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E-Hobby Legends Series Deadlock - First In-Hand Images Of Decepticon Drift

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Artist Naoto Tsushima and another Twitter user have received their E-Hobby Deadlock figures! A recolor of Generations Drift representing his pre-redemption days as Deadlock, the figure comes with both Generations Drift's greatsword and moldmate Blurr's rifles. A very nice looking figure - keep reading for a closer look!

Previews of Customs for #ToyConUK from Doktor A

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Doktor A has been dropping images of customs he'll be bringing with him for his tenure at ToyConUK this year (Booth #35) - including Dunnys, a Frankie figure by Fury Fury, a SquidKidsInk resin, and his own character creations - including hand-painted Todd Morden and Colonel Rombus, amongst others. Featured below is his "Worry Bean" custom done for Taylored Curiosities, also to debut at

Mercedes Benz NEXT A-Class Anime Short Film

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A photo posted by TOYSREVIL (@toysrevil) on Mar 26, 2016 at 7:12am PDT After the "recruitment-anime" from McDonalds' come to light, yet another "cooperate" related project has been unearthed on the internets, this time from the not too distant past, with "NEXT A-Class", promoting German brand "Mercedes Benz"'s "A 180" vehicle in Japan! Produced by Production I.G, the 6-minuter was released circa

[Sideshow] Armored Batman Premium Format Figure

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From the movie Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice comes the Armored Batman Premium Format Figure by Sideshow Collectibles. The Armored Batman statue stands approximately 23 inches tall and was made in collaboration with […]

set database: LEGO 41543 turg

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set database: LEGO 41543 turg
image courtesy of brickmerge
image courtesy of amazon.co.uk
image courtesy of amazon

set number: 41543
set name: turg
theme: mixels
year: 2015
pieces: 56
price: us$5
minifig: none
new mixels theme.
come with a poseable mixel character.
the character is turg.
good playability.
overall design is good.
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Figure King 218 - MP-32 Optimus Primal, Legends Hardhead, Skullsmasher, Galvatron, More

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Thanks to Loopaza Mega Store on facebook who has posted new images from the Japanese toy collectors magazine, Figure King issue 218. Here, we have some new previews of the up coming Takara Tomy Transformers products including color images of the MP-32 Optimus Primal with details on his head sculpt, weapons and more. Also show are Transformers Legends Hardhead, Skullsmasher, and Galvatron that are the Japan editions of their of their Titans Returns releases from Hasbro. Read on for the full looks now at all these and more previews.

Marble Splurrt Cadaver Kids and Mecha Brain Cadaver Kids

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To continue celebrating 5 years of the Cadaver Kid, Splurrt has teamed up with Grody Shogun to give Cadaver Kid (and Mecha Brain Cadaver Kid) a marble treatment in three different pink marble colorways. Lulubell Toys has announced that the Cadaver Kids will run $50.00 each and the Mecha Brain Cadaver Kids will be $55.00. They will […] Read more

kinetiquettes continues their capcom collaboration with a painted Devil may Cry Statue

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Kinetiquettes are at it again and this time, they're plying their trade on a title not called Street Fighter! They're still in bed with capcom though, but that's not a bad thing when they can give us a great diorama like this one of the two sons of Sparda!

And in even better news, they decided to tackle the brothers as they appear in Devil May Cry 4, and not the blandly pedestrian reboot.

There are four parts to the diorama, the brothers each get two statues depicting them in their human and devil trigger forms. Each statue can also combined with another in a number of ways. Sadly, there is no news of when pre-orders open up for us but hopefully, it won't be too long. In the meantime, we can look forward to the Street Fighter Diorama with the shoto characters.

[via kinetiquettes]

kinetiquettes continues their capcom collaboration with a painted Devil may Cry Statue screenshot

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Ghost In The Shell Arise Motoko Kusanagi ARTFXJ Statue

Life-Size Ghostbusters Slimer Replica From NECA

Wishing Steiff Collectors Around The World A Very Hoppy Easter!

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In the mood for a handful of Easter cheer?  Then this petite post on a small scale Steiff rabbit should do the trick!  There is something so endearing, and so precious, about Steiff's teeny, tiny treasures.  Come see for yourself how size defies when it comes to this happy hopper!

Blink and you might miss this baby bunny.  He measures 8 cm tall (including his ears) and 7 cm wide.  He is unjointed and in Steiff's "lying" position, meaning his hind legs are curled under his backside.  His torso, the front of his ears, and his underside are made from short white mohair.  His body, face, and back of ears are made from tan mohair.  His darling face comes to life with a simple red hand embroidered nose and mouth, black and brown glass pupil eyes, and tan airbrushing.  This pattern was made in 6, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, and 17 cm from 1930 through 1943 overall.  This example has a short trailing "f" style button, dating him in approximately in the 1936 through 1943 time frame.  Another example of this pattern was sold at auction in 2014; you can see that honey-bunny by clicking here.

This tiny rabbit has a few really big details that make him quite interesting.  The first is his size.  For the most part, Steiff items are "measured" without ears and without tails, and vertically.  As such, if his ears are taken out of the equation, his "official" measurement is 6 cm.  This puts him in at the smallest size made in this pattern.  However, he is not the smallest size rabbit ever made by Steiff - not by a longshot! In the prewar era, Steiff manufactured rabbits as small as 4 cm in velvet or felt. 

His second feature has been lost to time, but not to history.  When this item left the factory in Giengen, he had two wooden dowels lightly sewn onto his legs - one between his front limbs and one between his hind limbs.  You can see a picture of this to the left; the photo is taken from Pfeiffer's 1892-1943 Sortiment book. This somewhat unusual, labor intensive step was done to keep the body position secure and in line during manufacturing, packing, shipping, and distribution.  This same process was also done on some of the company's Scotty dogs of the same era, but Steiffgal is not aware of any other examples of this dowel treatment.

Steiffgal hopes this discussion on this Easter hare-binger has been and egg-cellent adventure for you.

Pure Romance Golden Girl Open-ended pleasure toy Male Toy

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Product Description When he uses the Golden Girl Pleasure Sleeve, he’ll thank her for being a

New Voltron: Legendary Defender Animated Series Images & Test Footage Video

Mezco’s 8-inch Beetlejuice Plush

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The afterlife's leading bio- exorcist is back and the manic Beetlejuice is bringing the creepy and the crazy! Mezco's newly announced Beetlejuice Plush stands in at 8 inches tall and features his black and white striped suit, a tangled mass of mossy green hair, while his sardonic grimace reveals his trademark yellowed teeth. Beetlejuice comes […] Read more

[Review] Lady Deadpool Bishoujo Statue by Kotobukiya

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Click here to order! Transcript: What is up everybody? This is Omegabalmung back again with another statue figure unboxing. Today, I got a pretty awesome statue from Kotobukiya. This is Lady Deadpool from […]

Batman v Superman: Dawn Of Justice Coming To Blu-ray In July

Almost Done! Wool "Portrait" of Terrier-Poo

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I’m getting close! The top coat on this sculpture is raw fleece that I hand washed. This is my

TNI Exclusive - New DC Collectibles Bombshell Busts, Statues & Gotham City Garage Wonder Woman Revealed

Isolda - Just Let Her Stroll In The Park! - Victorian Girl Doll

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"Isolda" loves to stroll in the park. It doesn't matter if it's sunny, rainy, cold, or warm. Isolda just loves being outside and loves walking, strolling, chatting with friends she meets, and just plain musing.

"Isolda" is an 11" Victorian cloth bodied doll with a gathered waistline, cloth legs with cross laced and painted black boots, porcelain head, and porcelain arms. She is wearing an 1863 Street Dress.  Isolda is wearing bloomers with lace trim that are gathered at the waist. Her slip is lace trimmed and gathered at the waist as well.

Her 1863 Street Dress has oversleeves. The sleeves have two layers of lace trim along the sleeve hem edge and are gathered at the shoulders. The oversleeves have lace trim along the edge and are also gathered at the shoulders. Her Victorian dress is gathered at the waist and lace trimmed at the waist as well. Her dress has 1 layer of gathered lace trim and one layer of wide gathered satin ribbon trim along the bottom hem edge. The neck edge of her dress is gathered and lace trimmed. Isolda has a delicate old handkerchief wrapped around her shoulders for a shawl that is tied in a knot in the front.

"Isolda" can spend all day just walking, strolling, talking, chatting, pondering and musing in the park. She never gets bored and never gets tired of it. Just let her stroll, and stroll, and stroll.

Note: The porcelain head and hands that are pictured are from Midwest Design Imports.

Designer - Linda Walsh of Linda Walsh Originals

For more information on my Isolda handmade doll please CLICK HERE.

Early American Wooden Dolls By Joel Ellis From 1873

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While I was doing research  on the "The History of Faceless Dolls" I read several articles about antique wooden dolls and fell in love with Penny Wooden Dolls so much so that I ended up writing a blog post entitled, "I'm In Love With Penny Wooden or Peg Wooden Dolls."

While doing that research I also ran across the wooden dolls created by Joel Ellis in 1873 which piqued my curiosity as he was from Vermont and only made his dolls for one year. Given I'm a die hard New Englander and curious as to why he only made them for one year I had to find out more.

Not only did I love his wooden dolls, what interested me was the workmanship on his dolls clothes, which was exceptional, unlike the cheap clothes on manufactured dolls today.

The doll pictured above is for sale on the Liveauctioneers.com website - 9: Rare 19th Century Wooden Head Doll, Joel Ellis.  According to their website this doll is attributed to Joel Ellis with metal hands, legs & feet and stands 15" tall.

According to their website,"Joel Ellis created a doll whose face is indeed a portrait of the traditional New England model of graceful simplicity – a quiet composed and simple beauty that now transports us to a long ago time. Yet we may forget the technological challenges and triumphs so benignly represented in this little rendition of humanity."

It turns out that Joel was an inventive genius who patented 13 different articles, one of which was for a wooden doll. He is credited as being the creator of the first commercial doll for America which he manufactured through his company, the Co-operative Manufacturing Company, on the premises of the Vermont Novelty Goods Company.

He filed his patent for a wooden doll of rock maple with mortise and tenon joints, and pewter or iron hands and feet on February 21, 1873 and it was granted on May 20, 1873.

According to the article from the Old and Sold Antiques Marketplace, "In 1873 Ellis took out a patent for a wooden doll of rock maple with mortise and tenon joints, and pewter or iron hands and feet. Heads were of blocks of wood taken from the end of the grain and rounded, except for one pointed side which allowed for the nose. Each block was put into a steel mold and shaped under hydraulic pressure. When it came out of the press, holes were drilled to fit a large tenon that had been made on the end of the body. The head, which was stationary, was glued to the body by means of this large tenon. The doll came in twelve, fifteen, and eighteen-inch heights. The most plentiful is the twelve inch, the least, the eighteen inch."

According to the Liveauctioneers.com description of the 9: Rare 19th Century Wooden Head Doll, Joel Ellis, "The first Ellis dolls of 1871 had pewter heads and feet. There was only one style of head and body available. The doll embodies many technical innovations. Its unique mortise and tenon construction allow a complete range of movement. Molded of rock hard rock maple, an extinct type of hardwood prevalent in New England at that time, molding and finishing must have demanded great skill. The design and construction proves excellent technical skill. Not only ingeniously built, it is well proportioned and gracefully elegant. The articulated joints work with uncommon ease. The metal hands and feet are gracefully shaped. It is a most sophisticated doll figure."

He filed his patent for a wooden doll of rock maple with mortise and tenon joints, and pewter or iron hands and feet on February 21, 1873 and it was granted on May 20, 1873.


In doing research for this on the web I found a copy of the patent page from The Commissioners of Patents' Journal By Great Britain. Patent Office.  What's interesting to note about this page, which is shown in the picture above, is that the person listed above him is Thomas Edison.  That listing is the patent for a "printing telegraph."  If you'd like to see a version of that page that you can read please CLICK HERE.

Joel Ellis operated the Co-Operative Manufacturing Company in Springfield Vermont from 1873 to 1874.

According to the Old and Sold Antiques Marketplace article, "The head, lower limbs, and forearms were dipped in flesh-colored paint; the features, eyes, and hair were painted by women, notably by two cousins of Joel Ellis, the Misses Woodbury, who became painters of miniatures."

Joel's dolls were only manufactured for one year due to the depression of 1873 so they are extremely rare today. Supposedly they cost 75 cents, which was an expensive amount for a doll in 1873. Their value today is dependant on the dolls condition and size, with the larger dolls valued at several thousand dollars.


The doll shown above is from the collection on the Museum Of Play website.

According to their description of this doll, "Unlike soft-bodied dolls of the time, the "Springfield Woodens" could even stand on their heads! This design, fascinating to children, led advertisers to declare that the "cost and trouble of dressing" the doll could be avoided."

"True to Victorian-era conventions, women, who made up one-third of the 50-60 employees, painted the doll's features and cast-iron hands and feet, while only men operated the complex lathes and other machinery."  

God forbid Victorian women were allowed to use lathes and other machinery!


What intrigued me about the dolls was their clothing and that they were made during the Victorian Era.The dolls pictured above are 50: Pair of Joel Ellis Dolls from the LiveAuctioneers.com website. I just love the tiered layers of the dolls dress above.


I found the doll pictured above, whose outfit I just love, on the Cowan's Auctions website - Lot 487  Early Joel Ellis Wooden Jointed Doll,

In 2005 some of Joel's dolls were the highlight of an exhibit by the Springfield Art and Historical Society which had combined it's doll collection with dolls from the Eldridge family of Springfield. The exhibit has 500 dolls from around the world including some from Joel Ellis.


If you look at the picture of the Rare Joel Ellis Wood Doll pictured above from the Morphy Auctions website you can't help but admire it's simplistic beauty.  At least I can't.

  

While the features of the dolls remained the same as he used the same mold for all his dolls he did manufacture both white and black dolls, like the beautiful Rare American Black-Complexioned Doll by Joel Ellis doll pictured on the left above on the Theriault's website and the Black Joel Ellis Jointed Wooden Doll pictured on the right above on the Skinner Inc. website.


The AMERICAN WOODEN DOLL BY JOEL ELLIS WITH RARE BROWN HAIR is also from the Theriault's website 


I found the 66. Joel Ellis carved wood doll  pictured above and 67. Two Joel Ellis  dolls pictured below on the Willis Henry Auctions website.

The paint on the dolls seems to be the weakest element in  their construction and hasn't held up as well as the clothing has. Despite that you can't help but admire the beauty of these dolls and simplicity of their design. Had it not been for the depression of 1873 he probably would have continued manufacturing his charming dolls.
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