Maybe
your thoughts are turning towards Christmas gifts now – yes I know it
seems premature – but some people start buying early, maybe to spread
the cost, or are looking for the right present for that special child
who is hard to buy for.
It
reminded me of toys from the past, ones maybe we don’t see any more, or
have outlived their popularity, but their inventors made millions from
them at the time.
Cabbage
Patch Dolls – remember these? Women panicked at stores and queued up
for hours. They were inspired by the Little People dolls sold by Xavier
Roberts as collectibles and registered in the US in 1978. The brand
was renamed 'Cabbage Patch Kids' by Roger L. Schlaifer when he acquired
the licensing rights in 1982. They have continued to be manufactured –
by several different manufacturers, and in various sizes - and the range
expanded to include clothing, and special editions. The manufacturers
have changed, from Coleco through to Hasbro to Mattel and so on, to
today’s owner of the license, Jazwares.
The
thing about Cabbage Patch Kids is that, to this day, each one is
unique. When you see them lined up, they vary by hair, skin colour, eye
colour, and outfit. Of course, this meant that the receiving child must
learn to love the one they were gifted. This is easier to understand for
children because the dolls come with a birth certificate and adoption
papers — and the request to swear an oath of adoption. They were asked
to parent a unique doll, and that felt like something special. These
facts are maybe what makes these dolls so special, and could very well
be the reason they never seem to wane much in popularity.
If
you can find one of the originals in the toy cupboard, one called
Teresa Ann sold on eBay for over €2,000. The red hair made this doll one
of the most desirable amongst all Cabbage Patch Doll collectors, and if
you can find one with a pacifier, it can be worth close to €830.
Another element that increases value is having the doll’s birth
certificate and its adoption papers. It is unlikely to find one in a
box, but the doll’s condition will ultimately determine the value.
Barbie
Dolls are another that seem collectable - particularly the earlier ones
- and are getting wildly excessive amounts in auction houses. Did you
know Barbie had a full name? Barbara Millicent Roberts. She was a 29 cm
tall plastic doll with the figure of an adult woman and was introduced
by Mattel, Inc. Ruth and Elliot Handler, who co-founded Mattel, on March 9, 1959. Despite adding ‘Ken’ and all the
Barbie outfits, Mattel has seen sales of Barbie spiral downward since
2009. Between 2012 and 2014 alone, sales apparently dropped by 20%. Part
of this is that kids are increasingly playing touch screens games and
electronic toys, rather than with old-fashioned dolls.
Remember
the Slinky? A ridiculously simple spiral of metal, then later in
plastic, invented as far back as the 1940s, originally intended as a
tension spring in a battleship engine horsepower meter by Richard James,
a marine engineer. Other than toys, Slinkies have been used for -
among other things - pecan picking, drapery holders, antennas, light
fixtures, window decorations, gutter protectors, birdhouse protectors,
therapeutic devices, wave motion coils, table decorations, and mail
holders. Here’s an interesting fact, Slinky has been to space, but
didn’t slink, according to Dr. M. Rhea Seddon of the Space Shuttle
Discovery, who found that Slinky behaved differently in space - it
wouldn’t slink at all, but just sort of drooped.
Last
one I have space for – G.I Joe. This toy became so popular that it
managed to build a worldwide fan base and even has its own annual
convention. Hasbro released the G.I. Joe Action Figure into stores
worldwide in 1964, and it quickly became one of the most popular toys
ever. With that in mind, some G.I Joe collectable action figures and
accessories have sold for huge sums - nearly €18,000 for The Missile Command Centre, and over €10,000 for others in the series.
Marilyn writes regularly for The Portugal News, and has lived in the Algarve for some years. A dog-lover, she has lived in Ireland, UK, Bermuda and the Isle of Man.