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From the age of 5, Filipino graphic artist Percival Lugue has had a passion for collecting toys from fast-food restaurant chains like McDonald's, Burger King and home-country favourite Jollibee. |
Now,the 50-year-old has about 20,000 toys packed from floor to ceiling in his home and holds a Guinness World Record from 2014, when his collection reached more than 10,000 items. |
"The toy is like a storyteller in itself," said Lugue, explaining his hobby while sitting among an eclectic mix of toys in his three-storey home. |
"For example, it gives me a glimpse of that particular period when I got it, the story of what's going on, what are the incidents that are attached in the acquisition," he said. |
Lugue, who lives in Apalit in Pampanga, a province northwest of Manila, built his home especially to house his collection. |
He likens the excitement that getting new toys gives him to Christmas morning. |
He has always played with the toys, but even as a child took good care of them and put them on display "unlike the other kids, who would tear up their toys into smithereens." |
While most of his toys were obtained through personal purchases, some were donated by friends and family. |
"I would invite my friends to... have lunch at McDonald's... and in one sitting I would be able to complete the whole set," he said. |
One of his most treasured pieces is a "Hetty Spaghetti" figurine, a mascot from the Jollibee chain that his mother gave him in 1988. |
His dream now is to eventually put his collection on display for the public or even open a museum to "give others a chance to revisit their own childhood memories." |
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