Rubber soul: How a pink light bulb grew into a collection of over 6,500 erasers for one Sask. woman - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Rubber soul: How a pink light bulb grew into a collection of over 6,500 erasers for one Sask. woman

Kerri Thurman started collecting with her mom when she was young. Now the collection is worth around $20,000.

Kerri Thurman's collection of thousands of erasers is like a walk through pop culture history

Kerri Thurman has a collection of around 6,500 erasers and that's counting packages with multiple erasers as one. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

Like many good ideas, Kerri Thurman's eraser collection started with a light bulb.

When she was 10 years old, she saw a pink light bulb eraser.Her mom thought it would be nice to buy it and start a collection, theBalgonie, Sask., woman said.

"That was the bright idea to start this collection and then it just kind of went from there," Thurman said. "Everywhere we went we saw any eraser and if I didn't have it, we would buy it."

That collection has now grown to more than 6,500 erasers of all shapes, sizes and colours.

Thurman and her mom started filling shoe boxes. Later, they started layingthem out and tying them to foam pieces to make them easier to move.

"I just kept going with it and never stopped. I never stopped looking," she said.

Kerri Thurman's collection started when she and her mom saw this pink light bulb, which turned out to be an eraser. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

The collection is really a microcosm of pop culture through the years, Thurman said.

"You could definitely walk through time for some of these," she said. "I have Smurfs from when the Smurfs first came out and Sesame Street when it was new."

With each new Disney movie there was a new eraser, another with each new Xbox game or major sporting event, as well as others from different places around the world.

It takes around seven hours to set up her eraser collection, Thurman said, and she only brings it all out once every few years. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

Thurman prefers searchinglocal shops forerasers rather than shopping online she likes the excitement of finding an eraser shedoesn't have.

She has a mental inventory and can tell by looking at an eraser in a store whether it's one she already has. But she doesn't go on shopping trips specifically to find new erasers.

"It's a natural thing," she said. "If I'm out shopping, I'll look for them. If I'm not, then I don't."

Thurman said she's spent probably over $20,000 on the collection so far.

Thurman said she's still looking for Barney the Purple Dinosaur and Gainer the Gopher erasers. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)
Going through the erasers is like going through time, Kerri Thurman said. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

When not on display, her erasers are all over the house.

"We just stack them up in Rubbermaid containers and my dad's old briefcases, and we just kind of find a place for them," she said.

She rarely brings them out for display, but when she does, it takes hours to set them up.

Thurman's Mr. T eraser is missing part of his mohawk because she tried it to make sure it was an eraser. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

Her dream is to have them onpermanent display somewhere.

"It's something for everybody to come and see," Thurman said. "It's kind of cool to look at. I was even amazed myself this time when we kept pulling them out. I'm like, 'Another box? Where are they coming from?' And holy man. It was a lot."

Some people have messaged Thurman lookingto buy a certain eraser, she said. But she's not interested in selling unless she has a double.

She's also got a few on her own want list, includingBarney the Purple Dinosaur and Gainer the Gopher erasers.

Thurman's eraser collection is around 6,500 pieces, but she expects it to keep growing. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

Thurman says hercollection will continue to grow over what she expects to be a lifetime pursuit.

"Not sure who is going to get it when I'm gone, but it might be a little bit of a fight," Thurman said. "My kids might fight over it, my niece. We'll see."

With files from Dan Plaster and Kirk Fraser