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"Inside the psychology of collecting"

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  • Sonneveld
    Member
    • Sep 29, 2013
    • 74

    "Inside the psychology of collecting"

    Thought I would piggyback this thread to wee67's "Thinking about selling" one. Some interesting stuff.


    This is only the second vintage Mego I’ve bought in the last year. I bought this despite having serious thoughts about selling off my collection. For a while now, I’ve found I’m not sure I get the same joy from my toyroom. That said, every time I think about, it seems like something on which I can’t
  • basilfan
    New Member
    • Feb 21, 2025
    • 39

    #2
    Interesting, though he never really came to any conclusion, it seems to me. So why do you collect what you collect?

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    • Sonneveld
      Member
      • Sep 29, 2013
      • 74

      #3
      Originally posted by basilfan
      Interesting, though he never really came to any conclusion, it seems to me. So why do you collect what you collect?
      I think it's the warmth of nostalgia, the feeling of childhood, and also, especially in the case of my McDonaldland fascination, the people I was with when there. My friend treasures his Star Wars because his late mother would go figure hunting with him.

      There is also the endorphin rush of finding something, so I guess a bit of shopper's addiction, as well. I got better at curbing that impulse, in recent years, though.

      I'm a "basilfan," as well. What a great film. Why do you collect?

      Comment

      • basilfan
        New Member
        • Feb 21, 2025
        • 39

        #4
        Although I do love to look at toys from my childhood, I don't collect them; I'm content to look, smile, and pass them by.

        I collect characters I love: super-heroes, Disney, TV shows, Star Wars, because I long to extend them beyond the film or the page. Before the invention of DVDs, the only way to actually look at movie characters, unless you happened to find a rerun, was to collect something with their image. One of the reasons I grabbed a lot of items I'm now ready to sell off, like trading card sets, is 'cause now I can pop in the disc any time.

        And action figures were always one of the top choices of collectible because you could pose them to create new stories. Absolute perfection would be to have an action figure of every Disney character, super-hero, and TV/movie character I like, all in the same scale, preferably 8" with real hair and clothes.

        As for Basil, he's my obsession. But even then I've grown selective enough to pass on things with the same image repeated, or off-model items. Maybe that's a touch of maturity. Or maybe that psychologist would have something different to say about it all.

        Comment

        • Sonneveld
          Member
          • Sep 29, 2013
          • 74

          #5
          here is something much more enjoyable, more tactile, about the real hair and clothes in the 8" lines, like Mego.

          Enjoying a DVD, versus owning a plastic totem of a character is a good way to look at things!​

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