Difference between revisions of "Canelon Toys"

From Sega Retro

m (I will not lie... it was this photo that gave me 100% sure that "Canelon Chemicals" and "Canelon Toys", are indeed the same company... taken in 2015, in the International Food Machinery & Technology Exhibition (FOOMA), in Japan...)
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Tokyo Toy and Commerce Report September's 1966 Issue.jpg|''Tokyo Toy and Commerce Report'' September's 1966 issue
 
Tokyo Toy and Commerce Report September's 1966 Issue.jpg|''Tokyo Toy and Commerce Report'' September's 1966 issue
 
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==External links==
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*[http://www.foomajapan.jp/2018sp/english/exhibitor_info/exhibitor_details.php?u=1400606 Info about ''Maruzen Co, Ltd'' and its two subsidiary companies, ''E-Half Co, Ltd'' and ''Canelon Co, Ltd'' at ''www.foomajapan.jp'']
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 10:21, 2 October 2018

https://segaretro.org/images/6/6e/Canelon_Toys_Logo.png

Canelon Toys Logo.png
Canelon Toys
Founded: 1955-04-05[1]
Merged with: Maruzen Co. Ltd (株式会社 丸善)
Headquarters:
Honjō, Saitama Prefecture, Japan (formerly: Koshigaya, Saitama Prefecture)

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Canelon Toys (キャネロン), currently Canelon Chemicals[2] (キャネロン化工株式会社), a division of Maruzen Co. Ltd[3] (株式会社 丸善), is a plastic products[4] manufacturing company (plastic containers, trays, packaging and growing systems for the horticultural and food industries) and former toy manufacturer[5][6][7][8] based in Honjō, Japan.

The company was famous in the 1950s and 1960s for its line of celluloid toys and dolls and mechanical tin toys (Rolly Dolly, Merry Elephant Music Box, etc). Sometime after, the company began to manufacture mostly toys for babies, including several from the Miffy series of toys for children, sold by Sega Toys in Japan, like the Busy Gym.

Canelon Chemicals in Honjō, Japan (2012)

Gallery

External links

References