Showing posts with label Cabbage Patch kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cabbage Patch kids. Show all posts

Saturday, November 18, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #309: Leaky Lindsay

   Today we're taking a look at a doll based on a popular series of collector stickers from back in the 80's. It's a Garbage Pail Kids doll!

Lyndsay is 8 and a half inches tall.


  Her name is Leaky Lyndsay, and yes, she's disgusting. But if you know anything about Garbage Pail Kids, you know they were all about disgusting.



  Garbage Pail kids premiered in 1985. Unsentimental Niece was a child of the late 70's/80's, and she LOVED Garbage Pail Kids. She had quite a collection of the stickers. She actually went with us to a toy show we were dealers at once, in the late 90's, and while there she scooped up a bunch of Garbage Pail stickers she didn't have. 

  Created by Art Spiegelman, the guy behind Wacky Packages, they were extremely popular for a while. They were obviously a parody of Cabbage Patch Kids. In fact, a little too obviously.


Lyndsay's tag.


They were eventually sued by Original Appalachian Artworks, who owned the rights to Cabbage Patch Kids. The case was settled out of court, with Garbage Pail Kids agreeing to change the appearance of the characters, so they didn't resemble Cabbage Patch Kids, and the logo, so that it less resembled the Cabbage Patch logo. Sales declined after the changes, whether due to the changes, or the novelty of the product wearing off. The next series of stickers was cancelled, and the craze was over. But not before a Garbage Pail Kids movie was released in 1987. A cartoon series was stopped before it started, due to complaints by enraged parents, and only later appeared on TV and video.


Lyndsay in her display box. There were 5 other Kids in the series. She's the last Kid standing.

  

The inside of Lyndsay's tag, showing the whole collection.
 

   As with most things that have been popular with kids, when the Garbage Pail Kids kids reached adulthood, GPK made a comeback. Stickers were released again in 2003, which were actually the original (shelved) set intended for release in 1988. The next year an all new set was released. On the 20th anniversary, in 2005, GPK celebrated by releasing special randomly inserted cards available in cases at specialty stores only, that featured artwork by the original 80's GPK artists. As you can see by Lyndsay's doll, released in 2022, Garbage Pail Kids are still going strong.

  That's it for today. My sister and I went to a miniature show today, and tomorrow we'll see a doll I got there. See you then.

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #259: Cabbage Patch Kids Bracelet

 Okay. Technically this isn't a doll. It's a piece of jewelry. But it's made up of tiny dolls. Besides, I'm still taking care of wedding stuff. I have several tubs of dirty dishes and a few boxes of dirty glasses to wash. I already washed  one tub of dishes and all the table runners and napkins, and put a bunch f stuff away.  I apologize for the lack of posts the last couple of days, but I misjudged the number of posts I was going to need to take me through the wedding, and came up one short. Then I unexpectedly was away the day after the wedding. Ken and I went to lunch with my cousin and aunt, who I hadn't seen for literal decades. We followed that up by going to pick up the car from the hotel, where Emma and AJ stayed the night of the wedding, before going to the airport the next morning. By then I was so sleepy, I had to take a nap before I could drive back. (No kidding. I was still sewing and finally showering until the wee  hours of the morning of the wedding. I went to bed at 6:30AM and got up at 8AM to go decorate the venue. Then we stayed and cleared up after the wedding and then had to load  a couple of cars with the stuff, and tote it upstairs. There was a porch full of stuff here when we got here too. Thank goodness for the boyfriend of Emma's friend and bridesmaid, who was staying with her other friend and bridesmaid who lives downstairs. He did most of the carrying upstairs. He was a lifesaver, because Ken and I were so tired and sore from being on our feet all day that it would have taken us years to get it all up there. I still had to condense stuff so we could get across the kitchen and get around in here, and start a load of laundry, before I could shower and go to bed. So I had gotten to bed about 5AM, and then got up at 10:30 to go to lunch with them. So I was exhausted. Glad to spend time with them, but exhausted.) Today I did all those dishes and washed and folded a thousand napkins and put more stuff away and washed and hung our wedding clothes...and dragged because of tiredness. So forgive me for giving you a doll bracelet instead of an actual doll. 

  This bracelet is a licensed Cabbage Patch item, I think.


It's an oldie, from the original era of Cabbage Patch Kids popularity.


  I mean, I can tell it's old, but I can't find one like it online. I can't see any familiar markings on it though.


But it does look like real Cabbage Patch Kids.


  There is a little metal tag with markings on it.  There's nothing that helps though.


That's it for today. Tomorrow will be something more solid and doll like. See you then.

Tuesday, June 13, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #156: Cabbage Patch Pin-Ups Boy

   Today's doll is one I swear I posted before. But I can't find him anywhere, so here he is today. He's obviously a Cabbage Patch doll.

That screw at the bottom looks like a donut. Throws me every time I see it.
                        I must be hungry.

  What may not be obvious at first is that he's a mini doll. He's a Pin-Ups doll.


He's 5 inches tall.


 He would have originally been in a plastic frame that could be hung on the wall. This little guy's frame had a barn scene inside, and a little stuffed chicken.

He's supposed to be 'a friend for you and your Cabbage Patch Kid'. The frame can be hung on the wall or stood on your dresser. Like all Cabbage Patch Kids, he came with his 'very own name', but he also had 'a secret about (his) favorite place'.

There were several Pin-Ups produced in 1983. I posted one HERE



He has Velcro on his back that is for holding him in his frame.


  I had this one in the frame at one time, but he was sold. I regretted it for ages, but then I found this guy. I don't mind not having the frame. I'm glad to have him though. He's so cute, how could I resist him? And he's the only boy Cabbage Patch mini that I have. All my others are girls.


  As small as he is, he has stitched in fingers.



His shirt is part of his body. I'm guessing his bibbed overalls are removable, but I haven't tried.


  As you can see, he has rooted yarn hair and the typical Cabbage Patch face.


  That's the doll for today. I was beginning to wonder if I was going to be able to get a post up today. My computer was freezing up. I had to shut it completely down and restart it several times. It finally started working properly again. It's been running really slowly, and freezing up a lot lately. I must have a virus. I'm going to have to do something about that. anyway, I'll see you again tomorrow, even if I have to borrow Ken's computer to do it.  

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Doll-A-Day 2019 # 258: Cabbage Patch MIni Doll

  I know school has been back in session for a while already. But when I was a kid,September was back-to-school month. So today's doll is this little girl.
 

Obviously she's a Cabbage Patch mini doll.
 

To me she looks she's wearing a 'school dress'. 
 

She has a little hat.
 


When I got her she was wearing her hat as a hair tie!
 

   Her hat is held on by elastic,which is a good thing, because there's no way it was staying on otherwise.


When I was in school,I had school clothes and play clothes. As soon as I got home from school I had to change out of my school clothes and put on my play clothes. I was glad to do that anyway,because another thing from when I was a kid was that girls weren't allowed to wear pants to school. I was glad to get home and get out of those dresses and back into my pants. The rule changed somewhere in elementary school. I know that by 6th grade I was wearing pants to school. That would have been 1973-74.
There were a couple of different types of these Cabbage Patch mini dolls. One version looks nearly like this one, except for having stuffed hands,vinyl legs and bare feet, and removable shoes.


This one has soft,stuffed legs,with non-removable vinyl shoes and socks.
 

Her little hands are vinyl too.
 

Her hair is long and blonde. She's only 5 inches tall. I don't think full size Cabbage Patch dolls have such long hair.



I'm not sure about that tongue filled mouth.


She's cute though. Who can resist a Cabbage Patch doll?


  That's the doll for today. Come back tomorrow for another one.

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Flea Market VS Thrift Store Part 2: Thrift Store and Yard Sales,Dollikin,and Some Cabbage Patch Stuff

  So many posts have been sneaking in ahead of this one. One thing comes up and then another. And seriously,it has been too hot to do much of anything here.Plus I helped my friend Lori clear some stuff out and she sent it home for me to sell for her. I wasn't expecting that.So I had that to work on too. Then I took a break when the weather cooled to make the mini Pippi you saw a couple of posts ago. Then it got too hot to breathe again. And somewhere in there I went to the Ear Nose,and Throat specialist. He thinks, and I agree with him, that I have LPR Reflux. It's not quite acid reflux,because normally it doesn't involve heart burn,although it can. Here's how it's described on one web page:
"LPR is caused by gaseous reflux. Little droplets that contain acid, bile, and most importantly, the stomach enzyme pepsin. They spread in your airways during inhaling and exhaling. That is why LPR is sometimes called airway reflux or respiratory reflux." Basically,you get pepsin in your airways,where it does it's normal job,digesting,only it's digesting your airways! You can read about LPR Reflus disease HERE.
  The symptoms I have had: persistent cough,trouble breathing,trouble swallowing, choking episodes,constant throat clearing,hoarse voice,post nasal drip,the feeling of a lump in your throat,all scream LPR reflux.
   I had to have a barium swallow test today to make sure my problem isn't something else. In the meantime the doctor has put me on medication,which is pretty much just heartburn medication. I wouldn't even worry about taking anything,because as far as the symptoms go,I can live with the effects. The problem is, when left untreated for a long period of time LPR can turn into cancer,because of the constant irritation of delicate mucus membranes that aren't made to handle that kind of abuse. It seems that the best thing I can do is lose weight to limit the pressure that causes the reflux. In the meantime I am not supposed to eat spicy foods, onions,tomatoes,or chocolate! That's most of my diet! I already don't eat animals. Leave me something!
 So, getting back to the story of the day Ivy and I went to the flea market:It took us a while to get to the town where the Toys R Us was,and some miles through the country. So as we passed we stopped at some yard sales. I didn't find much at those either. I did find this.



This little Cabbage Patch tricycle is really cute.
 



It has the long handle so the child can push the doll along on the tricycle. 


This vintage CP toy was sitting outside in the rain getting it's decals wet.








So I needed to rescue it. I also had to take the wet price sticker off the front decal before it dried on there  and ruined the decal.

  It was made in 1985. It's a doll version of the almost identical child's Big Wheel style  Cabbage Patch tricycle that was sold the same year. 
 

I probably won't keep it,  but it's fun to play with for a while.
 

It's being enjoyed by this girl I recently couldn't pass up at my favourite Goodwill.

She's just so cute!


I don't have many Cabbage Patch dolls,in fact she's only my second stuffed one. I have a couple of the large vinyl ones and a BUNCH of the mini versions of the regular ones.My other stuffed one is the standard yarn hair version, and you might have seen her HERE.


This girl is marked Play Along 2004.


She has the 'cornsilk hair',in platinum with pink bits.
 

  Once we had finally made it to Toys R Us there wasn't a lot to be found.I passed up a very pretty wrestling doll,which isn't my sort of thing, but she was pretty,and she was somewhat articulated. We went to another Toys R Us a day or two later and I caved. We'll see her and all my Toys R Us buys in a later post.
When we left Toys R Us we went in search of a place to eat. On the way we stopped a couple of other places. Finally we decided on either Taco Bell or Little Ceasar's cheesey bread,so we headed off to find one or the other. During the search we drove past a thrift store. It wasn't a national chain like Goodwill or Salvation Army. It was just a local charity shop. I decided to double back.(I hadn't found either food place anyway and I was running out of town.) Of course, Ivy threw a fit,because she hates thrift stores. I said it was somewhere we should stop because it was a new town and you never know what you're going to find in a thrift store. When I went in it  proved how right I was. They had an extra long counter which ran almost half the length of the store. Behind it the wall was lined with vintage dolls. Most of them were Miss Revlon types,but there were several Tiffany Taylor dolls,and right in the middle there was a Tessie Talk like my favourite of the three I have. (You can see my Tessies HERE.)Unfortunately Tessie was way over priced,so I left her there and went back to the toy section, not daring to ask the price of anything else.
  I found a cute Goodnight Starlight Mooshka doll. She was very clean and mint,but also unpriced. I was afraid they'd have put some ridiculous price on her, but I took her up front to see anyway. She turned out to be really cheap, so I dared to ask how much some of the other vintage dolls were, Typically, some of the other dolls were priced less than they were worth. There was also a display case on the wall near the entrance that was also full of vintage dolls.I ended up with two.
  One doll I bought was this girl.


She's a Dollikin by Uneeda. You may have seen the Dollikin I posted a while back HERE.


She's about 19" tall.


Dollikins this size were made from 1958 to 1962. There were several other sizes made well into the 70's though.
  

She's wearing her original outfit minus the blouse.


Dollikins are super articulated.





She is jointed at the neck,shoulders,elbows,wrists,waist,hips, knees,and ankles.



This girl was cheap,but then she does have a problem,which you might have seen above. She's missing her right hand.



It's not like Dollikin parts aren't around though,so she can be fixed.


Otherwise she's in nice condition except for a little looseness in her left hand.


She has earrings. She also has red flowers in her hair.Does anybody know if they are original?


We'll see the other doll I got that day tomorrow.