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Big Yellow Teapot

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  • Big Yellow Teapot

    The Big Yellow Teapot was based on two founding principles: little girls love dolls houses, and they also love playing with tea sets. This must-have iconic toy of the 80s combined both these loves so was always going to be a hit when it was released by the now-defunct Bluebird Toys in 1981.The name said it all, really. The Big Yellow Teapot was a large, plastic, yellow teapot that opened up to reveal a play house inside. It came with little plastic, peg-like (a bit like primitive Playmobil people) family figures and various pieces of furniture. You could have hours of fun playing with Mum, Dad, two little girls, a boy and a dog, positioning them between the four little chairs, a table, a bed, a bedside cabinet and printed cardboard walls to make the place seem more homely. There was even something that resembled a dog's bed! The only thing that wasn't in this Big Yellow Teapot was tea - much to the disappointment of those girls hoping to serve some invisible tea to their Barbies.It wasn't too long before a rival to the teapot was on the scene - Palitoy's Family Treehouse, which worked along the same design principle but looked a little more advanced and attracted an older, more sophisticated crowd of kids. There was also a house for Smurfs that was shaped like a toadstool.The great thing about the teapot though, was its bold design - the yellow and red duplo-esque design still scream out 'childhood memory' to many 80s kids, rather like it does that other household staple - the A La Carte Kitchen, which was released by Bluebird Toys only a year later than the teapot. But, really, couldn't Bluebird have come up with a better name for it?

    More...
    Do You Remember the 70s, 80s and 90s?
    http://www.DoYouRemember.co.uk
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