Monday, April 25, 2011

1987 Airsoft Catalog, real blast from the past

As most of you know, 
I have been involved in this Airsoft thing for a while.
I just took the time to scan in the catalog I produced in 1987.

When I say I produced, I mean I wrote the copy, did the layup and layout, everything but the pictures.
My ugly mug is even a model in most of the pictures.

Command Post was the 1st airsoft/Paintball catalog in the United States.
This catalog I have scanned was our third, 1987/88
I had no background in copy-writing or printing.
I managed to muddle though it though and I think we shipped out over 20,000 copies.
Laurence Lee Littlefield started the company in 1985,
I came on in late 86, left in 88 and I think it lasted till about 1990.
I worked with some great people there, met a lot of great customers in my travels to shill for the company and have some fond and not so fond memories of trying to convince people that we were not selling real guns!
In 1987 at one point you could turn over any of the "Mens adventure" magazines in a newstand 
(these were stores that sold just newspapers and magazines in the old days)
and my smirking mug would be on a full back-page ad trying to sell our ill fated paintball helmet.

I am posting this up because there is a huge dearth of airsoft history on the net,
and not for any ego boosting self promotion
( well, maybe a little, I am proud I was involved with it)

I have dropped out most of the paintball and other stuff, we sold Keith Idema Combat Systems vests and holsters ( look up Keith on Goggle, ya, it's the same guy), Al Mar knives, Cold steel knives and lots of other stuff.
If anyone wants to see the full paintball stuff, let me know, I am just putting a sampling here.
Well, I think that was enough ado, so with out any further, here you go,

Click on the images to make them larger so you can read all the wonderful verbiage and hyperbole I came up with to describe each gun. The more I look at it now the more I cringe,
seems like ever other gun was the "best"


 Yes, that is me on the left, and that is the gun I used to travel with to paintball fields around the US,
most people would just run away from it.

The Tippman SMG 62, that gun was a blast

 Para Ordnance made paintball guns before they ever got into real steel
and we were the US distributor of the Model 85, they were fun little toys.
We spent a lot of time developing a reloading kit to get the cost of the ammo down.

The M-79 was a Less than lethal unit called the UnGun, as seen in the Steve McQueen movie "Hunter",
they shot out a bean bag using Nitrogen capsules ( like 12 gram CO2s)
We bought up the remaining stock and turned them into paintball grenade launchers



 The Nelspot, the gun that started it all.


 You can see we didn't know squat about eye safety, no Dr Airsoft around then, but we did have a inkling and tried to sell the helmet. we built them by hand in Crestview, I spent many long hours cutting and fitting, in the end, no one gave a crap about being safe then.



 My introduction of airsoft to the US, I spent many hours writers blocked on this page!

 MGC AR180 anyone.

Yes you read right, we offered a conversion kit so that you could power any of the direct air guns with Freon.
Freon, yes. Back then we had no clue, I didn't even know who Al Gore was!
It worked great though and you could buy the stuff for 1.99 a can at the Kmart.


 Spring Tokyo Marui's, ever seen the mac or the M12 before?

And you thought the "Gat" was new for 2010, think again.
I think the Grease gun was a Hudson, but it took plastic ctgs like the Soft air guns,
 The Scorp was so cool, it had a light in it that charged the bb's ( like a tracer unit today), can't remember who made it though. Has anyone seen one of these "Mad Max" guns with the spring loaded ctg's, I remember the box having Max on the front with the shotgun, it must have been a Hudson, they even sold a nylon holster for it. I still think I have one of the holsters floating around
 MGC 745, what a dream gun,

 We bought out Daisy that year of all the "soft air" guns they had, I mean boxcar loads of them 



 yes, there were paint bb's in 1987, and they sucked then too.


Hope you enjoyed this little trip down memory lane,
I wanted to get it in print before my feeble mind forgot more stuff,
where was I ,,,,,,,,,
Oh ya, GET OFF MY LAWN.





Till tomorrow,
Stay Thirsty my Friends


Enhanced by Zemanta

19 comments:

  1. Wow man. I had no idea. I know airsoft was around for years before I got into it I just didn't know it went THAT far back hahaha

    ReplyDelete
  2. Even has TM's old m59! :) And ah the memories
    of those old springers. Great post

    ReplyDelete
  3. I salivated to pick up the new copies of Action Pursuit Games every month, just to peep at the Command Post ads inside or on the back cover...and the catalog was AMAZING. I must still be on a mailing list somewhere...and, yea....get yer danged bikes off my lawn, too! THUMPY...OVER

    ReplyDelete
  4. amazing! amazing! amazing! so much fun looking at this stuff. that was 24 years ago and I've only been into airsoft 4 years. my oh my. i'm gonna go ahead and share this page with others.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Totally awesome!

    I had one of your catalogs back in the day. I think there was more ink, notes and highlighting in that thing than any text book I ever had!

    Glad to say thank you to the guy who put it together and kept me entertained in my teenage years!

    ReplyDelete
  6. As much as anything, the Command Post ads in APG are what hooked me into paintball. Thanks for posting these!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hi! I write a german Airsoft-Blog. Can I use some of the pictures in this post?
    Sure I give a backlink to this post.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thanks for asking, sure you can use the pics.

    ReplyDelete
  9. If paintball was 'the sport of the 80s' as the catalog says, then airsoft is the sport of the new century. I don't know many people that play paintball anymore.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I bought a lot of Command Post paintball guns and accessories back then when I was running my field. Sure would love to see the paintball pages too!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Look at the next post, I had people ask so I did post up the Paintball pages

      Delete
    2. Thanks, I'll go look right now.

      Delete
  11. I STILL HAVE THIS! :) I just decided to google "old 80s airsoft catalog" and this pops up, exactly what I was looking for (to see if anyone ever posted scans of it)! Awesome! Well, thanks for creating it, I enjoyed it back in '87 and believe it or not, I still have it! The cover disconnected from the mag (of course, from reading a million times). So cool... Never thought I'd find out who made it. Ah the memories, I was 15. Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Glad to know there are still some around!. I have talked to people at shows that used it like the old sears catalog "wish book" was used at Christmas time. I had one guy bring me his copy to show me all the underlining, stars and notes he wrote for years to keep as his birthday guide for his mother!
      Thanks for the comment.

      Delete
  12. Ok, uhm, I'm not sure if you still read this over a year after the last activity in this comment section... but I wasn't able to contact you over your profile, so I'll just give it a try here :)

    I do not have an account here at blogspot and of course I don't want to post my email adresse in a public comment section... so I'm not exactly sure, how to communicate with you besides via this comment section -.-

    My request is similar to Godwin's: I'm writing an article on the history of airsoft and modelguns for a german forum, so I would like to ask for your permission to use the scans you have posted here.
    These would really bring some more "good old times" atmosphere to the article :)

    Of course, I would credit you and link to your site and this article.

    Let me know :)

    Cheers,
    Christian

    ReplyDelete
  13. Ok, uhm, I'm not sure if you still read this over 3 years after the last activity in this comment section... but I wasn't able to contact you over your profile, so I'll just give it a try here :)

    I don't really use my Googleprofile and of course I don't want to post my email adresse in a public comment section... so I'm not exactly sure, how to communicate with you besides via this comment section -.-

    My request is similar to Godwin's: I'm writing an article on the history of airsoft and modelguns for a german forum, so I would like to ask for your permission to use the scans you have posted here.
    These would really bring some more "good old times" atmosphere to the article :)

    Of course, I would credit you and link to your site and this blogpost.

    Let me know :)

    Cheers,
    Pydracor

    ReplyDelete
  14. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Thanks a lot for the warning and your adresse! Just dropped you a mail :)

    Cheers!

    ReplyDelete
  16. I have been involved in this Airsoft thing for a while. ... softairrevolver.blogspot.de

    ReplyDelete