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  2. Buddy Lee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddy_Lee

    Lee encouraged stores to sell the dolls after the displays were taken down, and later provided the dolls for retail sale, including versions dressed as a cowboy, Coca-Cola deliveryman, railroad worker and gas station attendant. Starting in 1949, Buddy Lee was produced as a 13-inch hard plastic doll.

  3. American Character Doll Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Character_Doll...

    In 1957, American Character marketed "Sweet Sue Sophisticate," a 14" or 20" fashion doll. The "Toodles" multi-jointed plastic doll — able to "kneel, sit, play and assume 1,000 different positions" — was introduced in 1955 and became a big seller for American Character, including its associated products like "Toodles Toddler" (1955-1959 ...

  4. Dollfie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dollfie

    The first Dollfie Dream Body which was called DD Basic body was strung with elastic string. The body pieces were 'hard soft vinyl' with the hands and bust being 'flexible soft vinyl'. [1] The second and third versions, as well as all subsequent models released, are soft vinyl dolls with a hard plastic internal skeleton that enables articulation.

  5. Kewpie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kewpie

    In 1949, Effanbee created the first hard plastic versions of the dolls, and soft rubber and vinyl versions were produced by Cameo Co. and Jesco between the 1960s and 1990s. The earlier bisque and composition versions of Kewpie dolls are widely sought-after by antique and doll collectors, who especially want those hand-signed by O'Neill.

  6. Dollikins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dollikins

    A number of hair colors and styles and face paint that were not available on the 20" Dollikin body can be found on the fashion dolls bearing the same head molds. It is not known what years or for how long these straight-legged, hard plastic fashion dolls were produced. Dollikins were also produced in hard vinyl in a smaller, 15" size.

  7. Ball-jointed doll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball-jointed_doll

    The first Dollfie Dream body type was strung and had classic ball and socket joints, but the current body has an internal skeleton of hard plastic, [49] [50] as do the Obitsu dolls. The vinyl bodies can, sometimes with some modifications, be combined with a resin BJD head.

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