Identification

Karbar 'Space Age' Tufted Vinyl Stroller, c.1965

Photo reference

3 uploaded photos

Overview

This is a quintessential piece of 1960s Canadian baby gear, featuring a striking red and blue tufted vinyl seat set upon a sleek, chrome-plated steel chassis.

Story

Introduced during the height of the 1960s mid-century modern era, these stylized strollers brought automotive 'Space Age' trends to suburban Canadian sidewalks.

Maker / Origin

Unattributed · Karbar, Canada, 1960s Mid-Century Modern

Condition & Value

Well-preserved chrome and uncracked vinyl are paramount for this category, as extensive reupholstery or re-chroming costs routinely exceed the item's inherent collectible value. The vinyl shows some surface wear and minor cracking consistent with age, and the chrome frame has visible pitting.

Full Research

See what it's actually worth.

Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.

Market Analysis

Direct comparable sales for the 'Karbar' brand are entirely absent from digitized auction records (zero extracted direct comps), necessitating a market-informed valuation anchored to similar 1960s Space Age strollers. Highly stylized, unbranded or regional-brand mid-century strollers featuring chrome frames and tufted vinyl generally clear between $75 and $150 on the secondary market, as seen with recent sales of 1960s Canadian Eaton's prams ($125) and unbranded tufted variants ($75). Top-tier North American brands like Rex Stroll-O-Chair establish a ceiling around $180 to $300, while internationally renowned Italian design houses like Giordani fetch upwards of $1,200. Because the subject item lacks a premier designer attribution and faces severe utility limitations due to modern infant safety laws, its value is conservatively capped at the local vintage prop and decorator market level.

Value Drivers

Striking 'Space Age' mid-century aesthetic mimicking 1960s automotive luxury trends.

Use of era-specific tufted vinyl and heavy chrome-plated tubular steel.

Interactive 'play beads' and atomic-era hardware enhance its appeal as a period-accurate display piece.

Concerns

Obscurity of the 'Karbar' brand limits crossover appeal to high-end mid-century modern collectors.

Strict modern infant safety regulations mean it cannot be used for actual childcare, entirely eliminating the practical-use buyer pool.

Prohibitive shipping costs for fully assembled, heavy vintage strollers force reliance on localized buyer pools.

Best Venue

Local Online Marketplaces (Facebook Marketplace, Kijiji) or Film Prop Rental Houses.

Upside Potential

Selling directly to a specialized mid-century film prop rental house in a major production hub (e.g., Toronto or Vancouver) where 1960s period accuracy commands a premium.

The upgraded report is now attached to this item.