Royal Wedding rekindles interest in memorabilia
You would be hard pushed to find a bigger .
The Weardale journalist has a home bursting with royal memorabilia. This picture above is just a fraction of her collection which tops 5,000 different items.
As you'll see in our latest episode (28 February 2011 19:30GMT ´óÏó´«Ã½1) her royal memorabilia collection is so big that .
All of this started quite by accident back in 1977 during the . Anita was 21 that year and lots of friends and family thought a royal souvenir would make a great present.
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That sparked an interest in royal memorabilia and so her collecting habit began.
Now she's so well known in the area that people give her any royal bits and bobs they've found along the way.
There are some pretty weird items, like the Charles and Diana slippers, pictured right.
I'm not sure if you can get the dressing gown to match but who knows?
There does seem to be a fine line between tasteless tat and something of real value when it comes to these keepsakes of royal events.
I thought I had no royal memorabilia in my house at all until I remembered that as a kid I received a specially minted 50 pence piece to mark the Queen's Silver Jubilee.
I still have it in its plastic presentation pouch somewhere in the loft. I also recall going to the end of our street as drove past as part of her tour of Britain that same year.
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It seems no-one can resist getting in on the act when the Royal Family sets a date for a great event.
What street party to mark would have been complete without a pack of meat-flavoured crisps?
When archaeologists of the future dig up our old rubbish tips to learn how we lived, they will remark how we lauded our first family with potato-based snackery.
Who knows what extraordinary mementoes will appear as Kate Middleton and Prince William approach their nuptials?
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As usual the market sees a demand and fills it. Maybe it's only in the 21st Century that any anti-establishment feelings can be so openly displayed without causing an outrage.
I'm not sure if the sick bag will make a welcome addition to Anita's collection. As for me - I'm just wondering what a commemorative 50 pence piece from 1977 is worth in today's money.
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