While we’re on the subject of Gambler’s Choices - let’s talk Vintage Club ones for today’s Collectibility Spotlight.
Of the three clubs Breyer regularly offers - Vintage, Premier, and Stablemates - Vintage is the one I’ve done the most. I was a member for eight of the fifteen years since its launch - 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022. The years 2016 and 2017 would have been included in there, but in late 2015, Breyer shut down my local dealer, who had been retailing Breyers for more than 30 years, over a 99-cent pricing error on the online portion of her dealership. I didn’t understand - and still don’t - how they could terminate such a lucrative, successful partnership over an error that is so easy to make. The nine and zero keys are right next to each other and anyone who doesn’t use the side number pad (or anyone who doesn’t have one; I don’t have one on the laptop I’m using to type this blog post) could make the same mistake. As a result of their decision, I boycotted buying anything directly from Breyer for all of 2016, which meant no Club memberships. And since you always have to sign up for clubs the year before, that meant I was out for the Vintage Club in 2017 as well.
I rejoined for 2018 and hung around for awhile, but when I started selling more than I kept and had a hard time getting even half of my investment back on the ones I sold, I was out.
The Vintage Club Gambler’s Choice was introduced for the first time in 2015 with Sailor, the Running Stallion in one of the four original decorator colors. I was a member that year and received a “Copenhagen.” I put that in quotes because, like Smurfy in 1991, something didn’t go quite right when they tried to reproduce the color from the 60s. Unlike Smurfy, though, the “Copenhagen” Sailors didn’t turn vivid Smurf blue - they were teal. Some clever hobbyist coined the color “Tealhagen,” which made me laugh out loud. I stole it and have delightfully used it ever since.
Side note: the 2026 Vintage Club release El Dorado (which queues up the Death Cab for Cutie song in my head every time I read the name) looked decidedly teal in his promo photo, enough for me to dub him "Tealhagen 2.0." Happily, he looks much less teal in the in-hand pics I've seen.
I did a three-way trade with a couple friends at BreyerFest that year to end up with a Wedgewood Sailor, who I later sold to my friend Nikki in 2022. She was after the full set of Sailors and he was the last one she needed, and he was going to be much more appreciated there than he was here.
I also received a Wedgewood Bernadette on the Shire mold in 2019, but she arrived pretty damaged from the loose COA in the box. (The resurrection of the “touchability” boxes was a terrible idea.) Breyer offered a replacement, but couldn’t guarantee a Wedgewood, so I declined. I sold the Bernadette at a steep discount in 2022.
Now let's get to the ones I still have.
In 2018, the Gambler’s Choice was #711242 Grace. The Vintage Club often uses at least one new mold in vintage colorways in order to keep memberships up, and that’s what they did here with Grace - the Weather Girl mold from 2011 in the three vintage colors from the Proud Arabian Mare: bay, alabaster, and dapple gray with black points. Since there were 500 memberships that year, that equates to approximately 167 per color. I was happy to receive the alabaster. Her show name is State of Grace.
Count me as one of those who engaged in chaotic, excited flailing when I saw they were putting out an In-Between Mare for the Vintage Club Gambler’s Choice in 2020 - and that one of them was a Shiny Bay Thing! [For additional reading on the original In-Between Mare and why she’s one of the rarest, most expensive, most collectible vintage Breyers ever, check out this article Breyer wrote about the mold earlier this year.]
I received the sooty palomino with my membership. My friend Beth was also a member that year, but didn’t want her Zahra, so she sold her to me. It was the Shiny Bay Thing, whose show name is Brillante. That just left the glossy rose gray pinto to pick up on the secondary market.
In 2021, the Gambler’s Choice was Nugget on the Brighty mold, offered in one of the four original decorator colors. Brighty fans everywhere started frothing at the mouth. I wasn’t really a fan, but then I saw an ad on Facebook for someone wanting to trade their glossy rose gray Zahra for a gold charm Nugget - and a gold charm Nugget is exactly what I’d received from Breyer. Easiest trade ever! Her show name is Bahira. Of the three, she does the best in the show ring.
2022 was my last year in the Vintage Club. The Gambler’s Choice, #712430 Poppy & Ollie, was another one like Grace - vintage-ish colors on a newer mold - but instead of using true vintage colors, they branded the colors as a “modern take” on some of the famous colorways from the Family Arabian sets of the 60s. Instead of matte bay, they did a glossy wild bay; instead of alabaster, they did a glossy perlino; and instead of matte chalky palomino, they did a glossy, much more nicely shaded version. There were 250 sets produced in each color.
While I like the original definition of the Vintage Club the best - vintage molds produced in vintage colors that they never wore originally - I’ve understood the necessity of keeping the collector base interested. If the club were to continue, they needed to vary on that theme a bit with modern molds in vintage colors and vintage molds in more modern colors. Every release prior to this one fit into one of those categories, and while I didn’t always like them, I could at least acknowledge that they fit the theme. Poppy and Ollie, though? While overall superbly done, they’re modern molds in a very modern take on vintage colors, and don’t really fit with the theme of the club at all. That was another nail in the coffin for my memberships.
While I like the original definition of the Vintage Club the best - vintage molds produced in vintage colors that they never wore originally - I’ve understood the necessity of keeping the collector base interested. If the club were to continue, they needed to vary on that theme a bit with modern molds in vintage colors and vintage molds in more modern colors. Every release prior to this one fit into one of those categories, and while I didn’t always like them, I could at least acknowledge that they fit the theme. Poppy and Ollie, though? While overall superbly done, they’re modern molds in a very modern take on vintage colors, and don’t really fit with the theme of the club at all. That was another nail in the coffin for my memberships.
As I mentioned above, I wasn’t a Vintage Club member in 2016, but I did like the Gambler’s Choice that year - #712619 My Girl, a Cantering Welsh pony released in glossy honey bay, glossy alabaster, or glossy honey palomino (think “that lovely, soft 60s FAM & FAS” honey palomino). Like Zahra, I immediately wanted one in all three colors, but at just 167-ish pieces per color, they’re hard to find and expensive.
At a show last year, I ran across this one for sale for only $50. That’s a third of what she cost to get direct from Breyer and about an eighth of what she usually sells for on the secondary market. Because I am an ethical person, I asked the seller if she knew it was one of the rarer Vintage Club models and if she wanted to change her mind on the price, but she said no - she just needed the shelf space. She even shipped me the COA after the show because she didn’t have it with her at the show hall. I don’t have the original box, but for $50, I’m definitely not complaining!
In addition to the other two colors of My Girl and a bay Grace, the only other Vintage Club Gambler’s Choice models I’d like to have someday are an undamaged Wedgewood and glossy gold charm Bernadette.
At a show last year, I ran across this one for sale for only $50. That’s a third of what she cost to get direct from Breyer and about an eighth of what she usually sells for on the secondary market. Because I am an ethical person, I asked the seller if she knew it was one of the rarer Vintage Club models and if she wanted to change her mind on the price, but she said no - she just needed the shelf space. She even shipped me the COA after the show because she didn’t have it with her at the show hall. I don’t have the original box, but for $50, I’m definitely not complaining!
In addition to the other two colors of My Girl and a bay Grace, the only other Vintage Club Gambler’s Choice models I’d like to have someday are an undamaged Wedgewood and glossy gold charm Bernadette.















