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Clinging onto your childhood toys

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  • darren
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    would like to see it mate.
    what age were you when you got it.

    ive lots of stuff ill not get rid of to many things to mention.

    never heard opf a fireman sam teddybear.

    Originally posted by onthebusescrazy View Post
    i still have my fireman sam teddybear when i was a baby im a hoarder for stuff i will never throw away anything

    Leave a comment:


  • onthebusesfan
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    i still have my fireman sam teddybear when i was a baby im a hoarder for stuff i will never throw away anything

    Leave a comment:


  • victorbrunswick
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    Indeed, it was based on a 1964 El Camino.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sly
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    Your latest pick up reminds me of the car they drive in My Name Is Earl. El Camino?

    Leave a comment:


  • victorbrunswick
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    Originally posted by darren View Post
    hi victor im sure you regreat selling all but most of your hot wheels cars.

    what made keep the blue one.

    i think as we get older a lot of us collect toys we once had and the ones wehave become more special.

    a lot of what i have now is stuff i bought again and it means more now than it ever did.
    It was my favorite!
    I was at a diecast model collector's show today and picked up this one:





    Keeping company with the Classic Cord


    Another one on my want list is a Corgi 1143 (American-LaFrance ladder truck)
    Last edited by victorbrunswick; 05-03-2012, 04:59.

    Leave a comment:


  • darren
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    hi victor im sure you regreat selling all but most of your hot wheels cars.

    what made keep the blue one.

    i think as we get older a lot of us collect toys we once had and the ones wehave become more special.

    a lot of what i have now is stuff i bought again and it means more now than it ever did.

    Leave a comment:


  • victorbrunswick
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    Originally posted by Sly View Post
    The paintwork on that green car is lovely.

    Also, shotgun shell in the background.
    Strangely enough, I found that old box of shotgun shells among a boxful of other stuff I picked up at a yard sale.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tortie
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    I'm glad it's not just a "female thing," although from the state of dad's house, I should've known that already

    Leave a comment:


  • Retrogames
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    Aw bless you Tortie. A sad but lovely story.

    I'm getting bad for hoarding my kid's stuff. Where possible the boxes for toys go up in the attic wrapped in plastic waiting for the day the kids grow out of them when i'll put it all back together. I do this for their future nostalgia and the fact that the toys hopefully will be worth something when they are grown up.

    I am also keeping their old shoes as they grow out of them, the wife thinks im mad but i'll knock up a great 'wall of memories' display one day

    Leave a comment:


  • Sly
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    The paintwork on that green car is lovely.

    Also, shotgun shell in the background.

    Leave a comment:


  • victorbrunswick
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    I had quite a collection of Hot Wheels and Matchbox (Lesney Regular Wheels!) when I was a kid. I don't know what happened to my Matchbox cars but most of my Hot Wheels were such beaters that I sold them to a friend some ten years ago. Here's the only one of my original childhood Hot Wheels I have left.



    Meanwhile I've decided to start all over and reacquire the Hot Wheels and Matchbox cars I had as a kid (as well as many I never had!). I recently acquired this one at a diecast model show for £80 -- It's a 1971-72 Hot Wheels Classic Cord which is much sought-after by collectors.

    Leave a comment:


  • darren
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    i quite often get criticised for keeping toys etc from my youth.
    im told oh you should grow up and get shot of those toys and other things from your youth.

    but these toys are doing no harm and they bring back memories special memories of when you where a kid.

    these things are just priceless.

    a lot of those old things ive bought again than i got rid off when i was a kid.

    i would be really hurt if i lost them or they got stole.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tortie
    replied
    Originally posted by sandie76 View Post
    I could never give up some of my childhood toys, they all hold a special memory to me. Kept lots of my cuddly toys which are kept in an old suitcase in the attic, although my daughter has a couple in her room. My husband is always on at me to get rid of them, said it just yesterday when we were putting the xmas decs back up. When I was pregnant, I got rid of a few things I wish I hadn't, like my Cabbage Patch doll, a Sindy doll. I've even put alot of my daughter's toys up the attic, kept the boxes for things she plays with now, along with some Argos catalogues for her to look at when she's older. My OH thinks I'm nuts and just complains how full the attic is lol.

    Like you Darren, I've bought a few replacements of toys I used to have - My Little Ponies, Care Bears. Think my Mum would have a clear out, while I was at school, of the toys she thought I was done with. I remember her giving away my Sindy house and all the dolls, I was gutted, even though I had grown out of them.
    I've just re-found my old toys whilst clearing dad's house (the family home where I grew up), and there's no way I would part with them. I was feeling very, very low after losing dad, and I can honestly say, finding my old friends has given me strength to cope and carry on.
    I particularly loved finding Bendy Giraffe (to whom I owe a lot of love and cuddles for making it my mission to tie his legs and neck in knots when I was too young to know any better).

    Originally posted by Palazzo View Post
    I say good for you mate, I think people are far too quick to grow up these days I really do. I have managed to keep hold of a few bits and bobs, the stuff that really meant something to me. whether it be old figures, games or magazines or even playground fad items like Pogs or sticker albums. Keeping hold of stuff for nostalgic value is all good in my book and I think it's great that there are so many people who do just that.
    Here here!

    Leave a comment:


  • darren
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    if your not getting enjoyment out of the stuff then its understandable that you will sell it.
    thing is though i do still get huge enjoyment out of my old toys games consoles etc.
    in fact i think i get more enjoyment out of them now than i did back then.

    thing is i got huge enjoyment out of these toys etc back then.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sonic Reducer
    replied
    Re: Clinging onto your childhood toys

    Ive bought stuff from the 'bay that I had as a child. Mostly action figure stype stuff like Micronauts which I was hugely into and Mego Planet of the Apes and Star trek figures as well as the Denys Fishers Cybord/Muton toys. I've also bought toys that I wanted as a child but never got.

    What's tended to happen with those is that I've enjoyed them and after a good few years I've realized that theyre just gathering dust on shelves, or - worse still, just sitting in a cupboard doing nothing. As I've tended to buy those 70's toys as close to mint condition as I could afford at the time, I've had no trouble selling them on when the time feels right and have usually made a decent amount of money on them so I've had the enjoyment and that nostalgia value and they've also turned out to be a bit of an investment too.

    This might seem a little harsh to some but for me it makes sense as at one time I looked at the amount of stuff I'd bought over say, a five year period, and how much it had cost me and how much space it was taking up and realized I was just buying it because I could because I had no other commitments at the time, but was really just hoarding and not getting the enjoyment of of them after a while that someone else might, So selling them on after a few years became a sensible way for me to manage my compulsion to buy this stuff and make some money out of it too.

    Leave a comment:

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