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Details
A BLUE PLASTIC SADDLE
With white filigreed plastic trim over a contrasting red ground and cut-out red let 'er buck cowboys in the corners and on the bottom of the tapaderos. White plastic Cheyenne roll with cut-out red ground. White trimmed horn with red accents. Includes Martingale.
The All Western Saddle Company was the brain child of Bill Vandegrift, a Colorado resident who came up with the idea of a plastic western saddle in the late 1940s with leather still in short supply following WWII. The huge sheets of plastic, called Geon, were about 1/4" thick, and basically the same material as today's PVC pipe - coming in a variety of colors. It was possible to place a seamless cover on the saddle seat by heating the sheet and wrapping it while still warm around the form. The few seams that were necessary, such as around the horn or the stirrups, were covered by decoration, according to plastic saddle aficionado and historian Tom Harrower. The All Western Plastic Company began operating in Lusk, WY., in 1946, moving to Scottsbluff in 1949. Vandergrift enlisted Tommy Nielsen, a saddle maker in Lusk, WY., and Bernard Thon, an excellent craftsman, to produce each hand crafted saddle. Of the 65 or so that were made, about 37 have been located, and Harrower owns eight of them. Cowboy legend, Roy Rogers, was both a promoter and collector of the novelty saddles - frequently riding his flashy and unique plastic saddles in the annual Pasadena Rose Parade.
With white filigreed plastic trim over a contrasting red ground and cut-out red let 'er buck cowboys in the corners and on the bottom of the tapaderos. White plastic Cheyenne roll with cut-out red ground. White trimmed horn with red accents. Includes Martingale.
The All Western Saddle Company was the brain child of Bill Vandegrift, a Colorado resident who came up with the idea of a plastic western saddle in the late 1940s with leather still in short supply following WWII. The huge sheets of plastic, called Geon, were about 1/4" thick, and basically the same material as today's PVC pipe - coming in a variety of colors. It was possible to place a seamless cover on the saddle seat by heating the sheet and wrapping it while still warm around the form. The few seams that were necessary, such as around the horn or the stirrups, were covered by decoration, according to plastic saddle aficionado and historian Tom Harrower. The All Western Plastic Company began operating in Lusk, WY., in 1946, moving to Scottsbluff in 1949. Vandergrift enlisted Tommy Nielsen, a saddle maker in Lusk, WY., and Bernard Thon, an excellent craftsman, to produce each hand crafted saddle. Of the 65 or so that were made, about 37 have been located, and Harrower owns eight of them. Cowboy legend, Roy Rogers, was both a promoter and collector of the novelty saddles - frequently riding his flashy and unique plastic saddles in the annual Pasadena Rose Parade.
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