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Dress two charming youngsters in authentic festival costumes, including typical apparel worn during celebrations in the Punjab, Rajasthan, Gujarat, and other Indian provinces. 2 dolls, 32 full-color costumes.
Irene and Yannis come with 32 costumes and accessories — 12 from the fashions of antiquity and the rest from the folk styles of modern times. Apparel of peasants, nobles, priestess, and soldier, plus embroidered garments from Macedonia, Thrace, Athens, and the islands.
Youngsters will have a great time dressing these two little Native Americans in traditional ceremonial costumes of the Kiowa-Apache, Navajo, Hopi, Pima, Yuma, and other tribes. Wardrobes include brilliantly ornamented shawls, tunics, and dresses, as well as costumes worn by a warrior and chieftain, a drummer, dancers, hunters, and other figures. Captions. 2 dolls; 32 costumes.
One doll, 8 carefully researched costumes of the Hopi, Zuni, Navajo, Pawnee, Sioux, Apache, and Arapaho tribes and the Acoma pueblo. Plus basketware, jewelry, blankets, toys, footwear. 1 paper doll. 8 full-color costumes.
6 charming paper doll youngsters, each with 5–6 1920s outfits plus accessories: riding togs, bunny robe, overalls, pony, parrot, sailboat, more.
Authentic costumes worn by Sauk & Fox, Delaware, Ottawa, Potawatomi, Iroquois, Seneca, Mohawk, and Ojibwa. 1 doll, 8 costumes.
Two charming "divas" come with more than 90 garments and accessories, including skirts, tops, dresses, leggings, jackets, shoes, scarves, and handbags. Combine the mix-and-match styles for a virtually unlimited number of looks.
An extraordinary paper doll’s house enhanced here by evocative photographs of Miss Otis’s late 19th-century life, which will delight lovers of art and interior design as well as children In 1884, a remarkable twelve-year-old girl made a paper doll’s house. While these were fashionable enough at the time, they were usually drawn and painted. Miss Sarah Elizabeth Birdsall Otis, however, chose the medium of collage: scraps of wallpaper, gilded trim, colored-in cut-outs of furniture, and engravings from mail-order catalogs, all glued down unselfconsciously in book form with no regard for scale or realism. What makes the album so special is its creator’s stunning, innate artistry. She also populated her house with paper dolls, their delightful cut-out costumes preserved in envelopes marked with the names of the characters and their accessories stored in paper squares marked “Hats and Bonnets” or “Umbrellas and Parasols.” Eric Boman’s photographs capture Miss Otis’s vivid fantasy world in all its quirky splendor. Exploring the household, from the conservatory, parlor, and library to the dining room and bedrooms, the images portray a domain of astonishing color and aesthetic daring. Context is provided by period photographs depicting the era of Miss Otis’s privileged Long Island life. The twelve-year-old girl grew up to become a formidable personality, a playwright, and a president of the Girl Scouts. Here, her youthful creativity is celebrated in a format guaranteed to appeal to adults and children alike.
These two adorable youngsters come with a colorful wardrobe of traditional Korean costumes. Paper doll fans will enjoy dressing them in festive robes and headdresses worn by court dancers and musicians, a bride and groom, a public official, and other figures. 2 dolls on gatefold cover. 33 costumes on 8 plates.
Dress two very "now" little girls who love wearing the latest fashions that will take them from school, dance classes, and beach parties, to play dates and sleepovers. Use crayons, pencils, or felt-tip pens to personalize the dolls and their appealing outfits with color combinations of your choice and design.