More Vintage Years of Airfix Box Art - Roy Cross - E-Book

More Vintage Years of Airfix Box Art E-Book

Roy Cross

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Beschreibung

The Airfix company was formed in 1939 and, since it produced its first plastic kit in 1949, grew to be the United Kingdom's leading model kit manufacturer. Several generations of young and young-at-heart modellers have made Airfix kits and, despite turbulent times in the 1970s and 1980s when the company changed ownership several times, in the twenty-first century it goes from strength to strength under the wing of Hornby Hobbies. The 1960s and early 1970s might be called the vintage years of Airfix, when some of their best and most popular kits were produced. For ten years up to 1974, renowned artist Roy Cross produced some of the stunning paintings that appear on the boxes of Airfix kits of the era. Roy set the standard for such artwork, to the extent that many are still used today, four decades later. Roy Cross's earlier book, The Vintage Years of Airfix Box Art, contained a host of the paintings he prepared for Airfix, but the unearthing of many more images in old Airfix files has enabled this entirely fresh look at Roy's work to be presented, coinciding with the seventy-fifth anniversary of the first Airfix kit. Thus the remainder of Roy's ten years' work for Airfix is reproduced here. This new compilation features many rare illustrations as well as studies and sketches that were not accepted at the time, and is beautifully illustrated with 180 colour artworks.

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Seitenzahl: 52

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2014

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MORE VINTAGE YEARS OF

Airfix Box Art

Roy Cross

Acknowledgements

THIS BOOK would not have been possible in its present form without the unstinting cooperation of Mr Darrell Burge, Marketing Manager at Hornby Hobbies Ltd. Similarly I am indebted to Jeremy Brook, editor of Constant Scale, journal of the Airfix Collectors’ Club, who in the course of his research at Hornby/Airfix has located many new transparencies of my artwork that have considerably enhanced the contents herein, and includes a number, especially of vintage cars, that I hadn’t even remembered painting! As always my son Anthony and daughter-in-law Lizzy have helped me in preparing the text for the publishers and Ken Smith has proffered a helping hand. I admit to referring frequently to Arthur Ward’s fine books on Airfix to refresh my memory, and offer him my thanks. Thanks are also due to the staff at Crowood with whom, over several books, it has always been a pleasure to work.

First published in 2014 by

The Crowood Press Ltd

Ramsbury, Marlborough

Wiltshire SN8 2HR

www.crowood.com

This e-book first published in 2014

© Roy Cross 2014

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.

British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN 978 1 84797 821 9

Page 1: Brunel’s trans-Atlantic steamer, the Great Western.

Page 2: The Vought A-7A Corsair II, a US Navy carrier-based light attack aircraft.

Page 3: The Hawker P.1127, forerunner of the Harrier.

Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Before Airfix

The Box Art

Variations

Index

A SAM-2 ‘Guideline’ missile and its carrier; this was a standard Soviet surface-to-air guided missile, serving from 1957.

Introduction

IN MY previous book, The Vintage Years of Airfix Box Art, I was able to give a comprehensive chronological sequence of the box-top art I painted over some ten years for Airfix Products Limited in the 1960s and 1970s. The book’s intent was to reproduce the artwork in full, rather than attenuated and disfigured (from the artist’s point of view) by the necessary titles and logos. I cannot say this drawback worried me when I was originally producing the artwork because – all importantly for a freelance illustrator – there was a constant supply of work over a long period and with reasonable remuneration! Many people have said then and since that they would like to have enjoyed the complete, unadulterated artwork: this was one of the incentives to produce Vintage Years.

The earlier book was well received, and since much artwork from those years was unused, the thought persisted of producing another volume to complete the job and fill in the numerous gaps between the subjects already covered. Years ago I had trawled through the photo files then held at Airfix subsidiary Humbrol Ltd, I thought at the time comprehensively. But more recent research at Hornby/Airfix by Jeremy Brook, who is their unofficial archivist, uncovered transparencies that I thought had been lost for ever (like the original artwork). Hence this present volume, which I think gives a fresh and even more comprehensive survey of the tremendous and varied output of kits produced by Airfix in its vintage heyday.

I recount elsewhere how I had seen the bagged Airfix plastic kits in Woolworths, had known I could do much better and approached them to offer my talents. The product output in those prolific years posed all sorts of new challenges for the artist illustrator and, as I have already said, I felt I was being well paid to learn as I went along! Of course I had done a good deal of previous colour work for various clients and, rather than repeat too much biographical detail already covered in my previous books from Crowood, the next few pages give pictorial samples of this work, plus a few notes highlighting the background and experience I was able to present to Airfix.

The artwork is presented in roughly the sequence of my invoices as submitted over the years. This provides a great variety of illustrations throughout the book, which I hope will give enhanced interest as the pages are turned – hopefully something for everyone.

The first Boulton Paul Defiant kit was issued in 1960; later I did two finished pieces of art in sequence, this I think being the second, the idea being to freshen up the presentation for new potential sales.

Before Airfix

WHEN Iapproached Airfix in late 1963, I already had some twenty years’ experience as a freelance illustrator/artist with work reproduced in print. As an Air Cadet in 1942 I sent some of my line drawings of aircraft to the Corps periodical: the editor, Leonard Taylor, asked to see me and show him some more of my work. The upshot was my supplying an increasing number of suitable drawings to illustrate the articles in theAir Reserve Gazette. I was paid £1 per reproduction, a useful sum in those days to augment my weekly salary as a technical illustrator at aircraft manufacturer Fairey Aviation Ltd at Hayes in Middlesex. Before long, I increased my earnings by submitting my own illustrated articles, using information culled from other aircraft manufacturers’ press releases and fromJane’s All the World’s Aircraft. Upon writing as a budding journalist to the firms’ press officers, I obtained releasable data and photographs to augment my own drawings and typescript. It amazes me that, with the battle of the Atlantic raging, large envelopes with superb 10×8in glossy aircraft photos arrived from the USA to illustrate my writing and later augment theGazette’s files.