The first product that the toy company Mattel came out with was picture frames.
Mattel's Surprising Start: From Picture Frames to Toys
When you think of Mattel, you probably picture Barbie dolls, Hot Wheels cars, or maybe Fisher-Price toys. But the company that would become one of the world's largest toy manufacturers didn't start with playthings at all—it started with picture frames.
On January 20, 1945, Harold "Matt" Matson and husband-and-wife team Ruth and Elliot Handler founded Mattel in a Los Angeles garage. The company name itself tells part of the origin story: it's a mash-up of Mattson's surname and Elliot's first name.
From Frames to Fame
Elliot Handler designed the picture frames using scrap plastic and wood. It was solid work—in their first year, the fledgling company pulled in $100,000 in revenue and netted $30,000 in profit. Not bad for a garage startup.
But here's where the entrepreneurial magic happened. Handler noticed all the leftover wood slats and plastic scraps from the frame production. Rather than tossing them out, he started making dollhouse furniture from the remnants.
The Pivot That Changed Everything
Those little chairs and tables made from scrap materials sparked something. The toy side of the business showed promise, and Mattel began shifting focus. Harold Matson, struggling with ill health, left the company early on. That left Ruth and Elliot Handler to steer the company in its new direction.
The transition wasn't just smart business—it was resourceful creativity. What started as a way to avoid waste became the foundation of a toy empire. By the 1950s, Mattel had fully committed to toys, and the rest is history written in plastic, imagination, and billions of dollars.
The Legacy of Leftovers
Today, Mattel owns some of the most iconic toy brands on the planet:
- Barbie (introduced in 1959, now a cultural phenomenon)
- Hot Wheels (launched in 1968, still going strong)
- Fisher-Price (acquired in 1993)
- American Girl dolls
- UNO and other classic games
It's a remarkable trajectory from picture frames to global toy domination. The next time you see a Barbie or a Hot Wheels car, remember: it all started because someone saw potential in scrap wood and refused to let it go to waste.