Showing posts with label Barbie furniture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barbie furniture. Show all posts

Saturday, March 18, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #71: Home Pretty Barbie

   Today's doll recently survived the deluge of water from the fire fighters. She was in a cardboard box full of boxed Barbies, in the room below the one where the fire was. Luckily for her, there was a vintage metal tray, with edges about 2 inches tall, in the top of the box. In a weird quirk of fate, the tray caught the water, and saved the dolls! It didn't do the vintage child's dish set, in it's original box, any favours though. The dish set, which looks to be from the 1960's, is porcelain, so it's fine. The box is shot. It had started to mold before Ken got to it. Know anybody who wants a children's dish set from the 60's, which until recently had it's original box? And how did the Barbie boxes, being cardboard, survive the water that must have pooled around the bottom of the box? For some reason I left the thick styrofoam that came in the box, as packing for whatever came in it, in the bottom of the box. That held the Barbies up, out of the water. The water then dried off the box, and behold! Undamaged Barbie boxes! The stuff that survived the fire and water, and how it did it, continues to amaze me.

  But which Barbie am I showing you today? She's Home Pretty Barbie. 


  Sorry about the blurry picture. I was photographing things quickly before Ken took the packed storage tub away to storage on his way to work. The rest are better.

 She's from 1990. Now, this doll kills me. She's pretty enough, and there was some great furniture available for her. (We'll get to that.) But...what today's society would make of the suggestions here! Let's take a look at how Barbie is 'pretty' around her home. For one thing, let's discuss the whole outfit. The dress has a huge tulle skirt, a gauzy bodice, and GIGANTIC rosettes on the shoulders.


  Now let's talk about the suggestions for 'gown changes for every room!', as it says on the front of her box. Um, let's start with the dining room and the living room.


Excuse me, but aren't those the same picture? Okay, so she has dinner in that snazzy dress. The table looks set for a dinner party. Or maybe she's having Ken over for a romantic evening and overset the table. (How he's getting close to her with those humongous rosettes in the way I'll never know. But maybe he's like Napoleon Dynamite: "I like your sleeves. They're real big.") But, she hangs out in her living room in that get up? It doesn't look comfortable, or practical. For one thing, she'd take up the whole couch with that dress.
  Now lets move on to the real problem here: the kitchen. Barbie cooks in that outfit? She's really channeling June Cleaver here. (Except, where's her pearl necklace?) 



And I love how it becomes the perfect outfit for the kitchen with just the addition of a frilly apron. And she's cooking dinner in high heels. Barbie certainly has a great pain tolerance.


  Then we move to the bedroom, where Barbie is ready for bed by just removing the fluffy skirt. She sleeps in those huge sleeves too. I'm reminded of "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel", in the scenes where she woke up before her husband so she could put on her make-up and take down her curlers, which she stayed awake to put in after her husband went to sleep, and then pretended to wake up beautiful when he woke up. My mom used to put her make-up on while dinner was cooking, so she'd be pretty when Dad got home from work. Give me a break. I'm afraid Ken has to put up with me hanging around the house, going to bed, waking up, and going almost everywhere, without make-up, or a hairdo...or a giant tulle dress, come to think of it.



  Speaking of hairdos, Barbie has some pretty big, excuse me, Home Pretty big, hair too.


Of course, it was 1990. The specter of the 80's loomed large. And so did hair. Luckily hair has died down now.

  But, as I mentioned, the best thing about Home Pretty Barbie was the stuff sold to go with her. The furniture was nice, and if not for the pinkness of it, fairly realistic.


But the house was pretty cool too. 


The fireplace has the 'cooking center attached to the back.

  It had window boxes full of flowers, 'wallpaper' in every room, a ringing door bell, a ringing phone, 'working appliances', a fireplace that lit up and crackled, a porch light, vanity light, desk lamp, ceiling fan with light, and chandelier that all worked. It came with the bed, sofa that extended to a bed, and chair (which extended into a lounger), dining room table and chairs, shower/tub and vanity, plus patio furniture. There was a lot of work to this house though, as the instructions recommend giving yourself 6 to 8 hours to put it together!


"It's recommended that two people assemble the magical mansion
 on a large table." Along with a trained construction team and a licensed electrician!

  There were loads of furniture sets, in a series called 'Sweet Roses', that you could buy separately from the house too, including a china cabinet with separate side book shelves, a fridge, an oven, and more. The sets were also combined into larger boxed sets. You can watch a commercial for the Sweet Roses furniture HERE.

  But why was the furniture called 'Sweet Roses'? Well, in 1989 there had been a Barbie doll called 'Sweet Roses Barbie'. She looked just like Home Pretty Barbie, with a slight change to her underneath dress, and a larger tulle overskirt. She also had that apron pictured on the box of Home Pretty, but seen nowhere in the package. 


Why were there both? I have no idea. There had also been a Sweet Roses PJ doll, but she was all the way back in 1983, and had nothing to do with Sweet Roses Barbie...the snob!

  That's today's doll, and a bit more. See you tomorrow for another doll...and a bit less?

Sunday, January 12, 2020

Dispelling a Barbie Suzy Goose Myth

  While going through all of Ivy's stuff in her room I came across something that there is a lot of confusion over,so I thought I'd take the opportunity to dispel a myth. Here's the thing.


It's a hard plastic doll sized hutch. I see so many people selling this as a piece of Barbie Suzy Goose furniture. Let me straighten that out: THIS IS NOT SUZY GOOSE FURNITURE. First, let me tell you how I know that for sure. For one thing,Suzy Goose furniture for Barbie is marked 'Suzy Goose'. Like this:


The Barbie wardrobes even say Suzy Goose right on the front of the piece. This piece has no markings on it all all.


Secondly, Suzy Goose's Barbie furniture is all nicely Barbie scale. This piece is a bit too short for Barbie really. It's only about 10 inches tall. The actual Suzy Goose wardrobes and things are at least 12 inches tall.
  Thirdly, I have the book "Barbie Structures and Furniture" by Marl Davidson. It covers all the Suzy Goose furniture, even the super rare Barbie Regal Bed, (You can see mine HERE.),and this hutch is nowhere. To me, this piece looks like a regular home decor piece,the type of which wasn't uncommon in the 60's. I remember seeing stuff like this when I was a kid in the 60's. It is the cream colour of the Suzy Goose stuff,(This one is slightly yellowed.),but it's just NOT Suzy Goose. Still,people sell it that way all the time. Buy it if you like it. Just don't pay Suzy Goose prices for it if you can help it. And don't think you're getting Suzy Goose.

Monday, December 3, 2018

The Toys of Christmas Past: The Barbie Regal Bed

  Today we're starting a series called 'The Toys of Christmas Past',which focuses on old Christmas photos and the toys in them. We're going to begin with one of my old Christmas photos,and a toy  I still have.
  Sometimes you have an item hanging around for years. Like, your whole life. (Well, practically.) You played with it as a kid. It got piled in all your toys, and boxed up for years. It sat in your Mom's attic. You did actually rescue it from your Mom's attic and take it to your house. It even moved with you. Then you stuck it in your attic, because you had one now. Fortunately, you had it in a box, because stuff got piled on it. Then one day you find out that it's rare. Like extremely rare. Like, the rarest item of Barbie accessory stuff. EVER. Maybe even the rarest Barbie item ever. Meet the Suzy Goose Barbie Regal Bed.

Modeled for us here by the lovely Barbita,my childhood Swirl Barbie,and yes, she's wearing a wig. (Note to childhood self: Do not use glue to repair your Swirl's hairdo.) Barbita is wearing the only 'store-bought' Barbie outfit I owned as a child,Dancing Stripes. Unfortunately,I lost the shoes.
  Apparently this thing is so rare that most people have never seen one. I read that, for years, nobody could even find a picture of one. Most Barbie reference books that were published a few years ago didn't even mention it. Joe Blitman, well known Barbie expert, told me he's only ever seen two in his whole career of Barbie collecting and dealing. That's not counting mine. He has one for sale on his site, which you can see HERE. Here's what his site has to say about the Regal Bed,"This is not only the rarest Suzy Goose item ever produced, it is very likely the rarest vintage Barbie item period. In 25 years of collecting, we've only heard of one other in existence." (That was not counting mine.) I remember reading in Barbie Bazaar magazine when Joe bought the bed at an auction. The price he paid was so high even he was embarrassed by it, and the magazine didn't tell what it was. The one on his site is listed at $1,995. If that's too rich for your blood, there was one on Ruby Lane a few years ago. They only wanted $699 for theirs.
 

   Barbie's Regal Bed was manufactured by Suzy Goose, like the other early Barbie furniture, but it was apparently not produced in such a large quantity as the wardrobe,Barbie's other Suzy Goose bed, or the vanity. 


 
The Barbie and Midge Regal Bed! Notice the Suzy Goose logo with Mother Goose and the slogan,"Toys that mold character".


Even the fairly rare Barbie Suzy Goose piano is way easier to find than the Regal Bed.  
 
The Suzy Goose Barbie piano in box. I borrowed this picture of a boxed set to show you and will remove it if asked. There is an old Wilton cake set that uses the exact same piano parts. (Except for the body of the piano, which is supposed to be the cake part.)

The Regal Bed may have been a Sears exclusive, as a Sears picture ad for the bed exists. This is according to barbielistholland, A warning before you click that link! Her page is all one super long page,and it will do weird things to your computer. I almost always get locked up when I click on that page. Ken says it's because instead of making separate pages for the site the person put it all on one 'page' and it takes forever to finish loading...or something like that.

"I got my bed back!"

The slogan for the bed was something like, "A bed fit for a Queen".


 I got mine for Christmas when I was a kid. 
 
Christmas 1965.What a mess. My sister on the left, and me, opening my doctor kit, on the right. The Regal Bed is in the middle, right behind the jeep. Looking at this, I can't believe that Mom obviously curled our hair on Christmas eve and I, even more, can't believe she took our curlers out before letting us open our presents! Note the cardboard fireplace on the left. My mom wanted a fireplace so badly that one year she left the cardboard one up all year! That's Ideal's Tearie Dearie, forsaking her own combination bath tub and cradle, (That's the pink thing on legs in the left foreground.),and stretched out enjoying the Regal Bed. Note the blue 'mattress' in Tearie Dearie's cradle. You'll hear more about that in a minute.

Quite a haul there. 
 
My sister and me, on Mom's lap,Christmas,1965. That's Tearie Dearie's cradle I'm holding. In the cradle are Tearie Dearie and a white haired doll I also got that year.


Besides Tearie Dearie I also got some clothes for her, a generic white haired doll and her clothes...

Me, on the left, holding the white haired doll. My sister got a matching red doctor kit to my white one, and this must be the year Mom got the guitar 'for' my sister. Mom longed to play the guitar and actually taught herself to play "Uncloudy Day" on it. Years later she finally gave in and bought herself a real guitar and took lessons.
... a real metal wash tub and a metal and wooden wash board,(How old am I?!), ironing board, real wooden clothes pins, and metal umbrella style washing line, which my sister wasted no time taking apart to steal the metal discs that held the line up, to make finger cymbals out of.  

I also seem to have just received my wonderful Remco Tiger Cat Jeep that could crawl over anything. It was battery operated and eventually stopped working, and we all know what that means, right boys and girls? It means Mom threw it out. All I have left is the radiator that says 'Remco'. Note the long thin box in the foreground that could have been what the bed came in if it came unassembled.

   I always thought we moved into the house in the picture when I was 4, but the picture says 1965.That's the year the Regal Bed was available, which would mean I was only almost 4 that Christmas. The Remco Tiger Cat was made in 1965, according to what I have been able to find out, so it sounds like it really was 1965. The fact that I was three when I received the bed makes it that much more amazing that it never got broken!
The Regal Bed originally had a matching red taffeta pillow with white fringe. Mine is missing the pillow now and the fringe from one side of the bedspread.


Barbita can commiserate about the missing fringe...
The Regal Bed on Joe Blitman's site has the footboard turned the other way around, with the double circles on the bottom. He says the only other one he has seen was the same way. Mine, the bed on Ruby Lane, the bed shown on Barbielistholland, and one which sold online a while back, have the double circles on the top, which makes more sense. With the double circles on the bottom they don't both sit on the floor. 



 Check out the pictures on Joe's site. Plus, the head has the double circles on top, and the pattern in the gold foil is facing the opposite way from the headboard's if the double circles are on the bottom.(Everybody got that?)





  This ad picture of the bed shows the bed came put together, with the double circles on top. (Also, do I REALLY think we would have sat down and put the bed together with more presents to open?)


Ohh! It really is The Barbie or Midge Regal Bed! "With all of the Exquisite and Beautiful Detail of our Successful Experience--Regalistic Styling--Gold Photo inset in head and foot--Rich Red Taffeta Spread and Pillow--Hand Brushed Gold Highlights---Simply Irresistible" . Notice the double circles are on the top.

 So I think mine is put together the right way. Maybe someone took theirs apart. 

 
The bed was assembled by popping the pegs into the holes.Once in they probably can't be pulled back out very easily.






Or maybe some of them were screwed up at the factory. Maybe some of them came unassembled. Who knows?  If you look at the Christmas photos, the floor is littered with shipping boxes,(Mom did a lot of catalog shopping.),including a long thin one that could have contained the bed.(See above caption on one of the Christmas photos.)
   As it says on the ad, the bed has, "
Gold Photo inset in head and foot--Rich Red Taffeta Spread and Pillow--Hand Brushed Gold Highlights".




  




 We always used the blue piece of textured cardboard from the bottom of Tearie Dearie's bed as the mattress. But I have since returned it there. I happened across a cardboard piece printed with the word "mattress' in my childhood doll stuff, so THAT may have been the mattress. 


But, it might have gone to some Barbie sized twin/bunk beds my sister had. (They were the subject of a post once, asking if anybody could identify the bed coverings, as I want to replace the beds that disappeared in the mists of time.) The  word 'mattress' is barely readable on the cardboard now. It didn't even show up in the photo I took.
  

Believe it or not,it says mattress right there under the two circles punched in the cardboard.
The cardboard has notches cut out of each corner.They line up at the bottom of the bed, but there's nothing for them to line up with at the top. So....?

 
The foot of the bed.


And the head of the bed.
Under the cardboard mattress the bed has crisscrossed plastic.



The bed is in pretty good shape. It has one little hairline crack.  I couldn't even find it this time. Actually, I'm amazed the tall headboard didn't get broken.  






There was also a good chance of it melting in the heat of either attic it was stored in. Luckily it survived unmelted. 
 



  I don't remember asking for it. Maybe I did. Maybe I didn't. Truth be told, I may have liked my sister's bunk bed set better.  I know we never really used the cardboard bed from Barbie's New Dreamhouse. We always used the Regal Bed or my sister's bunk beds.




  I'm flabbergasted that I own something as rare as the Regal bed, and also flabbergasted that it's in still pretty good shape,and even MORE flabbergasted that Mom didn't throw it away. That was her thing, after all. 



  If you're curious about Barbita's history you can read a post about her, and my other childhood Barbie and friends dolls HERE 

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    Next time we'll look at another old Christmas photo and talk about the toys therein.