Ok people, here is the massive, descriptive post of my Convention grabs. First there be supermarket cars, my nephew grabbed them for me because I couldn’t find them anywhere and traded them with me at the event. The Chevy SS is awesome.
Now the Hot Wheels. The Boulevard Hudson Hornet is beautiful! The white Jeep with construction tires is much harder to find than the blackwall version, and it was only a buck. The black Mercedes with UHs was $3.
I bought this Real Rider Path Beater several months ago, in one of the club get-togethers, but I dropped it into a guy’s box of stuff when I was packing my own things up. The guy contacted me back and told me he had it, and kept it well cared of for me until the Convention, when he gave it to me. I was fortunate that it fell with such an honest guy, it isn’t an easy car to find, much less in this condition. Not many collectors would have returned it.
Then this made in Mexico Cadillac Seville, the grey interior variation (see taillights). an upgrade for mine, this is in most excellent shape. Still two mexican variations of this car to go, and two down.
I couldn’t pass up this chromed Aeroflash, it was too minty to leave behind. It’s only missing the redlines, but it would have been much more expensive.
I was on my way to the bathroom when a lady over at the table I was passing by literally emptied an enormous bag of loose cars. Like a fly to dog poo, I flew over there. These two were like 50 US cents each. The Supervan is a real Redline with metal base. But the really relevant car is the superhypermegastupidly rare Super Bird in brown. The lowest-production color in this casting, I grabbed it even in this very poor shape, and even so, it would be worth about 5-10 bucks as it is. A mint one is about $70.
These are the projects. From the same bag as the Bird and the Supervan came the Majorette Wagoneer ambulance which, unfortunately, isn’t French, but the car is complete, it even has both rear doors. The Zylmex Lola Can Am racer also came from there. The Siku 917/30 was a steal for a buck, same for the rubber-tired JL Cobra, and the black Porsche is a Chinese car that’s incredibly well made, with a rollcaged interior and such. It’ll be cool when I’m done with it.
The previous Picture brings us to the other brands. These are the ones everyone was asking about, they are a new Chinese brand, VZ-something. I promise I’ll ask my friend for the link when I see him at MSN. The guy that paints my customs was with me at the stand and had these for sale, they’re pull back action and very well detailed, with rubber tires and clear headlamps. There’s also a ’10 Camaro, a Gallardo Leggera, a WRX STI and a Hummer.
Then another panoramic. Missing an individual Picture here are the Yatming 928 Porsche which I was missing in red, and the Welly Passat wagon, extremely well made and oly a buck.
This Majorette Mercedes is extremely difficult to find with the trunk, as it falls off really easy. A steal at $3.
Both Matchboxes for the day, I was missing the gold 70 Camaro, only had the green version; the blue Boss 302 is a Premiere car with rubber tires and all that.
I have always liked this Siku Audi but everytime I found it it was extremely beaten up, and sometimes lacked doors. It cost me $4 but was worth every penny.
And the crown jewel for me, AT FREAKING LAST, the Playart AMC AMX! You don’t have an idea, people, how long I’ve been looking for this thing. YEARS. It’s not that I had never seen it available, but it always, ALWAYS lacked the hood. I almost cried when I found it. $4.
Then both closed cars, first the Siku Mercedes wagon that was a trade with a guy for about 5 hot Wheels. I frankly don’t know what to do with it. I can’t bring myself to liberate such a survivor, but what do I do with it in the blisterpack? I might keep it until a loose one comes my way.
And now the story: we were finishing setting up the stand in Saturday morning when I noticed two guys, one of them in a HW shirt, chatting,
in English, from our stand with the guy in the next stand. He handed one of them some blisters and the guy signed them right there, over our own cars. He turned and said “sorry, taking over your table”. It was, obviously, the designer. Once he had autographed the cars, he started picking around the cars my paint friend had for sale, some quite old ones, and started remembering which ones he had as a child. So I started talking with him about those. “Did you have the Flat-out Olds 442?” –“Yeah but mine was orange” and stuff like that. He knew what he was talking about.
I asked if he had any Mexico-made cars in his collection, he told me he was looking for a Mexican Cobra (one of the most sought after, and expensive, Mexico models), and I showed him the Cadillac you saw in a pic just a moment ago. We compared them with a US-Cadoo I had for sale. The guy was very kind and fortunately understood my slowly spoken English well enough (I write well, but my talking is quite subpar, I don’t practice speaking in English enough).
Then I remembered my nephew had also gotten me a KITT from the supermarket. I grabbed it and asked him to sign it. Then I told him this was gonna be like the fourth car in my collection to stay trapped. We kept on chatting about how I opened everything and stuff, and then he left because he had to cut the ribbon for the event. It was a cool way to get an autograph, instead of waiting in line. Now I need a protecto pack… and another KITT to pop loose.