I decided to hunt around a little for a couple books I had as a kid. I didn’t find one of them, but I found one set:
A set of four books: one on farm animals and pets, and then baby animals of Asia, Africa, and the Americas.
I got these as a birthday gift when I turned 7; I can’t remember if my parents gave them to me, or one of the aunt-uncle pairs. They’re basically very brief encyclopedic entries about each animal, along with drawings.
I liked learning about different animals as a kid, and these books have some unusual ones like saiga and pangolins. I was surprised to find that the books were originally published in French and then translated. They’re old enough to have “Rhodesia” on the map of Africa. And they don’t show a partitioned Korea, though they bear a 1970s copyright date.
I used these books as references when I wanted to draw animals as a kid, and I just liked looking at them.
In my looking for the bird book I didn’t find, I did find a few other things
Makit and Bakit kits were a thing when I was a kid: tiny hard plastic crystals you put inside a frame and baked. I now wonder what kind of damage I took from the plastic fumes (we made them in the kitchen oven) but they were fun to do.And then finally, dolls I had bought for my collection but absolutely didn’t remember having. I may have bought them at a doll show when I was in grad school.
In the 1970s, Mattel made a line of dolls called the Sunshine Family. I had a set, which I played with a lot- basically a wholesome, back to the lander family.
There was also a Black family (friends of theirs) called the Happy Family. I’ve never actually seen them.
But close to the Bicentennial, they made a “historical” line called Star Spangled Dolls - some were couples (a Revolutionary War soldier and his bride, a pair of jazz musicians) and some solo “girl” dolls (presumably: teenagers too young to marry yet)
I was already kind of “out” of being interested in dolls when they came out but in recent years I wanted some. And I did buy another Sunshine Family, plus the grandparents, from Etsy. From time to time I saw one of the Star Spangled Dolls, but they were either more than I wanted to pay, or were in poor shape.
So imagine my surprise when I found these packed away in a box: the Colonial Girl, the Pioneer Girl, and the “Indian Maiden” (of very nonspecific tribe).
They’re about 9” tall
ETA: they DO have names. The Colonial girl is Alison Thompson, the pioneer girl is Sarah Jane Benson, and the Native American girl is “Smiling Eyes,” and it says she’s from a “Northern Plains Tribe,” which, okay, that’s probably the best fit for the costume. (Living where I do I am much more familiar with Choctaw and Chickasaw traditional dress, and I have a nodding acquaintance with how Diné women would have dressed…)
1 comment:
I LOVE the pig!
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