T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
449.1 | Lillian Vernon are compatible | NODEX::HOLMES | | Fri Feb 12 1993 09:18 | 5 |
| I bought the wooden trains from the Lillian Vernon for my nephews and they
are compatible with the Brio stuff that they have. I was also thinking of
getting the Thomas things, but I haven't ordered them yet...
Tracy
|
449.2 | Thomas "Brio-type" trains big hit at my house | LEZAH::MINER | Mom...I'm as happy as a shark | Mon Feb 15 1993 10:13 | 15 |
|
I have several Thomas trains and they are completely compatible with
Brio and T.C. Timber train sets (magnet and all). They're adorable, but
the way my children lug them around they get banged up pretty quickly!
I had heard that there was a problem with the manufacturer (the wheeels
on the engines weren't functioning properly) but mine have been fine.
As for Lillian Vernon, I bought some track from them but sent it back
because even though it connected with my TC Timber/Brio set, the actual
grooves didn't seat properly and the train would get "stuck" when it
tried to ride those pieces of track.
Learning Express has the Thomas "Brio-type" trains.
-dorothy
|
449.3 | Nick has Brio & Hero... | SSGV01::CHALMERS | More power! | Tue Feb 16 1993 11:26 | 23 |
| FYI, the "Hero" line, available at the Early Learning Center, is
compatable with Brio (and cheaper, to boot!) For comparison, a 40 pc
Hero set (oval layout w/switch and bumper, engine and 3 freight cars)
was approx $25 at the ELC, while a comparable 40 pc Brio layout
(figure-8, engine & 3 cars) was $40.
In fact, I prefer the Hero pieces to Brio because they seem to fit
better (we find Brio to be a little snug). Unfortunately, we haven't
found a source for Hero accessories (tunnels, switches, bridges, etc.),
so we stick with Brio for those.
FWIW, there's a place in Waltham (E.M.Holt?) that opens their warehouse
to the public on the first Saturday of the month. Although selection is
limited, they sell Brio sets and accessories at a 20% discount from
list price. (Their list price is the same as the ELC prices, by the way.)
For Christmas, we bought Nick a ton of accessories here, while adding
a couple of 40-pc Hero sets from the ELC ($19 on sale...less than the cost
of a Brio tunnel or bridge!). A cost-effective way of expanding his
(our) layout...
Good luck.
Freddie
|
449.4 | | SUPER::BLACHEK | | Mon Nov 06 1995 16:35 | 12 |
| Does anyone have an update to this? We are thinking about getting some
type of Brio-like (or even Brio, if we must...) set for our 18 month
and 5-1/2 year olds.
They both seem to really like these trains when we go into stores that
allow them to play with them. We are concerned that it is something
they like when they don't have access to them, but once we shell out
the $$, the trains won't have the same interest.
Thanks,
judy
|
449.5 | It is working for us | DSSDEV::ZEEB | Cada ser humano faz o seu proprio destino | Mon Nov 06 1995 23:27 | 12 |
|
We bought a Brio-compatible train set for our two children, a 20-month old
boy and 5 1/2 year old girl, and they have been playing with it everyday.
We have added a few extra pieces like a garage and some people to make
things more interesting. I'm not sure if it will still be holding their
interest a year from now, but so far it certainly is. Sometimes they
fight over the pieces. We were thinking of building a short table for
the train, similar to the ones they have in the stores. Matthew seems
to like having the train up so that he can stand rather than sitting on
the floor to play with it.
--Cida
|
449.6 | fun for me too | FREBRD::POEGEL | Garry Poegel | Tue Nov 07 1995 08:44 | 11 |
|
>> <<< Note 449.5 by DSSDEV::ZEEB "Cada ser humano faz o seu proprio destino" >>>
>> -< It is working for us >-
I'd skip the Brio stuff and go for the DUPLO train set. With Brio, it
looks like the track will be constantly falling apart. With the DUPLO
track, you can use DUPLO blocks to hold it together and build with the
rest of the DUPLO blocks. They even have a neat battery operated engine.
I got the set for my son and he loves it!
Garry
|
449.7 | I'd get it... | STAR::MRUSSO | | Tue Nov 07 1995 09:23 | 17 |
| We've gotten more use out of our wooden train set than *anything* else
we purchased. I have a 4 year old and a 2 year old. I have mostly
Brio track, some TC timber. The only engines that get real use are
the Thomas ones. I don't like the Thomas track. The quality isn't
as good as the Brio. My boys have the train set up on my coffee table
all the time. It prevents the 2 year old from walking all over the
track. I order the Thomas playboard for Christmas. We may or may
not build a table depending how it works out.
BTW, Brio seems to have lowered it's prices on the starter type sets.
They are cheaper now than when I bought them 3 years ago. There is
also a battery operated engine available(not Brio) and a Polar
Express Engine(Brio). Many of the stores have 20% off sales this
time of year.
Good luck,
Mary
|
449.8 | A big hit in our house... | DELNI::CHALMERS | | Tue Nov 07 1995 12:21 | 26 |
| In our house, the Brio/Hero/Thomas trainset has incredible staying
power. My sons have just turned 6 and 3 yrs old, and they play with
it a couple of times per week. They're at the stage now where they like
to build massive layouts that use *every* piece of equipment in their
collection. We store it in a large Rubbermaid storage box that's always
kept in a handy location. In fact, when we go away on vacation, we
always manage to pack a smaller box with enough track/trains to make a
decent-sized layout.
As far as durability goes, we've been building the collection for 3+
years, and we add a bunch of new stuff every Christmas. You'd be hard-
pressed to tell the difference between the older stuff and the newer
stuff. The only piece that's ever been damaged is a Hero freight car
that Mom stepped on, breaking off one of the magnets. I fixed it with
a bit of epoxy, and it's as good as new.
As far as the Brio vs. Thomas vs. ??? discussion goes, we've only
purchased trains and accessories from the Thomas set (as opposed to
tracks), so I can't comment on durability/compatability. As far as the
boys' preferences are concerned, they are just as likely to choose a
Hero engine as they would Thomas, James, etc...
I'd be interested in hearing people's experiences with the 'house-brand'
stuff offered thru Lillian Vernon and other mail-order vendors.
Specifically, how does it compare quality-wise with the Brio/Hero stuff?
|
449.9 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Tue Nov 07 1995 13:02 | 35 |
| > My sons have just turned 6 and 3 yrs old, and they play with
> it a couple of times per week. They're at the stage now where
> they like to build massive layouts that use *every* piece of
> equipment in their collection.
Gee, *I'M* at that stage too! :-)
In our house, the initial Brio collection arrived with a
custom "trainboard" built by Santa. The trainboard was similar
to the one that you could see down at the Brio shop, rectangular
with part of it painted green for grass and part blue for water,
but it was slightly larger, and it sat up off the floor by a few
inches, supported on a sturdy frame.
It was also just the right height that a Brio "downramp" would
lead the track down to floor level.
About a year later, Dad (that's me) built a flakeboard box that,
amazingly enough, was completely compatible with some notches in
the frame of Santa's trainboard. This box was about 2'x3' by
about a 1' deep, and would store all the Brio equipment that was
ever likely to turn up. Then, the trainboard (and any current
layout) could be set atop the box for convenient play by growing
kids of all ages. ,-)
Brio play goes through some definite stages. There's the "push
the train round-and-round" stage. Then, the use-all-the-pieces
stage. Then, the build-very-complicated-yet-technically-elegant-
and-highly-functional-layouts stage. The may be others...
Brio is also attractive to kids of both sexes. There's now
a five-year-old girl getting just as much fun from the Brio
set as my ten-year-old son ever did.
Atlant
|
449.10 | | SUPER::BLACHEK | | Tue Nov 07 1995 16:04 | 7 |
| Well, I've got a lot to think about here. Thanks for all the detailed
replies. And it's nice to know there are so many others willing to
shell out the bucks...
Thanks,
judy
|
449.11 | We have all 3 types - get Brio Track and Thomas trains. | OONO::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed Nov 08 1995 11:05 | 44 |
|
We have a Brio "figure 8" (Christmas deals have it for $39.99, incl 3-4
cars), several Thomas cars, and 2 other figure-8 compatible (well, not
QUITE!) sets. It takes up my living room floor, and every time I look
at it, it's different. I have three boys, ages 10, 7 and 2, and
they're ALWAYS playing with it (including me and Al (-;), and even the
2 yr old changes the track around.
My comments:
o The compatible sets, aren't always.
o The BRIO bridges aren't QUITE high enough for the Thomas "larger
cars" to fit under (engines fit fine)
o The Brio trains, compared to the Thomas trains, stink. Period.
o Thomas trains are heavier and have MUCH stronger magnets than Brio.
o The Brio engines only have magnets on the back, which gets
frustrating for a small child.
o Thomas trains/cars/bus have magnets on both ends
o The Thomas track, compared to the Brio track, stinks. Period.
The Thomas track that I have, has peg-sort-of things that attach the
tracks together (vs Brio, which is one solid piece of wood). The
pegs come out of the track, which make a LOVELY choking hazard for
little kids. I have a couple Thomas "switches", a tunnel (the tunnel's
nice), and 2 bumpers. I wouldn't buy more Thomas track unless it was
a specific piece that Brio doesn't make. Also, the Brio track is
deeper, which helps the trains stay on better.
IF I had to do it all over again, I'd buy 2-3 of the $40.00 "starter"
sets, from Brio, and several Thomas trains, and a few switches and
bumpers, and you'd have an awesome layout for YEARS to come, with
amazing "staying" power and flexibility. Also, Brio has a new tunnel
out, which is large enough for an adult's arm - important when the
little ones get the train "stuck" in the tunnel.
Hope this helps .... I love it, and don't even mind donating the whole
living room to it - heck, they're just kids!! (-:
Oh - and as for being stepped on - well, that just gives them the
opportunity to rebuild it all!
... Santa's looking at a turntable for Christmas .... and a shed. And
Peter Sam (-: (santa should start looking for a 2nd job! (-;).
Patty
|
449.12 | Get the large Brio turntable | STAR::MRUSSO | | Wed Nov 08 1995 11:32 | 12 |
| BTW Patty, If you are looking for a turntable big enough to
accomodate Henry and Gordon... Brio now makes an awesome one. It
is very large compared to thier other and has half male and half
female adapters. Don't buy the Thomas one. It is made of particle
board and my son (4) broke it within 2 hours. Neither of my kids
have ever managed to break any of the trains before that. I returned
it without a problem and exchanged it for the Brio one. It is
rather expensive though.
Mary
|
449.13 | The good stuff will last forever... | DELNI::CHALMERS | | Wed Nov 08 1995 12:04 | 25 |
| re: .11
Patty touches on a couple of good points...
- Some sets use those little 'dogbone' connectors to join tracks.
Try to avoid them, as they are a choking hazard for younger kids,
a walking hazard for grownups :^), and will tend to get lost.
- Plan to spend a least $40-$100 to get started. Add-ons will cost
you anywhere from $5 for small pieces of track or switches to $50
for some of the larger pieces (ex. suspension bridges, large
turntables, etc.). Your investment will only be limited by your own
enthusiasm. Our collection is worth probably $250-$300; we'll
probably keep adding to it for a while, and I suspect that it will
likely be handed off to our grandchildren in 20 or so years, but you
can build quite a nice, flexible system for less than $100 that
will last forever.
Also, one of the educational toy chains (possible Early Learning
Center, but I can't recall) keeps a registry of stuff you buy there, so
if a relative wants to add some pieces to your collection, they can go
in and find out what you already have and what you might need.
Good luck...
|
449.14 | | SUPER::BLACHEK | | Wed Nov 08 1995 13:37 | 9 |
| One question my husband asked is what keeps kids interested in Brio
when they could get a nice HO set that is more complicated and runs
with a transformer?
By the way, for anyone else in the market for this stuff, Learn & Play
(a NH-based toy store) in the Phesant Lane Mall is having a 20% sale on
Sunday, Nov. 19 (charity night).
judy
|
449.15 | | VIVE::STOLICNY | | Wed Nov 08 1995 13:43 | 9 |
|
Brio vs. electric train - We have both. For the younger ages, it
is infinitely more fun to be able to push, pull, etc. that train
around the track then it is to simply watch an electric train go
round. Also, HO trains are difficult to use and set up for the
little ones, so they typically can't do it by themselves (if that
matters to you).
Carol
|
449.16 | There's a TON of flex. w/ Brio - not so w/ electric | OONO::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed Nov 08 1995 17:07 | 25 |
| >One question my husband asked is what keeps kids interested in Brio
>when they could get a nice HO set that is more complicated and runs
>with a transformer?
Because it's more complicated and requires a transformer ...
We have "real" trains too - though they're for the most part N-Gage
(smaller than HO). They're okay, but the enthusiasm dies out pretty
quick, and when the trains derail, it takes a careful hand and a good
eye to get them all back on, exactly right, and make sure all the track
is exactly right.
Basically, the Brio is pretty forgiving of kids being a little "rough"
with it. "Real" trains require a lot more patience and a more sedate
Engineer. AND, our Brio/Thomas trains are driven EVERYWHERE, usually
end up going to bed with them, work fine on the track, the kitchen
floor, the carpet, up and down Mom's arm etc. Electric trains work on
track. Period.
Though a _permanent_ electric setup might be an okay alternative (ie,
the track's nailed down) - but then you can't change it, so that's no
fun....
YMMV
|
449.17 | Where to get Thomas trains? | STAR::LEWIS | | Thu Nov 09 1995 09:10 | 9 |
| re: Brio-Thomas trains
Are the Thomas trains for Brio available in stores anywhere? I know
I've seen them in catalogs, but I wasn't sure if I'd seen them in
stores. ( My kids have metal Thomas trains, but I don't think that's
what's meant here)
Thanks,
Sue
|
449.18 | Brio-compatible Thomas trains | CNTROL::STOLICNY | | Thu Nov 09 1995 09:13 | 2 |
|
The Learning Express has them.
|
449.19 | Oh - and they're ALL wooden. | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Thu Nov 09 1995 11:24 | 5 |
| Everyplace that I've seen Brio, has Thomas right around the corner.
They usually have a much larger selection of one than the other, but
most stores will order whatever you'd like....
Patty
|
449.20 | on sale right after Thanksgiving | UPSAR::FRAMPTON | Carol Frampton | Thu Nov 09 1995 13:30 | 9 |
| I was in the Concord Toy Shop (Concord, MA) yesterday. I had to pull
my 18 month old son from the Brio/Thomas train display, kicking and
screaming. My 3 year old daughter was also pretty interested in the
trains.
They are having a 25% off Brio (and Playmobil) sale the 3 days after
Thanksgiving (in reponse to the Learning Express sale at the same time).
Carol
|
449.21 | | SUPER::BLACHEK | | Thu Nov 09 1995 14:02 | 6 |
| Learn & Play at the Phesant Lane Mall has the Thomas (and Brio) stuff.
And on Sunday, November 19 they are having a 20% off sale for charity
night. (This is from 6:00 to 9:00 and you have to buy a $5 ticket to
get into the mall, which you can buy at the door.)
judy
|
449.22 | Cataglos that have Hero Brio-compatable stuff? | CHGV04::PROCTOR | How 'bout those Cubs... | Fri Nov 10 1995 11:03 | 7 |
| Anyone find a catalog that has Hero/Brio-compatable stuff at reduced
proces? I have not fond any specialty toy store yet that carries
anything but Brio and the Thomas stuff.
Thanks,
Jerry
|
449.23 | TC Toy | STAR::MRUSSO | | Fri Nov 10 1995 13:13 | 6 |
| I Have a TC Toy catalog at home. They have good quality compatable
trains. I'll try to remeber the number on Monday. You could
try to get it from the 1-800-555-1212 operator. They are located
in upstate NY.
Mary
|
449.24 | | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Mon Nov 13 1995 08:51 | 13 |
|
Well, I got caught up in the Bradless "Family shopping night" last
night, and was able to get a couple Sesame Street brio-compatible sets
for ~$22.00 .... what a steal!!
The track seems to be identical to BRIO, and the only complaint about
the trains is that the engine doesn't have a front magnet. And the
bridge it comes with is a suspension bridge that rests on supports, it
looks like it might be a little tippier than a "normal" bridge, but for
the price, you can't beat it. 42 pieces in all ... I'm having a REAL
hard time saving it till Christmas!
Patty
|
449.25 | More details on Brio-Compatible | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed Nov 15 1995 10:13 | 51 |
|
As long as I'm shopping Nashua for Brio, I figured I'd post my latest
"findings".
BJs wholesale has a compatible set, that's a real bargain if you're
looking for shear volume. For $40.00, you get;
30 pieces of straight/curved track
2 bumpers
3 over-under bridges
1 straight piece with "railings" on either side
1 straight double?switch (2 side-by-side tracks, that cross and connect
4 pieces of track)
1 all-plastic turntable (I think it has a total of 6 connections to it)
1 or 2 railroad "stations" - just the rain-cover things.
a circus train, complete with animals
I *THINK* another smaller train as well
a billion little people, telephone poles, signs, trees, etc.
a wooden whistle that sounds JUST like a train.
There's 100 pieces in all, made from black oak. BEWARE: The
bridges may be too short to allow brio/thomas to fit under, but they
work great for hills. The engines don't have magnets on the front, and
the trains are a little on the light side. The pieces are connected
together with plastic "dogbones", so it might not be good for under 2.
*IF* they haven't changed the design any since the set I bought ~4
years ago, you might have a little trouble getting the brio "male" ends
into the female pieces of this track - but it's certainly do-able, and
usually just choosing a different piece of track solves it.
Of course I can't remember the company - the box is mostly green. Toys
R Us also carries this brand, but it's considerably more expensive
there. This is a great set especially if you're more interested in
just adding a lot of track/hills, and a turntable. I bought one!
Almost two! (-:
AND, back to the sesame street set .... Toys R Us carries it - made by
Tootsie Toys, and has sets ranging from an "oval" for $23.00 (yawn) to
a Cookie Monster 42-piece set w/ suspension bridge, for $35.00 (best
deal). *ALSO* all you Brio lovers - they sell the Tootsie-track boxed,
and it's almost free compared to Brio - averages about $5.00/box. And
they have trains w/ Sesame Street characters for ~$2.00/ea. I already
have too many trains, else I'd have snagged some of them! They seem
comparable to the Thomas quality.
Now if I could find some Tootsie-switches, I'd be in 7th heaven! BTW -
Toys R Us does not (and WILL NOT!) carry Brio, nor the Thomas "trains"
(they do have the plastic 'cars').
Hope this helps!
Patty
|
449.26 | | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed Nov 15 1995 10:14 | 3 |
|
p.s. - and the proceeds from the Tootsie-Toys, Sesame Street sets, go
to CTW ... I thought that was cool!
|
449.27 | "The Whistlin' Dixie Line" | USCTR1::COLEMAN | | Wed Nov 15 1995 11:57 | 9 |
| "The Whistlin' Dixie Line" is the brand you refer to from BJs. We
bought it for Christmas last year and we are not at all happy with it.
The quality is not nearly as good at Thomas or Brio. The connectors do
not work well on the track, and the train does get hung up on it. The
bridges do not stay put well, etc., etc.
I would recommend spending the extra $ and get the quality to withstand
the abuse it will get.
|
449.28 | Thanks for the info sharing | OBSESS::COUGHLIN | Kathy Coughlin-Horvath | Wed Nov 15 1995 12:26 | 6 |
|
This information is great. Thanks so much for sharing. I'm planning to
get a starter set for my 2.5 year old and you saved me so much time and
money!
Kathy
|
449.29 | | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Fri Nov 17 1995 12:12 | 37 |
| re .27 Yup - that's the brand. It's definitely NOT a top-quality
item, but you also could never dream of getting 100 pieces of BRIO
anything for $40.00, and that's why I said "if you're looking for
volume". I've never noticed any problem with the "operation" of the
tracks themselves - a little difficult fitting it to BRIO since BRIO
male ends a little on the larger side, but it's not impossible to do.
The bridges are too short to fit Thomas/Brio trains under, but they
make good hills. And the cars are a bit light, but it works. And if
you're not trying to mix sets, it works great. (IMO)
ALSO, on the Sesame Street set - I couldn't wait, and opened the one I
got. It seems similar to the Whistlin' Dixie Woes .... the suspension
bridge isn't high enough to even fit all of the Sesame Street cars
(there's 1 car that's too tall to make it), and the silly thing falls
down all the time - nothing a little nail couldn't fix, but still a
_little_ aggravating. I think it bugs me more than the kids .... (-:
they haven't complained yet! And the track has the same problem - the
Brio track, while LOOKING identical, is actually a little larger for
the "peg" pieces, so it's a little tight to fit together. The two
"compatible" sets fit together better than any of the Brio pieces fit.
So, ANY set by itself, I'm sure would be fine.
It depends on how much you want to spend, and how fussy you are that
everything looks absolutely PERFECT. If I were to start all over
again, I'd get 1 or 2 of the 100-piece Whistlin Dixie sets, a couple
Thomas bridges (they're the highest) and trains (they're the heaviest),
and leave Brio out altogether. For the money, there are just too many
other options, and the kids are more impressed with quantity than
quality (and of all of it, I've only ever had trouble w/ 1 piece of
"whistlin" track, when I tried too forcefully to pull a Brio track out
of it, and caught a piece of the wood - it still works fine though).
Oh - and maybe add some Sesame Street trains at $2.00/ea from Toys R
Us.
Of course - YMMV!
|
449.30 | Now, just for the major assembly on the 24th | SUPER::BLACHEK | | Mon Dec 04 1995 09:16 | 10 |
| I want to thank everyone for their input into this note. We did bite
the bullet and got a set of Brio trains, plus the table. The table was
mostly for me, since I'm not crazy about lots of toys lying around and
getting a major guilt trip for ruining a layout is not my idea of a
good time.
I sure hope they like them, but it sounds like other kids like them for
a long time.
judy
|
449.31 | What is the age range for Brio sets? | DECWET::WOLFE | | Mon Dec 04 1995 15:01 | 2 |
| Just curious if we make the investment, how
long your kids played with the Brio train sets.
|
449.32 | | GUSTAF::PARMLIND | | Mon Dec 04 1995 15:24 | 6 |
| My 6 year old son has an extensive brio train set (it helps to have Swedish
grandparents :^) He is still very interested in it. It is not something that
he plays with everyday but when he does play with it he plays for hours. He
also usually wants an adult to play along.
Elizabeth
|
449.33 | Ages 3 to 103! | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Dec 05 1995 12:30 | 13 |
|
I think I wrote this already, but we have a large layout that's played
with every day, by all 5 kids (well, when they're there), ages 10, 9, 7
4 and 2. I think it'll be considered part of the furniture for many
years to come.
Usually by the end of the day, the track has gotten trashed a bit, so
I'll spend a few mins and change the layout around a little. Each day
they have a new track to drive on. I kept it the same for a week once,
and after a couple days, they started getting bored with it (and ripped
it all apart and made it different themselves).
|
449.34 | | PERFOM::WIBECAN | Harpoon a tomata | Wed Dec 06 1995 09:30 | 3 |
| >> -< Ages 3 to 103! >-
Yep, my 104-year-old grandmother has decided to stop playing with hers...
|
449.35 | Hahahaha!!! (-: | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed Dec 06 1995 16:15 | 1 |
|
|
449.36 | Felt for a Base? | PCBUOA::akhr01.ako.dec.com::Marianne | MARIANNE | Thu Feb 29 1996 16:18 | 19 |
| Has anyone tried to make a felt base for the Brio/Thomas setups to be put on?
I'm thinking of a base that would have blue sewn on green for water and land.
Maybe even some felt with stuffing under it to make little hills.
Do you think this would be an unstable surface to put the tracks on since
there might be multiple layers of felt on some parts, where there is blue
felt on top of green for example. Of course the track would have to be
set up around the hills.
I don't have a place where I can build and paint a wooden base for the brio
so I thought this might be an alternative. I do have a large coffee table to
set the felt base on for playing which could add stability as opposed to the
carpet.
Has anyone used other alternatives from the store bought wooden bases?
Any input would be appreciated.
Marianne
|
449.37 | | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Fri Mar 01 1996 09:59 | 17 |
| You'd probably be better off with a canvas/denim base, and then add the
felt, as you'd like. If I were doing it, I think I'd glue the felt
down instead of sew - it'd be simpler, and seems like it'd be flatter
as well. Felt takes glue quite well. Just regular Elmer's should do
fine.
The track can probably withstand the height difference, as ours is on
the carpet all the time, and seems to tolerate that okay. Sometimes
your have to encourage the trains a bit, but not a lot.
Another alternative is to think about using those pre-cut iron-on
patches. Then you don't have to "seal" edges, and the material is
thinner than felt would be.
Good Luck! (and let me know what you used!!)
Patty
|
449.38 | Base for Brio and Beyond. | PCBUOA::akhr01.ako.dec.com::Marianne | MARIANNE | Fri Mar 01 1996 15:33 | 23 |
| Patty,
Thanks for your ideas. As I was reading and thinking about this it occurred
to me maybe the children would like their base setting to be changeable just
like the train setup is. I could make a felt or denim base for the coffee
table and cut out freeform lakes and rivers out of blue water colored felt
and the kids can place them where they want. I could make a river just big
enough to fit under a bridge and so forth. Felt generally doesn't fray so
you don't have to seal the edges, and as you said glue works well if there
were parts that I would want to glue down.
The truth is, I say children, one of them is me! My 3 year old isn't that
into Brio, unless I play with her --- my eleven year old - "baby toy". I
think it's the neatest stuff around. She loves the Playmobile, but it has
small parts that are ever so fascinating to a three year old, and she's still
tasting most toys - so Playmobile is out for now. I thought making a base
for her Brio might stimulate interest, so I could have an excuse to buy the
bridge that I want so much! Actually the base could be for all kinds of toys
a doll house or Playmobile or Brio or whatever she (or me) is using at the
time. I'm so glad I have kids for my cover. And just think, everybody thinks
I'm so grown-up because I have two kids! It's too perfect.
Marianne
|
449.39 | Observation on Brio bases | TUXEDO::FRIDAY | DCE: The real world is distributed too. | Fri Mar 01 1996 17:18 | 18 |
| Next/unseen just happened to bring me into this discussion about
bases for Brio, and I thought I'd add my observation.
My son, who is now just a month short of turning 10, together
with a friend, pulled out the Brio for the first time in several
months. We have a *large* Brio collection, and at one time
acquired a wooden Brio base. They started building on the
base, but ended up running track over a large area, extending
maybe 10' away from the base. With the houses, etc, they built
a real city, and took over a major portion of the family room.
I'd think BIG. If you plan on steadily adding to the Brio, and/or
have friends who will give your kid(s) lots of it, the base is going
to become too small quite quickly. In other words, spend the money
that you'd spend on a base on more pieces of Brio.
Also, I'm wondering if Brio might be a good financial investment,
especially with the prices!!! :)
|
449.40 | | MKOTS3::OBRIEN_J | Yabba Dabba DOO | Tue May 21 1996 12:16 | 3 |
| FYI - the Sesame Street stores are going out of business. Brio Trains
and accessories 30% off.
|
449.41 | Where are they located? | OBSESS::COUGHLIN | Kathy Coughlin-Horvath | Wed May 22 1996 13:50 | 3 |
| Where are the Sesame Street stores?
Kathy
|
449.42 | sesame store at Pheasant Lane in Nashua NH | TLE::BENDEL | | Wed May 22 1996 13:51 | 2 |
| one at pheasant lane mall in Nashua... nice stuff :)
sesame stores that is...
|
449.43 | | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed May 22 1996 22:52 | 11 |
|
If you're more interested in the sesame street trains, I've seen them
at the following stores:
ToysRUs
Wal-Mart
Bradlees
I'm sure that others carry them as well ....
-Patty
|
449.44 | No Sesame trains | OBSESS::COUGHLIN | Kathy Coughlin-Horvath | Thu May 23 1996 13:54 | 34 |
| Actually I bought a few sesame street trains which are very nice, but my
son doesn't even notice they are there. I started the Thomas/Brio
investment at Christmas hoping Alex would be interested in them (and
become less obsessed with cars/trucks, et al.) and now he is obsessed
with Thomas/James/Terrence/Edward and the gang. Trains are all he talks
about now. He even stops strangers and tells them stories about James,
Thomas, etc. of course people have no idea what he is talking about
and probably think something is wrong with him! I brought a train
video home from the library and there is NO talking in this video.
There is just 30 minutes of various real trains running along tracks,
blowing whistles and steam and showing engineers working. He is in
heaven. Sits there transfixed the entire program.
So, I was interested in a store - any store - that sells Thomas/Brio
on sale. I have stopped into the store in Pheasant Lane Mall and
shortly after Christmas they had a sale which we benefitted from.
However, that sale depleted their stock of Thomas and even a few
months later they never had more stock. I haven't been back since March
or so.
Alex's 3rd. birthday is June 30. A few learning type stores around me
have had 20% off sales and I got him a turning table (which is all he
talks about) a train shed, some track, and a new train. Even with 20%
off all this cost a fortune, in my opinion.
Off on another tangent, I am very disappointed with Thomas track. It
was mentioned in here that they aren't as good as Brio but the problem
we had is within a month or two of buying some Thomas track (which have
grooves in the wood) little pieces of wood broke off. Now we only buy
Brio tracks but Thomas trains. Alex loves Shining Time Station and the
Thomas videos and books so he is sucked into the characters the Thomas
line offers.
Kathy
|
449.45 | I think I need a life ...!! | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Fri May 24 1996 14:06 | 87 |
|
We have Thomas trains, Brio trains, and Sesame Street trains. Jonathan
hogs ALL of the Thomas trains, and will set up a Sesame Street train
for me to play with. He won't let me have any with a face on it )-:
I haven't seen them on sale in a long time, and the last time I looked
at the mall for them (same store) they were still totally depleted.
If you're just looking for some of the characters, and don't care that
it'll fit on the tracks, Erich Fuch's, across the hall, has the ones
that you just drive on the ground/table/Mom's head/whatever. But they
don't fit on the track (too small), which can be aggravating. We
bought a Terence and Duck in this. Terence isn't a big deal - he's a
tractor anyway, but Jonathan frequently has a canary trying to make
Duck drive on the track .... he ends up flipping over the straight
track, and driving it on the smooth side.
I still think the Thomas track is awful, and the Brio trains are awful.
Sesame street track is pretty good, and a LOT cheaper than Brio. I try
to buy Sesame street track pieces when I want/need more track (which'll
be about 100 years from now!)
We have a huge bucket full of tracks and turns and switches and
bridges. The switches are the best thing for flexibility, and 4-6
switches, plus a "T" seems to give a never-ending layout - pretty much
the size of our living room (-:
If you buy one of the smaller Sesame Street sets (which I believe is
cheaper than separate track), it comes with a nice suspension bridge,
and quite a lot of track. It fits great and is of very similar quality
to the Brio.
Our train set is:
1-$40.00 Sesame Street Set (I think it's the Big Bird set, but Iforget)
Includes Suspension bridge and lots of track
2-Whistlin' Dixie sets, each was a figure-8 w/ over/under bridge (these
bridges are too short to allow any other trains to pass under, but
they make nice 'hills')
1- Brio figure-8 w/ over/under bridge (our favorite bridge by far!)
1 - Thomas Tee track.
1 - Thomas tunnel (another favorite)
2 - curved switches
2 - Thomas straight "forks" (comes in from one, splits to 2 tracks)
2 - Bumpers (1 male, 1 female)
And somewhere along the line we picked up some sharp curves, and short
straight pieces - they may have been in the Sesame Street set. Or
they're Brio.
Pile of trees/people/houses (most that came with the Whistlin' Dixie
sets) that pretty much sit in the bottom of the bucket, and go unused.
Aside from the Thomas trains, most of the other trains go unused, but
when we have company, most kids could care less what train they're
pushing around - they just think the track's pretty awesome.
For Trains we have:
Bill &
Ben
Thomas
Gordon w/ coal car
James w/ coal car
Oliver
Percy
Diesel
Sodor Caboose
Boco
Donald &
Douglas
Daisy
Troublesome freight car?
Rusty
Not trains:
Harold
Terence
Duck
Sir Topham Hat (but of course!)
It seems to me that there's more, but I can't remember who ....
Toys R Us mentioned, around Christmas time, that they were going to
start selling the trains, sometime soon - haven't looked since.
Good luck!
|
449.46 | Another Sale | ALFA1::PEASLEE | | Fri May 24 1996 17:20 | 2 |
| Classic Toys on Main Street, Shrewsbury is going out of business and
all toys and Brio are 25% off.
|
449.47 | | OBSESS::COUGHLIN | Kathy Coughlin-Horvath | Tue May 28 1996 13:55 | 22 |
| Patty, thanks for sharing. I got a real chuckle out of your note cause
I can truly relate. We don't have the amount of track you have (yet)
but have many of the trains/characters. Alex knows them all and uses
them all. He seems to have a new favorite every few weeks. Not that
this makes a big deal, but I thought Duck is a train. We have a green
train (I don't think it's an engine) he calls Duck. I bought it for
him so probably went by the name on the box but can't remember for
sure. At one point I noticed all these engines are males and mentioned
it to my sister. She has now taken to buying him the female trains
(although there aren't many which are the leaders!!) He does like Terence
and even though he isn't a train and his catapillars fell off almost
immediately, he uses him on the track. Speaking of track, lately he
hasn't even bothered assembling track. We have tiles in the family
room and he has been using the grooves/grout between the tiles as
track as well as the spaces between floor boards on the deck.
He is telling everyone within earshot he is getting a turning table for
his birthday. Now, thanks to a parenting noter for telling me the
Thomas party stuff exists and where, he will have a Thomas party. We
are extatic about that.
Kathy
|
449.48 | Thomas Trivia - what's "DUCK"'s real name? | OOYES::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue May 28 1996 16:36 | 27 |
|
Kathy -
Sorry for the confusion - Duck is a train (his real name is Montague,
but they call him Duck because they say he waddles (-:). But the one
that we have doesn't fit on the track.
There aren't too many female ones at all ... I THINK that Daisy is the
only engine - although I'm not sure if Mavis is a girl or boy name.
All of the coaches are females - Annie and Clarabel etc.
I bought a pile of Thomas pillow cases (they're flannel) from Building
19 in Jan, and cut them open, then sewed them together flat, and made a
couple quilts for the boys. They LOVE them!! Thomas, Sir Topham,
Edward, Rusty and James. Maybe Gordon and Percy too .... sleep with
them every night. Really cute. Jonathan's taken to 'singing' the
little Thomas tune .... doo-doo-doo-doo-do-do-dooooooooooooo Doo doo
do doo etc ... it's pretty funny.
We shied away from the turntable .... mostly because the kids play with
LONG trains, and to use the turntable, you can really only have one, at
most 2, trains connected together - the "T" worked better for us, since
what they really wanted to do was change direction.
Have fun with the party!!
-Patty
|
449.49 | Thomas stuff | OBSESS::COUGHLIN | Kathy Coughlin-Horvath | Mon Jun 10 1996 18:12 | 8 |
|
By the way, Building 19 (I saw them in Burlington) is selling Shining Time
Station videos for $1.99. Last year I bought a 5 pack for $9.00. They split
the packages and are now selling them individually. Each video has 1
episode of Shining Time Station and incudes a Thomas or his friends train
story. They also have Thomas coloring books 2/$1.00, as well as $.59.
Kathy
|