Choose one word to define toys in recent years and it would be “collectable”.
Every box and packet, from pocket money mini-figures to expensive construction sets, urged children and their parents to complete the set. In other words, buy more.
Now that craze has peaked, there is a new word on the industry’s lips – sustainability.
Children, the very people the toy industry serves, are leading the environmental charge. Striking from school, providing the figurehead in teenage campaigner Greta Thunberg, and demanding action from their parents.
It is only natural that the market is paying attention. What was clear from the Toy Fair, the annual jamboree in London’s Olympia which was held this week, is that small toymakers are setting the tone.
University project made a business
While studying design at Northumbria University, Dan Robson came up with the idea of a 3D puzzle garden. Children assemble the model scene – ranging from a windmill to a volcano – from pop-out boards, then plant seeds to grow cress, pea, kale, rocket, lettuce or watercress in the little “garden” container.
The 32-years-old’s Build and Grow business is based in Blaydon, near Gateshead.
“Our aim is to encourage children to grow their own, while educating them on how to grow and why it’s important. [So] we had to make sure all of our materials choices were considered,” he says.
The £15 play sets and packaging are made from recycled card and are printed using vegetable ink. The plastic container is recyclable, and even the soil is locally sourced.
Parents and children, he says, not only want a fun toy, but a responsible one too. Ignoring that could hit the bottom line.
“People are very aware now of their impact on the environment and this is driving a change in consumer habits,” he says.
Eyes on the planet
Such eco-innovation is not unique at the Toy Fair. On a nearby stall is another small business – Paper Engine – which has created build-your-own gadgets such as a telescope, a microscope, and a paper aeroplane launcher.
The business is a spin-off from the designers of pop-up books, which has now moved into the crowded creative toy sector.
The selling point is clear. Apart from the lens, the telescope is made entirely from paper and card.
The cardboard box in which it is delivered is self-contained and free from shrink wrap. The only issue that tests its environmental credentials is that, in order to keep costs down, the printing is done in China.
While the backlash against plastic packaging of toys has been vociferous for some time, the actual products themselves are now increasingly under the microscope.
“We’ve been talking about sustainability for 10 years. It is not new. We’ve moved on but we are still not perfect,” says Natasha Crookes, from the British Toy and Hobby Association.
The association, which represents manufacturers, has been working hard to make toys more durable, she says, allowing toys to be handed on to friends and family as children grow out of them.
Some 80% of parents donate used toys, she says, and the association tracks marine litter to ensure toys are not continually washed up. The results, she says, are encouraging. Buckets and spades and other litter left by families visiting the seaside are more of a problem than dumped plastic toys, she says.
Unintended consequences
Yet, gifts in children’s stockings and presents under the Christmas tree last month were still primarily plastic, much of which ultimately ends up in landfill after a toy loses is lustre?
Parents are cutting back. Consumer awareness is driven by the children themselves, says Ms Crookes.
However, many manufacturers face regulatory problems if they try to go further, broadly for two reasons.
The first are the strict controls on the chemical content of toys. Regulations are tight on what a toy can be made of, to ensure it does not harm the children who play with it.
Put simply, manufacturers cannot use any old recycled plastic if they do not know exactly what is in it. So the recycled material needs to be clearly and cleanly sourced.
Secondly, in order to recycle toys efficiently just like any other product, they would need to be easily pulled apart. Again, this goes against regulations. Toy safety rules state toys, particularly for young children, should not be easily dismantled and become a choking hazard.
These are hurdles for big manufacturers, but they are not impossible to clear.
Italian-based toymaker Clementoni has a range supplying children from birth to 12 and over, and is making a statement.
It is aiming for its infant range to come from recycled plastic, certified and manufactured on site in Recanati. A range of puzzles, including packaging, made from recyclable materials has also been designed and will go on sale from March.
“We are making an offer to the conscious consumer,” says UK country manager Shahbaz Khan. “But we accept it is only a first step.”