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The new sixth edition of Tomart's Hot Wheels guide is being published in two volumes and is current up to 2008 vehicles available at the time of publication. Volume 1 covers Hot Wheels cars first produced from 1968 through 1996, plus variations of these castings manufactured up to 2008. Volume 2 updates Hot Wheels values and adds information for first edition castings introduced from 1997-2008.
The new sixth edition of Tomart's Hot Wheels guide is being published in two volumes and is current up to 2008 vehicles available at the time of publication. Volume 1 covers Hot Wheels cars first produced from 1968 through 1996, plus variations of these castings manufactured up to 2008. Volume 2 updates Hot Wheels values and adds information for first edition castings introduced from 1997-2008.
Identification and values of collectible hot wheels from 1968 to 1977.
If you're a veteran collector, you're probably already supercharged about miniature replica cars, and the needle on the speedometer is off the chart. If you're just starting to get interested in die-cast cars, buclde up. It doesn't take much exposure before new collectors find themselves shifting into high gear. Book jacket.
In 1983, the world was introduced to He-Man and the Masters of the Universe. What followed was a cultural sensation that changed the landscape of children's entertainment forever! Join Mattel and Dark Horse in this comprehensive retrospective chronicling He-Man's decades-long epic journey from toy, to television, to film, to a true pop culture phenomenon!
Jack Clark & Robert P. Wicker Hot Wheels, The Ultimate Redline Guide, Second Edition, takes an in-depth look at Redline Hot Wheels cars manufactured between 1968 and 1977. Everything you loved about the first edition is still here! Over 1,500 larger-than-life color photographs complement hundreds of listings, which include all color variations and current collector values. Besides Hot Wheels cars, collector buttons are listed and valued, as are track sets, play sets, sticker sheets and decals, parts, and related merchandise. This all-new second edition has been revised and expanded to include more variations and values for both loose and packaged vehicles. The new standard for Redline collectors also includes special sections on prototype vehicles, as well as vehicles inspired by 1970s cartoon series. Collector checklists are once again provided, in addition to user-friendly indexes. Multiple, full-color photos of each vehicle make it easy to identify cars. Cars are listed by value, from common to rare. The best guide for Redline Hot Wheels collectors just got better!
Provides Information on the history of Disney Pins from 1930 to 2007, Pin Collecting, How to get connected to Pin Trading Market, Plus Color Photos and Values for over 17,000 Disney Pins.
Who Framed Roger Rabbit emerged at a nexus of people, technology, and circumstances that is historically, culturally, and aesthetically momentous. By the 1980s, animation seemed a dying art. Not even the Walt Disney Company, which had already won over thirty Academy Awards, could stop what appeared to be the end of an animation era. To revitalize popular interest in animation, Disney needed to reach outside its own studio and create the distinctive film that helped usher in a Disney Renaissance. That film, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, though expensive and controversial, debuted in theaters to huge success at the box office in 1988. Unique in its conceit of cartoons living in the real world, Who Framed Roger Rabbit magically blended live action and animation, carrying with it a humor that still resonates with audiences. Upon the film’s release, Disney’s marketing program led the audience to believe that Who Framed Roger Rabbit was made solely by director Bob Zemeckis, director of animation Dick Williams, and the visual effects company Industrial Light & Magic, though many Disney animators contributed to the project. Author Ross Anderson interviewed over 140 artists to tell the story of how they created something truly magical. Anderson describes the ways in which the Roger Rabbit characters have been used in film shorts, commercials, and merchandising, and how they have remained a cultural touchstone today.