Showing posts with label just about horses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label just about horses. Show all posts

Saturday, August 2, 2025

Featured JAH - 8/2/2025, July/Aug 2010

 Hello and welcome to Featured JAH! This week we're moving right along and covering July/Aug 2010, so let's get going! 

On the front cover we have another beautiful diorama by Robin Briscoe, this time featuring All Glory, the 2010 Breyerfest Celebration Horse. 




















In the Editor's Desk, Arlene talks about various Breyerfest guests and features of the magazine, as usual. There's also another Who Am I? and a Find the Hidden Objects contest. 





















Letters to the Editor appears on page 3. 





















On page 4 we have an article about Elizabeth Shatner and All Glory as part of the Breyerfest preview. 





















The Breyerfest preview continues on page 5. 





















On page 6 we have a reveal of many Breyerfest 2010 models, including raffle models, live show prizes and more. Sorry they're slightly cut off - this magazine is super thick and hard to fold for scanning! 





















On page 7 we have the mini version of Big Lex that was produced for the WEG, as well as some sneak previews of upcoming products, and an information blurb about the costume contest for Breyerfest 2010 - interestingly, it notes that Star Trek and Elvis costumes won't be judged, probably because of the connections to William Shatner and Priscilla Presley at the event. 





















On page 8 is the first page of the article about Sapphire. 





















The Sapphire article concludes on page 9 with a reveal of the model. 





















On page 10 is a preview of the 2010 WEG. 





















The WEG preview continues on page 11. 





















On page 12 we have the next Connoisseur model, Taima! This was the second and final time a non-horse mold was used for the Connoisseur series. 





















After skipping Artist's Sketch, Mailbag, Model Horse Show, a how-to article, ads for various Breyer products and another how-to article, on page 24 is the first page of Vintage Point, featuring Rejoice! 




















Vintage Point concludes on page 25. 





















After skipping Winners' Circle and the Calendar of Events, on page 28 we have On the Trail with Breyer and a Breyer Canada update. 





















On the back cover of the magazine we have the handsome Enchanted Forest, and that brings us to the end of this week's issue. Check back next week for Sept/Oct 2010! 

Saturday, August 12, 2023

Featured JAH: 8/12/23, Summer II 1993

 Hello and welcome to another edition of Featured JAH! In this issue, we see some pretty horses (as usual), learn about Peter Stone the Breyer Man, and more! Let's get started.

















On the front cover, a guy gives a thumbs-up on a strutting park horse. On the back cover is the same horse from the opposite side (you can see the back of the ribbon in the first picture). Curiously, the back cover photo appears to have been cropped to just show the horse's head, as the photo credit on the table of contents page shows the entire photo (the guy sitting on the horse bareback again). Interesting. The credit says the horse is Countess Vanessa, but no information on the rider's identity. 

















On the Editor's Desk page we see a stallion being goofy on a visit with Megan. They visited a stud farm for a photo shoot for a new model for 1994 - ooh, a mystery! Who could it have been? I guess we'll find out in a couple of months when I get to that issue. I also liked the bit at the bottom about things coming in the next issue, including "the Clubs listing, really!" They must have had some trouble with that. 

On the opposite page are some announcements and the Pen Pals for this issue. Apparently advertising was free? Seems kind of counterproductive. 




Next we have an article about National Show Horses, the next big thing in the showing world. Ahh, so Countess Vanessa is a NSH and her rider was Jim Stachowski. Mystery solved! 

















And on this page we discover that Vanessa ended up being a six-time national champion park horse. Pretty impressive! Aww, the article is continued (again; that's awkward). Anyway, on the opposite page is an article about the one, the only, Peter Stone! Yes, Peter Stone (now of Stone Horses, the main competitor to Breyer) was once the head honcho at Breyer. 

















Feast your eyes on Peter Stone's life story. 

















I think that article may have been longer than the one about Countess Vanessa. Anyway, keep your eyes peeled for more of Peter's antics. On the opposite page, there's a Blast from the Past about the Open Top Buggy with flocked PAS. Breyer flockies are kind of the stuff of legend and tend to command high prices whenever they show up for sale. 





Here's the rest of the article about Countess Vanessa. Maybe the Stone article wasn't longer than this one. In any case, it's interesting that Breyer would make this horse the cover model for the issue, do a huge article about her and then not make a Breyer model of her. Maybe they just didn't think they had a mold that could do her justice? Heck, the Saddlebred Weanling probably would have worked, if nothing else. And it ended up taking another five years for Breyer's NSH mold to debut. 





















Hey look, the Vintage Point for this issue is about the Saddlebred Weanling! It could have been perfect...oh well. I guess Countess Vanessa's article helped set the stage for Rejoice down the line. Edit: on further contemplation, the Saddlebred Weanling appears to have a set tail, which isn't allowed with the NSH breed. But they could have put her on an Arabian or something, I guess.

Other things appearing in this article: a death notice for Dixie Blue Devil, subject of the "A Pony for Keeps" book and gift set (issued in 1990); an update on the Misty of Chincoteague Foundation; a how-to article on photo shows; a sneak preview of the Rowland Cheney illustration that became "The Challenger" gift set; and a how-to article on indoor photography. 

Check back next week for the Fall 1993 issue! 

Saturday, August 5, 2023

Featured JAH: 8/5/2023, Summer I 1993

 Hello and welcome to another installment of Featured JAH! I hope everyone enjoyed last week's inaugural installment of the new blog series. This week's issue is Summer I 1993. Let's get right into it, shall we? Oh, before I start - I forgot to mention this last week, but JAH started out as a tri-fold pamphlet before eventually morphing into the form seen here, which was a half-size magazine measuring 8.5" x 5.5". Probably not a coincidence that the magazine is the same size as a standard sheet of 8.5" x 11" paper when laid out flat. This will become relevant later, I promise.



















These magazines will obviously show varying amounts of wear, but this one is in pretty good condition. Anyway, this cover model is Sno-Jax Specialty, who appeared somewhat frequently in these old issues. The back cover is a random Appaloosa butt, presumably from Black Horse Ranch given that the photo is credited to Karen Grimm. 

















On the first page, we have a first sneak peek at the Spanish Barb (prior to receiving his clothes), and the Proud Mother and Newborn Foal gift sets on Lady Roxana and the CAF. On the opposite page we can see the ticket reservation form for Breyerfest '93. In those days, Friday night was called Old Kentucky Night every year (I think) and that was the big event where attendees feasted on cookout-type food and the Celebration Horses were handed out. 

















Okay, here's the Editor's Desk on page 2. In the photo with Megan you can see a prototype for the Mesteno "The Challenger" mold. There's some more of that goofy humor on this page with the "at last, the Club listing!" On the opposite page we have a description of Breyerfest 1993, in which the live show took place all day on Friday, the Old Kentucky Night dinner happened Friday night followed by the live auction, and the vendor show and raffle happened on Saturday...and that was about it. I guess Breyerfest wasn't quite as popular in those days, and there were no special runs other than the Celebration Horse and raffle. Again, I like the bit about "after staying up all night running from room to room in our host hotel, the Holiday Inn Lexington-North," (which is what the Clarion was called at the time). I've certainly never done that myself, but other people still do, I guess? 
















The centerfold of the magazine is this full-color preview of Nevada Star (the raffle model) and Grayingham Lucky Lad, the Celebration Horse. Huh, a scan of this exact page appears on the IDYB entry for this model. I guess that makes sense if no one has managed to get any photos of one since 1993. 

















On page 18 we have a preview of some of the Breyerfest 1993 auction models. Now, in those days the auction models weren't created specially for the auction - they were actual old tests from the archives. So that bay appaloosa Lady Phase is probably the test for Prairie Flower, the German export model for Equitana that year, and the black leopard Lady Phase is a sample for the regular run Family Appaloosa Mare. So the Classic Quarter Horse Family would have been the only colors readers hadn't seen prior to that point. On page 19 is the remainder of an article about live showing. 



















At the end of this issue is a Vintage Point focusing on Stud Spider, and you can also see the entry form for the Breyerfest 1993 live show. 





















Here's the rest of the Stud Spider article. I edited out the other page because it was just the (blank) back side of the show entry form. 

Other highlights from this issue: an article about Night Vision and Karen Grimm's Appaloosas, by Karen Grimm herself; making model horse props on a budget; Blast From the Past (featuring the Appaloosa Performance Horse).

That's it for this week's issue - check back next week for another exciting installment! 

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Featured JAH: 7/29/2023, Spring 1993

 Hello, readers! Well, as you may have noticed, I stopped doing the Featured Model blog series last year, both because we had sold our house and moved to an apartment, and because I felt the series had run its course. Since then the post frequency on the blog has been down a bit without those extra four posts a month, which makes me sad. But anyways, I was extremely sleep-deprived last week, and while getting into my bed I saw a stack of my old JAH magazines nearby - and an idea popped into my head. Why not scan them all and then do a series of Featured JAH posts? There's a lot of information in those old magazines that's probably well-known by older people in the hobby (and people that were subscribers at the time they were published, like me), but not necessarily so well-known by newer people in the hobby. 

For those who aren't aware, JAH (Just About Horses) is/was the official Breyer publication to members of the hobby.  It began publication in 1975 and was published a varying number of times per year until 2011. The magazine contained articles about Breyer portrait horses, articles by sculptors detailing how various sculpts came to be, how-to articles (by people still active in the hobby today) for any and all aspects of customizing and tackmaking, surveys, sneak peeks of upcoming Breyer releases, special runs released only through JAH, probably more I'm forgetting, and of course Vintage Point, which was like the precursor to Identify Your Breyer. 

Since 2012, JAH has been published on a yearly basis and sent to Collector Club members at the end of the year, but the JAH we have now is a pale shadow of what it used to be, in my opinion. It was a repository of all things Breyer, collected in one place. The Collector Club has more-or-less replaced JAH, with more special runs and fewer informative articles. If I remember right, Breyer's reasoning for discontinuing JAH was due to increased publication costs, which the cost of a subscription must not have been able to cover, considering there was little to no outside advertising in the magazine.

The only problem with this new series is that my collection of JAH issues doesn't start until Spring 1993, which is rather late in the magazine's publication. Maybe in the future I'll be able to get my hands on some of the previous years and cover them then! Now, I'm not planning on scanning every single page in each magazine, because it would just be too time-consuming. Also, my apologies if the pages of the magazines aren't always in order - the scanning process turned out to be much more irritating than I thought it would be (my poor scanner has never worked so hard in its life!). My plan is to cover interesting things in the magazines but not necessarily everything in each issue. So, let's take a look at the Spring 1993 issue: 





















On the front and back cover of this issue we see a Chincoteague Pony stallion and a mare and foal. JAH's cover photos were almost always of real horses, not models (at least in this era). 

















As we can see on the first page, 1993 was the debut year of the Dawning gift set, featuring Mesteno as a foal with his mother. Mesteno was a Pryor Mountain mustang stallion who, along with various family members, had a number of Classic-scale portrait molds sculpted by artist Rowland Cheney. Also debuting in 1993 was the Buttons and Bows Grazing Mare and Foal set, Ichilay the Crow Horse on the Indian Pony and the ceramic (porcelain?) Performing Misty, which is still sought after today. On the opposite page you can see a typical table of contents for the magazine, staff information, etc.

















On the next page is Editor's Desk, the note from the editor that appeared in every issue. JAH had a number of editors over the years, and at this time the editor was Megan Thilman. I won't always show the Editor's Desk page, but wanted to establish its existence. At the bottom of the page is a note that dressage Olympian Reiner Klimke's horse Ahlerich had passed on. JAH frequently published articles about various famous horses, whether they had received portrait models or not (I don't think Ahlerich ever had his own Breyer model). On the opposite page we see a notice about a computer breakdown at Breyer headquarters that resulted in loss of some data (heh) and an example of the Pen Pals page. 

















On these two pages we find an article about the Hooved Animal Humane Society, and on the opposite page an example of the slightly-goofy humor of JAH in those days ("Announcements to the Teeming Millions," "Wake the kids, phone the neighbors, bribe your spouses..." and "...that's as rare as steak tartare. Ooh, bad joke."). I don't know, they gave me a chuckle at least.




I cropped out the other page here because it was the second part of a review of various old tack kits. Anyway, on this page we see a Blast from the Past, which featured various models of yesteryear in each issue. This issue's model was the raffle florentine Misty from Breyerfest 1990 (the first Breyerfest). 20 florentine Mistys were raffled off at that event, with a 21st sold at the live auction. The auction Misty was signed by Marguerite Henry and sold for a whopping $350, the equivalent of $739.02 in today's dollars (according to the inflation calculator). Huh - I would have expected a bigger increase. I'm pretty sure a florentine Misty signed by Marguerite Henry would sell for a lot more money nowadays!

There's also a photo of the 1993 Breyerfest Show Special on this page, a mini version of Chaparral (on the Fighting Stallion) issued on the Classic Rearing Stallion. I had one of these models that my grandparents found in an antique store circa 1998, though I've since sold him on. 

Speaking of Misty, here's the Vintage Point article for this issue: 

















Like I said earlier, Vintage Point was like the precursor to Identify Your Breyer. If I wanted to see if a particular mold had been used for a particular release or color, I'd pull out my JAH issues and check. Uhhh, is Vintage Point still a part of JAH now? I can’t even remember. I don’t think it is. Anyway, the drawback was that the magazines couldn't be updated, so they might become out of date after a while. But Breyer didn't do quite as many special runs in those days, so it wasn't as much of an issue then as it would be now. So, the very last page of the issue would contain photos of all the releases for that mold. 

Other things I didn't cover in this issue: JAH used to have an extensive classified ads section (called Horse Trader) where people could advertise models they had for sale, and subscribers could buy things totally sight unseen from them (I bought a Traditional Black Stallion from someone using the classifieds, in the old days of personal checks!). There was also a Personals section, artists advertising their services, tack sales, publications and miscellaneous. In this issue, the classifieds section is 6.25 pages long, including one page dedicated to the Abbreviations Legend. The porcelain Shire Mare made her debut in this issue as well, one of the first sculptures Kathleen Moody did for Breyer. 

That brings me to the end of today's post - I hope you enjoyed it! Check back next Saturday for another installment of Featured JAH. 

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

The 2018 Stablemate Club is (mostly) revealed!

Greetings, readers! As a continuation of yesterday's post, today I'm going to talk about the 2018 Stablemate Club reveal on the last page of this year's JAH.


Look, it's mini Brishen again! I wondered if he would show up. And his cute little box - I won't even want to take him out!

And dare I assume that those silhouettes are the molds that are going to be used next year? One of them doesn't look familiar...must be the new mold for next year? Exciting!

It does seem a little odd that they're showing a photo of the mini Brishen, when the G1 release is usually the first to come out, and the one used to promote the club. And shouldn't the new mold be last in the lineup? Confusing. I'm happy about these silhouettes, though - they make it a lot easier to plan. Now I already know I only need one membership for next year! I don't collect any of those molds except for mini Brishen - yay!

As for the new mold...am I the only one that thinks it's a little awkward-looking? Looks like a cross between an Arabian and a really pathetic big lick TWH. Hopefully we get some actual photos of it later in the year when they open up enrollment.

Lastly, if you look closely at the pages of the magazine, Breyer is running a contest to win the test color Swaps that wasn't used for this year's Scotty release. More information here (must be logged into your account to view).

That's all I have for today - hopefully we get more exciting reveals soon! 

Monday, October 30, 2017

The 2017 Just About Horses is out in the wild!

Greetings, readers! I bring exciting news (that you've probably already heard!) - the 2017 JAH issue is in collectors' hands, and there are so many exciting things to talk about! However, today I'm going to talk about the Premier Club reveals!

I'll start with the cover of the magazine - behold, the final Premier Club release of 2017 - Carina and Selene!



Okay, Breyer has to be trolling us at this point. They got up everyone's hopes that we would get a new draft mare and FOAL set - because the grand total of one draft foal in Breyer's lineup could really, really use an update - and we get Lipizzaners instead? Bleh.

I like the sculpts, and they'll probably stay with me, but...argh. I wonder if this duo will be released on time, or if they got caught up in the other delays we've had this year? I guess we'll find out.

On a slightly different note, I could be wrong, but it almost looks like the models in the photo could be the actual finished production pieces instead of the resin prototypes? That bodes well for the future, although there's still plenty of room for quality issues.

Next, I'll move on to the first release from the 2018 Premier Club, Bristol!



Wow, a jumper! We haven't had a new one of those for a while. I like his color, too!



There's a full-body photo of the completed resin, though I suppose we'll have to wait until signups open to see what the painted sculpt looks like. Looking at those sketches on the upper right, I like the "taking off" one the best, honestly. I don't know why, but none of Morgen's sculpts have appealed to me so far (nothing against her personally), and I'm similarly lukewarm about Bristol. Maybe I'll like him better once I see a full photo, but no promises there.

There are a couple of other things from the JAH issue I'd like to cover, but that will have to wait until tomorrow.

In the interest of full disclosure, I recently had a baby and as such, may not be able to update the blog in as timely a manner as I'd like. Please be patient as we figure out this new parenthood adventure!