The initial promotional photos for him were not that promising. It didn’t particularly matter to me, since I appear to be going through a Carrick phase.
But oh my goodness, the two I picked up are super, particularly this one:
I figured they’d be incorporating that Blue Interference paint on a nominally “realistic” paint job in the near future, but putting it on a release I was already predisposed to like? Nice!
I haven’t taken most of my more recent Celebration Horses out of their boxes – partly out of laziness, and partly out of self-preservation – but I think this one will be having a coming out party pretty soon.
You can’t really see in the photograph, but he’s live show quality, or darn well near it.
It would have been even lovelier to add a Gloss one to my equine family, but that was not meant to be.
My Costume Contest entry this year was made from recycled bits of previous costumes and materials I got on sale, or for cheap through the local thrift store circuit. One yard of felt from the local Salvation Army Store, some glue sticks and a Dollar Tree sun hat =
In other words, I wasn’t terribly invested in it, emotionally or financially. But it turned out pretty nice regardless, and considering the judging for this thing seems to be pretty random, I thought I had as good a shot as anyone.
Aside from the fact that the scheduling issues have still not been resolved, and either the time or the location of it has to change – it was, as I mentioned before, the lack of prize equity that I found most troubling.
I believe the prize breakdown was 26 kids got prizes, as opposed to 10 adults? I was there and saw the disparity first hand, but I did not realize the gap was so huge.
I know why they do it: it’s supposed to encourage kids and families with young kids to participate.
But I think it’s starting to have the same effect the Gloss Prize Models did at the Children’s Show, and the Diorama Contest’s under-10 category: it’s becoming an incentive for some parents to use their children as proxies.
Gloss Prize Models tend to baseline at $500 on the secondary market. That’s a pretty big incentive, especially if the odds are in their favor.
I’ve been luckier than most and I have actually won a couple of prizes, and for that I’m grateful. And I’m definitely not hurting for treasures: my local flea markets are pretty sweet, and I definitely have a knack for finding things at BreyerFest or online that nobody else does.
BreyerFest is a constant work in progress, and things will change.
And so am I, and so will I.
For the better, for the worse, or just for the sake of change.
Do Breyerfest Celebration horses have VIN numbers? I would think they make them in enough numbers that they would. VIN numbers are starting to really fascinate me now ... I just bought a Cherry Creek Fonzie Merit from Breyer's "Christmas in July" sale and I found out that his VIN is December 2015 -- in other words, just before his official release. Seems to prove that the first made are not necessarily the first shipped -- either that or Breyer has a warehouse full of Fonzies!
ReplyDeleteOops -- I guess I should have said "a warehouse full of Merits"; Fonzie was his dad. :)
ReplyDelete