What to look forThere are several features worth noting when examining a klicky. I have a system of abbreviations to describe the main combinations of features. For example ‘MMRnon’ (one of the commonest types) indicates a klicky with a Molded head, Matched skeleton, Rounded-edges to the feet and the ‘bottom’ has two numbers with a central space. Here is a guide to all the most useful features. I have also created a pdf showing this information, available
here1.
HeadP or
M- does it have a
Printed face or a
Molded one? Remove the hair and look inside the head. If you see brown plastic as well as the “pink” plastic, it is moulded, as in the two centre heads below. If the face is printed, is there a straight slot (Ps) or a v (Pv)at the back of the head? (see below). Does it have ‘ears’? Is it made from brown or white plastic (introduced 1978)?
2.
SkeletonM or
O: what colour is it? (Look at the top of the legs) Does the colour
Match the torso, the legs or both (as on the left below)? Or is it an
Off-white colour (as in centre and right below)?
It can be difficult to decide for klickies with white torso or legs. It may help to take the klicky apart as in the pictures below (Off-white skeleton is on the right in both pictures).
3.
Soles of feetAre they flat or with a lip around the edge? Is the lip
Flat or
Rounded? Is the central area deep (
Fd) or shallow (
Fs). What is the impression: a hole on each foot (
Fo), a ‘b’ on each foot (
Fb) or ‘©1974’ on the right foot and ‘(b) Geobra’; on the left? Is the (b) closed or open? The following pictures show the main types.
Fo, flat feet, ‘hole’ on each
Fb, flat feet, ‘b’ on each
Fs, flat edges, shallow centre
Fd, flat edges, deeper centre
R Rounded edges, closed b
R open ‘b’ on left foot
The shallow
Fs and deeper
Fd feet types can be hard to tell apart. I found
Fs with
oo1 type bottom (in 75 out of 76 klickies) and
Fd with
oo2 bottom (in 49 out of 49 klickies). I found
R with several different types of bottom.
Close-up of the open b
4.
Bottom(With the klicky bent forward at the hips, the bottom is the panel at the top of the legs): any circles, letters or numbers?
-o-, oo1, oo2, oo3, non, ono, sos; numbers are 1- or 2- digits.
-o-, small central circle
oo1, small circles widely placed
oo2 larger circles closer together
These two can be hard to tell apart, but
oo1 is only found
with
Fb feet or
Fs feet.
oo2 is found with
Fd or
R feet.
ono narrow central mould no.
non two mould numbers
sos F and a number in squares
5.
Other details Torso: Is it Male or Female (‘flip hem’)
Arms: earliest types had a small hole in each wrist.
In 1978 hook-hands and peg-legs were introduced
The bottom on peg-legs has one mould number on the right
oonThe earliest klickies had flattened toes (below) The ‘prototype’ klicky (below, left) had slightly shallower ‘holes’ in the feet than the 1974 klicky (below, right)