All posts by JohnM

Something for the holidays

If you celebrate Christmas, you might be interested in this: the BRIO Advent Calendar. New for 2015, this advent calendar can also double as scenery in your layout and it includes some holiday-themed accessories, including a two-piece travel train, figures, a snowman and magentic “present” loads. The front flap of the box folds down, revealing the calendar doors in the front of the building, and forming a scenery “base” for the accessories.

So far I have only seen this sold in Germany, so I got mine off of eBay from Spielkiste. This seller seems to be offering the best international shipping to the U.S. so far, though of course other sellers may be less expensive if you live elsewhere in the world.

Fall 2015 lineup is out

BRIO’s new products for the fall of 2015 have been released in Europe. If you aren’t familiar with the 2015 product lineup be sure to check out the catalog on Issuu.com. Those of you who live in the United States won’t get these until 2016 at least, so for now you’ll have to find international sellers that will ship to the U.S. Amazon and eBay are good starting points.

Here’s a summary of what’s new (click to enlarge):

Product lineup thumbnail

Deluxe Railway Set bargain

Over the last couple of weeks, some 3rd party sellers on Amazon in the United States have been listing the #33052 BRIO Deluxe Railway Set for $200, and Amazon has been price-matching that. This set has an MSRP of $299 and typically retails for between $260 and $270.

This is a very significant price drop and this particular set has a tremendous amount of value even at full price. Included are three of the red, tied-arch bridges (which are themselves only available in starter sets), a light-and-sound Metro Train, a Travel Train, many components including the ship and crane from the Harbor Set, two stations, some road pieces, an engine and some boxcars. It even comes in a vinyl-lilned box that unfolds into a sturdy playmat.

Blue Steam Engine restored

I just finished a project to restore my very ragged #33429 Blue Steam Engine, which I first wrote about back in December. Here’s what it looked like when I received it:

And this is what it looks like now:

I documented every step of the process and will be writing an article on what I did very soon for those who are curious and may want to experiment with restoring their own pieces. It was a very long and at times tedious project but it was absolutely worth it in the end!

The Train that Almost Was

BRIO collector and enthusiast Tyme let me see a copy of an old flyer from 1997 that was sent out to BRIO retailers. This was something of a pre-announcement of upcoming BRIO products in the late 1997 and early1998 timeframe. On the cover of this flyer, which bears the name “Toy Fair 1997”, is a photo of a prototype train in orange:

Toy Fair 1997 flyer

Inside the booklet is a larger photo with more information, indicating that the train was modeled after the TGV in France (in French, the Train à Grande Vitesse, which translates as “high speed train”), specifically the TGV Sud-Est in its original orange livery. According to Tyme, who had a close relationship with his local BRIO retailer, BRIO was not able to secure the rights from France to sell the train so it never made it to market.

Prototype Trains

As you can see in the photo (click to enlarge), this prototype is just a mockup. The body is orange, but the graphics are printed on paper which are glued onto the train body. This is probably fairly common in the early stages of train design since, once you have the body color decided, changing the graphics is easy if you are just printing them on paper as opposed to commiting them permanently in ink on the train itself.

Also note the early prototype of the redesigned Shinkansen as well, which bears the name Shinkansen Tokaido. The final product name for this train would be Shinkansen Nozomi when it was finally released in early 1998. In Japan, Tokaido is the name of one of the high-speed rail lines in operation while Nozomi is the name of the fastest service offering on this line (the limited-stop service). So Shinkansens Nozomi is merely a more specific name for the same train. The train itself is modeled after the 300 series which was in operation from 1992 through 2012.

Also note the suggested pricing in US Dollars. BRIO has never been cheap. Accounting for inflation, $43 in 1998 is equivalent to about $62 today.

View the BRIO 2015 catalog

The BRIO 2105 Retail Catalog was released on Issuu back in March but it managed to sneak by me because it was not published by BRIO directly. I have no explanation for that, but regardless it is online for viewing. It looks like BRIO is expanding the road and rail system and adding the Fun Park Theme (as I wrote about here earlier). And if you love horses, you are in for a real treat as 2015 will include several new accessories including an enormous horse stable play set, an equestrian accessory called the Horse Jumping Kit and a couple of other goodies.

Consumer vs Dealer Catalogs

The terms “dealer catalog” and “consumer catalog” are often times used interchangeably, but they aren’t always the same thing. See the photo below, which shows two BRIO catalog booklets for the year 1990.

consumer_vs_dealer.jpg

These two books are nearly identical, though of course the difference in size is immediately obvious. The dealer catalog is the larger of the two, and certainly the more expensive to print. Since consumer catalogs were intended to be produced in much greater numbers, it would make sense that they would be made smaller so as to keep printing costs down.

There is more to this dealer catalog than just its larger size, however: there is also a slight difference in its content. While the product pages are identical between the two, the last two pages of the dealer catalog are devoted to campaign materials and other promotional items that are intended for use in retail store displays:

dealer-1.jpg

dealer-2.jpg

The consumer catalog has the same number of pages, but these final two pages are instead replaced with blank, ruled sheets:

consumer.jpg

The assumption here, of course, is that the average consumer would not be interested in expensive store displays and posters. Not so the collector, but of course the collector is not the average consumer.

History of the City Park set

I received a copy of a 1982-83 catalog from writer and BRIO enthusiast Joshua McMorrow-Hernandez and will be adding it to the catalog archive, with his permission of course, in the coming days. One interesting bit of history jumped out at me in perusing it, however, and that is the origin of the City Park set, #33578. This item first appeared as a wooden railway accessory in the 1984 catalog, but it appears that it began life as an accessory to what BRIO would eventually come to call their role-playing line of toys.

My earliest catalog is from 1980, so what I know of this line is limited to that decade. The 1980-81 catalog shows these four items:

  • Garage #1110/31654, a large building with three overhead doors,
  • Garage/petrol station #1111/31656, basically the garage plus gas pumps
  • Parking Garage #1113/31658, a three-story garage with petrol station, numbered parking spots and adhesive stickers that children could use to customize its appearance
  • Farm #1122/31105, a farm house with removable roof, large play yard and a two-room animal shed.

Accessories for this line would appeared in the early 1980’s, debuting in the 1982-83 catalog:

  • Farm #1131/6-31131, a four-piece animal shed with animals
  • City Park #1132/4-31132, which would later become wooden railway accessory #333578
  • Chicken run #1133/2-31133, a two-piece chicken coop with chickens and other figures

The 3-car garage set #1110/31654 would eventually be renumbered to #31109 in the new 5-digit system, and the Farm #1122/31105 would become #31122. Both products would live for several more years and were last seen in catalogs in 1989.

The accessories for the farm, the smaller four-piece farm and the chicken run, were in catalogs through 1986. What’s interesting here is that these items were in the same styling and rough scale as the wooden railway system, even using the same animal and figure cut-outs, but only the City Park would go on to become an official wooden railway accessory. It would also live on an extra year, showing up in catalogs through 1987.

The Fun Park Theme

While the 2015 BRIO catalog has not been released yet, this year’s new products have already started landing in stores in Europe. One thing that caught my eye is that the Roller Coast Set from last year was the beginning: BRIO has created a full Fun Park Theme. New so far this year are:

33739
#33739 Ferris Wheel

33740
#33740 Fun Park Kit

33741
#33741 Fun Park Train

If you don’t live in Europe, your best bet so far appears to be eBay. I’ve seen all of these items for sale with international shipping as an option.