Polly Pocket
Polly Pocket :
Just like bum bags were essential items of the 80s, so was having something to go inside them. After all, little kids didn't tend to have wallets or mobile phones (although they do these days!), so instead they filled them to the brim with life's other necessities. For boys this was Mighty Max figures. For girls, that most ingenious of creations, Polly Pocket.
It's somewhat strange then, that Polly Pocket was the brainchild of a man - Chris Wiggins, who developed Polly's first pocket-sized, plastic world in 1983 for his daughter Kate's doll, out of a pocket compact no less. But it wasn't until 1989 that Bluebird Toys officially launched to toy in the UK, while Mattel did the same across the Atlantic.
Each one-inch-high Polly Pocket looked like a cross between your typical Lego lady and a Charmkin, with bendable legs and simple hair and facial features that made them instantly loveable. They lived inside a case, which when unfolded revealed an intricate play scene. There were all kinds of themed Polly Pocket cases, which added of course to their collectable nature, but better still, it was possible to join the playscenes together by means of plastic clips on the cases to create a huge (well, still very tiny actually) world of Polly Pocket. Carnival and zoo-themed carry cases were the craziest, if I remember rightly.
For fans of the toy, there was a burgeoning range of extras on offer, from friends for her (Dana, Billy, Stephanie and others) to hair things. And by 1999, it wasn't just Polly's head that had swelled because of her increasing popularity, she'd grown all round and had been given more life-like features. Maybe they thought kids had become more advanced, who knows. A new range of Fashion Polly dolls measuring just over 3 inches included the characters Polly, Shea, Lea and Lila, and Mattel even took the radical step of producing a Barbie in Polly Pocket proportions. The newer Polly Pockets now come with stretchy rubber clothing that can be taken off and swapped over.
While bum bags are no longer the thing to be wearing, kids will still find a way of transporting their Polly Pockets around. After all, where there's a will, there's a way.
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The original fiendishly difficult puzzle,
now with solution guide
The original fiendishly difficult puzzle, invented by Erno Rubik in Hungary and one of the biggest toy crazes ever. In 1982 Hawkin's Bazaar was the first to bring a few cases of the Rubik's Cube to England. Unfortunately 25 years ago we were very small and it wasn't long before a much larger company had the exclusive rights to distribute in the UK. We are very pleased to be offering it again! And now includes a new seven step solution guide.
Features
5.5cm Seven step solution guide
About Hawkin's Bazaar
Hawkin's Bazaar has been providing you with unusual gifts, toys and gadgets since 1973. Originally a local toy shop at the Hawk Inn (hence the name), Hawkin's Bazaar now sells things you thought had gone forever and things you never even knew existed. They bring you Pin Art, Morph, Rubik's Cube, Big Trak, Space Hoppers and much more.
Also remembered...

Flatsy doll was not only flat but she was bendy. I loved her to bits with her big eyes and whimsical smile. Her technicolour hair was so vibrant. She came in groovy frames with with cool accessories. My favourites were the Big Sister version - 'The Fashion Flatsys'. I can still remember them at the shops bright shiny and new with arms outstretched waiting to be loved.
...and do you remember these?
- Snorks
- WWF Thumb Wrestlers
- Raving Bonkers Fighting Robots
- Hot Wheels
- Erector Set
- Buck Rogers Action Figures
- Secret Sam Spy Case
- Christmas crackers
- Flight Deck
- Diver Dan





Comments
I always found it strange how 'Polly Pocket' kept growing bigger and bigger, considering they were based around fitting in your pocket. Polly Pocket castles, 'Lucy Locket', and the new 'Polly!'... they all miss the point so wonderfully.
CherryMay 23-Apr-2005, 12:48:42 AM
we rememver the polly pocket... ahh the old days of 'toy day' on a friday at school and we were allowed to take in toys. There was a great divide between the polly pocket collectors and the barbie collecters!! BIG UP THE POLLY POCKET!!!!
ashley, fran and amanda 15-Feb-2006, 01:24:12 PM
i still have mine!!! their amazing!
fe 18-Mar-2006, 02:50:39 AM
I loved the original Polly Pocket houses that were little compact cases that you could carry around with you. The first one I had was a Japanese house and garden and I remember feeling sad when I lost one of the teeny tiny lady figures in my school playground - I was much more careful with the next one! I had a few of the houses/shops from the mid-90s too, but they weren't as nice as the original ones. I've seen them in shops again lately and they are big! She's not really "pocket" sized anymore!
Amy 12-Apr-2006, 10:18:53 AM
I remember playing with them with my sister when I was younger ^_^ I had a aladin one as well i loved them :P
Andrea 23-Sep-2006, 09:51:52 PM
I use to LOVE polly pocket. I owned many different little compact pockets.
Christine 16-Dec-2006, 11:25:23 PM
I remember someone at school had a polly pocket pencilcase, with the toys inside. I was sooooo jealous as I only had a small normal one, I wanted to get away with playing with it in class!
Loz 01-Mar-2007, 03:58:42 PM
I played with these as a child and kept losing the tiny bits, it drove my mum mad. My daughter is 4 now and she loves it!
Claire Mck 25-Apr-2008, 11:30:27 AM
Vintage Polly Pocket dolls and playsets ROCK! The dolls themselves were so tiny, so fairy-like - and so easy to drop, lose, etc! I still have two sets that I love - but they're from the 1990s, not the 1980s. My mum gave away most of the dolls and sets from the 1980s to one of my cousins, but that's OK: I still have a really precious little schoolroom playset, and a little beach house. I remember, my sister and I had only one Polly Pocket boy doll, and he was so special because he was our only BOY! I'm not a fan of the modern Polly Pocket - though I appreciate that it's probably easier for little hands to play with modern Polly than with vintage Polly.
nugirl 21-Oct-2008, 11:13:08 PM
I remember having a Polly playset when I was a kid, but nowadays I see them in the shops and it's so sad they dont make the pocket compact worlds with tiny little Polly's anymore. With todays thorough safety checks they probably saw them as a choking hazard cause they really were miniscule. Nevertheless, today's Polly's just don't compare.
chimairacle 23-Sep-2009, 05:34:15 PM
In my house, Polly Pocket was regularly taken prisoner in the Mighty Max compacts.
dex 27-Oct-2009, 11:15:18 AM
I liked the older Polly sets better. They were way more intricate and awesome. The little dolls were too easy to lose though.
Amanda-Davis 22-Apr-2010, 11:08:22 PM