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A Topsy-Turvy doll is a double-ended doll, typically featuring two opposing characters. They are traditionally American cloth folk dolls which fuse a white girl child with a black girl child at the hips. Later dolls were sometimes a white girl child with a black mammy figure.
1963 McCall's pattern #6941, Raggedy Ann pattern has lost her cape, dolls now come in three sizes; 1970 McCall's pattern #2531, dolls come in three sizes, with a simplified pattern and different hair and face embroidery pattern, loss of button eyes [101] 1977 McCall's pattern #5713, identical to previous #2531 pattern, different cover; ca. 1980 ...
Original file (SVG file, nominally 450 × 350 pixels, file size: 3 KB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
This image is a derivative work of the following images: File:Die_Faces.png licensed with Cc-by-sa-3.0,2.5,2.0,1.0, GFDL . 2008-03-13T16:54:36Z Nanami Kamimura 707x237 (28884 Bytes) {{Information |Description=A set of die faces for the European and Asian-type dice |Source=I made this image myself using primarily [[w:Microsoft Powerpoint|Microsoft Powerpoint]] to make the image, Irfanview to ...
These 50 printable pumpkin carving templates are ready to inspire you. On each image, click "save image as" and save the JPEGs to your computer desktop. From there, you can print them!
What's Her Face! was a line of customizable dolls that straddled the line between traditional fashion dolls and creative activity toys. [1] Made by Mattel, the line ran from 2001–2003, and enjoyed only a modest success in a market dominated by Mattel's iconic Barbie and MGA Entertainment's Bratz dolls.
An Amish doll is best described as a plain rag doll usually lacking physical features of a face and hair. [3] It is also thought that a face on a doll makes it appear more worldly, which is not considered acceptable among the Amish. Not all Amish dolls, however, are faceless. Clothing on Amish dolls is similar to that worn by Amish children.