Thursday, May 7, 2026

On a Regular Basis: The Winx Trio

Well, I knew it would happen eventually - I’d get so busy that the regularly scheduled time for a post would come and go, and I wouldn’t have a post written. I like to be 3-4 posts ahead of schedule, but that hasn’t happened for at least the last month. I’m writing them the day before, the morning of, or right up to the posting deadline.

It happens to the best of us, I suppose.

And I have a good excuse. I've been quite occupied with our newest addition.
 
We named him Oliver. Chris wanted a name that reflected his origin story, and a friend of his suggested Oliver Twist - a little guy with a rough start who maintained his goodness and decency in spite of the injustice and corruption around him. Our little man continues to be a total sweetheart - last night, he put his paws on my chest and rubbed his face on my nose - so the name fits. 
 
I’ll probably still call him “Little Man” forever. It’s already morphed into “Mannarino” as a nickname, so I’m off and running with my usual shenanigans. By this time next year, he’ll have at least half a dozen nicknames that have nothing to do with his actual name. 
 
He went to the vet today and got a clean bill of health - no FIV and no FeLV! He's got to be the luckiest cat in the world, to have been outside for a year, scrapping with other cats, and not have picked up a single infectious disease. He's also flea-free and his skin has healed enough that we don't have to give him the 10 days of Clavamox, which will make everyone happy. We're going to leave the sunroom door open so he can come into the house on his own schedule.

Since I’m (a) already a day late on this post and (b) still horrifically short on time, I’m going to give you a brief but telling glimpse into just how obsessed I am with bay things.
 

Behold, my *cough cough* three *cough cough* regular run #1828 Winx models.
 
 
The first one is explainable - I bought her as part of the 2021 Collector Club Appreciation sale. I wanted a glossy Winx, so I ordered a matte one in the hope they’d get the hint - and, happily, they did!
 
 
Then in January of 2022, not two months after I had just bought my first regular run Winx, Heather B and I went to Sir Troy’s Toy Kingdom in search of a Harley for her. (We are all slightly obsessed with Harley, the famous Sugarbush Draft who escorts horses to the track, and the Friesian is one of Heather’s favorite molds, so of course she had to have a Harley.) I’d already heard about chalky Winxes in the mix, so I wanted to look at the ones at Sir Troy’s to see if I could find one.
 
I'm pretty sure this gal is one. Her paint is much thicker than my original.
 
 
And then this other one with red shading jumped out at me, and I was doomed.
 
I keep telling myself I should sell one, but I just can't do it.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Do That Conga: Stone ISH, Part 3

We’re up for part 3 of my ISH conga - the factory customized (FCM) models.

The 2005 Stone Base manual defined factory customs as, “[S]culpting the molds at the factory with additions or subtractions to the original.” For their upcoming 2026 SHCF show, Stone defines factory customs as: “[M]odels that can have a range of customizing from their standard form up to mane and tail swaps, gender swaps, ear repositioning, and adding unicorn or other smaller horns. Manes and Tails can be altered from the original version (IE tails customized to swish, ends of manes customized to be windblown, manes and tails modified to fit other sculptures).” There’s also a category called Extreme Factory Customized (EFCM), which includes turned/tucked heads, added wings, moved limbs, crazy detailing in the mane/tail (I always call that Spaghetti Hair), adding feather to the legs or extra bulk/less bulk in various parts of the body, or completely coating the body in another texture (for example, the dragon horses they’ve done from time to time that are covered head to toe in scales).

With a few exceptions, I don’t find a lot of Stone’s EFCMs to be realistic or attractive. I look at most of them and say, “Yeah, cool idea, but that’s not how [legs, necks, etc.] work in real horses.” One of my self-imposed collecting rules is that if I’m gonna drop a fortune on a Stone, it has to be showable in breed, and a lot of the EFCMs, while pretty pieces, just aren’t biomechanically sound.

FCMs that have simple mane/tail modifications are more my bread and butter. It’s not a surprise that they’re the most populous ISH body style in my collection. Here they are, in order of acquisition.
 
 
Banjo was a run of 15 windswept ISHs made for the Midwest Horse Fair in April 2019. I love Stone’s strawberry roans (universally, on any mold) so he was a must-have as soon as I saw his picture. Stone allowed orders via Facebook Messenger back then, so I messaged Elaine and snagged one. His show name is Bandurria - I wanted to keep with the theme of a stringed instrument.
 
 
I just talked about White Luna, a run of 7 models produced in 2017, in my bonus post for March about silver things, so you can read her full deets there. Still thrilled I was able to find her.



 
This horse is without a doubt my favorite ISH in my entire collection.

In 2023, I was a member of the Stone Loyalty Club. Members got special early-bird shopping at any in-person events, including Equilocity, which always occurs in Lexington during the same week as BreyerFest. That Friday, I hopped the shuttle from the CHIN over to the Fairfield Inn at the appointed time to get my shopping wristband, and then hung out in the lobby until it was time to go in. I wasn’t really interested in any of the runs, so I went straight to the OOAK tables.

I was initially eyeballing a beautifully shaded seal bay Arabian Foal named Norman, because I don’t have any of that sculpt in my collection and it would have filled a hole in my show string. In the end, though, I couldn’t resist the pull of a bay ISH. His issue name was Bear and he was painted by Dawn Quick. I had him glossed, of course.
 
[Side note: I do hope to still add Norman to my collection someday.]

I say this is my favorite ISH because he immediately grabs my eye from across the room. On multiple occasions, I’ve plunked him on a show table, gone back to my own table, and nebbed on the class from afar, and I’ve seen him and gone, “Wow, who is that, he’s gorgeous!” Only to realize it’s my own horse. I have five solid bay ISHs, four of whom are shiny, and he’s the only one who gets that Wow reaction out of me, every time.

He has been on the table at ten shows so far and has 7 breed NAN cards and 2 collectibility NAN cards. He’s only been completely out of the ribbons once, and given what else was on the table at that show, it was totally fair for him not to place. His show name is Desert Road.
 
 
If forced to choose a second-favorite ISH, it would be this gal, Cheerleader, a run of 14 ISHs from the 2019 Stone Super Bowl event. She was painted by Audrey Dixon and, like most Audrey Dixon chestnuts, it was love at first sight for me. I had a chance to buy her during the sale, but we’d just purchased a house not six months prior, and I couldn’t justify the expense.

In October 2023, a seller listed one on the Peter Stone Sales Page on Facebook, and the rest is history. Her show name is Chalice.
 
 
I have mixed feelings about this ISH.

He’s a DAH who was listed for offers in November 2024 and was immediately bid up higher than most DAHs typically go for. The reason was obvious - he was absolutely gorgeous in the seller’s photos. His sooty parts were super dark and contrasty and he had shiny, satiny finish. I was slightly uncomfortable with how high he went, but ended up with the high offer.

Then I got him in hand and was … seriously underwhelmed. I understand that models can look somewhat different depending on the lighting, but he looked like a totally different horse. He was lighter and washed out, not dark and contrasty like the seller's pictures. I like him significantly less in-hand.

That being said, he’s done pretty well in the show ring so far, with three NAN cards out of four shows. His show name is Gone Overboard - a reflection of how I got caught up in bidding and paid more than I should have.
 
 
Lance of Earth was a run of 30 pieces for the 2022 Art of the Horse event. He came in three colors - palomino, liver chestnut, and black, with 10 pieces made of each color, and he was a gambler’s choice - you didn’t know which color you were going to get. I only liked the liver chestnut, so I decided to wait to see if I could find one on the secondary market - hoping at least one of the ten had been glossed.

In December 2024, a glossy liver chestnut popped up on the Peter Stone Sales Page on Facebook, and I pounced. He has not been shown.
 
 
This is the customized version of Gleema My Star, a run of 30 produced in 2010. He was featured in my “Top 5 purchases of 2025” post. An absolutely gorgeous model. I bought him from my friend Ellen.
 
 
This ISH, Ruffalo, a OOAK produced for the 2019 Midwest Horse Fair (the same event where I got Banjo) and painted by Audrey Dixon, was in my top five most-wanted ISHs since he was released. I put out an ISO for him prior to BreyerFest in 2024; his then-owner responded to the post and said he was not for sale at the time. However, in September 2025, she was ready to part with him and put him up for sale on the Peter Stone Sales Page on Facebook. I didn’t see the post for several hours and thought I’d be too late, but he was still available, and now he is mine. He is unshown.
 
 
Ima Shifty Goodbar, a run of 15 for the 2017 Quarter Horse Congress, was featured in my March 2026 New Additions post, so you can read more about his acquisition details there. I’m so glad I finally have the big one to match the little one! He’s going to his first show this coming weekend. I named him Cagey Clark.
 
Most of the ISHs on my wish list are FCMs. Top of the list are Big Bad Wolf, Excuses Excuses, Firestarter (a 2008 Tom Bainbridge OOAK), Niveous, Rum Runner, and Seeker - because who doesn’t dream of one day owning a Seeker? 

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Sentimental Journey: Ducky

In case the cat didn’t make it obvious enough, I am a person who likes rescuing things.

In mid-August 2014, on Blab, fellow hobbyist Amanda Reed shared an eBay link to the dirtiest FAM I’ve ever seen:
 



She was so gross that people didn’t know what she was - a supremely yellowed and/or scorched alabaster? A partially stripped bay or heavily damaged appaloosa? 

Well, she pinged my rescue nerve, so I made an offer significantly lower than the BIN price and to my surprise, the seller accepted. I received her a few days later and broke out my trusty bottle of old Lestoil. I made a thread about her on Blab called “One Ugly Duckling” to track her progress. Most of the photos here are from that thread.

As soon as I started working on her, it became clear that all the brown goo was grease splatter. The seller acquired the model as-is in Nashville, but nothing else was known about her. I wonder if she was just hanging around in a diner somewhere as part of the decor. Here's what her back looked like after the first round of Lestoil and some industrious scrubbing:


After half a bottle of Lestoil, a bunch of toothpaste, and lots time in a sunny window, she looks pretty darn good. She lost some paint from her mane/tail in the process, but I’m really pleased with how she came out. Apologies for the relatively shitty pics; my camera setup back then wasn't the best.
 
I named her Ducky.

Here are both sides of her, from start to finish.
 






(Bottom photo taken today with a much better camera)







(Bottom photo taken today with a much better camera)

Quite the transformation.
 
Here's a pic of our little rescue man from this morning, also, for tax. He's about the cutest thing ever.