Little apple dolls
What a sweet mold!
From that Chaos, a safe Haven will be born; the Inbetween. Created by British Doll Maker Ufuoma Urie, this series follows the stories of a group of little girls and one boy whose lives are ended by a mysterious force, usually via supernatural means; Suicide , Murder , etc Anyone Can Die , even cute little kids. In the beginning, Sine , a little girl, dies unexpectedly from a disease, which is caused by the series' Big Bad. She ends up in an afterlife where little boys and girls who share a similar fate are, only to realize that not everything is truly as it seems. An apple in her pocket that has come to life thanks to the powers of the afterlife helps her get free, and they go in search of other lost souls.
Little apple dolls
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Her death came when she starved to death from the lack of shadows. There's an innocent sadness in that strange face, little apple dolls. Erro's body is all white semi-soft vinyl and has 5 points of articulation.
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What a sweet mold! The doll and backstory are not my style. It is definitely a haunting story! I find I am still thinking about it today. Can you picture this doll posed on a shelf next to Disney's Rapunzel and a few Liv dolls? She doesn't really fit in, to say the least. I think I need to reorganize my collection!
Little apple dolls
An apple doll , also known as an apple-head or applehead doll , is a North American folk craft in which the doll's head is made from a dried apple. In modern times, apple dolls are mostly used as decorations or to display craftsmanship , rather than as children's toys. Because of the different effects drying produces, no two dolls are alike. In colonial America , white settlers and enslaved people fashioned children's toys from utilitarian objects and materials on hand such as corn husks, clothes-pins and rags , using ingenuity and imagination. As colonists came into contact with Native peoples, they copied their dolls; Native peoples also began to make brightly and elaborately costumed apple-head dolls to sell to tourists.
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The second time that Sine uses the Salt Circle as punishment for the lives Ianua took. Her death is met after she is returns to her old garden and black flames burn her alive. That's a great looking hat. I have seen a few Tangkou dolls--one of my favorite doll photographers on Flickr bought one a while back and took some very nice pictures of her. The Little Apple Dolls are a much, much milder interpretation of dead children than, say, the Living Dead dolls, but I am finding that as I get older, I have a shrinking tolerance for themes like this. I found one in a thrift shop. I like her tall kitty friend, too. My goodness. It's clear the doll is derived from Japanese religious sources. Now I'm weirdly obsessed with them, without having the slightest notion of why that might be. Such a pain! Not sure about that, but anyway, it isn't voodoo.
From that Chaos, a safe Haven will be born; the Inbetween.
Erro's body is all white semi-soft vinyl and has 5 points of articulation. Eating the eggs would kill her. Email This BlogThis! The second time that Sine uses the Salt Circle as punishment for the lives Ianua took. I definitely hope to see her make an appearance here. The cable tie holding my doll was cut I'm thinking she was not as mint in box as the seller wanted me to believe The minis are nicely done with removable cloth clothing. I thought at first that this was some kind of voodoo pincushion, but the story on the flap of Erro's box explains that pins, while destructive in the real world, are actually symbols of protection and friendship in the Inbetween. I think I agree about the mask, too. Can you picture this doll posed on a shelf next to Disney's Rapunzel and a few Liv dolls? Oh yes, you'll be sorry. They are happy there, and despite their creepy appearance, they're not evil. Her eyes are alien-slanted black sockets and she has just the slightest suggestion of a nose. The simple clothing and unmanageable hair on this doll are its weaknesses.
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