A Puppy Worth Pinning: Meet Copper
Few Disney films reach into the chest quite like The Fox and the Hound. Released in 1981, it marked a generational turning point at the studio — a story about friendship, loyalty, and the way the world slowly chips away at both. At the center of that story is Copper, the hound pup whose wide eyes and floppy ears disguise a heart that audiences have never quite forgotten. This Disney Studio Store Hollywood exclusive limited edition pin captures Copper in exactly the spirit the character deserves: playful, bright, and full of life — a portrait of the puppy before the weight of the world arrives.
The Pin Itself: Craft and Color
This is hard enamel work on gold-tone metal, and the difference between hard enamel and its softer counterpart is immediately apparent to anyone who collects seriously. Hard enamel is fired and polished flush with the metal surface, giving the finished piece a smooth, lacquer-like quality that holds its vibrancy for decades. The result here is a geometric background of purple, pink, and yellow — a bold, graphic palette that feels modern without being jarring, the kind of design language that became a hallmark of DSSH's most sought-after releases. Copper himself is rendered in a playful puppy pose, ears mid-bounce, expression exactly right. The pin measures approximately 1.75 inches tall by 2 inches wide — substantial enough to command attention on a lanyard or display board without overwhelming neighboring pieces.
It arrived on a black-and-white film strip backing card marked Limited Edition, and it has stayed there. The original plastic sleeve is intact. For collectors, that backing card is not packaging — it is provenance. It tells the story of where this pin lived, what it was, and how seriously it was treated from the moment it left the store.
DSSH Exclusives: Why Location Pins Matter
Disney Studio Store Hollywood, nestled on the lot at Burbank, has long occupied a singular place in pin collecting culture. DSSH exclusives are not available at Walt Disney World, Disneyland, or online storefronts — they are earned by showing up. That geographic restriction is the whole point. A guest who made the pilgrimage to the studio store, navigated a sometimes-limited release window, and walked away with one of these pins carries a story along with the pin itself. That story adds real collector value that no secondary-market listing can fully replicate.
The Fox and the Hound is not a character that floods the pin market. Copper and Tod appear far less frequently than the franchise juggernauts — Mickey, Stitch, the princesses — which means a well-executed DSSH exclusive featuring Copper occupies a narrow, competitive space. Collectors focused on underrepresented films, on 1980s Disney animation, or simply on completing a comprehensive Fox and the Hound sub-collection will recognize this one immediately.
From an Estate Collection, Preserved with Care
This pin comes to us as part of a larger Disney estate collection — the kind of accumulation that takes years and a genuine reverence for the material to build. Estate collections like this one tell a different story than casual lots: someone made deliberate choices, tracked releases, and stored pieces properly. The evidence is right here. The sleeve is on. The backing card is clean. The enamel shows no chips, no losses. Whatever the prior owner's system was, it worked.
For a collector stepping into this piece, that care means something. Hard enamel is durable, but backing cards are not — they yellow, they crease, they get separated from pins in drawers and bags and the entropy of everyday life. Finding one in this condition, still married to its original presentation, is the kind of small fortune that makes estate lots worth exploring carefully.
Copper is waiting. He looks exactly like he did the day he came off the shelf — bright-eyed, posed mid-play, surrounded by geometry and color that feels as considered now as it did when the designer signed off on it. Add him to a display that does him justice, or keep him sealed and let the next decade do the work. Either way, this is a pin that earns its place.
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