Kaden Nachod (and the later name, KOVAP Náchod) is the somewhat anglicized name for the Kovodružstvo Náchod toy factory in the town of Nový Hrádek in the Czech Republic. The factory, however, started making toys around 1950 when the country was still communist united Czechoslovakia.
History
The state factory, started around 1950, was also called by the acronym KDN which led to the spelled out and somewhat more western name Kaden. The enterprise reportedly changed its name to Kovap Náchod in 1991, though the factory's products were most commonly referred to by the Kaden name during the 1970s and 1980s. Since about 2005, the company uses both names as different brands.
Approximately through the 1960s, the KDN logo included those letters inside of two overlapping circles, like a Venn diagram. Since the 1970s, the KDN factory logo has been a stylized child on his knees playing with a vehicle with the entire logo against a black background. The newer logo is similar, but with a yellow, red and blue 'Rubik's-cube'-like graphic behind the child (with the 'E' in Kaden similarly colored). By contrast, the Kovap logo appears as a stylized 'K'.
Many, but by no means all, Kovap models were apparently retooled 1960s and 1970s CKO/Georg Kellerman pressed metal toys from Nuremberg, West Germany.
Communist toys
Typically, East European toys and other more sophisticated models replicated the actual vehicles chosen by these governments for the people, the workplace, or more often, the communist party elite. Real vehicles were not manufactured as a result of research development response to market demand, thus Eastern European automobiles usually lagged far behind the west. Since there was no market, what people received was what the government deemed worthy of production. In Hungary, Poland, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, therefore, and, above all, Russia, most vehicle toys replicated the real vehicles from the state factories – operated and owned by the government. The toys, then, were also made in factories owned by the state. Sometimes the toys were made in the same factories as the real vehicles.
Nevertheless, Czechoslovakia was a bit different than its Soviet sphere neighbors. It was the country behind the Iron Curtain that let engineers and designers have the most free rein in the production of vehicles. Real factories such as Škoda and Tatra developed unique designs and clever engineering features which were lacking in communist industrial environments elsewhere. Tatra was known for aerodynamic shapes, sometimes even contracting with Torino design studios in Italy. Tatra trucks were (and are) known world-wide for their endurance. Škoda was one of the few communist names to have market success in western Europe, even participating in western rallying. Not unexpectedly, Czech toys largely represented the vehicles from these state enterprises.
Czech toys
From play to promotional
Kovodružstvo Náchod was established in 1950. Its vehicles ranged from tractors and military to everyday Škodas and politburo Tatras. As seen below, varieties of the famous Tatra trucks were common. Some of the first KDN toys manufactured in the late 1960s and through the 1970s were either more conservative plastic construction vehicles like a cement mixer, a dump truck, and a road roller – or brightly colored lithographed tin tractors and forklifts among others. KDN also produced other toys and models in plastic for promotional purposes including the KDN Kino 85 working film projector. Many vehicles, even though often done in plastic, had a refined western quality and solid feel lacking in other communist bloc toys (with the exception of many Russian models which were often much more impressive in miniature than the real cars they represented). Sizes ranged from about 1:20 or larger scale (about 6 – 7 inches long) to about 1:43 for cars, vans, tractors and also larger Tatra trucks. Some of the smaller early cars like the Innocenti Mini and Mercedes 280 sedan were a bit simpler than the later Miniauto range. Many of these were marked KDN and had the overlapping circles logo on their bases.
These often had a crisp promotional feel, and one wonders if Škoda dealerships in the west (say, Spain and Italy where Škodas were fairly popular) used the tiny cars for sales purposes. Circa 2010, Kaden has also begun to offer 1:87 scale coupes and sedans of their new VW affiliated offerings. Packaging, usually colorful for the toys, was a bit more subdued for the 1:43 scale cars, accurately illustrating the vehicles and featuring logos of the real vehicles.
Miniauto Range
Factory directions
With the fall of communism, as with all the Soviet satellite countries, products were recrafted and repackaged to be sold to the western markets and toys were no exception. Reflecting the 180 degree change in economic orientation away from the Soviet Union, Kovodružstvo Náchod changed its name to Kovap Náchod in 1991. In 1993, Kaden toys became products of the Czech Republic as Slovakia made its own way in the new Europe. As of 2016, both names had parallel websites.
In the mid-1990s, Kaden models continued to be sold in the west, but now in diecast metal instead of pressed tin or plastic. Offered are modern Škodas, Jeeps, and Tatra trucks and military materials carriers. Škoda models are often sold in promotional company colored boxes of white and green, which carry company information on their end flaps. The company (which it now legitimately can be called – not being a communist party factory anymore) has also moved into the buzzing European 1:87 scale market.
External links
- KOVAP Official website of the company KOVAP.
References
- <ref name=BábBystrica2008>Bábkarská Bystrica Toy Fair. 2008. Half a Century of Sheet-Metal Toys. Fair advertisement website.^
- See many examples in Smith, Hedrick. 1976. The Russians. Crown Publishing.^
- Margolius, Ivan, and John G. Henry. 1990. Tatra: the legacy of Hans Ledwinka. SAF Publishing ISBN 0-946719-06-3, ISBN 978-0-946719-06-8.^