Unfortunatly this citroen has a husky baseplate.....SMS88 wrote:Metallic yellow Citroen Safari is mega rare with Juniors sticker baseplate and Ironside blister pack isnt common either,nice to see such rare gems!

Unfortunatly this citroen has a husky baseplate.....SMS88 wrote:Metallic yellow Citroen Safari is mega rare with Juniors sticker baseplate and Ironside blister pack isnt common either,nice to see such rare gems!
Husky baseplate in a Juniors blister - I have never seen this before on any model -perhaps blister has been resealed carefully? I have a sticker baseplate Citroen in this colour but only come across one other online collector who also has onefamilybucket43 wrote:Unfortunatly this citroen has a husky baseplate.....SMS88 wrote:Metallic yellow Citroen Safari is mega rare with Juniors sticker baseplate and Ironside blister pack isnt common either,nice to see such rare gems!
I`m sure if i went through my juniors(as i have about 100 blistered) i have an odd few with husky baseplates.plus i have a yellow jag blistered,i think in a husky blister and the baseplate is blank!!!SMS88 wrote:Husky baseplate in a Juniors blister - I have never seen this before on any model -perhaps blister has been resealed carefully? I have a sticker baseplate Citroen in this colour but only come across one other online collector who also has onefamilybucket43 wrote:Unfortunatly this citroen has a husky baseplate.....SMS88 wrote:Metallic yellow Citroen Safari is mega rare with Juniors sticker baseplate and Ironside blister pack isnt common either,nice to see such rare gems!
I have one of those too.familybucket43 wrote:plus i have a yellow jag blistered,i think in a husky blister and the baseplate is blank!!!
Ghosty has forgetten that Husky models were sold all over Europe in all sorts of stores that stocked c1/43 scale Corgis from 1965 - the Woolworths exclusive ONLY applied to the UK + USA (perhaps Canada too if they had Woolworths). Corgi Juniors castings were stocked in UK branches of Woolworths until the end of UK production at least so its not accurate for Ghosty to describe the Juniors range as ´´fairly shortlived´´GHOSTHUNTER wrote:It's easy to forget the significance of the 'HUSKY' range. They were designed for the specific purpose of retail sales within the large Woolworth's stores from the mid 60's and were exclusive to those stores, it's only when the contract finished that 'Mettoy Playcraft' could re-brand the range (calling them 'Corgi Juniors'), and add them to their product line and offer them to other retail outlets. The first versions show the tight budget restraints during their development, by having plastic baseplates and all plastic rim and tyre design. Once they had proved popular with high sales, the design was up-graded during 1969, with metal baseplates and more a accurate metal rim and seperate tyre design.
The 'Juniors' range was fairly short-lived because of the on-coming 'HOT WHEELS' onslaught from America
By October 1969, a couple of the old 'HUSKY' models and some new castings had become the first batch of models to create the new 'Corgi Rockets' range.
It's very likely those examples shown above are left-over stock intended for Woolworth's but used by Corgi and just blister packed and sent out without any regards to customers picking up on the idea that the models are now branded as 'Juniors' on the packaging, but still showing 'Husky' on the baseplate.
GHOSTHUNTER.
I`ll have a look in the next few days..SMS88 wrote:Ghosty has forgetten that Husky models were sold all over Europe in all sorts of stores that stocked c1/43 scale Corgis from 1965 - the Woolworths exclusive ONLY applied to the UK + USA (perhaps Canada too if they had Woolworths). Corgi Juniors castings were stocked in UK branches of Woolworths until the end of UK production at least so its not accurate for Ghosty to describe the Juniors range as ´´fairly shortlived´´GHOSTHUNTER wrote:It's easy to forget the significance of the 'HUSKY' range. They were designed for the specific purpose of retail sales within the large Woolworth's stores from the mid 60's and were exclusive to those stores, it's only when the contract finished that 'Mettoy Playcraft' could re-brand the range (calling them 'Corgi Juniors'), and add them to their product line and offer them to other retail outlets. The first versions show the tight budget restraints during their development, by having plastic baseplates and all plastic rim and tyre design. Once they had proved popular with high sales, the design was up-graded during 1969, with metal baseplates and more a accurate metal rim and seperate tyre design.
The 'Juniors' range was fairly short-lived because of the on-coming 'HOT WHEELS' onslaught from America
By October 1969, a couple of the old 'HUSKY' models and some new castings had become the first batch of models to create the new 'Corgi Rockets' range.
It's very likely those examples shown above are left-over stock intended for Woolworth's but used by Corgi and just blister packed and sent out without any regards to customers picking up on the idea that the models are now branded as 'Juniors' on the packaging, but still showing 'Husky' on the baseplate.
GHOSTHUNTER.
And the Corgi Juniors name lasted until 1978 when the range was rebranded simply ´´Corgi´´ - HOTWHEELS didnt finally beat the Juniors range into the ground until Mattel actually bought Corgi in 1989 and incorporated the surviving serviceable Juniors castings into the Hotwheels range for upto 10 years further production!
The yellow Jag XJ6 is uncommon with a sticker blanked baseplate so it is the 2nd Juniors model now confirmed with Husky baseplate - can familybucket share any more photos of Huskys in Junior blisters???