The Asian Age

UK’s biggest royal fan set for summer of babies, weddings

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London: Festooned with bunting and guarded by a stained- glass sentry, the eccentric London home of retired charity worker Margaret Tyler is already bursting with souvenirs, but it is getting fuller by the day ahead of a busy summer for royal fans.

The “loyalist royalist” has been collecting souvenirs for four decades, amassing over 10,000 mugs, life- size cutouts, effigies, tapestries, books, posters, toilet seats, nodding corgis, tea- sets, and countless other nick- nacks in her London home.

But with Prince Harry’s wedding to former US actress Meghan Markle and another baby for Prince William and his wife Kate on the horizon, Tyler is having to find more space for the glut of new merchandis­e, including plates, tea- towels and cups. “I can’t resist it,” the 74- year- old said.

The so- called “Heritage House” also doubles as a B& B for royal enthusiast­s looking for a quirky place to stay, with some even mistaking it for a museum.

“A lady knocked on my door the other day and said ‘ what time do you open?’” she said

Ms Tyler, who used to work for a Down Syndrome charity, began collecting after giving birth to her four children.

“That’s when I started collecting stuff and the room downstairs was called the ‘ Royal Room’ and everything royal went in there,” recalled Ms Tyler, dressed in a Union Jack blazer.

“The children were not allowed in there, but they were not that interested really. Now all the children have left home, I’ve got more room. I’ve filled it up.” Her collection has become so vast that her children have banned her from using the Internet, with a whole new treasure trove available online.

With every surface already packed full of merchandis­e, taking care of the collection has now become a full- time occupation.

“It’s a labour of love,” she said, sitting on a red, white and blue bedspread in the “Royal Bedroom”. “If anyone moves a cup, I know it’s been moved”.

Unsurprisi­ngly, her family know what gifts to buy. “I don’t get ordinary presents at all, which I don’t really want,” she said.

Ms Tyler even had a “Diana Room” built, a shrine to Harry and William’s mother Princess Diana, who died in a Paris car crash in 1997. On one wall hangs an oil painting of Diana and her two children, which Tyler calls the pride of her collection.

The royalist plans to set up camp outside the central London hospital where Kate is due to give birth.

Tyler’s ‘ Heritage House’ also doubles as a B& B for royal enthusiast­s looking for a quirky place to stay, with some even mistaking it for a museum.

 ??  ?? Margaret Tyler
Margaret Tyler

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