that one enterprising designer starting selling royal sick bags.
But that was just the beginning.
With the new heir now expected within days, retailers have put a royal spin on everything from biscuits to books and have stocked up on commemorative mugs, key rings and plates. Even Kate’s parents appear to have got in on the act — the Middletons’ Party Pieces online business is showcasing as “new” a range of “I’m a Princess” party cups, plates and napkins.
There is no shortage of baby products with a royal theme, from leading British firm Mothercare’s romper suits for a “Prince in Training” to blankets and even dribble bibs adorned with crowns.
If they aren’t to your taste, one company has published a book of sewing patterns for traditional bonnets, booties and christening gowns suitable for a future monarch.
The upmarket London hotel, Grosvenor House, has taken it further with a bespoke nursery suite designed “with a royal baby in mind” by the boutique that furnished William’s childhood bedroom.
Costing US$3 550 a night, the rooms contain hand-crafted and painted furniture, including a crib equipped with a regal coronet and canopy.
The ivory colour scheme may be impractical for babies, but for that kind of money, you would hope someone else would clean up.
Unlike the Olympics, a highly lucrative brand that is fiercely protected by the International Olympic Committee, anyone with an eye for a marketing opportunity can use the royal name.
And the new baby, like the queen’s jubilee last year and the royal wedding in 2011, offers a welcome boost for an industry still suffering the fallout of the global economic crisis.
“These kind of events lead to a temporary feel-good lift.
“It will really help to boost particular brands and products,” said Mandy Murphy, a spokeswoman for the British Retail Consortium.
The Centre for Retail Research estimates that £199 million was spent in Britain on souvenirs and merchandise produced for William and Kate’s wedding at Westminster Abbey.
Among the memorabilia was a tea-towel bearing the couple’s faces, which William’s Royal Air Force colleagues bought and made him use while he was washing up in the mess.
The CRR predicts £80 million will be spent this year on royal baby toys and products, and £76 million on books, DVDs and other media related to the royal family.
Publishers have rushed out a slew of children’s books about fictional pregnant princesses, the newborn’s crying that might wake up the queen, and even a history of the diapers used to cover royal babies’ bottoms. — AFP.



