BOXES of unsold and unwanted Action Man and Star Wars toys that lay untouched in a retired salesman's garage for decades made more than £150,000 at auction today (Wednesday).

One collector paid £5,400 plus commission for a rare Action Man judo outfit while publicity photos for a Boba Fett toy made more than £2,300 when the estimate had been £40-60.

When the judo set went on sale in 1970 it retailed for 12 shillings, or 60p.

Another bidder even paid £160 for an empty cardboard box in which Star Wars figures had been packaged at the Palitoy factory.

With more than an hour still to go, the sales figure was £154,000 when the top end of the auctioneers' estimate had been £81,000 at this point.

When Palitoy ceased trading rep Doug Carpenter was allowed to keep unsold stock and he kept boxes of it in his loft and garage.

Now 88, he and wife Daphne handed it over to son Paul, 51, to sell after the family heard about a Boba Fett figure, untouched in its pristine box, had sold for £18,000 earlier this year.

Kathy Taylor, a valuer for Vectis Auctions in Thornaby, Teesside, handled the sale, said: "I cannot believe the amount of interest there has been.

"I first had a phone call from Paul which was as a result of us selling the Palitoy Boba Fett figure earlier in the year for £18,000.

"He was aware that there was a quantity of stock that had remained in storage and he wondered whether there was anything similar to the record-breaking figure that was sold."

As it turned out, his father had unwittingly been holding on to toys which were worth well into six figures to collectors today.

The valuer said: "It was unbelievable to see all the boxes coming out with stock that was factory fresh, which hadn't been opened, it was like a time capsule."

Vectis encouraged Mr Carpenter to throw nothing away, as even factory notes, boxes and invoices have a value to collectors.

Ms Taylor said: "Factories sent toys out in what were called trade cartons and these, from the 1970s and 1980s, can be very rare.

"They are rarer than the items themselves.

"For a collector to own a trade carton, even if it is empty, is a big bit of history to them."

She believed prices for Star Wars memorabilia, with a new film due out this year, had not peaked yet.

And more pristine collectable toys from the 1970s and 1980s could be out there, she said.

"You all need to get in your lofts and see what you have got," she said.

Action Man sporting goods were relatively poor sellers in the 1970s, as children preferred to see him soldiering. But that unpopularity makes the outfits even more valuable now as few of them remain.