I also loved the WCW ones because I didn't have sky and itv used to show nitro on late sat eve/early Sunday morning. The wcw ones were rubber whereas WWF had a moveable plastic piece.
I also loved the WCW ones because I didn't have sky and itv used to show nitro on late sat eve/early Sunday morning. The wcw ones were rubber whereas WWF had a moveable plastic piece.
Need to get one of those Peter Garland action figures
I have just sold one of those pirate ship lego sets for £180.00 on eBay.
Blimey! Still got mine in the basement waiting for the nipper to get old enough for me her to play with it.
It was my sons, it has been in our loft for 20 years, we had 3 x vintage sets up there so I had a lot of fun building them to make sure all the parts were there then I sold them.
I had stacks of it and it was great fun. I never knew anyone else who did, though. My mum bought a job lot of it second-hand at an auction. If you look carefully at the picture you'll see that there are metal rods sticking up from the base; these hold the bricks in place. At some point in time, the powers that be declared that it was not best practice to have children's toys consisting of rows of upright metal spikes and it got withdrawn from the market. That explains why even in the seventies, when the likes of Jimmy Saville and Rolf Harris were considered safe around children, my mates never had the pleasure of owning their own Bayko set. It's health and safety gone mad!
OMG that has just brought back so many memories, I had a set of that.
The Test Match and 'Owzthat' cricket games and the Mask bloke with the green motorbike bring back proper memories. I'm sure the green motorbike changed into a helicopter?
Comments
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-37911284
Bill Gates having fun with the family
Also did anyone else have a plastic construction set called Tallon Tek?
Grew up in Bermondsey.