10 Things Everyone Collected in the 1980s
Kids in the 1980s didn’t need an online marketplace or a carefully curated display shelf to become collectors. Sometimes all it took was a sticker, a cool eraser, or one interesting object that suddenly made you want 50 more.
Some collections were serious, complete with albums, cases, and complicated trading rules. Others simply grew in desk drawers, shoeboxes, and bedroom corners until your parents started asking why you needed so many of the same thing. Here are 10 things almost everyone seemed to collect in the 1980s.

10. Stickers
Stickers were far too precious to actually stick on anything.
Kids collected scratch-and-sniff stickers, fuzzy stickers, puffy stickers, holographic designs, and anything featuring a favorite cartoon character. The best ones went into sticker books, where they could be admired indefinitely instead of wasted on a notebook.

9. Marbles
A bag of marbles could contain an entire miniature treasure collection.
Swirls, cat’s-eyes, clear glass, and oversized shooters all had their own appeal. Even kids who rarely played an actual game of marbles could spend years accumulating them.

8. Pencil Toppers and Novelty Erasers
School supplies became collectibles the moment someone figured out how to make them smell like fruit or look like tiny hamburgers.
Novelty erasers, pencil toppers, and unusual sharpeners were traded, displayed, and carefully protected. Many were far too cute or impractical to ever use for their intended purpose.

7. Buttons and Pins
Jackets, bags, and bedroom bulletin boards became display cases for personal identity.
Kids and teens collected buttons featuring bands, slogans, cartoon characters, and brands. The more you had, the more opportunities you had to show everyone exactly what you liked.

6. Trading Cards
Long before collectors tracked values online, kids traded cards on playgrounds and bedroom floors.
Baseball cards remained hugely popular, while entertainment cards featuring movies, television shows, and pop culture gave non-sports fans plenty to collect. The thrill was often less about value than finding the one card you were missing.

5. Keychains
Most kids didn’t have enough keys to justify a keychain collection, but that didn’t stop anyone.
Souvenir keychains, fuzzy creatures, plastic charms, and novelty designs accumulated on backpacks and bedroom hooks. One actual house key could end up buried beneath a collection weighing several pounds.

4. Postcards
A postcard was proof that either you or someone you knew had been somewhere interesting.
Kids saved cards from family vacations, tourist attractions, and faraway places sent by relatives. Even a postcard from a destination you had never visited could feel like a tiny window into another world.

3. Seashells and Vacation Souvenirs
No beach vacation was complete without bringing part of the beach home.
Shells, polished rocks, souvenir spoons, pressed pennies, and tiny snow globes filled shelves and dresser drawers. Their monetary value was usually minimal, but each one came attached to a memory.

2. Cassette Tapes
By the end of the 1980s, many music fans had built impressive walls, racks, and shoeboxes full of cassettes.
Some were store-bought albums, while others were homemade mixtapes, recordings from the radio, or mysterious tapes with handwritten labels. A cassette collection could reveal almost everything about its owner.

1. Garbage Pail Kids Cards
Few collectibles captured the gross-out humor of the 1980s quite like Garbage Pail Kids.
The parody trading cards became a playground phenomenon, with many kids swapping grotesque characters and searching for favorites. Many parents couldn’t understand the appeal, which probably made collecting them even more fun.
Read More:
- 10 Gadgets That Made You Feel Rich in the 1980s
- 10 Things Every Elementary School Classroom Had in the 1980s
- 10 School Rules Every ’80s Kid Remembers
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This article originally appeared on Resourcebuzz and was syndicated by MediaFeed.co.
