Over the course of four decades, Manuel Ferrando Cabrera, now in his mid-70s, has put together one of the most extraordinary tin-toy collections to be found in Europe.
Despite having been the youngest child of a wealthy family in south-eastern Spain, Manuel was never given brand-new toys as a boy but instead got secondhand, often-battered toys handed down from his older brothers.
So 40 years ago, Manuel decided it was time to get his revenge, and he started building his own toy world.
At the same time, he had begun a project for a purpose-built garage to host his growing collection of cars, movie posters, dolls, old furniture, vintage signs, bicycles, a few training biplanes (yes, really), pedal cars, scale models and iron sculptures.
But the most elaborate gallery in this new space was dedicated to his huge collection of tin toys.
“I don’t really know how many items I have in my various collections,” he reflects, “but for sure I passed the 100,000 mark a long time ago.”