Showing posts with label ERASERS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ERASERS. Show all posts

Monday, March 28, 2011

TOPPS WACKY PACKAGE ERASERS 2011

I just recently found out that Topps released these and had to get my hands on some (thanks Kirk Liebig).
I collect erasers and Wacky Packages so it was exciting to see the two melded into a creative collectible.

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You can buy these at Target in the trading card section of the store. They are marked at $2.99 a pack but surprisingly ring up at $1.99! Each package comes with three erasers shaped like Wacky Pack products and coinciding stickers. There are 24 in all, the last 4 marked "rare".

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I bought the majority of the box and am still missing two (#7, #11). I ended up with quite a few duplicates. Here are some photos:

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These are really neat to see in 3D and a great addition to any Wacky Package collector. I only had two complaints. First, one of my erasers came out of the package with a shard of glass jutting out of it? (not too safe for kids). Second the outside stickers were sloppily adhered to the erasers in some cases or misapplied (one was actually upside down). Other than that I think they are excellent.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

SPRING GARAGE SALE HUNTING 2010

So far, spring garage sale hunting can be summed up in three words: CHILLY, WINDY, RAINY.
I haven't had much luck finding treasures so far but I thought I'd share the few things I found.

I found this Care Bears suitcase at a neighborhood garage sale. The lady gave it to me for free. I always wonder why people do that. The point of a garage sale is to make money right? Anyway, I figured this would be great to put all my Care Bears in when I'm going to grandma's house. Right now I have them up on shelves in my studio with Wuzzles and Godzilla.

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CARE BEARS

CARE BEARS

CARE BEARS

I also found this clown doll for a dollar which I thought was a Cooky the cook doll from the Bozo Show, but after I took a better look at it I figured out it was just a dumb clown.

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Bozo and Cooky

I found this Noah's Ark Playset for 75 cents and pretty much bought it for the plastic animals.

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I have hundreds of plastic animals in a bin in my basement but in this set I found one I'd never seen before. A baby kangaroo that fits inside a pouch on the mom kangaroo's belly? I guess I'm easily amused.

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Yesterday I stopped by an old man's garage sale in the rain and was excited to find some smelly markers and a couple diener erasers in a huge box of pens and pencils. I already had two of the fire engine erasers red/yellow but I didn't have the frog. Once again the old man sitting on his porch in the rain said I could have them for free but I made him take my 75 cents.

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I'm hoping the garage sales will pick up this spring and I'll have more exciting finds to share next time.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

DIENER SPACE CREATURES AND MONSTERS

DIENER LOGO

A large portion of my blogs gravitate around my weird quirks and obsessions and along that same track I thought I'd share a recent stop.
This summer I made a special effort to frequent the local thrift stores and garage sales and it was at one of these sales I came across a little red swamp monster made of rubber. It was buried down at the bottom of a box of old toys and as soon as I dug it out I found myself suddenly ripped back to the early 1980's file of my mind.
When I was probably three or four years old my grandma would take me on stroller rides on afternoons she babysat me and we would always stroll down Main St. where we would stop by Latta's. In the early 80's, Latta's was the equivalent of what would nowadays be a Hobby Lobby or craft/supply store. The first Latta's store was opened in 1898 by John Stuart who came from my home town of Cedar Falls. Latta's is one of the oldest school supply companies in the United States with a variety of categories including: arts and crafts, audio and visual, children books, early childhood, games, mathematics, multilingual, office supplies, science, social studies, teacher resources and more. My grandma was interested in Latta's large assortment of sewing supplies and would always stop in to pick up thing on our walks. To me the store seemed pretty boring with the exception of the eraser bins. Latta's had a long Plexiglas bin filled with hundreds of brightly colored erasers with dozens of different themes. If I behaved myself while she shopped she would always let me pick one out to take home. There were so many different ones to choose from. Farm animals, sports equipment, dinosaurs, airplanes, sea creatures, cars, popular cartoon characters like Popeye and Mickey mouse. I would pick through them to find the one I liked the best. Just holding that rubbery little figure in my hand as we strolled our way home was as good as it gets.
Flash-forward to that garage sale where I knelt by that cardboard box at the age of 32 holding that rubber monster I could remember that feeling. I recognized the little red figure as if I had just seen it yesterday.
I regret to this day tossing it back in the box because about a week later I found two more monsters from the same series at the thrift store. This time I didn't let them go, I was determined to find out more about these neat erasers and who made them.
After a quick search on the computer I discovered these erasers came from a series of monsters and space creatures created by Diener Industries the leader in eraser toys during the early 1980's, and there were a whole lot more of them than I remembered. If you were a child in the 80's you most likely ran into these at one time or another. Here is just a sample of some of the erasers:

801267-lB-1
801097-CP

My personal favorites are the Monsters and Space Creatures which were actually used as McDonalds Happy Meal toys in the 80's

MONSTERS AND ALIENS HAPPY MEAL

The cool thing is these were mostly based on actual movie monsters and aliens. Lets take a closer look...

DIENER FIGURE 1
Horned Cyclops - I’m guessing this one might be an amalgam of different cyclops. Pictured is the Ray Harryhausen’s Cyclops from The 7 th Voyage of Sinbad, the Lost In Space Cyclops and the Siamese Cyclops from The Three Stooges Meet Hercules.

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Winged Amphibian Creature - design based after the creature in the 1966 movie Destination Inner Space.

DIENER FIGURE 3
Vampire Bat Creature - design based after the Batman comic book character Man-Bat.

DIENER FIGURE 4
Insectman - design based after the Fly from the 1958 movie The Fly.

DIENER FIGURE 5
Lizard Man - design based after Ray Harryhausen’s creation the Ymir from the 1957 movie 20 Million Miles to Earth.

DIENER FIGURE 6
Tree Trunk Monster - design based after the aliens in the 1958 movie I Married a Monster from Outer Space.

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Veined Cranium Creature - design based after the Martians in the 1957 movie Invasion of the Saucer Men.

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Gil Face Creature - design based after an alien named Ikar from the 1964 television series The Outer Limits in the episode Keeper of the Purple Twilight.

These erasers are now collectables and not only are tough to find but usually sell for $10-18 a piece. I'll still keep my eye out for them but I definatly won't spend that amount of money on a 2 inch eraser. Recently I scoured a large flea market in the hopes of finding some and ended up finding one Ronald McDonald Diener figure. I wish I would have bought that "tree trunk man" swamp monster from that garage sale but, oh well.

RUBBER MONSTERS
Here's a pic of me with my 2 monsters!!

RONALD AND POPEYE
Here's my Ronald McDonald and Popeye Diener figures.

I'll post another blog if I find anymore.