Nice! BBK Jonah Hex figure review and yep! I bought like 5 pairs of those spurs from MD or TA and really liked them
Around the same time I got a bunch of Zorro spurs too….Triad Toys I think
This has got me thinking about my western collection.
Growing up watching westerns the 1873 Colt SAA .45, with its variant barrel lengths, was the dominant sidearm. Since then I've thought of westerns as falling into distinct eras: pre-1873 or post-1873.
Post 1873 was what fascinated me most due to the faster cartridge loading weapons I associated with gunslingers. I therefore wasn't drawn to Civil War figures.
But then there's one of the greatest westerns ever made,
The Outlaw Josey Wales, which is set just after the Civil War, and
The Good, The Bad and the Ugly set during it (but also making good use of cartridge conversions).
I've never actually thought about it until today, but my collection has been pulling backwards towards the war for years with Redman's Blondie, Tuco, Angel Eyes and Josey Wales.
Kaustic Plastic's Django is from a movie set in 1858. Xensation's Hugh Glass is from 1823, though I imagine him as a mountain man from a later period.
The BBK Jonah Hex figures recall the war, but you'd have to cover their gun belts to put them back into it.
The remainder are more firmly later: Redman's Monco; LiM's and VTS' Red Dead Redemption, Asmus'
Hateful Eight pair; KP's Rooster Cogburn and my customs. Thunder Toys' Carter Slade is borderline.
I never really rated Redman's Josey Wales highly. He'll be replaced by Sideshow's, and will be a good focus for whatever ACW figures Qorange produce.