Welcome to the Strelets Forum. Please feel free to discuss any aspect of 1/72 scale plastic figures, not simply Strelets. If you have any questions about our products then we will answer them here.
I don't have much use for the Funko Pop figures. They are way too large for most of my purposes and they are not proportional human figures. Still some of them are cute and I know a lot of people do enjoy collecting them. Each Funko Pop Town building comes with one, so since I want the building I am stuck with the figures.
Some I have given away and a few my wife has kept because they were especially cute. I kinda like this Uncle Fester figure, with Thing, but I suspect it will transfer to the MRS.
For decades the US Army has been experimenting with wheeled vehicles that can have the wheels removed and replaced with tracks. I like to have a few experimental vehicles in my collection, so I converted a junk Roco 1 1/2 ton truck into one of these wheel / track combinations using parts of a Hot Wheels truck and a Matchbox truck.
It used to be that these little houses were only sold at Christmas time, but now they often have summer and spring versions. They are also getting a bit larger in scale. They have done that by making them thinner but taller. Which works out fine on the wargame table because it takes up less space but still looks big. I repainted this one and it looks a lot better.
One of my projects is to do a circus in 1/72nd scale. I think a set of circus performers would sell well if any Ukrainian based plastic figure company is interested in a unique idea for a new set.
I the meantime I am converting cheap hard plastic figures used for architectural models as circus performers and staff. Preiser also made a small set of circus folk and I have one of those but they are a bit small at 1/87.
This circus project is getting it's own artillery with a giant cannon to fire a clown across the big top. The circus plays a major role in the James Bond movies Diamonds Are Forever, and Octo*****.
So it seems a good idea to have circus for my spy games.
This is a building made out of interlocking bricks, Lego type plastic bricks, but not actual Lego. It is scaled for 1/72nd scale figures. Likely the Red Box Police and Robbers will likely spend some time here.
The restaurant is based on one from a TV show. The show used a real restaurant and then after the first episode they used a set based on, but not identical to the real restaurant. Later the same set was used on Stargate SG-1 TV show also.
The model is not finished and won't likely be for a couple of months as I need some additional materials to complete it.
The lego type bricks that I am using to make three restaurants I am also using to make one of them the end store of a large strip mall. Outdoor strip malls have been common in the USA since before the First World War.
My plan is to swap out different stores as I use it for different eras. So the old mall might have a blacksmith shop and the newest version might have a computer store instead.
There are never enough wagons in miniature armies. Part of that is because there are never enough horse, or wheels. But wagon bodies are also important. So here is a solution to a few of those problems.
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang was based on a book written by Ian Fleming, the same guy who wrote the James Bond novels! It was a similar car to the ones the early Bond drove, apart from the flying and stuff.
This is an excellent die cast car, in 1/64th scale, I think, same as most Hot Wheels cars. I have the family figures selected but not yet converted nor painted.
But this is a start. The movie is pretty good, and the Vulgarian Armed Forces are interesting.