Bought: * an original 1963 Easy Bake Oven
in stunning turquoise plastic,
with its box & accessories
* a huge set of 1930s Strombecker dollhouse furniture
* a rare 1960s troll doll
* a bunch of 1930s - 40s radio premiums
(toy rings and badges from shows like
The Lone Ranger and Captain Midnight)
* a prize badge for the winner of the 1914
Galveston, Texas, annual Oyster-Eating Contest
(it was Bob Frey, and he ate 928!)
* a bag full of vintage celluloid dice
* a new book about the history of garden gnomes
I've done my part to stimulate the economy...
Thursday, March 18, 2010
You Know You Have Too Many Toys When...
You know you have too many toys when...you buy something you already have, because you didn't realize you already had it.
I recently was thrilled to win this vintage 1960s Batman Viewmaster reel set, complete with original package and story booklet, on ebay:
I recently was thrilled to win this vintage 1960s Batman Viewmaster reel set, complete with original package and story booklet, on ebay:
When it arrived, I gleefully headed to my "toy storage room", aka, my second bedroom, in search of my Viewmaster, where I discovered this:
a box FULL of vintage Viewmaster reels I didn't even remember I owned, with, resting prominently on the top, the 1960s Batman set.
So, if anyone needs a 1960s Batman Viewmaster reel set, complete with original package and booklet, drop me a line, and I can hook you up...
Labels:
Batman,
Fiscal Irresponsibility,
Viewmaster,
vintage
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
The Fashionable Ladies
The three little trolls below are some of my favorites. They look like fashionable "society" ladies, heading off for an afternoon of lunch, shopping, and ogling the pool boy. The girl on the left was made by one of the many unknown 1960s troll makers, while her two friends on the right are by Scandia House.
Troll Fashionistas.
Rooted Hair Troll
Most 1960s trolls had their hair affixed with glue: it was quick, which meant it was cheap to do. Time-consuming and thus more costly was the rarely seen alternative method of individually rooting each hair (just like a doll's hair). Trolls with rooted hair are hard to come by. I have only one, this 3 inch girl below with long salt & pepper locks. If you look closely, you'll see a little ridge above her brows, where the hairs have been individually rooted.
She's special, and she knows it!
Unique Hair Troll
Scandia House made some of the most beautiful trolls of the 1960s. They're notable for their luxurious 'dos: big, BIG poufs of gorgeous mohair. I read somewhere that at the height of the 1960s troll craze, an entire year's production of Icelandic mohair was purchased by troll manufacturers. That's a heck of a lot of troll hair! Anyway, this girl has some of the most unique mohair I've ever seen on a troll: it actually has a frizzly wave to it, and, being undyed, it reveals its natural tint, varying from gray to ivory. She wears a vintage troll dress in a fashionable '60s print.
Stylin'!
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