tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7371380495065351450.post279340926139918990..comments2024-03-29T02:00:51.964-04:00Comments on Breyer History Diva: Real and TrueANDREAhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00138509980267775687noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7371380495065351450.post-85831429024901958322022-09-28T23:05:06.609-04:002022-09-28T23:05:06.609-04:00Where do you list your models for sale? Do you hav...Where do you list your models for sale? Do you have a link to your sales profile/listings?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7371380495065351450.post-8040853850217137912022-09-26T21:38:57.463-04:002022-09-26T21:38:57.463-04:00My first thought was, what an excellent paint job!...My first thought was, what an excellent paint job!!<br /><br />I dunno- I wonder if the very manufacturing process produces these oddballs. I'm picturing unpainted horses going into bins, bins going into a warehouse. When they pull them out again for painting, the newer horses (with U.S.A. stamp) get painted and distributed before the older ones sans U.S.A. stamp. At least, this is how I imagine the no-U.S.A.-stamp Yellow Mounts came into being.<br /><br />Funny though, I had a thrift-store trophy/clock that I took apart (unable to afford a Clock Horse, I thought I'd make my own🙄)-looks like the same bevelled base, probably walnut. It's on the porch somewhere...Suzannehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06699756539225627005noreply@blogger.com