I could be steppin' through a time zone! Oh, if I could do that I'd turn the clock foreward about a week so this God-forsaken ice would all melt. A bunch of freezing rain fell Monday night, Tuesday night brought another pulse, and Wednesday night brought still another wave. The roads are slicker than snake snot, and the library has been dead as a doornail as a result. But since I'm not in control of time or the weather I'll just suck it up and get on with the review. Today's doll could be considered a relative of sorts to both Rebecca and Ana Ming. She's Kat the Time Explorer.
The heavy emphasis on fantasy and Kat's connection to time travel bring Carpatina to mind. Like Stardust Classics, Carpatina has three main characters (Julia, Kohanna, and Ana Ming), and they could travel through time with the help of a magical moonstone necklace. Kat utilizes a time machine rather than a necklace or a spinning blue police box, but I digress. The backstories are similar, and when I put Kat with Ana Ming I realized that the dolls themselves are similar.
Kat's original box would've looked a lot like Ana Ming's (blue with an oval window in the front), and it turns out that there's good reason for this. Both dolls were designed by the same guy using the same three-dimensional computer animation. Not bad for the late nineties! That's all I know about the connection between Kat and Ana Ming, but there's bound to be more to it since Carpatina sold Stardust dolls for a brief period. Not that that matters to Kat and Ana Ming; they're already in a hurry to start talking. Unfortunately, I've gotta separate these two and review Kat. Like a great many of my dolls Kat is eighteen inches tall, just like Ana Ming, like Rebecca, and like...oh, fancy meeting you here, Luciana.
Houston, we may have a problem. You pull that time lord victorious crap on me and I'll wallop you one, Miss Kat. Ugh, if there was ever a time the Tenth Doctor needed a good, sound slapping it was at that moment...and if I'd been standing there he'd have gotten it. But I wasn't, and he didn't. Silliness aside, according to her books Kat is 100% human as opposed to a fairy or a princess or a God-knows-what. Stardust Classics dolls had a healthy dose of fantasy, but only one of the dolls (Laurel) was not human (she was the aforementioned fairy). Alissa, the princess, dabbled in white magic and thus probably could've been considered a witch, but...witches are humans, aren't they? Pity there wasn't a mermaid or something water-themed, since most little girls would eat a story like that up with a spoon. Whatever, you two stand still and let me compare your heights.
Since I brought up Rael, Kat's face reminds me a little of a My Twinn head.
Alrighty, so Ana Ming wins the expression contest, but let's look at nitty gritties. Kat's eyes are bright blue with rooted eyelashes, and they have alarmingly yellowed scleras. May want to have your liver tested ASAP, Kat. Her irises are unnaturally blue and look a lot like the eyes on my old Fairy Tale High Sleeping Beauty. At least they're not grape juice-colored like Teen Rapunzel's eyes (Miss Emily wasn't a fan of those, LOL).
All these girls wore long dresses (Laurel in green, Alissa in burgundy, and Kat in pink), and both Laurel and Kat wear low-cut numbers that like to slide off their shoulders. I freaking HATE that!!!
Indeed, when I took this outfit off the underlayers held a faint reek of Eau du Cigarette, so I think I may know now why the lace (and Kat's eyes) are yellowed. Have I ever mentioned that I freaking HATE cigarettes??? If you smoke, more power to you, but I can't stand the things. Anywho, I think this waistline is a princess-cut waistline, but don't quote me on that. This overall outfit is supposed to have an overall Victorian theme, and indeed this dress looks like it could easily accommodate a corset. The seam is trimmed with a string of fake pearls, and to my delight the string is sewn on with the teeniest little stitches. I had been afraid that they'd be glued on, but they're not.
This top layer is gathered in two areas, and the peaks of these gathers are decorated by white bows with three pink flowers. Like the lace at the neckline, these bows have yellowed somewhat, though not quite as badly as the lace.
The third layer is also pink, and it's the layer that is trimmed with lace. It is also evenly cut all around, and is the longest layer. This dress as a whole is the perfect length for tripping on unless one takes "little baby steps," as Felicity Merriman once put it.
This lowest layer is the one that's trimmed with the lace. This stuff is the soft kind, like the stuff trimming the neck.
Now...NOW, underneath the skirt is nothing. American Girls usually have period-appropriate skivvies (a shift in Felicity's case, pantaloons for Kirsten, NOTHING for Kaya, and so on). Kat has white lace-trimmed underwear and lace tights that we'll soon see, but as for things attached to the dress, all there is to see is a tag, marked with the warning "DRY CLEAN ONLY." So much for giving this dress a spin in THE PICKLE JAR OF DESPAIR.
The sleeves are layered similarly to the skirt, though there's only two layers: a pink overlayer and a gathered white underlayer. The sleeve is trimmed with more of that itchy-looking lace.
Okay, I was lying a little when I said that Kat wasn't wearing anything under her skirt. As I said above, she has white lace stockings.
The toes and heels are nicely reinforced. I don't see that too often in doll tights.
The skivvies are a step up from what Ana Ming has (hers don't have lace). Rebecca is missing her drawers so I can't comment on what she's wearing, but since Rebecca and Kat came from the same company around the same time I presume that they wore the same britches.
On her feet Kat wears pink slippers that match her dress, and they're the weakest part of her outfit.
Oh, they're pretty enuff, and they match Kat's dress to a T, but the glue is yellowing badly and is losing its tack. Both shoes are missing their soles.
I can mend that with some white or pink craft foam, but durn it, I shouldn't have to! Ana Ming's slippers are head and shoulders above this, though granted, there is a ten-year age gap between Kat's shoe and Ana Ming's. Here's the top side of both...
What a pity that those shoes were glued together, but then again a sewn shoe probably would've drawn production costs up. One can't sew a shoe that tiny, by hand or by machine, without going half-blind.
Kat, Alissa, and Laurel all could be bought with an extra accessory set that was very much like the meet accessories that accompanied American Girls. Laurel and Alissa both got outerwear, a headpiece, and something to hold, while Kat forewent the outerwear for a parasol. In addition to the parasol she had a white lace fan that matched the parasol, a cameo choker, and a hair bow that was attached to a comb. Alas, my Kat has only her bow.
It matches the bows decorating Kat's skirt, and it's yellowed a teensy bit (not as badly as Kat's eyes, though). The teeth of the comb are long enuff to hold this firmly in Kat's hair, and as such it can create quite a few styles. I hope to find the cameo choker, as Kat has a longish neck and it looks bare without something on it. Overall this outfit is attractive and robustly constructed (I found not a single loose thread), but boy howdy would I hate to wear it! I don't know how women in the Victorian era survived, and Kat doesn't even have the worst components of that period's fashion! She's not wearing a corset, nor is she wearing high-button boots, neither of which look a bit comfortable. Kat looks very pretty in this dress though, and thank goodness, it hasn't stained her body. Alissa's wine-colored meet outfit apparently did stain, as does Kat's silk coat and cap.
As an aside, at the top of the garment bag is this sticker, proclaiming that the coat can fit other eighteen-inch vinyl-bodied dolls.
Interestingly, despite being long out of her box Kat arrived with her hang tag still tied to her wrist, and said hang tag included some very interesting information. I don't know if Dolls Unlimited was the holding company for all of these poppets or if they were just a distributor, but either way they had some advertisements for dolls that were...NOT Just Pretend dolls. There was a Bitty Baby competitor called My Li'l Punkin.
BAD
*The hair is long and curly, and as such is hard to handle.
*Similarly, Kat's dress is a lot to manage, even though it feels very substantial in my hands.
*Kat's eyes and parts of her outfit have a lot of yellowing, but I don't think that's her fault.
*Shoes are falling apart at the seams. Again, this is age-related.
*Some clothes have a problem with staining. Kat dodged that bullet, but her friend Alissa did not.
*Can't share clothes with American Girls, but that's not a huge deal. Just thought I'd throw it out there.
*Hair was easy to whip into shape, but if you're a kid, ask an adult for help.
*With the exception of the shoes, these clothes are robust. I wasn't expecting that, not after handling Ana Ming's clothes for so long.
*Poses well, but be wary of loosening joints on these dolls, as they're strung.
*Shares clothes with Carpatina and Magic Attic, and Sasha can wear her clothes (though mine didn't want to).
*I love the concept of this line as a whole, with all the fantasy that encourages kids to play "make-believe."
Happy Groundhog Day,
RagingMoon1987
Are you familiar with the line of 18 inch historical dolls that Madame Alexander produced based on the Dear America book series? It was admittedly a short-lived line. I believe there were only 4 dolls released. But one of the characters was a Pilgrim on the Mayflower and another character was on the Titanic.
ReplyDeleteI never owned any of these dolls myself. But I remember seeing the Titanic one in store.
Signed, Treesa
I actually have seen pictures of them, yes! I was most interested in the Titanic girl because I own that book. Don't own any yet, though; just bought some crap I didn't need, so now I need to take a break from shopping.
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