Showing posts with label vogue Brikette doll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vogue Brikette doll. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

That Ever Present Wish List

    Let's start with the obvious: It's been HOT lately!. Ken and I have been surviving in our house without air conditioning, but we have had to retreat to my sister's house a couple of times to cool off.



Tammy World came along for the ride, and because she gets hot too. She posed with my sister's rock collection, and a very colourful plant I've forgotten the name of.



 It's nice to get out of the heat, and it's nice to hang out with my sister, but it's an hour and a half drive each way, and by the time we spend any amount of time there, we have to drive back in the dark. The time before last we came close to hitting several animals, including a group of three deer, a mother racoon and her two babies, two more deer, and two more large lumps that I think were large raccoons. I hate driving at night these days. I'm tense the whole 90 minutes of the way home.

  I've been working on this post for ages. I don't get on my computer much any more because to charge mine we have to unplug Ken's. Then his dies, and he has nothing to do. My computer doesn't stay charged very long any more, so I can't get much done on a charge. We have minimal electric outlets we can use because of our wiring, so we're limited on outlets. We are a bit paranoid about another fire, so we don't want to leave anything charging in a room we aren't in either. Anyway, I'm sorry I don't post much any more, and sorry some of the posts have been a bit boring.

  As for Ken, he is doing well. He has been taken off medication after medication, and his recent blood work came back with great numbers. He has been released from occupational therapy, (but told to keep up his exercises and work on his muscles.), and will start physical therapy again in November. (Thanks to Medicaid  refusing to pay for more therapy right  now.) He passed his stroke-aversary July 14th. We forgot all about it until I happened to think of it much later.  

  I have taken loads of pictures of dolls I wanted to talk about with you, but I have never gotten around to posting them. I will try to do some of that soon. I'm still scooping up free toys via the Mini Brands displays, or at least I was. Yesterday, for the first time, I was told I couldn't have an empty box from our local Walmart. At least before that happened I managed to FINALLY snag the Lord of the Rings one, Two different Harry Potter boxes, and two different My Mini Baby ones. Walmart, it's not like I like you anyway. You're not doing yourself any favours. If it wasn't for the fact that I like your wet wipes, and you are the store most often selling yellow corn, I wouldn't even darken your door.    

  Reader Treesa sent me some wonderful Christmas gifts that I have yet to show you. I'll get to that when I have more time, but in the meantime, she asked me recently if I had any grail dolls left that were unattainable, for whatever reason. Well, of course I do. Those things are never ending, especially those expensive ones that are never going to be accessible.  So I thought it might make for an interesting post, to see what dolls I have wanted for ages, but will probably never get. 

  I have gotten pretty much all the dolls I wanted as a child, but never got as a child. Those include That Kid, which you're probably sick of hearing me talk about...

This particular boy was ruined in the water damage from the fire. He was amazingly quickly, (and cheaply!) replaced!

If not, I have several posts on That Kid. You can access them in the side bar, under That Kid.

...Mrs. Beasley.

Poor perfect Beasley, with glasses, got smoked in the fire  I have yet to get around to cleaning her.

The same goes for The Bease. I have a few posts on her, but the LONG one about her history is my most viewed post ever, and continues to get record views every day. You can check out the Mrs. Beasley posts by clicking that name in the side bar.

  My dream Beasley, which I got at a yard sale got all smoked up in the fire. I haven't tried to wash her yet. If I had had her at Emma's, with access to a washing machine I could trust, (as opposed to one at the laundry mat.), I would probably have given her a wash. She is sitting upstairs, all sooty. I will probably try to clean her up this summer and see how she does. I have a back up Beasley that was supposed to get sold, and she even has her glasses, so I might end up keeping her. Dream Beasley's glasses were on the vanity in my bedroom during the fire, and they melted a bit. They're still glasses, but they are a bit misshapen, and might not stay, (or even fit), on her head any more. I would never get rid of her though. I run into her original owner every now and then, and I can still tell her that her girl has a good home with me. Not so good that she didn't get smoked like a piece of meat, but still...

  I also got multiple versions of the Drowsy I always wanted, including the original kitty cat PJ version I didn't even know existed when I was a kid.


  You can see those by clicking Drowsy in the sidebar.

  I would still like some other dolls that use the Drowsy head sculpt, like  Baby Charlotte, and maybe Teachy Keen.

The red head in the nightgown, top left corner, is Baby Charlotte. Teachy Keen is the girl in the pink coat.

  I also had a desire for a talking Baby Beans. 


  I think the reason I never got one as a kid was that I was a little too old for a baby doll. I still wanted one though. I had a really nice Talking Baby Beans as an adult. That was years ago. But she still talked and was super clean and perfect, and she got sold. Now I have a not so clean one that doesn't talk. She'll have to do.

      Over the years I have gotten several dolls on my list that I thought I would never get, dolls like Betsy McCall. I now have multiple Betsys, in varying sizes. You can click on Betsy McCall in the side bar to see them.


I got this one at a doll show 


This girl was cheap at a doll show because she had dirt on her nose that the dealer thought was a nose nick!

This girl was cheap at a doll show for two reasons: The dealer knew nothing about dolls, and I had to fix her eye.

  Another was the Maru and Friends Savannah. She was more than I generally spend on a doll, and I thought I'd never get one. You can see Savannah's post HERE.


   Then I bought a big one and a little one from Emily at The Toybox Philosopher. And you can see little Savannah's post HERE.


 I wanted a Zwergnase doll, but they are so expensive. But Emily also gave me a really good price on one of those, so I ended up with one of those too. 


You can see her post HERE.

  I wanted an Agnes Dreary, and I did manage to get one for only $50 when they were clearanced on the Tonner website years ago.


You can see Agnes' post HERE.

  I love Dianna Effner dolls, and wanted a :Little Darling. Well that was never going to happen, until amazing reader Dorothy SENT ME ONE!


You can see her post HERE.

  I still can't believe she was so generous and thoughtful. Thanks again Dorothy!

I always wanted a Garden Patience, with her red hair and pretty dress, but I have given up and settled for the naked, dark haired Prom Patience I got cheap on Ebay years back. She's rooted, not wigged, so I can't make her into a red head, but the wigs are expensive anyway.

  Now for the dolls I didn't get. Of the dolls I wanted, but never have gotten that are not quite as expensive, there is the Barbie Life in the Dreamhouse Midge that I never got.


  She was the first Barbie Life in the Dreamhouse Midge, I think. She went up quite a bit after her original release, but she seems to have dropped in price lately.

  Of the dolls I still want, but will almost certainly never get, I still yearn for the Mezco Dr. Zaius Planet of the Apes doll.


  (I'm sure there are people who will insist that this is an action figure, not a doll, but let's be honest:  we all know they're the same thing.) He was affordable, (barely), and then his price rose on the secondary market. It looks like he's occasionally more affordable now, but he's still out of my price range these days.

  I still want a red haired Brikette by Vogue, but I'd even settle for a Jinx, by Kaysam or Jolly Toys,  which looks almost exactly like Brikette.

This is a beautiful Brikette I saw at a doll show.

  I still want that red haired Klumpe girl with glasses, and a suitcase. I can't find a stock photo of her, so you'll have to use your imagination...and your Google search. The closest thing I can show you is my red haired Roldan gardener girl, which is neither Klumpe, nor holding a suitcase. But Roldan's are kind of like Klumpes, so...

My Roldan gardener girl, the closest I'll get to the Klumpe suitcase girl.

   Something I always wanted came out when I was 13. Maybe I didn't get him because I thought I was too old for such toys. I don't remember. I did go through that stage, believe it or not. I still want one though. His name is Hugo, Man of a Thousand Faces.

He was made by Kenner. He's a puppet that came with loads of disguise pieces, like scars and wigs and false chins and noses. He even had sunglasses and an eye patch. If you've ever seen the pre-Playhouse 'Pee Wee Herman Show' HBO special, you'll have seen Hugo. He's so expensive these days, that unless I run across one in a thrift store or yard sale, neither of which I frequent very often these days, I'll probably never get one.

  I also still want the Mattel Squishies  witch I saw when I was nine years old. I saw her one time in a J.C. Penney while shopping with my mom, and I still want her. 


  You can see my post on her HERE.

  But the newer dolls that I want that I will undoubtedly NEVER get include Tonner's Wilde Imagination Hamish doll...

He has become REALLY expensive.

...and Sad Sally. I most want the red haired one, but I can't find a stock photo of the red haired Sad Sally dolls. I think there were two, the very first one, and a later one called Sad Little Witch. They both had crazy bushes of red hair. If you aren't familiar with Tonner/Wilde Imagination's Sad Sally line, I can direct you to my post on Sally's friend Bashful Burt.

  Keeping to the red haired dolls, there's also Helen Kish's Creamsicle Lark or Lark of the High Seas...

Lark of the High Seas.

Creamsicle Lark.

...and then there's Kish's Raggedy Riley. 

  These are all from years ago now. Of newer dolls, I wanted a red haired Ruby Red Fashion Friends doll. I have a Siblie,but I wanted the full size version. They do a lot of special edition dolls, and there was one I really loved, but I was willing to settle for Rock Star Stella, even though I don't care for her clothes.



  I'm sure I've forgotten something that I really want, but this has been hanging around in draft form long enough.  So, here it is. At least you know I'm still alive. Also, I do show up in the comments on other people's blogs sometimes. I will try and not leave it so long between posts in the future. See you soon...I hope.

Friday, November 24, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #315: The New Talky Tina is on Sale For Black Friday!

   Remember Talky Tina? She was the villain in an episode of the original Twilight Zone TV series called "Living Doll". (You can watch a condensed version of the episode HERE.) Talky Tina was 'played' by a customized Vogue Brickette doll. 

  The episode has proved to have something of a cult following, even amongst Twilight Zone's cult following. A little girl brings home a Talky Tina talking, moving doll. Her stepfather, who is under some bill paying pressure, resents the money spent, and hates the doll. When he mistreats the doll, it starts threatening him. The mother and daughter don't hear it, of course. The stepfather, played by Kojak himself, Telly Savalas, tries to destroy Talky Tina. He can't, naturally, and Tina gets the last word...literally.

  Tina's been so popular, that there have been multiple...well. I can't say 'remakes', since there was never a real Talky Tina in the first place. But companies have made versions of Talky Tina over the years. There was a six inch action figure type Talk Tina, in 2010, made by EMCE. She was made in grey tones, to mimic the black and white episode. She had rooted hair, and was jointed at the neck, shoulders, elbows, wrists, ankles, and, I think, hips and knees. She was a limited edition. If you can find her these days, she isn't cheap.



  In 2013 Bif Bang Pow made an 18 inch Talky Tina doll in colour. She had vinyl head, arms, and legs, and a stuffed cloth body. She also talked and said 5 of her phrases from the show.



  In 2022 Bif Bang Pow also made a terrible 3 3/4" version of Talky Tina. Also grey, and also jointed at the neck, shoulders, and 'hips', (She really was jointed 'at the dress'.), she didn't much resemble the doll from the show. She still brings in about $60 though.

  


  The more popular, and more expensive, version of Talky Tina was a 21 inch doll made by Trick or Treat Studios in 2011. She was also made in shades of grey. She wore a recreation of Talky Tina's plaid dress, white ankle socks, and Mary Jane shoes. She was all vinyl, and jointed like a standard Brickette doll, at the neck, shoulders and hips. She had rooted hair, and actually talked. Tina said 'all' her phrases from the TV show, like "I'm Talky Tina, and you'll be sorry." "I'm Talky Tina, and I don't think I like you." She wasn't a pull string doll, like the one on the show. She used batteries. Still. She looks just like Talky Tina, and therefore, just like Brickette. Of course, she's also about $600 these days. $300 if you're lucky.



  So those of you who may be longing for a Talky Tina of your very own will be glad to hear that there's a new Talky Tina in town, and she's available in today's Black Friday sales from Entertainment Earth for only $123.50. She's limited to 1,004 pieces worldwide.


  This Tina is 18 inches tall, which is slightly smaller than the Brikette doll used as Tina in the show. She has a vinyl head, and limbs, and a stuffed cloth body, so that's different too. The original was all vinyl/plastic. She does look authentic, and is made in shades of grey. She says 5 phrases used in the Twilight Zone episode:

 "My name is Talky Tina, and I love you very much."

"My name is Talky Tina, and I'm going to kill you."
"My name is Talky Tina, and you'll be sorry."
"My name is Talky Tina, and you'd better be nice to me."
"My name is Talky Tina, and I don't think I like you."

  She has rooted hair and sleep eyes, and a plaid dress that is not removable, since the wind up cranks are through her dress. (I'm not sure they're functional.)

  Now get out there and buy your Talky Tina...or you'll be sorry.

Sunday, March 19, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #72: Miss Capri

   I happened across today's doll while looking for something else. I want a red haired Vogue Brikette doll, or I'd even settle for a red haired Kaysam-Jolly Toys Jinx doll. (Brikette is too expensive and Jinx looks just like her.) So, every now and then I do a search online for either of them. While doing that a few days ago I came across Miss Capri. Now I want a Miss Capri! She looks very much like Brikette, but has her own personality. In any case, I asked the dealer if I could feature their doll and use their pictures, and they said yes. So here is Miss Capri.


  Miss Capri was made by Reliable, in Canada.

And it says so on the back of her head.

From the 1962 Reliable catalog. She was a killer in her original outfit!

  She was produced around 1962, the same year I was produced. She hasn't started going white haired though. In spite of what my poorly eye sighted sister-in-law thinks, I am. (She asked me, "Do you colour it yourself?" "What?" "Your hair." "Uhh, this is just my hair." I pointed out the white ones but she swore she couldn't see them. She was mock angry: "That's not fair!" I owe it all to my red hair, (Red heads go gray later than other people.), which Miss Capri also has.


  Brikette came with blonde or red hair, or the rare brunette. (I can't say for sure, but Miss Capri looks like she has a more silky hair texture than Brikette.) But one thing all Brikettes and Miss Capri have, is those pointy eyebrows.


They also both have freckles. I think Miss Capri has a slightly more realistic face though, and definitely a more happy smile. From some angles, Brikette, who was famously transformed into 'Talky Tina' on an episode of  'The Twilight Zone', looks a bit fed up.


She also has big blue sleep eyes and blushy cheeks.

  Miss Capri stands 22 inches tall. Brikette came in a couple of sizes, 16 and 22 inches tall. Miss Capri has a feature Brikette has, and that's her bendy, twisty waist. She can also tilt her head.



Her waist joint allows her to turn, and bend, and lean. 


And she holds her pose, due to the weird little nubblies on her torso joint.


  These nubblies resemble the ones on the leg joints of the much smaller Mego dolls.

  Miss Capri has hands very like Brikette's too. They're quite expressive, and nicely detailed, with creases in the palms, the backs of the fingers, and the knuckles. Her feet have toenails, and little toe wrinkles too.


  If you're intrigued by this doll and have to have her, the dealer has her listed on Ebay and Etsy, with the Etsy listing being on sale! (And shipping is listed as free! Even better!) She's cheaper on Etsy. You can find that listing HERE. But if you really have to buy from Ebay, you can find that listing HERE.

  Just so you know, I'm not getting anything from the dealer. It's not like this is sponsored or anything. I just used their pictures and in exchange am providing their auction information. I'm not home, with access to my dolls, and I don't have any place to take interesting pictures of what I do have, so I appreciate being able to use these pictures. I have taken some pictures outside, on Emma's porch, and some around some rocks and bushes near her porch, but there isn't much choice of interesting or picturesque spots for pictures. It's especially bad with the weather being cold and wet, and nothing having sprouted up to green things up yet. Plus, there are a lot of stairs here to get to the outside, and my knees haven't been up to snuff lately. Some of you may remember me taking pictures, in previous years, in what I referred to as 'Emma's grotto'. That was this same house, but a different apartment. That apartment was downstairs. There were no stairs, and a lot of interesting places to take pictures. Somebody else lives down there now, and I don't think they'd appreciate me making their grotto into a photography studio! 

  That's today's doll. I hope you found her as interesting as I did. There'll be another doll tomorrow.

Monday, April 28, 2014

Doll-A-Day 118: Hard Plastic Girl, Plus Doll Shows, The Death of Doll Play, and Extolling the Virtues of Little Boys Playing With Dolls

  Yesterday was the giant doll show, as you will know if you've been reading the blog. We didn't do terribly badly. We actually made a little money. Ken keeps saying, if you deduct the cost of the merchandise we didn't really make anything. But we have so much stuff we've been sitting on for years, and so much stuff we got for nearly nothing at auctions, that it's good to:
A. Get Rid of It!
B.Make something from it. It's not making money sitting here.
C.Clear out room in the house!
D. Ken also thinks I should do shows to get my Tamsykens stuff seen. It's not like anybody buys anything though. Apparently alot of the BJD people were looking at the furniture and liked it, but it was the wrong size for their dolls.I finally found out what size a Puki and a Puki Puki are, as well as Amelia Thimble. Even standard dollhouse scale stuff is a little too big for them. (And also, now that I know how extremely small Amelia Thimble is, I want a Hamish more than ever!)
Me, on the left, and Ivy, setting up for the show.
We were going to be there anyway. (Although, as Ken points out, he would normally have been working on Sunday and made actual money.) Well, I was going to be there anyway. But I can't do the show AND shop the show at the same time! I could just go to the show, but that doesn't clear any stuff out of our house.
Albert Einstein watching our table for me while I shopped.He looks so sad because I spent money....

  We stopped doing shows, years and years ago, when Fuzzy was tiny,and have only been doing them again recently. We used to just go to the show and I would try to buy something I could sell to make back the money we spent to get in. (Entry fees for a  family of five add up to a fair amount!)
  I keep saying how big the show is. Well, it gets smaller every time I go! This time there were even more empty spaces.

Empty tables and empty space against the railing that would have normally had dealer's tables there.

More empty space, against the railings above and below, where there should have been tables full of dolls.

The rumour was that the antique doll dealers were boycotting to protest the promoter's having a big doll auction for 2 days running, on Friday and Saturday, right before the show . The idea was that having the auction so near the show, and promoting them together was taking money out of the dealer's pockets. That's a point. If the customers have spent their money at the auctions,which were only about a half hour away from where the show is held, they won't have any money to spend on the show. On the other hand,alot of the people who go to the show don't go to auctions.That is where the dealers get so much of their stock though. Not everybody can afford to put out such large sums of money to get the lots at auction, or prefer to not to buy lots at auctions and get stuck with things they don't want. The promoter claims it saves him money on advertising to have them close together, because he can advertise the auctions and the show in the same ad. On the other hand, (I feel like Gilligan!), if he keeps losing dealers, either because they are boycotting or because they aren't making money because their customers are buying at his auctions, he's not going to have a show to advertise.
  Shows are dying anyway. Not least of all because their customers are dying. So are the dealers. I was noticing yesterday just how old most of the dealers were,and most of the customers weren't that young either.

The roving dealer: sighting number 1. Watch for the lady in black and purple in several of these pictures. She's a dealer. I didn't realize until I was putting these pictures on here that she must have done nearly as much roaming as I did.

In adding these pictures I noticed that there is a walker in this picture and the next one. And they're not the same one. Still, nice to see that these ladies haven't given up and are still enjoying their collections, and even adding to them. My friend Connie makes me sad when she says she needs to be getting rid of the collection she loves so much because she's in her 70's and her children won't want it when she's gone. Who cares? She's not gone yet. Enjoy yourself! Also notice the little girl in conversation with the old man. Cute.

Walker number two in the left center aisle, but notice her sit down walker is full of shopping! You go girl! By the way, I tripped over that wheel chair ramp TWICE! If I'm not more careful I'll be using a walker myself.It's not like the thing isn't big enough to see!

I was talking with one of the dealers at the Cincinnati show Ivy and I did last year, and she was saying that young people aren't collecting dolls any more. That's not strictly true. Ball jointed dolls are breathing a bit of young life into doll collecting. But those collectors aren't collecting older dolls.
The youngest dealer was probably this lady at the bottom of the picture. She was also selling to just about the youngest collectors, with her display of Pullip and other ball jointed dolls, Rement, and other Japanese goodies.She also has a shop in Columbus.By the way, the empty rail above her is more space where tables should have been.

The dealer was asking, "What's going to happen to all these beautiful dolls when we're gone?" Good question. Who is going to want them? I'm hearing more and more people say, 'my kids have no interest in my collection. They're probably just going to throw them away when I'm gone.'
  Another thing I keep hearing people say is that their children don't have any interest in dolls. Little girls don't play with dolls anymore. And little boys certainly don't. Most of the little girls I know of who want dolls want dolls like Monster High, not exactly the kind of doll you use the mothering instinct on! They also don't actually play with the dolls. They just collect them. They sit them up on shelves and display them.I was very pleased a few weeks ago, when Lori and I went to the flea market, to see a little boy cuddling his doll as his parents pulled him in a wagon. I made a point of telling his parents how good it was to see a little boy with a doll. I imagine his parents take alot of flack for letting him have a doll, and they probably get some sneers. But doll play is an instinctive thing, to teach people how to love and care for a child, or even just other other people.Little boys grow up to be fathers, and loving a doll is good for them,just as little girls will use that when they grow up to be mothers. Fuzz had his dolls when he was little. Apart from Fuzzy the Doll and all his friends, Fuzz had Hap,a Susan Perl rag doll, which I bought him because Hap had orange hair and a grouchy face just like Fuzz,and Sake, a 60's doll whom he rescued from our garage and couldn't be separated from, and his stuffed toys. He may not have played with them like Emma did, feeding and caring for them like a mother,(And unlike Emma,he definitely didn't breast feed his!), but he cared about them and put them to bed and changed their clothes...and made them attack people. But I always said that as a little guy he had the best heart of all my children. He's 19 now, and that isn't the case at the moment, but hopefully he has that base and will come back to that eventually.
  But I digress. It was still a pretty big show.


Roving Dealer sighting number two:Here she is about halfway down the aisle. I think this was where her actual table was.


A veritable ocean of dolls, as far as the eye can see...

The auditorium had played host to a wedding reception the day before, hence the fabric hanging from the ceiling.

 There were alot of interesting dolls on display.

This is the display of the people below us. They've been below us for several shows now.They sit opposite their display, just below our shelves, and we invariably drop something on their heads at some point. Yesterday it was all my fault.Luckily they are really nice about it.

This is a closeup of their display. I got a kick out of the Willie Tyler Lester ventriloquist dummy dressed as a clown.He's the only guy amongst all those girls, and he appears to be loving it.

Old stuff, new stuff, and handmade stuff.The little lady sitting with her husband at the bottom of the picture is so sweet. She was giving things away left and right. She gave away a whole shoe box of furniture for Tammy's Ideal House to a lady who bought some Tammy clothes. She tried to give me some things I wanted to buy, but I forced her to take some money. Sometimes I think dealers do it just because they enjoy it.

Handmade doll clothes of all sizes, and dolls of all eras.
I had to add this picture. Roving Dealer sighting number three.It's like Where's Waldo. Can you spot her?

Just about my favourite thing at the show was this Vogue Brikette doll with bright orange hair. She even has a ring and a watch, which is why she's wearing bags on her hands. I've seen her there before. Maybe nobody else can afford her $160 price either!
She deserves a close up.
 As for my purchases, my first was this Buffy and Mrs. Beasley for $10.

Buffy has had a slight haircut, but the glasses on Beasley are worth at least $40, and Buffy has all her bends and no green. I can steal her body for the nice Me and My Dog Tutti head that Connie gave me. Tutti's real body was badly greened, but her head was so nice, with pink colouring and her hair ribbon intact.
Then I got these pieces of Japanese dollhouse furniture for only $5.

Some of the pictures are painted, but the rest of the furniture has inlays. A little tung oil will make these beautiful again.
  Then I got really excited when I found a couple of items I will detail when I can work around the rain and cold.(It's freezing here today, and all wet and muddy outside. They were my finds of the show, and I want to show them off  as they deserve!) After that, I found this really cool coat from the same dealers, Ed and Jackie, who we have known for about 20 years.

It's Ken sized, or maybe more likely Tammy sized, since the hood is so big.The mittens,which I got from another dealer, look like they'll fit Pepper, but I haven't tried yet.
We have always called them The Barbie Clothes Guys, because that's what they mainly collected. They gave me the coat. It was that kind of day! I have no idea of the maker. The fabric is a silky, nylon type stuff,and the cool zipper really works.The zipper pull says 'zipp'.If anybody knows anything about it I'd love to know.
  When I went back later Ed gave me these two hats when I tried to buy them.
Ken's toboggan and a generic fedora. I'm going to add a band.

I got these two packaged outfits for $1 each! I think they were  from the little giveaway lady.

The two tiny books were from another dealer. They are fully printed and were only a quarter!
And I got this sailor suit. It's about Ginny sized. Anybody?


And the sweet little lady I showed you above gave me this doll for $2 because she has some problems. (The doll, that is!)

She has no makers mark. She's about 10" tall, and she has jointed legs. They aren't working exactly right because she needs her body put back together, but she still poses cutely.






I also need to redo her hair. the one side has lost all it's curl.
Aww. Isn't that cute? She fits right in with her ONE HAIR!

Well that's it.Tomorrow is another doll, and hopefully my other goodies,so be sure to check it out.