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Home >> Toys - Vintage Games >> Tin Toys >>

Tinplate Toy Cars of the 1950s & 1960s from Japan by: Andrew Ralston


 Price: $45.99

ISBN:  9781845841263
Complete Book Title:The Collector's Guide: Tinplate Toy Cars of the 1950s & 1960s from Japan
Author:Andrew Ralston
Binding Type:Soft Cover
Copyright Date:2008
Number of Pages:160
Size:9.88 x 9.88 in.
Book Subject:Toys
International Customers:This item WILL NOT fit in a Global Priority unpadded flat envelope.
Domestic Customers:This item ships BOXED.
Tinplate Toy Cars of the 1950s & 1960s from Japan by: Andrew Ralston - MO-2008-9781845841263-X12 - 1

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Table of Contents

Tin toys had been made in Japan before the second World War but they reached new heights of realism in the 1950s. The post-war American occupation of Japan gave Japanese toymakers ready access to the lucrative American toy market and as a result most of the tin toy cars made in this period were based on American vehicles like Cadillacs, Chevrolets, Buicks, Oldsmobiles and Packards.

Like the real things, these tin toys were big. A small one would be around eight inches long, with some of the largest stretching to eighteen inches. As such, tinplate was the ideal medium to capture the look of American styling of the 1950s, a period when size mattered and car manufacturers tried to outdo each other with the extravagance of their designs, the size of their tailfins and the amount of chrome.

During this era of consumerism, Japanese toy production was at its peak, with exotically-named manufacturers like Marusan, Bandai, Yonezawa and Alps turning out vast quantities of tin toys. It proved to be a short-lived phase in the history of toy production.

By the early 1960s, tin toys were falling out of fashion for various reasons: their sharp edges gave rise to safety concerns; die-cast models were becoming increasingly realistic and sophisticated, with many action features that appealed to children; the development of plastics in the toy industry made tin toys look increasingly old-fashioned. Half a century later, there are very few surviving examples of these magnificent play things. Bruce Sterling of New York has devoted years to seeking out the very best examples of Japanese tinplate cars and has built up what is probably the worlds finest collection of these toys, every one of them in pristine condition, complete with their original boxes which are works of art in themselves.

This book showcases 150 examples of the very rarest tin toy cars, many of them never having been pictured in books or magazines until now.


 

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