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A royal obsession

LONDON (AFP) – It takes agility to get past the thousands of commemorative pictures and teacups piled up in the London home of Margaret Tyler, one of the United Kingdom’s (UK) biggest collectors of royal memorabilia.

Days ahead of Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee marking 70 years on the throne, the 78-year-old pensioner wearing a Union Jack jacket shows off her collection, which fills the ground floor of her house in the northwestern suburb Wembley.

“I think it’s wonderful that she’s done 70 years on the throne. The one thing that does upset me is the fact that Prince Philip isn’t here,” said Tyler.

The house’s exterior sets the tone: a front door guarded by two queen-inspired garden gnomes, a replica of a bearskin hat-wearing royal guard and a pennant in the red white and blue of the Union Jack.

Inside, Tyler has collected more than 12,000 royalty-themed objects over the last 40 years, from teacups bearing the image of all the members of the royal family, to posters, framed pictures, books, statues, even slippers and ashtrays.

Royal super-fan Margaret Tyler with her collection of royal memorabilia in her ‘Jubilee room’. PHOTOS: AFP
A pair of slippers featuring the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh in bed, part of Margaret Tyler’s collection of royal memorabilia

“If I like it, I buy it,” she said. So much that her children have barred her from going on the Internet in the hope of slowing her spending.

“I don’t know whether to go to libraries” for the Internet, she joked.

“They wouldn’t know.”

When she started collecting, Tyler gave over one room in the house to her hobby and forbade her four children from entering.

“They weren’t that interested, to be truthful,” she admitted.

The collection grew inexorably, and as her children become adults and left home, she used their bedrooms to store more objects.

She even had walls knocked down and an extension built to create a “Diana Room” entirely dedicated to Prince Charles’ first wife, Tyler’s favourite princess.

She has had a portrait of “Lady Di” painted on the ceiling by a United States artist.

“It was very hard work because you’ve got your arm up like that all the time. So you have to keep resting it,” she said.

Despite the amount of time spent collecting royal souvenirs, Tyler also does not miss a chance to meet the royal family.

That was why, aged 19, she left rural Herefordshire in the west of England to move to London and be closer to Buckingham Palace.

She has since met the queen four times. “I gave her a big cake shaped like a crown one time,” she said with unabashed pride.

Tyler’s royal passion is relentless. She hopes that the jubilee will be a success for the queen, who at 96 remains very popular, despite health concerns, family scandals and the death of her husband.

“My wishes for the queen would be a happy, happy time together with her family… I hope she has a sort of restful time because she’s worked so hard,” said Tyler.

Like many Britons, Tyler is eagerly waiting for the jubilee celebrations.

But she will follow the festivities at home on television with friends rather than travelling into London, as she has to look after a loved one who has mobility issues.

“On TV, I can watch it again on replay in the evening when everyone is gone,” she said with a smile.

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