Talk of Fine Molds models elsewhere on this forum reminds me that, if the 1920s aren't too late a period for this website, modellers may like to know that a version of the Japanese Type 89 medium tank in 1/35 is available in a slightly unexpected form at a fraction of the original price.
The original Fine Molds kit (of a late mark) was only available as "free" with a set of three issues of a Japanese modelling magazine, and that is still the case for that variant. (The original boxing is here - part one only - you will need to add the other two issues so it costs three times as much as it seems at first ... http://www.hlj.com/product/MDGAM1011/Mil and the magazine is (logically enough) in Japanese.)
However, the kit has been reissued much more cheaply in a slightly earlier variant (with big cupola and with fuel filler caps along the sponson roofs), in the Girls und Panzer series. (This is an anime cartoon film series about winsome young schoolgirls being trained in the Way of the Tank rather than cha-do or ikebana ... don't ask! Utterly demented as a friend commented, but it is worth googling for the Maus episode on youtube just to get a sense of the love of detail. Personally, I find these lassies insufferably cute and much prefer Porco Rosso ...)
The only problem with this new boxing, once one has chucked the pink box and the transfer sheet, is finding markings. The easiest option is to do a naval special landing forces machine in dark green or olive drab (not quite sure which), as it only needs naval ensign markings, and the anchor badge is on the sprues already. (The original issue of the kit has spare markings for IJN vehicles anyway, as a bonus thrown in, so if you have this or know someone with it ...).
-- Edited by Lothianman on Wednesday 24th of July 2013 02:05:55 PM
1920s certainly isn't too late in my book - even some '30s tanks are still suitably riveted and thin-skinned to count as proper landships. There's the Vickers No.s 1 and 2, Vickers Mediums Mk 1 and 2, A6/Medium MK III/16 tonner, A1E1 Independent, Delaunay-Belleville, M24/25 and M26/27, NC, Char D3 and perhaps the D1 and D2, Grosstraktor and Leichttraktor, T-18 and T-19, M1919/M1921 Christie, M1921/T1 Medium A, M1922, the Vickers Medium letter tanks (C, D, E etc), probably more besides. Perhaps others would disagree, but I consider all such designs to be suitably early and still experimenting with the idea of the tank and what form it should take. There's the variants for the French Char de Bataille too - SRA, SRB, FCM 21, and FAMH. There are lots of interesting tanks from between the wars that get neglected, because they do not fall directly into "WW1" or "WW2" categories, and even the TOG tanks and early A9/A10 cruiser tanks from WW2 are somewhat ignored, yet the multi-turret design of A9, plus the riveting and thin armour make it a possible candidate for the tail-end of the 'landship' era.