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"Not very long ago, in the top left-hand corner of Wales, there was a railway. It wasn't a very long railway or a very important railway, but
it was called The Merioneth and Llantisilly Rail Traction Company Limited,
and it was all there was. And in a shed in a siding at the end of the railway lives the locomotive of the Merioneth
and Llantisilly Rail Traction Company Limited, which was a long name for a little
engine, so his friends just called him Ivor."
- Ivor the Engine, with working headlamps and glowing dragon egg in the firebox
- Two open/sheep wagons
- Full range of sounds and dialogue from the original colour animations on DCC SOUND versions
- 2D cardboard figures with bases for Jones the Steam, Dai Station, Idris the Dragon and three sheep, all produced from the original animation artwork
- Fold-up cardboard engine shed and water tower.
- A brand-new Ivor the Engine story written and illustrated by Daniel Postgate
- Special presentation box
- Compatible with other OO gauge products
- Die-cast metal and injection moulded plastic construction.
- High quality motor and mechanism.
- Next18 decoder socket
- Factory-fitted speaker in all locomotives
In 1959 Oliver Postgate and Peter Firmin, working under their Smallfilms name, brought Ivor the Engine to life in a series of six 10-minute black and white films. The animations were created using cut-out painted cardboard items held together with pins and Blutack.
A single frame camera controlled by a small electric motor with some Meccano, a rubber band drive and a manual clicker allowed frames to be made in quick succession – a good thing as five minutes of animation required 8000 frames to be recorded. On a good day two minutes of animation could be recorded; 12 times faster than most stop-frame animation studios of their time. All of this was created in the pair’s workshop (a converted cow shed) at Firmin’s home in Blean near Canterbury, Kent. Postgate wrote the stories, narrated and voiced many of the characters which were brought to life by Firmin’s illustrations.
The original series was regularly shown by Associated-Rediffusion Ltd. on ITV (who had acquired the original rights) until their demise in 1968. In 1975 the creators re-acquired the rights and started producing the original episodes, alongside new ones as a series of forty 5-minute episodes, this time aired over the following two years on the BBC. Ivor the Engine would see regular screenings for the next decade.
Numerous books and VHS cassettes were also produced alongside other merchandise such as board games and playing cards. In 2023 a remastered version was released on Blu-ray DVD.
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