Britain’s biggest Barbie fan has spent more than £20,000 collecting 800 dolls – which have rocketed in value since the movie release.
Dawn Austin, 44, first became obsessed with the iconic doll when she spotted one in an airport shop when she was a small child.
She steadily added to her collection but lost interest as a teenager until she fell back in love with them in her 20s when she became an artist.
Over the last 23 years, Dawn has scoured flea markets and online auction sites like eBay for dolls from her childhood.
She now has a staggering 800 Barbies as well as several Kens. She also has dozens of Sindy and Tammy dolls which are crammed into her three-bed terrace in Derby.
Dawn says the dolls fill almost every surface but husband Steve, 45, draws a line with having any in their bedroom.
She said: “One of my first memories is sitting in a pram and seeing this amazing toy doll in a shop window at an airport.
"I saw all these golden-haired dolls and I asked if they were fairies or angels.
“My mum took me over and bought me a Malibu Barbie and I never let it go. From then on I just wanted to collect them all.
"When I was a child, it was the scope for imagination and play. She could be what I wanted.
"I remember that Barbie was a nun, but she was also a farmer - she went anywhere that you could take her.”
While she was an art student in 2000, Dawn decided to collect Barbies she enjoyed from her 1980s childhood.
She added: “My fascination just snowballed. I would go on eBay sites and scour flea markets and thrift stores.
“Every time we go on holiday, I always scout out a market or car boot sale nearby.
“My husband Steve is very good. He knows how important they are to me.
"I have kept all the receipts for the dolls and I would estimate that overall I have spent more than £20,000 on them but for me it's worth it because I just love collecting them."
Since the Hollywood movie Barbie was released last month, the value in Barbie-related memorabilia has soared.
Dawn has now upped security of her most precious dolls, with some being extremely rare first editions.
The most valuable doll she owns is a 1960 model featuring Barbie wearing a black and white swimsuit and sporting a ponytail.
Dawn said: “I never really thought to much about the doll’s value but since the movie, Barbie memorabilia has gone up 25 per cent.
“I have become quite expert in what to look for and I always go for as mint condition as you can find.
“First I look at the condition of the face and hair and if the doll has any limbs bent or chewed or missing.
“If you can find any which are boxed then that’s really going to up their value.
“The clothes don’t really matter because they can be replaced.
“A face can even be repainted or repaired but they lose their value.
“Through my work as an artist I have become expert at doll restoration.
“I’ve helped other collectors restore their dolls which were not in the best condition.”
Dawn Austin, 44, first became obsessed with the iconic doll when she spotted one in an airport shop when she was a small child.
She steadily added to her collection but lost interest as a teenager until she fell back in love with them in her 20s when she became an artist.
Over the last 23 years, Dawn has scoured flea markets and online auction sites like eBay for dolls from her childhood.
She now has a staggering 800 Barbies as well as several Kens. She also has dozens of Sindy and Tammy dolls which are crammed into her three-bed terrace in Derby.
Dawn says the dolls fill almost every surface but husband Steve, 45, draws a line with having any in their bedroom.
She said: “One of my first memories is sitting in a pram and seeing this amazing toy doll in a shop window at an airport.
"I saw all these golden-haired dolls and I asked if they were fairies or angels.
“My mum took me over and bought me a Malibu Barbie and I never let it go. From then on I just wanted to collect them all.
"When I was a child, it was the scope for imagination and play. She could be what I wanted.
"I remember that Barbie was a nun, but she was also a farmer - she went anywhere that you could take her.”
While she was an art student in 2000, Dawn decided to collect Barbies she enjoyed from her 1980s childhood.
She added: “My fascination just snowballed. I would go on eBay sites and scour flea markets and thrift stores.
“Every time we go on holiday, I always scout out a market or car boot sale nearby.
“My husband Steve is very good. He knows how important they are to me.
"I have kept all the receipts for the dolls and I would estimate that overall I have spent more than £20,000 on them but for me it's worth it because I just love collecting them."
Since the Hollywood movie Barbie was released last month, the value in Barbie-related memorabilia has soared.
Dawn has now upped security of her most precious dolls, with some being extremely rare first editions.
The most valuable doll she owns is a 1960 model featuring Barbie wearing a black and white swimsuit and sporting a ponytail.
Dawn said: “I never really thought to much about the doll’s value but since the movie, Barbie memorabilia has gone up 25 per cent.
“I have become quite expert in what to look for and I always go for as mint condition as you can find.
“First I look at the condition of the face and hair and if the doll has any limbs bent or chewed or missing.
“If you can find any which are boxed then that’s really going to up their value.
“The clothes don’t really matter because they can be replaced.
“A face can even be repainted or repaired but they lose their value.
“Through my work as an artist I have become expert at doll restoration.
“I’ve helped other collectors restore their dolls which were not in the best condition.”
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FunTranscript
00:00 [dramatic music]
00:03 Hi, I'm Dawn and I live in Derbyshire.
00:06 Okay, when I was a child,
00:08 my love for Barbie really started
00:11 was the fashions, the fantasy element,
00:14 and that she could be anything that I wanted her to be.
00:17 And obviously she was beautiful.
00:19 It was the '80s Barbies that I first started out collecting.
00:27 So popular ones like Crystal Barbie,
00:30 Peaches and Cream, I had all of those.
00:33 And they were quite fantastical in their fashions.
00:35 What draws me in about the Barbie fashions
00:42 is the attention to detail and the craftsmanship.
00:46 I have a great love for the '60s now,
00:50 through Barbie and the fashions of that era.
00:52 It's a record of a bygone time.
00:54 [upbeat music]
00:57 I've actually got this one right here.
01:00 This is a really rare Wonder Woman Barbie.
01:02 She was manufactured in Korea
01:04 and she's a slight oddity
01:06 'cause I think in the beginning
01:07 they didn't have the licensing
01:08 to produce the costume as faithfully.
01:11 So this is actually made up of warehouse scraps.
01:15 So bits of other items of clothing
01:18 from the different Barbie dolls lying around
01:20 and they basically hodgepodge the outfit together.
01:24 Part of my collecting habit
01:26 is to actually take the pictures in forms,
01:29 I make dioramas from them to produce artwork.
01:32 I am an illustrator by trade.
01:34 So it's basically fusing my two loves together.
01:38 My love for Barbie and my passion for artwork.
01:41 So I will set them up in like a,
01:43 Barbie will be driving a car down the highway
01:46 or smoking or cooking or having a drink with the girls.
01:52 Fun little dioramas.
01:54 Well, I have done commissions in the past
01:57 and people do like their own portraits made of them.
02:01 And so I've done a few of those.
02:03 And also as well, I do have like an online website,
02:06 which is dollygoodtime.com
02:09 where I showcase all my imagery.
02:12 With the renewal of the movie,
02:15 there has been added excitement around Barbie.
02:18 So obviously first thing any collector would notice
02:21 is the prices on eBay have shot up
02:23 and the actual, the want for Barbie
02:27 to explore that nostalgic side.
02:29 And actually what she represents in my artwork,
02:33 she will be seen in many different guises,
02:36 which is about, I think very much Barbie.
02:39 She's quite different and transformative.
02:42 I'm a member of a lot of different Facebook Barbie groups.
02:47 And we do a kind of like show and tell.
02:49 And whereas, oh, I've got this new Barbie,
02:51 but then I noticed some of the other people
02:53 would be taking more care on their pictures.
02:56 So I was like, I've got to step my game up.
02:58 And then that's how the love of the dioramas progressed
03:02 because it would be to create these interesting scenes
03:05 to show off the doll.
03:07 But then it kind of evolved into its own life.
03:11 And it just took me down a different avenue.
03:13 So now I will actually say that I will buy specific dolls
03:17 because I want to take their photos, their pictures
03:20 to do explore a particular theme.
03:23 (gentle music)
03:25 (dramatic music)
03:28 (dramatic music)