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WCN
Magazine Issue 20
Collecting Disney Pins |
click on images for detail
I
was first introduced to Disney Pins in March 2000 by an excited
collector who e-mailed me about the latest idea at Disney which
had become a collecting phenomenom, practically overnight.
Pin Station at the Magic Kingdom.
I was pointed to Deb's Unofficial
Walt Disney World Information Guide for more details and a
background (Deb's site is a tremendous resource for people visiting
Disney).
Pin Trading was introduced in October 1999 as part of the Disney
Millennium Celebration. The idea was to offer collectible pins
for sale and which could also be traded with cast members and
Disney guests, and between guests themselves. "Now, instead
of flying past that stranger to get to your next attraction, you
catch a glint of metal in the shining sun and you stop to inquire
about a trade. In the process, you learn a little about the person
and maybe you'll even find someone you've met on line (as I did).
Even when folks find they have no items to trade, it's great fun
to look at pins and share in the experience." (from Deb's
Unofficial Walt Disney World Information Guide)
Armed
with my basic knowledge and a few answers from the WCN
Disney Pins message board I visited Walt Disney World to learn
more.
The number of pins available is overwhelming, but luckily help
was at hand from Disney Pin expert Scoop who provided a Seminar
on Pin Collecting at the Magic Kingdom.
Scoop - talking pins.
For the uniniated the Seminar is great and for the seasoned collector
it is still full of insider tips and a view of Scoop's own collection
which includes many of the rarest pins available.
Scoop
went through the history of pins which had been available at Disney
Parks for years in various varietys such as: cloisonne (which
are powdered glass and fired at 800 degrees); semi-cloisonne which
uses epoxy resin for wider colour range, and enamel.
He then went on to talk about What to Collect?, How to Display?
and Pin Etiquette.
Scoop getting down to business - trading.
Finally he ended with a contest to win one of his rare pins. You
had to count the number of Mickey Ears in his folder of pins.
I will not give the answer but it is many more than you think.
Not winning the contest I had a go and the mystery swap. You select
a pin at random from Scoop's lanyard. The great thing about this
is that you can get a rare pin for any pin you want to swap. I
got lucky and received a Limited Edition Graduation Mickey pin.
Now
an expert I set out around the parks hunting for rare and hard
to find pins.
There are Ofificial Pin Stations at all the WDW Parks, the main
centre being at Epcot.
Pin Station Central at Epcot.
Although you can trade at any time with cast members or guests
who want to participate, there are also trading events throughout
the day at Pin Stations.
At the Epcot Pin Station Central there are people to trade with
all day as well as Super Pin Traders - cast members with whole
vests of pins.
After many trades, meeting lots of people from I ended up with
a lanyard of Limited Editions and pins relating to Peter Pan.
It was quite exciting seeing a cast member with a rare pin and
knowing you could swap your normal Piglet pin for something more
interesting. However, thousands of people all had the same idea
so you had to be lucky to find the rare ones. If you cannot find
one visit Scoop and try his Mystery Swap - or you might be lucky
enough to visit when a Mystery pin appears - these appear
without notice and are usually very limited.
Although pin trading was meant to last until the end of the Millennium
Celebrations in January 2001, it now looks to be a permanent feature
of Walt Disney World and the other Disney Parks.
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