mess! I recently ordered the same model on eBay (for a lot more than Mom paid) and an original Mercury/Gemini combo kit which I’d also built at about ten. These versions ended up as fine scale models when finished. Amazing what patience, maturity and experience does! I loved All Three manufacturers. Kept me busy for hours. I loved for trips to the drug store with my Mom and the chance to shop the model shelves. I’m sorry there gone but pleased Revell Germany is out there. I’ve ordered some of their contemporary kits. Very happy with them.
      Oh yeah, and all those airplane models that stirred my imagination? They made me a Naval Aviator years later! Thanks for the inspiration boys! Cause I coulda ended up an accountant...lol.

    • @mikentx57
      @mikentx57 Před 3 lety +2

      I also had my first model when I was 6. My parents were going to some evening thing and left me with my grandparents. They let me with a model of a B29 and a tube of glue. I never had seen a model be put together but my dad had a few models I would play with. Now as anyone who started young with plastic models knows the glue that that came in the tubes, (we all know the orange and white Testors tubes.). That if you are nor careful that glue can get all over your fingers and when you hold the parts it will etch your fingerprints onto that part. So by the end of the evening I had a B29 all put together and had my 6yo fingerprints etched all over it. I think somewhere I still have that model. By 9 I found that I did pretty well at construction and painting. I got a kit that had 4 Blue Angels Grumman F-11 Tiger jets. I entered it in a contest and i won first place for my age group. My model sat in a display case at our airport for a few months. I still have one of then here on my desk. From 6-18 I put together scores of models. Mainly planes and jets but now and then a car too
      My time to be able to build models dropped off a lot when I went to college then was married and working. i am now 63 and I still have a number of models out in my garage I hope I could someday work on but still never find the time now.

  • @hadial-saadoon2114
    @hadial-saadoon2114 Před 3 měsíci +2

    My newspaper route in the early-mid-sixties paid for my voracious appetite for model airplanes, armored vehicles and ships. My ardour waned as I reached maturity, but my stepfather continued to collect kits. When he died I inherited two dozen vintage kits. I'm not a builder now, but as I age I see myself finally pursuing my youthful passion. Many Aurora , Hawk and Monogram kits are on my shelves.

  • @Michael-im1vc
    @Michael-im1vc Před 3 lety +6

    I built models from all 3 companies in the 70's as a kid. Thanks for taking the time to walk me down memory lane and provide their stories!

  • @buxxbannerspov30
    @buxxbannerspov30 Před 4 lety +7

    I'm in my mid 70s...the only model kits I remember building as a kid were the model cars...before they made the custom kits we would lower them, paint flames on them, the works...lots of fun times.

  • @solardisk3
    @solardisk3 Před 3 lety +116

    If you grew up an only child, you know these companies well.

    • @warriordragonify
      @warriordragonify Před 3 lety +3

      He was the President of our model warship club. We'd divvy them up and have mock battles in his back yard. He always escalated the arms race-Graf Spee

    • @TheMoravians
      @TheMoravians Před 3 lety +6

      I can imagine how true that is.
      Even though I had 2 brothers and a sister, I "know these companies well" because none of my siblings cared to build or create anything that took more than 3 minutes. Needless to say, I played by myself much of my childhood.

    • @mbrew3244
      @mbrew3244 Před 3 lety +5

      Hell, if you grew up with sibs, still know these companies well. The Aurora slot car racing was quite informative. There were a couple of AFX tracks in the house when I was a kid.

    • @Glicksman1
      @Glicksman1 Před 3 lety +2

      My younger brother is seven years my junior. It was just like being an only child.

    • @scooterbob4432
      @scooterbob4432 Před 3 lety +2

      I am one. I used to assemble Monogram and Revell model planes and tanks back in the 1950s when I was in grade school.

  • @richardromero1797
    @richardromero1797 Před 3 lety +6

    These models were a big part of my childhood. Interests and skills I developed from building these models are still with me to this day.

  • @tyrssen1
    @tyrssen1 Před 3 lety +41

    As a kid, every weekend it was the same thing. My mom would gasp, "Two dollars? TWO DOLLARS? You spent two dollars for a MODEL?" Many of those same kits, now reissued, cost ten times that much or more. So yeah mum, I'm glad I spent two dollars on a model. Used to have 50 or more sitting around the basement -- all lovingly assembled and painted. I learned a little about cars, and the basics of custom painting. At one point, my baby sister smashed 'em all up, and I was so devastated that I never built again. Well, one or two some decades later, but my time as a model builder was basically gone. Ah well, that was then, this is now. If I can get my real-life motorcycle finished this spring, I'll be delighted.

    • @raysullenberger5626
      @raysullenberger5626 Před 3 lety +3

      If a kit exsits of your motorcycle or ones you really like, get one and build it. Relight the fire, you might be able enjoy it again🤠

    • @tyrssen1
      @tyrssen1 Před 3 lety +4

      @Incog Nito LOL Mom kept me from killing her.

    • @87mini
      @87mini Před 3 lety +6

      Remember peering at the price "code" on the end of the box and figuring what you could afford, or how many more soda pop bottles you'd need to find to buy the next one up? That's economics 101! One thing that strikes me is the amount o additional detail about a thing that you notice as you're assembling an painting the model. I got a model of the Queen Mary one Xmas, must have been a Monogram, the detail was amazing. I installed lifeboats for a week! My Dad went to England on her as a troop ship, and my mom came back on her as a war bride!

    • @tyrssen1
      @tyrssen1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@87mini Now, that's cool! :)

    • @ultra4e
      @ultra4e Před 3 lety

      So why did your babysitter smash them? I stopped and never built again after my 7th grade eye exam crushed my dreams of becoming an Air Force pilot, as it revealed I didn't have 20/20 vision.

  • @kennydemartini2169
    @kennydemartini2169 Před 4 lety +25

    I was a member of the Revell Master Modelers Club in the '70s! I enjoyed building all the cars well into high school, which was a huge part of me becoming a very successful auto restorer in adulthood... I really liked the 'Deals Wheels' line, and recently won a bidding war on Ebay on the ZZZZZZ/28 kit. I ended up paying 80 bucks for it, but I surely would have paid more. That kit reminds me of me and my dad assembling that car in 1973, shortly before my parents divorced.

    • @georgeshelton6281
      @georgeshelton6281 Před 3 měsíci

      I'm still thinking about the AMC Pacers and Gremlins. Also, Dodge Colts and Plymouth Champs.

  • @uplate57
    @uplate57 Před 4 lety +51

    Brings back memories. As a boy, I had the Frankenstein, Werewolf, Phantom of the Opera and, yes, even the model guillotine. I wish I still had them.

    • @tyrssen1
      @tyrssen1 Před 3 lety +2

      Yup, had all the monsters, and a bunch of cars and a few planes. Great times!

    • @tomrhymer7468
      @tomrhymer7468 Před 3 lety +2

      Polar Lights has reproduced all the monster kits.

    • @TheWolfsnack
      @TheWolfsnack Před 3 lety +2

      ...I remember building all of the Knights in armor

    • @tyrssen1
      @tyrssen1 Před 3 lety

      @@TheWolfsnack Yep, me too!

    • @carltonpoindexter2034
      @carltonpoindexter2034 Před 3 lety +2

      I still have the Godzilla model.

  • @ms8596
    @ms8596 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I was that kid from age 5 through 14, 1967 through 1976, looking for my next model from these 3 companies. Opening the box, seeing the "tree" of parts, or in Aurora's case, loose in the box, reading the instructions, getting the right paint colors, learning the finer points of detail (like cutting a paint brush to one bristle and filling in the red lettering on the Lincoln hub cap under a microscope) and how it matters, finessing fits (fit and finish) and decals...these kits , plus erector sets taught so much and provided hours upon hours of a hobby and, most of all, learning.
    I actually was in a Target earlier this year and looked at what was available on shelves in the toy area. Zilch. I figured it was video games and computers that killed this market. Thanks for putting this together, as I was obviously wrong.

    • @65gtotrips
      @65gtotrips Před 3 měsíci +1

      I had to double check to see if I was reading one of my own posts as you and I are from the same ‘tree’ mold so to speak. I used to have to have find best quality horsehair brushes. Like you say, I even took bristles out to like (1) hair so I could paint the eyeballs on the pilots !

    • @ms8596
      @ms8596 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@65gtotrips And it made it look so much better! Taught patience and a steady hand.

    • @davidcollin1436
      @davidcollin1436 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I was a detail specialist, I won the Revell model car contest, both in paint,upholstery and detail as well as my age category. My car took an entire year, hand rubbed lacquer bronze metallic. The tiny dipstick had oil, all sparkplug wires, even under the dash wiring, cut the doors open and made hinges, pearl naugahyde upholstery on rotating seats. I won two big trophies but only built one car because it took so long. Later used those skills to custom paint electric guitars, motorcycles , helmets, cars. It was a hobby that I loved as a 12 year old. I still build custom guitars .

    • @ms8596
      @ms8596 Před 3 měsíci

      @@davidcollin1436 That's amazing.

  • @sfneurosurgeon
    @sfneurosurgeon Před 3 lety +6

    As a kid I would save my weekly allowance and blow it all on $5 model kits from Monogram and Revell. Good old days.

  • @faelwolf1177
    @faelwolf1177 Před 4 lety +144

    This brought back a lot of fond memories. In this age of computer games, I think a lot of kids are missing out on the virtues that scale modelling gave us. Patience, hand-eye coordination, artistic skills, etc. I think it would be great to see the hobby make a comeback.

    • @pyroromancer
      @pyroromancer Před 4 lety +1

      GANDAM

    • @christianleblanc2842
      @christianleblanc2842 Před 4 lety +2

      Life is still primarily lived in the physical world.

    • @ignaciodejesuscabreralario3966
      @ignaciodejesuscabreralario3966 Před 4 lety +8

      It even somtimes gave us frustration tolerance, because no matter how difficult some steps became, we found the way to overcome them .

    • @faelwolf1177
      @faelwolf1177 Před 4 lety +11

      @LTrain 45 Hardly. While video games have shortened the time for technical training for things such as pilots, (especially drone pilots, per a USAF report to congress) they do not give you the hands-on fabrication and engineering problem-solving skills that modelling does. Apples and oranges comparison. Neither skill set is bad, just different.
      There is a big difference between pushing a button to create a crafted item in a video game, and having to figure out how you are going to make real world parts fit together properly. For scratch builders, it is practically a junior course in structural engineering.
      My modelling skills sure came in handy as a fabricator when the boss would come around with some project drawn on the back of a cocktail napkin with estimated dimensions and say "here, build me a prototype of this".
      I could tell when an engineer was a video gamer, I was correcting their blueprints when they wanted me to drill a hole in solid steel that then turned at a 90 degree angle......

    • @onazram1
      @onazram1 Před 4 lety +4

      You are so correct, it's sad to see my grandson with more interest in video game's than building things...

  • @MichaelAChang
    @MichaelAChang Před 4 lety +14

    Those models were a big part of my childhood. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

  • @djg6015
    @djg6015 Před 3 měsíci +2

    As a kid, I liked Aurora aircraft models because the decal locations were molded in. I always thought Monogram had the best aircraft kits. Then Airfix hit my hometown with 29 cent WWI and 39 cent WWII kits. Molded in swirly silver plastic, made me have to start painting. What a hobby.

  • @manisteerocks7092
    @manisteerocks7092 Před 3 lety +30

    I'm so glad I found this video!..when my father passed away 11 years ago he left me over 50 unassembled revell and monogram model airplanes still in the boxes. He had collected them over his years as a vietnam vet and sometimes took over a year to build one at a time. It drove me nuts!..I started building my own in the early 80s but I never had the patience to do the great job my father did. I still have them all he left to me, sitting in my basement. I tried selling them in ads and such,but kids would rather play video games these days. I don't know what to do with them,.. maybe one day I'll build that cool black widow night fighter plane,the box looks so cool. Thanks for doing this video,I had no idea of the history of these companies.

    • @Flint-Dibble-the-Don
      @Flint-Dibble-the-Don Před 3 lety +2

      I knew exactly what model you where talking about the second I saw black widow. I use to stare at it in the model section at Walmart way back in the day. She's a beauty.

    • @manisteerocks7092
      @manisteerocks7092 Před 3 lety

      @@Flint-Dibble-the-Don so did I!!!

    • @manisteerocks7092
      @manisteerocks7092 Před 3 lety

      @@Flint-Dibble-the-Don except it was Kmart at the time, before Walmart came around.

    • @manisteerocks7092
      @manisteerocks7092 Před 3 lety

      @@Flint-Dibble-the-Don well,..I can make a bunch of these yours, including the black widow,..for a reasonable price,they are literally just sitting in my basement collecting dust..I need the space for my rock shop anyhow..

    • @JohnBarrow1961
      @JohnBarrow1961 Před 3 lety +2

      @@manisteerocks7092 If you have any local model shops, you may be able to sell the complete kits to them.

  • @baystgrp
    @baystgrp Před 3 lety +22

    Required viewing for all American boys from the 1950’s. I was a Revelle fan with Monogram as a fallback. I was an Army brat; for some reason the PX’s didn’t carry Aurora kits. Remember building the kit of the USS Nautilus right before it transited under the ice to the North Pole. Very cool. The PX in Italy also sold the British Airfix kits but their 1/72d scale was a leetle bit too small...

    • @maxsmodels
      @maxsmodels  Před 3 lety +1

      😁

    • @siseley1
      @siseley1 Před 3 lety +1

      From another military brat, the Navy Exchange, and places like Schofield barracks BX, and Sasebo, did not have much either. When back stateside, I built all the "Hot Rod" series like "Grasshopper", and "Black widow", as well as the regular cars. Still have over 60 models in my house !!! Now that I am 74, I don't have the eyesight to do much building, or detailing, but still enjoy dusting, and looking at my collection.
      Steve, in the Cali Desert

  • @DM-rp7ps
    @DM-rp7ps Před 4 lety +10

    Thank You for the great history documentary! I built many, many of these in the 70's which were our chief source of entertainment. It often took weeks to scratch up the $3.88 they cost then! I never considered sniffing the glue or Testors paint for a thrill; it seemed a pretty stupid notion! Great trip back in time when life as a pre-early teenager was so much better. I built skills then that have served me well everyday since!

  • @vhhawk
    @vhhawk Před 3 lety +6

    This helped to put context to a big part of my childhood in the 60s. I built so many of these models. Great to know the backstories. My students always thought I was joking when I talked about all the glue and "dope" I inhaled as a kid. Just part of building models back then.

  • @Larrye123
    @Larrye123 Před 3 lety +4

    Thank you for the video. I live next door to Elk Grove, IL. Can't believe my childhood was so closely linked to where these models
    were made. I'm sorry kids today will never know the joy of building plastic models with their own hands. How I wish I'd kept mine. So sad.

  • @phillipdavies6548
    @phillipdavies6548 Před 4 lety +10

    I 1963, when I was sixteen I had left school and was working for a company call London Artid Plastics in Slough, Buckinghamshire UK. I operated a plastic injection moulding machine making Revell model kits. Needless to say I was able to build many kits as I got them for virtually nothing. The company office had a glass case where all the models I built were displayed for customers to see when they visited. Best job I ever had before I joined the army

    • @cwlong9667
      @cwlong9667 Před 3 lety

      What a wonderful story! We are about the same age!

  • @Barnabas45
    @Barnabas45 Před 3 lety +7

    Grew up with Aurora, My greatest memories are those Universal Horror model kits!

  • @ripjones5294
    @ripjones5294 Před 3 lety +27

    An EXCELLENT chronicle. I remember all three companies.

  • @tonytygrrHI
    @tonytygrrHI Před 3 lety +3

    Splendid doc on these three plastic model powerhouses!! Models were a huge part of my childhood that I'd forgotten. Thanks for stirring up these memories!!

  • @ANTINUTZI
    @ANTINUTZI Před 4 lety +5

    ... I was born in '51, and I got into building models in a big way. I consider that deep experience with assembling all kinds of things from instructions to have been invaluable. My models taught me order of battle, mechanical logic, and common sense. I became a multimedia fine artist, and everything I can do was based on this invaluable early experience.

  • @sinsagoodmansbrother
    @sinsagoodmansbrother Před 3 lety +9

    Wow... Fantastic stuff... 64 year old here who in and around 1966 loved Hi-Flier Kites, Estes Rockets, Matchbox Cars and Aurora racetracks with 1:32 slot cars! Also loved building and painting the Aurora Monster Models! What great memories I have of all of that... Thanks for the fantastic video!!!

  • @clicks59
    @clicks59 Před 3 lety +11

    Excellent documentary. Thank you! I was one of those kids. We were lucky enough to have an actual hobby shop in our little (back then) town. My father was in the Air Force and we lived near an airbase that repaired Viet Nam era aircraft. It was McClellan AFB in Sacramento California. It was easy for us to get hooked on model building. We could see the aircraft flying in and out from our house..... We used to go to a nearby park (Gibson Ranch) that was in the path of the runways. It was amazing to watch the C-5’s coming in to land. The incredible and eerie groan of the jet engines. They would come in flying extremely low and slow. It appeared that they could fall out of the sky because they were so big and flying so slow. It was a much simpler time.

    • @maxsmodels
      @maxsmodels  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching and commenting, glad you enjoyed it 😉

    • @siseley1
      @siseley1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@maxsmodels I think a lot of us "Military Brats" had some of the awe, and inspiration rub off in building, and detailing models. Dad was a Navy Warrant Officer, and we saw a LOT of different stations with new, and awesome aircraft, and testing platforms. Like at China lake NWTS, we saw a LOT of the newer Aircraft and missiles before the public even knew they existed ! When I worked at NASA's Dryden facility in California, I watched as the SR-71 prototypes, the YF-12, were tested, and evaluated, as well as lots of the current, and former aircraft developed

    • @urdude67
      @urdude67 Před 3 lety

      @@siseley1 thanks for your story!

  • @kenrosenstein198
    @kenrosenstein198 Před 3 lety +8

    I deeply appreciate the time and effort you put into this video. I cannot imagine the number of hours I spent in our basement cutting trimming gluing painting rigging staging...what a wonderful time it was.

  • @d-obvious
    @d-obvious Před 4 lety +21

    Man.. Trip down memory lane.. Thanks!
    I recognized a bunch of the kits I did as a kid. These kits got me into rc aircraft for a bunch of years. The skills developed with the plastic models were a huge help with balsa kits and covering. Sadly I can't see well enough to do the fine work any more

  • @grunt167
    @grunt167 Před 4 lety +8

    I can still remember how happy and proud I was when I received my Revell Master Modeler certificate and patch. Very good history of a huge part of so many kids lives.

    • @darwinbarnes740
      @darwinbarnes740 Před 4 lety

      Oh good lord - I had totally forgot about that! I wish I still had mine.....

  • @pg1171
    @pg1171 Před 3 lety +11

    OMG! This brings back so many memories of a HUGE amount of time spent from the age of about 7 to probably 18...lots of fun building the kits from ALL of the manufacturers. Also, I got a free Frankenstien kit, because my dad worked for a company who cleaned and refinished stores that had fire, smoke, or water damage back in the early 1970's. He brought me home a kit of Frankenstein. Silver, Black and Green Testors paint. That was all that I could get at the time. I was about 8 or 9, I think. I've built several of the kits that you show during this video. Can't remember them all, but I recognized a few. Still building kits, and I'm now 56. Fantastic! Thank you for doing this!

    • @georgeshelton6281
      @georgeshelton6281 Před 3 měsíci

      Did you notice that there was no Gidget Griffin/Francine Lawrence plastic model figurine that has ever been manufactured during the Carefree 50s movement and the Sentimental 60s era? No plastic model company has ever thought about creating one of those kinds.

  • @potwms99
    @potwms99 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm 63 years old. I spent a lot of time as a kid building model airplanes and ships. Revell was always top-of-the-line to me. Their models were more expensive and they always had more parts, at least the way I remember it. Thanks for reminding me of some of the best memories of my boyhood.

  • @rickzoehfeld6679
    @rickzoehfeld6679 Před 4 lety +13

    What a wonderful and informative walk down memory lane. I saw models that I built in the 1950's and 1960's.
    it is a shame we can't get today's youth to build models and let their imaginations soar like we did.
    Nice presentation of the three model makers !

  • @interact48
    @interact48 Před 4 lety +7

    I loved these kits I the 60s and 70s , model shops in England were bedecked with hundreds of kids on a Saturday morning, it made you use your hands, appreciate detail and engineering, now youngsters couldn’t knock a nail in straight if their life depended on it. I off to see if I can buy a Frankenstein kit xxx

  • @wallacegeller2111
    @wallacegeller2111 Před 3 lety +5

    During the 50s as a child I loved putting together model air planes and cars.

  • @TheTurtleinariver
    @TheTurtleinariver Před 3 lety +2

    My pop has always been a Revell man. As a miniature hobbyist, I have my roots in my dad's scale kit building. We built a ton of kits back in the day, mostly warbirds and ships. He grew up in the 70s so a lot of kits he built fall outside the golden age, but still. Having his next to mine and the ones we built together is something I'll always treasure. Really cool to see the history behind some of his favorite builds.

  • @Barnabas45
    @Barnabas45 Před 4 lety +68

    I remember I could walk into the local drugstore in the early 70's and buy a model kit for $1.50, God those were the days!

    • @alfredomarquez9777
      @alfredomarquez9777 Před 4 lety +7

      When I built the majority of my kits, back between 1964 and 1967, the typical Monogram 1/48 WW-II warplanes like the Spitfire, Hurricane, Me-109, Fw-190, Douglas Dauntless, TBF-Avenger etc. costed me exactly 99 cents each. Only some larger ones, like the DH Mosquito were somewhat above a dollar. Greatest improvement at that time were the magnificent "Pactra" paints, the first truly good military "flat" colors that were realistic and with so finely ground pigmemts, that those did not cover fine details and panel lines!

    • @pbrazor50
      @pbrazor50 Před 3 lety +3

      That's funny. In my small town the local drug store was the only place I could find model kits to build. I spent many many hours standing in front of the display agonizing over how to best spend my limited funds on a new model. A battleship? A tank? a fighter plane? So many choices. Those were much simpler times, although, living through them, things seemed so complicated.

    • @JohnnyBallou
      @JohnnyBallou Před 3 lety +1

      And you could buy glue at minimal costs, and NOBODY CONSIDERED SNIFFING IT!

    • @devolvedmutant
      @devolvedmutant Před 3 lety +1

      Same. Tho what used to just cost our weekly allowance, now costs a fraction of a weekly paycheck. ... Vid was an awesome walk down memory lane.

    • @Barnabas45
      @Barnabas45 Před 3 lety

      @@devolvedmutant Exactly, Now you have to be a CEO for Microsoft just to buy a model kit!

  • @NitroModelsAndComics
    @NitroModelsAndComics Před 4 lety +115

    These companies got a LOT of money from me over the decades. I salute them. A quick look at my shelves shows my fealty.

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 Před 4 lety +6

      Same. That Cutty Sark model has been sitting on the mantel for 40+ years. This was the backstage story of my modeling youth.

    • @jonowens460
      @jonowens460 Před 4 lety +2

      Me as well have a fortune in models...always dug building them

    • @christianleblanc2842
      @christianleblanc2842 Před 4 lety +3

      I just last year built a 1/32 Revell P-51B, and have another one in my stash. And this month finished the Revell's 1/96 scale Golden Hind.

    • @texasjetman
      @texasjetman Před 4 lety +1

      Got a lot of my Lawn Mowing MONEY in the 1970's!!!

    • @doodad77
      @doodad77 Před 4 lety

      Indeed, although I can think of worse situations & pursuits. ; )

  • @_Abjuranax_
    @_Abjuranax_ Před 3 lety +10

    Having grown up building model kits, when I got out of the Army at the end of 81", I started as a mold maker at Martian Metals, and we later merged with FASA making Star Trek miniatures. Both companies were awarded the prestigious H.G. Wells Award for Excellence in the gaming industry. Now it's almost all video games, but they do not have the Heirloom Quality that the old kits had back then. I'm planning on starting my own business now, but it is definitely a niche market nowadays.

    • @Britcarjunkie
      @Britcarjunkie Před 3 lety +2

      Very true.
      With the onset of computer games, and the Internet, plastic models have all but vanished.
      Pretty much every hobby shop I used ro frequent in the L.A. area (with the exception of a couple of places that also sell electric trains) are all gone:
      Gary's Hobbies, Gardena
      Paul Frieler's(sp) Historical Models, Ingelwood
      Modeller's Mansion, Gardena
      The Military Shop, Lakewood
      Vern's Hobbies and Crafts, Lynwood
      sigh...

  • @ChuckJansenII
    @ChuckJansenII Před 3 měsíci +4

    Great work on the documentary. Growing up model building was a part of our lives. Among the aircraft I built were mostly Monogram and Revell with some Aurora and Lindberg.
    Aircraft:
    Grumman's F4F Wildcat, F6F Wildcat, F8F Bearcat, and F9F Panther, North American B-25 Mitchell, Boeing B-17, Messerschmidt BF109, Hawker Hurricane; Curtis P-40 Warhawk/Tomahawk, Mitsubishi A6M Zero, General Dynamics F-16 Eagle, McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom and more.
    Warships:
    CV-6 USS Enterprise, several of the Essex Class Aircraft Carriers, Several World War 2 USN Battleships, Troop transports, Destroyers & Cruisers. I had a full task force.
    My father flew several of the aircraft such as the in USAF B-25, T-33, T-37 and for Eastern Air Lines the Boeing 727 where he ended his career as a Captain.
    Between my Dad and my brothers we had several of the Monster figures and the Aurora/Aurora AFX slot cars.
    This video takes me down memory lane.

  • @MrAtomichunter
    @MrAtomichunter Před 4 lety +32

    This was outstanding. I was an avid modeller as a kid in the 70's and into the early 80's. Sad that Revell/Monogram is no more.

  • @douglasstrother6584
    @douglasstrother6584 Před 4 lety +158

    Model building taught me and my buddies history, craftsmanship, artistry and fine motor skills.
    Very interesting to learn the histories of these companies!

    • @stevenospam4216
      @stevenospam4216 Před 4 lety +6

      Douglas: Let me add "following the assembly instructions". There's no doubt that that fed into my building computers step by step, installing software and updates step by step, and learning or teaching applications step by step in various businesses. Thanks for your post.

    • @timshannon6363
      @timshannon6363 Před 3 lety +5

      exactly it was a history and a technical education

    • @broznkyra4853
      @broznkyra4853 Před 3 lety +5

      Yes...there was an article in an aerospace magazine that extolled the virtues of model building as a good preparation for young nen entering the mechanical trades for the same reasons you enumerate. .

    • @jeffford861
      @jeffford861 Před 3 lety +4

      And the glue!

    • @douglasstrother6584
      @douglasstrother6584 Před 3 lety +6

      @@jeffford861 WARNING: Use only in a well-ventilated area.
      Yeah, whatever!

  • @bobmcweeney7459
    @bobmcweeney7459 Před 3 lety +11

    I remember having HO gauge racing car sets by Aurora. They were awesome.

    • @codewalker66
      @codewalker66 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes. The first wave of Aurora HO was using AC power, stepped down. Cars were troublesome. They used a coil and a plate of metal, shaped like an "L" the short part moved a gear that powered the wheels. The second wave, used the same trace, but went to a DC system, a real motor with magnets and those worked really well.

    • @tommurphy4307
      @tommurphy4307 Před 3 lety

      FLAME THROWERS! STIRLING MOSS!! TUFF ONES!!!

  • @paulsimmons5726
    @paulsimmons5726 Před 3 lety +4

    Wow, these companies were how I spent so many hours of my elementary school time in the late 60's and early 70's. I enjoyed this video immensely.
    Models, paint, and Testors glue... Yep, hours of enjoyment and a life-skill that's helped me for decades - "Read and follow the instructions!" Building models was a great part of my young life and taught me plenty of skills that I've used for decades!
    Great video, thanks for sharing!

  • @kenshores9900
    @kenshores9900 Před 4 lety +9

    This was a flash back of my youth. I grew up building these models. Good story to hear.

  • @electron4784
    @electron4784 Před 4 lety +6

    As a kid, I loved Revell the best! I probably built about 150 assorted tanks and Planes

  • @stoveboltlvr3798
    @stoveboltlvr3798 Před 3 lety +4

    I wish I still had some of the models that I packed full of firecrackers and M-80's when I was a kid.

  • @FranklinArtSite
    @FranklinArtSite Před 3 měsíci +1

    I built a great number of model cars, some planes and a ship or two. It was the love of my youth. The most important thing I learned, completely without realizing it, was how to read drawings. When I took engineering drawing in college it was no problem to go from model to drawing instead of the reverse. I eventually went on to architecture school as a graduate student. That transition or transposition, I see, is the value of learning crafts as a child. Thanks for the film. It was well appreciated.

  • @Rich206L
    @Rich206L Před 4 lety +15

    I built so many of these models when I was a kid. My Dad taught me how and my weekly allowance went straight to the hobby shop! Thanks for doing such a great job on this story!

  • @KentuckyRanger
    @KentuckyRanger Před 4 lety +4

    What an awesome story!
    I was a kid during their hay days, and fondly remember building most all of the WWII aircraft offered.
    It's so sad that model building isn't as popular as it was in the 70s and 80s...

  • @dagwoodsystems
    @dagwoodsystems Před 3 lety +2

    I'm 56 and still build models. Since I enjoy things like robots and spaceships, my go to brands are Polar Lights and Fine Molds. Current project is an extremely accurate, 1000 piece Millennium Falcon. The kid in me still lives!

    • @fishsquishguy1833
      @fishsquishguy1833 Před 3 lety

      Always loved it as a kid. A friend of mine is the same age as you and me and still builds a lot. I never make the time. Always say it’s because I have other projects and I do, but spend too much free time online is why.

  • @josephvotta6698
    @josephvotta6698 Před 3 měsíci +2

    As a kid, I loved building these model kits! I built a 1963 Jaguar XK-E, and many other cars, as well as airplanes and a few ships. I even built the Gemini Spacecraft, which was a larger model! It came with 2 astronaut figurines that sat inside, and the 2 doors opened so you could see inside! I think that last models that I built were the "Big Daddy Roth" models that were comically exaggerated and extreme! Ah, what a great memory of my youth! Thank you for this beautifully informative video!

  • @lynetteschroeter6843
    @lynetteschroeter6843 Před 4 lety +8

    Great story about the three companies that filled my bedroom with things that dreams are made of......In the COVID Era what better thing can one do than build a model! Even if you have to search the internet for one of the "classics" from the past and pay who knows how much for it, go for it! Nostalgia is powerful medicine.

  • @larryandersonsspectacularc5390

    Without the car models that these companies put out, slot car races wouldn't have had great plastic bodies to build our slot cars with. Thanks to all these companies.

    • @tommurphy4307
      @tommurphy4307 Před 3 lety +2

      how many happy hours spent in the basement designing tracks and racing my model motoring t-jets!

    • @larrysepicmovies5044
      @larrysepicmovies5044 Před 3 lety +1

      So true.

    • @erichanhauser3190
      @erichanhauser3190 Před 3 lety +2

      My first slot car kit was an Aurora AJ Foyt track. My Dad put a painted piece of plywood on my bedroom floor to set it up. I was young. It was awesome.

  • @jujenho
    @jujenho Před 3 lety +3

    I am an old plastic model builder and kit collector from Brazil that was hopelessly addicted to this hobby since 1960, by the local Revell licensee A.Kikoler. I have been extremely fortunate since then to have collected two roomfull of boxes of unbuilt kits (shame on me) in the insane hope of one day having time to build all of them. Anyway, this has given me an immense delight. I have also deeply researched the history of the kit companies throughout the world. But I must admit that I have learned a few things watching this video. It also brought me wonderful memories. For these I give my sincere thanks to Max Kohnke (a very real jack-of-all-trades).

    • @Marcelo-wn3bq
      @Marcelo-wn3bq Před 3 měsíci

      Me dá até um frio na espinha quando vejo uma caixa de 707, 727 ou DC10 da Revell. Montei todos os comerciais e pintava na cor das minhas companhias aéreas fictícias. Como não tinha nem o 737 200 nem o Electra, me virei cortando a fuselagem e as asas de um 707 para parecer um 737. Ficou horrível.
      Para o Electra, o kit do DC7 teve os profundores virados para ter o diedro parecido.... Depois de casar, a coleção de kits virou uma coleção de caixas, q eu comprava p um dia montar hahaha

  • @carabela125
    @carabela125 Před 3 lety +2

    In my Middle School, about 1970, they had a car model building contest and all the entries were displayed in a big glass case in the school library. I built a bright yellow Mustang convertible but it didn't come close to winning. The winning cars looked completely real.

  • @robertheston4403
    @robertheston4403 Před 4 lety +201

    Polystyrene is therapy for those of us born in the 60's! Can't do without it now and still building.

    • @jmfa57
      @jmfa57 Před 4 lety +16

      I was born in the late 1950s. I built my first model, a Lingbergh sport plane, when I was 3 years old, with a little help from Dad. I was hooked. Still am. Problems now are no different than when I was 12; they take all of my allowance, and I have no room to put them anywhere.

    • @JoeFlation
      @JoeFlation Před 4 lety +7

      i just bought a F4f model after many many years out of the hobby

    • @surreygeorge11
      @surreygeorge11 Před 4 lety +20

      We can start a club. Old nerds who built models and dioramas as kids. Who's in?

    • @toznerd6369
      @toznerd6369 Před 4 lety +10

      I finally got back into modelling after a long hiatus: a bagged Revell 1:32 Stuka missing about 10 parts, but with instructions and a very good decal sheet. Over time, I manages to hoard a bunch of the Revell and Matchbox 1:32 kits. Through the early 1970s, I loved the Revell catalogs. That is until a neighbor got his hands on the 1976 Tamiya "catalogue". It was a thing of wonderment and beauty. I have fond memories of those days.

    • @christianleblanc2842
      @christianleblanc2842 Před 4 lety +3

      @@jmfa57 My wife likes my stuff, and it's all around the house!

  • @ToyzNWheelz
    @ToyzNWheelz Před 4 lety +5

    Some of the best times of my chilhood in the 60's were spent building model kits !
    Monogram was my favorite with their great quality and detail. I still have the
    "Lil Coffin " car kit, Patton Tank, and several WWII U.S. Navy aircraft kits that were never built. Someday ! This was a wonderful documentary.

  • @michaelrandall4956
    @michaelrandall4956 Před 3 lety +2

    I made my first model airplane at age 6. I made a total of over 300 models. Revell and Monogram were Great kits. It was a Great hobby. I still have 4 kits I never finished. I'm 56 now. Guess it's never to late to start again.

  • @johngalt6929
    @johngalt6929 Před 3 lety +3

    I built many of those kits in the 50's 60's and 70's. This video really brought back a lot of memories. Thanks Max!

  • @brucecaldwell6701
    @brucecaldwell6701 Před 4 lety +11

    This brought back many memories for me building models back in the 60's & 70's. I was into fighter planes & cars & my brother really got into the monster models when they became popular. We even modified many of the models & made custom parts ourselves. At one point I had most of my plane models hanging from my bedroom ceiling. We went out of town one weekend & discovered upon returning to find all our models smashed to bits. We knew the kid in the neighborhood who did it & he got his ass beat.

    • @alfredomarquez9777
      @alfredomarquez9777 Před 4 lety +1

      I would had smashed all the fingers in his hands with a large hammer, to make him remember for his long life not to destroy things owned by others!

    • @natural-born_pilot
      @natural-born_pilot Před 3 lety +2

      Sounds like the kid broke into your home along with destruction of property which is a crime and as a minor could have put him in reform school ( term used at the time) a confinement for minors under 21.

  • @jimrogers7841
    @jimrogers7841 Před 4 lety +10

    Max, thank you for a great history lesson! I can tell you a little bit of what has happened to some of the Revell and Monogram molds since the demise of Hobico. Most went to Revell Germany, many are still in limbo in China, but some of the molds from Illinois have made their way to Atlantis models, and the 81-98 molds for the stock car kits are now in the hands of Salvinos J R Models of Corona California. We are now producing some of them under our name and expanding the line by making other 1:24th scale bodies to fit on the GM chassis, and adding them to our own line of 1:24th scale stock cars from the 1970s. We feel like we are now the stewards of these kits, these 3500 pound amazing works of engineering art molds, and plan on continuing their production for many years! Thanks again for the great video, I’m going to check your page to see what you have on the actual molds and designing.
    Jim Rogers
    Designer
    Salvinosjrmodels.com

    • @maxsmodels
      @maxsmodels  Před 4 lety +2

      thanks

    • @siseley1
      @siseley1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@maxsmodels How about the AMT kits from the 1960's, and early 70's ??

  • @AB1Vampire
    @AB1Vampire Před 3 lety +3

    Wonderful video thank you for bringing back memories. Late '60-70's like all my friends, hung plane models from ceiling with thread. Painting the models was the best part. Aurora electric race cars, Hop up kits, sponge rubber tires, square bottles of paint, red colored oil and gear sets? My generation had it all.

  • @KreemieNewgatt
    @KreemieNewgatt Před 3 lety +24

    I'm surprised there was no mention of Revell's collab with Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, those kits were pretty popular

    • @covercalls88
      @covercalls88 Před 3 lety +2

      I still have a few new "big Daddy" Roth's t shirts. I can't fit them as I bought them when I was 13.

    • @HawksVideos27
      @HawksVideos27 Před 3 lety +7

      I had "The Rat Fink"!!! loved it

    • @erichanhauser3190
      @erichanhauser3190 Před 3 lety +1

      There is an awesome doc about Big Daddy Roth. Saw it about 9-10 yrs ago. Its fascinating!!!

    • @chasbodaniels1744
      @chasbodaniels1744 Před 3 lety +1

      Haha yeah, Mr. Gasser, Mother’s Worry, Rat Fink, Surf Fink and so on. I loved assembling, painting and looking at them for several years.

    • @davidcollin1436
      @davidcollin1436 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I had a Rat Fink hat painted and signed by Big Daddy.