theBaron
A Fixture
Just checking in today, and yep, those are the Pyro kits. They were God-awful, by today's standards. Most of the dinosaurs were smooth-skinned, shapes were soft, and fit was terrible. I remember the Ankylosaur's head as consisting of three pieces-left and right sides of the face, and the skull plate fit over it, but it didn't fit right. And yeah, those little cavemen! I think the plastic was relatively brittle, too, and I recall some of the kits having swirls, where the styrene hadn't quite mixed thoroughly before they shot it into the molds.
But when I was six, they were the coolest things I had ever seen. Lindberg has the molds for some or maybe all of these, today, and those kits are still available. Of the series, the Corythosaurus was probably the best-detailed, with a textured hide. If it weren't for its tripod stance, it wouldn't look too out of place with more recent kits, like Tamiya's second generation of dinos.
I got a whiff of nostalgia for Pyro kits last summer, when I collected a bunch of their "Table-Top Navy" waterline kits of WWII ships. When I opened up the first one I got, the texture and the smell of the plastic took me back to those dinosaur kits. It was exactly the same as I remembered it. Lindberg has some of those kits, too, and they have re-released them in boxed sets of two kits each, one for the USN, one for the IJN and most recently, for the Royal Navy.
But when I was six, they were the coolest things I had ever seen. Lindberg has the molds for some or maybe all of these, today, and those kits are still available. Of the series, the Corythosaurus was probably the best-detailed, with a textured hide. If it weren't for its tripod stance, it wouldn't look too out of place with more recent kits, like Tamiya's second generation of dinos.
I got a whiff of nostalgia for Pyro kits last summer, when I collected a bunch of their "Table-Top Navy" waterline kits of WWII ships. When I opened up the first one I got, the texture and the smell of the plastic took me back to those dinosaur kits. It was exactly the same as I remembered it. Lindberg has some of those kits, too, and they have re-released them in boxed sets of two kits each, one for the USN, one for the IJN and most recently, for the Royal Navy.