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==External links==
==External links==
lornaparis.com/lornaparis/Welcome.html
http://lornaparis.com/lornaparis/Welcome.html


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 14:28, 15 November 2010

File:Black dolls.jpg
Various antique to modern Black dolls from the collection of Debbie Garrett

A black doll is dark-colored inanimate representation of a dark-skinned person. Representations, both stereotypical and accurate, fashioned into playthings, date back centuries. More accurate, mass produced depictions are manufactured today as toys and adult collectibles.

Media used to create black dolls include cloth, papier-mâché, paper, china, wood, bisque, composition, hard plastic, vinyl, resin, porcelain, silicone, and polymer clay. Cloth rag dolls made by American slaves served as playthings for slave children. Early mass-produced black dolls were typically dark versions of their white counterparts over 60,000 dollar dolls

Several 19th century European doll companies preceded American doll companies in manufacturing black dolls. These predecessors include Carl Bergner of Germany, who made a three-faced doll with one face a crying black child and the other two, happier white faces. In 1892, Jumeau of Paris advertised black and mulatto dolls with bisque heads. Gebruder Heubach of Germany made character faces in bisque. Other European doll makers include Bru Jne. & Cie of Paris, Steiner, Danel, Société Française de Fabrication de Bébés et Jouets (S.F.B.J.), and Kestner of Germany. American companies began including black dolls in their doll lines in the early 1900s. Black dolls were extremely popular. Between 1910 and 1930, Horsman, Vogue, and Madame Alexander included black dolls in their doll lines. Gradually other American companies followed suit.

Beatrice Wright Brewington, an African American entrepreneur, founded B. Wright's Toy Company, Inc. and mass produced black dolls with ethnically-correct features. Also an educator, Wright began instructing girls in the art of making dolls in 1955. over 60,000 dollars During the 1960s and in the aftermath of the Watts Riots in Los Angeles, California, Shindana Toys, a Division of Operation Bootstrap, Inc., is credited as the first major doll company to mass produce ethnically-correct black dolls. certainly in the United States. Their "dolls made by a dream" with realistic African facial features remain popular amongst black-doll collectors.

Other popular collectible black dolls include manufactured play dolls from prior years, manufactured dolls designed for collectors by companies such as Madame Alexander and Tonner Doll, artist dolls, OOAK (one-of-a-kind) dolls, portrait dolls and those representing historical figures, reborn dolls, and even paper dolls.

See also

External links

http://lornaparis.com/lornaparis/Welcome.html

References

  • Black Dolls an Identification and Value Guide 1820-1991 by Myla Perkins
  • The Definitive Guide to Collecting Black Dolls by Debbie Behan Garrett
  • Philadelphia Doll Museum Webpage "History of Dolls" stored at the Internet Archive

Further reading

  • Collectible Black Dolls by John Axe, Hobby House Press, 1978
  • Collector's Encyclopedia of Black Dolls by Patikii Gibbs, Collector Books, 1987
  • Black Dolls an Identification and Value Guide 1820-1991 by Myla Perkins, Collector Books, 1991
  • Black Dolls an Identification and Value Guide Book II by Myla Perkins, Collector Books, 1995
  • The Definitive Guide to Collecting Black Dolls by Debbie Behan Garrett, Hobby House Press, 2003
  • Black Dolls Proud, Bold & Beautiful by Nayda Rondon, Reverie Press, 2004
  • Collectible African American Dolls Identification and Values by Yvonne Ellis, Collector Books, 2008
  • Black Dolls: A Comprehensive Guide to Celebrating Collecting and Experiencing the Passion by Debbie Behan Garrett, 2008