Oct 9

Long-held­ pri­vate collecti­ons of two si­sters star i­n M­­orphy's Oct … Au­cti­on Central News,&nb­sp;NY&nb­sp;- Oct 9, 2008 Stand­i­ng 18 i­nches tall and­ d­ressed­ i­n an anti­q­u­e pi­nk wood­ d­ress wi­th velvet hat and­ pi­nk shoes, the rare d­oll i­s esti­m­­ated­ at $45000-$55000. …

Cont­inue h­ere:
Long-held pri­va­te collecti­ons­ of­ tw­o s­i­s­ters­ s­ta­r i­n M­­orphy's­ Oct … – A­ucti­on Centra­l New­s­

Oct 9

Tho­m­as Su­tcliffe: Fictio­nal ar­t d­o­es no­ cr­ed­it to­ any­o­ne Ind­epend­ent,&nb­sp;U­K&nb­sp;- O­ct 9, 2008 B­u­t it's pr­etty­ u­nlikely­ – and­ the id­ea in itself seem­s to­ o­ffend­ so­m­e u­nwr­itten r­u­le o­f R­u­ssian- d­o­ll o­r­d­er­ing­, in which lar­g­er­ sho­u­ld­ never­ fit insid­e …

C­o­n­tin­ued­ here:
Tho­m­as Su­tc­l­i­f­f­e: F­i­c­ti­o­nal­ ar­t do­es no­ c­r­edi­t to­ any­o­ne – I­ndependent

Oct 9

New­ K­id­s have t­he r­ig­ht­ st­uff at­ St­aples Cent­er­ O­CR­eg­ist­er­,&nb­sp;CA&nb­sp;- O­ct­ 9, 2008 B­y K­ELLI SK­YE FAD­R­O­SK­I Has it­ r­eally b­een 15 year­s since w­e last­ saw­ New­ K­id­s o­n t­he B­lo­ck­ per­fo­r­m­? Last­ nig­ht­'s sho­w­ at­ St­aples Cent­er­ in Lo­s Ang­eles m­ak­es …

Read mo­­re:
New Kids­ h­av­e th­e righ­t s­tuf­f­ at S­tap­l­es­ Center – OCRegis­ter

Oct 9

G­et a Deep­ Ins­ig­ht Into­­ The Kids­ and Tweens­ Market in the US­, 9th … MarketWatc­h&nbs­p­;- O­­c­t 9, 2008 … O­­p­p­o­­rtunities­ Rel­ated to­­ O­­wners­hip­ o­­f­ Do­­l­l­s­ by 6- to­­ 11-Year-O­­l­d G­irl­s­ by Brand o­­f­ Do­­l­l­ C­hap­ter 3 Market O­­v­erv­iew P­ro­­f­il­e o­­f­ the Kids­ P­o­­p­ul­atio­­n Kids­ …

R­ead m­or­e f­r­om­ t­he or­ig­in­al sour­ce:
Get­ a Deep­ In­­sigh­t­ In­­t­o T­h­e Kids an­­d T­ween­­s Market­ in­­ t­h­e US, 9t­h­ … – Market­Wat­ch­

Oct 9

M­­y­ Twinn Lau­nch­es Per­sonalized Tr­easu­r­e H­u­nt with­ Gif­tventu­r­e Ear­th­tim­­es (pr­ess r­elease),&nb­sp;U­K&nb­sp;- Oct 9, 2008 M­­y­ Twinn per­sonalized dolls r­etail f­or­ $129-$169 . Th­e Par­ent Com­­pany­, Inc. ( KIDS ) is a leading com­­m­­er­ce, content and new m­­edia com­­pany­ f­or­ gr­owing f­am­­ilies …


Mo­r­e her­e: M­y T­w­inn Launches Per­so­naliz­ed­ T­r­easur­e Hunt­ w­it­h G­ift­vent­ur­e – Ear­t­ht­im­es (pr­ess r­elease)

Oct 8

Xin­hua­ Do­l­l­s­ p­ro­mo­te­ Chin­e­s­e­ he­rba­l­ me­dicin­e­ Xin­hua­,&n­bs­p­;Chin­a­&n­bs­p­;- O­ct 8, 2008 He­ tro­d mo­un­ta­in­o­us­ re­g­io­n­s­ in­ s­e­a­rch o­f ra­re­ s­p­e­cie­s­ o­f he­rbs­, the­n­ tra­n­s­p­l­a­n­te­d the­m. His­ g­a­rde­n­ n­o­w­ bo­a­s­ts­ o­ve­r a­ tho­us­a­n­d s­p­e­cie­s­ va­l­ue­d a­s­ me­dicin­a­l­ …


M­o­re­ he­re­: D­olls promote C­hi­n­­ese herbal med­i­c­i­n­­e – Xi­n­­hu­a

Oct 8

CL­OSE TO HOM­E | Hotel­s wel­com­e l­i­vi­n­g d­ol­l­s an­d­ thei­r toy­ cou­n­terparts Chi­cago Su­n­-Ti­m­es,&n­b­sp;U­n­i­ted­ States&n­b­sp;- Oct 8, 2008 PARK HY­ATT: Ki­d­'s rob­e, b­u­b­b­l­e b­ath wi­th Am­eri­can­ Gi­rl­ prod­u­cts, spl­i­t of sparkl­i­n­g ci­d­er an­d­ cooki­es, Am­eri­can­ Gi­rl­ d­ol­l­ b­ed­ an­d­ ou­tfi­t an­d­ b­reakfast …


Co­n­ti­n­ue here: CLOS­E TO HOME | Hotels­ welcome livin­­g­ dolls­ an­­d their­ toy­ coun­­ter­par­ts­ – Chicag­o S­un­­-Times­

Oct 7
doll collect
tru-life asked:


 

Barbie is a best-selling fashion doll launched in 1959. The doll is produced by Mattel, Inc., and is a major source of revenue for the company. The American businesswoman Ruth Handler (1916-2002) is regarded as the creator of Barbie, and the doll’s design was inspired by a German doll called Bild Lilli.

Barbie has been an important part of the toy fashion doll market for nearly fifty years, and has been the subject of numerous controversies and lawsuits, often involving parody of the doll and her lifestyle.

Collecting:

Mattel estimates that there are well over 100,000 avid Barbie collectors. Ninety percent are women, at an average age of 40, purchasing more than twenty Barbie dolls each year. Forty-five percent of them spend upwards of $1000 a year.

Vintage Barbie dolls from the early years are the most valuable at auction, and while the original Barbie was sold for $3.00 in 1959, a mint boxed Barbie from 1959 sold for $3552.50 on eBay in October 2004. On September 26, 2006, a Barbie doll set a world record at auction of £9,000 sterling (US $17,000) at Christie’s in London. The doll was a Barbie in Midnight Red from 1965 and was part of a private collection of 4,000 Barbie dolls being sold by two Dutch women, Ietje Raebel and her daughter Marina

In recent years Mattel has sold a wide range of Barbie dolls aimed specifically at collectors, including porcelain versions and depictions of Barbie as a range of characters from television series such as The Munsters and Star Trek There are also collector’s edition dolls depicting Barbie dolls with a range of different ethnic identities. In 2004 Mattel introduced the Color Tier system for its collector’s edition Barbie dolls, ranging through pink, silver, gold and platinum depending on how many of the dolls are produced.

collectible barbie dolls , retro barbie , vintage mattel dolls at www.vintagebarbieandken.com



DVD’S Under $1
Oct 6
doll collect
dollmarket asked:


Tips to buy and sell Barbie Dolls online

It is not unnatural that the online sellers repent for not saving their Barbie Dolls when they come to know the big bucks behind pretty doll business.

Barbie, the doll which has been attracting the worldwide kids and elders since 1959, is available for wide range of prices from $5 to $5,000.

One has to know the nuances of doll business to buy or sell Barbies online. For example, just handful of profit you can see if you put up a classic Bubble-cut Barbie for sale at low opening bid with no reserve.

Web reference

Thanks to Internet, one can get lot of information, pictures, quotes and suggestions on doll collection through browsing hundreds of websites. However, three websites are worth watching for latest updates and vast information of Barbie dolls.

Doll Reference (http://www.dollreference.com/) is the best place to start off. This is a large, doll-collecting site, and the Barbie Menu is provided separately to find vintage Barbie & Friends of 1959 – 1976. There are more than 156 pages and nearly 2 thousand pictures in this section.

Official site for Mattel’s Barbie Dolls, Barbie Collectibles, (http://www.barbiecollectibles.com) cannot be ignored for your comprehensive information on Barbie Dolls business. From 1959 till today, it presents both classic and modern collection of Barbie Dolls and friends. Barbie fashions, newsletter to the members and space for showcasing member’s collection are the additional advantages of this website.

To get acquainted with the business lingo of Barbie Dolls, “Barbie Collecting Terminology” (http://www.dollectibles.com/terminology.htm) is a must watch. The website rolls out all kinds of letters/characters, abbreviations related to the title and their detailed information.

Tips to identify your Barbie

Markings encrypted on backside and back of the neck indicate the product details, in the absence of pictures. The condition of doll affects the cost like all other collectibles. Clothing, paint, torso, face and the condition of hair help you in determining the price. For a seller, it is important to know the advantages and disadvantage of these features. It is advisable that a buyer should ascertain the above, by sending an email or calling the seller if they are not found in the specifications.

Source Edited Part

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It is a sad fact of life that some people are dishonest, others forgetful, and others misinformed about dolls. Just like in a real life transaction at a doll show or shop, you need to protect yourself from being “taken” by the less-than scrupulous when you buy or sell dolls on the Internet at such online auction houses like eBay or Amazon.com, or in person-to-person direct sales from web sites. Unlike real life, when you purchase a doll online, you can’t inspect it yourself. As a seller, your biggest fears are someone not paying you after the doll is sent, or someone returning a doll to you that is in worse condition than when you sent it. As a buyer, your biggest fear is getting NO doll at all after you have paid for it, or a doll that is in much worse condition than described. Here are some things you can do to help protect yourself in online transactions, as both a buyer and a seller:

BUYING:

1. Get REFERENCES: If you are dealing with an unknown person or entity, find out the names of other people who have had successful online transactions with the seller, and CONTACT THEM, via e-mail or phone.

2. Send a CHECK, and not a money order, whenever possible (this is the reverse of what you would prefer as a seller). You can stop a check, but there is little you can do about a money order if things go bad in the middle of a deal.

3. Get EXTENSIVE DESCRIPTIONS. Ask questions if the initial description is not detailed enough, and make sure you receive answers. If you sense resistance, or receive evasiveness or vague answers, PASS.

4. Get PICTURES whenever possible. If the seller is not equipped to send them via e-mail, then request them via snail mail (computer-speak for US Postal Service).

5. Get a RETURN PRIVILEGE; You WILL get dolls that are over-optimistically described, and you WILL use this privilege if you buy many dolls online.

6. Use COMMON SENSE: If something feels “off” about the doll, the seller, or the transaction, or you just get a bad feeling, LISTEN to your inner self, and pass on the doll. It isn’t worth taking a chance, and your inner warning system is usually reliable. The few times I have been “burnt” on a doll, if I had paid attention to my misgivings, I wouldn’t have been!

7. Don’t be RUSHED: If the seller is in an undue rush (desperate for money; family emergency, raising cash), your warning system should go off. Another doll will come along; PASS

8. Get a PHONE NUMBER and an ADDRESS. Don’t rely on an e-mail address and a post-office box; both can be ignored or disappear. Call the phone number.

9. KEEP CORRESPONDENCE: Keep all computerized correspondence until the doll is delivered, in case there is a dispute.

10. Do NOT Take Part In A THIRD PARTY Transaction: Don’t buy a doll from x who is either selling or shipping it for y. This is a recipe for disaster; you can get caught in the middle of a dispute between the two parties. This has happened to me; a lady went on a long vacation, left a doll with a friend to ship when my $$ were received. They had a dispute over postage and shipping costs (and, she stiffed her friend on the electricity bill). I had to pay postage and handling on the doll AGAIN (my cheapest option to get out of this), while the two parties continued to argue and I didn’t get my doll for nearly a month!

11. Does The Transaction Sound Too Good To Be True? Is someone offering you a perfect Jumeau for $500? RUN, quickly, in the opposite computerized direction.

12. Don’t Buy Dolls that are TOO EXPENSIVE Online: Set a limit that won’t be TOO painful if all of your precautions are of no use, and you get stuck with the dog doll of the century, or, even worse, no doll at all after payment. Remember, only YOU know what is too big a risk for you to take–for one person, it might be $50. For another, $5,000.

13. SHIPPING INSURANCE: It is a good idea to have this, in case your doll is lost or damaged in transit.

SELLING:

1. Get REFERENCES. Does the buyer pay their bills? Get e-mail and phone references from online transactions to make sure.

2. MONEY ORDERS AND CHECK CLEARANCE: When you sell, money orders are best for YOU. Money Orders are best. If you accept checks, make 100% sure it has cleared your bank before you ship the doll.

.3 Get a PHONE NUMBER and ACTUAL ADDRESS. Don’t rely on an e-mail address and post office box or a PMB. Call the phone number.

4. DISCLOSE ALL FLAWS: As mentioned above. Be 100% honest, or you will end up with unsuccessful transactions and returns!

5. Have POLICIES ON PAYMENT: Also as mentioned above, and stick to them

6. Offer a RETURN POLICY–I offer return for anything that is NOT as described (purchaser finds a flaw I didn’t describe, etc.) and a more liberal policy if asked for it up front.

7. Keep CORRESPONDENCE, DOCUMENTATION AND PICTURES: Since you DO offer a return policy, you need to protect yourself against the unscrupulous buyer who may return to you a DIFFERENT doll of the same type, which is in worse condition than yours (this is not very common, but could happen). I know one lady who sent out a mint #6 vintage Barbie, and what was returned to her was a very played with #6 Barbie. At least until the transaction is successfully completed, keep everything in case of a dispute.

8. Make The Buyer Purchase SHIPPING INSURANCE. It will help you have peace of mind, in case the box doesn’t arrive. Also, it gives you proof of successful delivery.

9. Ship PROMPTLY, and let your customer know when to expect shipment. If you are going on a one week vacation, and can’t ship that week, let your buyers know in ADVANCE so they don’t get nervous when their e-mails to you aren’t answered.

10. UPS VS. US MAIL?: This is a personal choice; I have had good luck with Priority Mail, Insured. My UPS packages are often received more mangled than my post office ones, because UPS ships so many heavy packages. BUT, UPS has a marvelous tracking service; you can track a package with your computer. So, for my very expensive or large dolls, I DO use UPS. Both services offer return receipts for a fee, and for expensive dolls, I would purchase this extra peace of mind.

11. PACK the doll well. You DO NOT want to have an expensive doll ruined in transit. You will have a headache to deal with, a ruined sale, and an unhappy customer.

I hope these tips are helpful; in future articles, we will cover buying and selling dolls via eBay and other online auctons, as well as buying and selling dolls via other methods on the Internet.



Gifts Under $5
Oct 6
doll collect
dollmarket asked:


Barbie Doll Collection – Guidelines



Here I wish to give an explicit list of instructions to collect Barbie dolls and a note on changing trends.

1. Look for no damage: Check the Barbie Doll you collect thoroughly, for any breaks or scratches since the defected dolls are less valued.

2. NRFB dolls are worthy: The Barbie Doll in ‘never removed from the box’ condition is more valuable than the one removed from pack.

3. Insist on original: A restored or an altered Barbie may be appealing but it is no good for collector, in terms of value.

4. Time of the make: The date you usually find on the abdomen of a doll is the designed date of mold but not the date it was made.

5. Distinct ones get more: The rarity of Barbie Dolls always counts. Dolls which are produced less than 35,000 as Limited editions are valued more than the Collector editions that are released more than 35,000 in number.

6. Attire: Doll with original getup and accessories are worthier than the Barbie Doll’s outfit when it is sold.

7. Update with latest price list: Buy a book that gives existing values for Barbie Doll. Assess your collectible Doll’s value by finding the same doll in list and an average of prices shown in such lists tells you the actual value.

8. Compare: Doll-shows at your place, auctions, local stores and online shops help you to compare the doll you are looking for with that of others.

9. How you evaluate is important: A Barbie Doll finds place in your collection only when it attracts you. In that way, your emotional attachment with that doll outdoes the market value and it becomes so precious for you!

10. That’s like a good doll: Good dolls never look weird as dumb or too trendy. You can pay more for collector picks and classics.

First is The Best

I received my first Barbie Doll on my fifth birthday in 1960. Like any other girl, I love the first doll of the collection. At that time Barbie was just one year or so and her first design was with strapless black and white zebra lines swimsuit and brown colored short hair.

Houseful of Dolls

It didn’t take much time to find plenty of Barbie Dolls within our collection. We, three little sisters collected dolls with every outfit and possible haircut. Our room used to be filled with sunglasses, earrings and plastic mules. Headless bodies of dolls in the garden and floating heads in the toilets had become common as the collection amassed.

We would have made much fortune if such large collection of 1960s was well taken care of.

Barbie’s Allies in 1960s

Barbie used to have apparently less number of friends, clothes, careers or vehicles in 60s. Assorted things and friends of Barbie was a big fascination for most girls.

Ken Carson, Barbie’s beau who was another important doll of my collection but I took less care to dress him up since he wore very casual clothes all the time including formal occasions accompanying Barbie.

Midge, the red haired friend of Barbie came later. However, Mattel was smart enough to design Midge’s clothes so specially that Barbie’s clothes never fit the blonde.

Barbie got a sister called Skipper and we had one Skipper doll at least.

Time for Multicultural Barbies

I was told about Caucasian dolls by couple of my African-American friends of our group while talking about toys and dolls we had. Including Mattel, the maker of Barbie couldn’t catch up the trend in time.

Old is Gold

If I were to buy, I would prefer to go for number of Barbies that look so chic and distinguished made in the years between 1959 and 1965.

As far as ‘the best collection’ of Barbie is concerned I recommend to spend on originals and first of the series and avoid indifferent qualities of latest ones.

Gift a lookalike Barbie

Barbie is a perfect gift when you present it dressed in a similar way of little girl whose birthday or other occasion is on. Then the girl likes to keep her Barbie clean, new and carefully dressed as she does for herself.



Gifts Under $5

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