SINGAPORE: The autistic youth who
designed a dinosaur-print pouch which the wife of Singapore’s prime
minister took to the White House has little idea how much of a celebrity
he has become since pictures of it went viral.
Sales of the $11 blue-and-white pouch have soared since Ho Ching was
photographed carrying it during husband Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s
official visit to the United States.
Ho bought the purse last weekend at a fundraising event for the
Autism Resource Centre (ARC) in Singapore, for which she is an advisor.
The dinosaur motif was designed by See Toh Sheng Jie, 19, who attends
the Pathlight school for students with autism run by the ARC.
Photos of Ho holding the pouch on the White House lawn sparked huge
demand, with Pathlight saying its stock of 200 sold out within a day and
it was now on backorder with a two-month wait.
Ho, also one of Asia’s most powerful businesswomen, garnered praise on social media for her unusual choice of accessory.
“So good of Mrs Lee to use it at such a high profile occasion! Great job ADP artist Sheng Jie!” wrote Facebook user Su Yeo.
Another user, Leong Geok Hoon, called it a “world class fashion of
the heart” while others noted that while Ho could have chosen any other
designer, she went with one from a cause she supports.
“It gave such a great mileage for the artists on our Artist
Development Programme and The Art Faculty merchandise,” Pathlight
principal Linda Kho told AFP.
See Toh’s family has also been overwhelmed with media attention but
for the autistic teenager, the son of a taxi driver with a love for
dinosaurs and beetles, it makes little difference.
When AFP visited the family’s suburban government-built housing flat,
he nonchalantly sat at a table in the living room drawing his favourite
dinosaurs and watching television.
He has filled countless notebooks and folders with his drawings, his parents said.
“When the school first told us that Ms Ho Ching brought Sheng Jie’s
pouch to the White House, we thought it was a joke,” said See Toh’s
father, Jason.
When shown a picture of Ho with the bag bearing his design, See Toh was delighted, his parents added.
“He is not very communicative but when we once gave him a dinosaur
toy during a tantrum, he calmed down. That’s when we knew he liked
dinosaurs,” the elder See Toh told AFP.
The youth has an encyclopaedic knowledge of dinosaurs and must watch every dinosaur movie he comes across.
He also makes intricate dinosaur toys from polymer clay, filling an entire display cabinet in the family’s flat.
“We’ll just let him do what he likes because you can’t force him to draw when he doesn’t want,” Wendy See Toh said.
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