The famous hat worn by Harrison Ford in "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" is set to go on sale June 29 in Hollywood.

Its price is estimated between 150,000 and 250,000 dollars.

More than 1,200 iconic Hollywood pieces will go on sale in June and July. 

Fans who can't wait any longer for the next 

Indiana Jones

 in theaters can wait while treating themselves to his famous hat, which will be auctioned next month in Hollywood. The headgear, custom-made for Harrison Ford, who wore it in 1984 in

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom

, goes on sale June 29, with an estimated price of between $ 150,000 and $ 250,000.

The hat had been ordered by the production to the prestigious London hatter Herbert Johnson a year before the start of the shooting, specifies the director of the sales house Prop Store, Brandon Alinger.

“They didn't just walk into the store and grab a hat from a shelf. They combined the features of certain hats to make what has become the Indiana Jones hat, arguably today the one of the most recognizable of all films, ”he says.

Harrison Ford, 78, must return to his role as an adventurous archaeologist next summer for the last episode of the saga.

A saber wielded by Tom Cruise

In total, more than 1,200 iconic Hollywood pieces will go on sale in June and July, including the screenplay by Carrie Fisher, the actress who played Princess Leïa, for

The Empire Strikes

 Back and the Sword Wielded by Tom Cruise. in

The Last Samurai

The golf cart driven by Brad Pitt in

Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood

 will be alongside the magic wand and glasses used by Daniel Radcliffe in the last two episodes of

Harry Potter

, donated by Warner Bros. Studios and whose product is sale will go to charities.

Movie relics are on the rise

According to Brandon Alinger, movie relics are more and more fashionable and their value is increasing for collectors.

"Pieces like the Stormtrooper helmets that have been sold in the past, we see that they have gone up in price in recent sales, as more and more people realize that they can be collected or invested" in

Star Wars

costumes

, he said.

Last year, a Darth Vader outfit used to promote George Lucas' legendary film sold for $ 287,500.

An R2-SHP "remote controlled droid" from the latest

Star Wars

movie

 could fetch $ 120,000 in the sale organized by Prop Store.