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Toymakers Team Up With Artists for Tariff-Proof Toys

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Under threat from the global trade war, toymakers are looking for a tariff-proof consumer. Adult collectors with deep pockets may be the answer.

To attract them, companies are teaming up with artists to create exclusive, expensive toys like $350 Barbie dolls and $8,000 Lego sets. These are generally pitched as works of art intended for display rather than mass-produced products designed for children’s play. Hasbro, Lego, Mattel and others have created dedicated sites to sell these higher-end toys to collectors.

Tariffs loom over the toy industry. Nearly 80 percent of toys sold in the United States are made in China, which faces the steepest potential tariffs threatened by President Trump. The president has played down the potential effect of tariffs, saying that children “will have two dolls instead of 30,” adding that those two dolls would “cost a couple of bucks more than they would normally.”

Global toy sales fell 0.6 percent last year, a second consecutive annual decline, according to the market research firm Circana. And that was before Mr. Trump’s tariffs, which industry sources predict may lead to product shortages and higher prices during the crucial holiday season.

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A He-Man-inspired artwork titled “Macho Man” by Dave Bondi at an exhibition for Mattel’s 80th anniversary . . .Credit...Colin Sussingham for The New York Times

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. . . and “I Lost My head Over You,” an artwork by Annie Montgomerie based on Mattel’s Talk-Up Doll.Credit...Colin Sussingham for The New York Times

But toys that appeal to adult buyers — or “kidults,” as Circana describes some of them — have been a bright spot: Sales of franchises like Barbie and Lego and collectibles like trading cards are growing much faster than the market overall.


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