Looking for something?

Showing posts with label Meygan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meygan. Show all posts

Friday, October 13, 2023

Sorry, it's another Bratz post, LOL!

Happy Friday the 13th, ladies and germs!  Xanadu correctly predicted that more Bratz dolls were to visit the blog.  I know they're not everyone's thing, so you're welcome to NOT read if you wish.  That said, I learned a somewhat-painful lesson this past week during an eBay browsing session:  if you see a Bratz doll or a Monster High doll you like, get it.  My searches for Dynamite Nevra and Haunted Kiyomi Haunterly ended in disappointment, as in-box examples go for a hundred bucks (or so), and out-of-box dolls are inevitably missing pieces.  Case in point:  Welcome to Fabulous Tiana can go for THREE hundred dollars MIB.  My doll is a very close match to her, and she's available RIGHT NOW, so I got her.

Yep, Tiana, not to be confused with the Frog Princess.  Tiana reminds me of my childhood favorites Jade and Kumi, and also of Maci, who was a young adult favorite.  I love the red streaks in her black hair.

Fun fact:  Felicia and Tiana do indeed have nylon hair.  Thanks to Bailey Maria for pointing this out.  The days of fishing wire nylon are apparently long over, because both Felicia and Tiana have soft, smooth, manageable hair.  A far cry from Meygana Broomstix's eternally tangled mane and Jade J'adore's short-but-still-coarse bob.  I wonder what MGA Entertainment was thinking, saddling their dolls with that crap?  No, no, don't tell me!  It was cheaper than decent hair.

In the time that's elapsed since Felicia made her debut, the temperature has dropped significantly.  It was ninety at the very beginning of October, then lows bottomed out around 42-fahrenheit on the seventh of the month, then after a brief rally temps are in the low seventies again.  Felicia has an outfit that will fit the season, but Tiana...hmmm.

A fur jacket and a crop top!  Yep, makes total sense!  Yeah, yeah, I know that the Welcome to Fabulous line was supposed to be dressed up for a night at Las Vegas during God-knows-when in the year, not for an autumn afternoon in the Missouri Delta.  But the juxtaposition between crop top and jacket still makes me giggle.  The jacket is partially lined, by the way, and I love the fabric MGA used.

In true Bratz fashion Tiana also comes with another outfit that shows a copious amount of skin.  Pardon Tiana's slightly unkempt ponytail; I need to wash some gel out of her hair.

I have to admit that I'm growing less and less accepting of revealing clothes as I grow older.  As a teenager I'd have shrugged at Tiana's skimpy outfit and said "She's going out to party, no big deal."  Now I know that sixteen-year-old girls almost NEVER dress like that unless their parents just don't give a crap what they do.  Goodness knows my parents wouldn't have let me out of the house dressed like Tiana, OR Felicia when Felicia is wearing her skimpier outfit.  But as I've said before, that's real life, and Tiana and Felicia are not real life.  Still, I understand more and more why some parents were concerned about these back in the day.  My dad didn't mind me playing with the Bratz, but then again I was a teenager and understood fully that dolls are make-believe.  Little girls sometimes don't know where that line between real and not real lies.  Whatever, strike a pose, girls!

It's worth noting that it takes a fair amount of hand strength to bend these dolls' knees, just as it initially did when the first wave came out.  I was about fourteen when I received my first-wave Jade, and I didn't learn that her knees could bend until...I think I was reviewing May Lin when I figured out that Jade could indeed bend her knees.

So far I like all the dolls from this current Bratz line, but I'm gonna try to show SOME self-control and wait for the Pretty 'N' Punk revamp to come out.  Jade, Yasmin, and Eitan are my favorites from that line, but if I have to get just one I'll flip a coin between Yasmin and Eitan.  Yasmin is underrepresented in my collection, and I have exactly ONE boy (Cameron, from way back in the first wave).  I am a little sad though that the revamp doesn't come with dogs like the original line did.  I liked the dogs because they all named after musicians that I either liked or knew of:  Elton John, Ozzy Osbourne, Ronan Keating, and Gavin...Gavin Rossdale, was it?  Bush was modern, and even now I can't name a single song they performed.  Interestingly, the Boyz from this line had cats, christened Nigel, Ian, and Sherlock.  LOL, I love the name "Sherlock" for a cat!  I did think it was a shame that Elton (Jade's dog, wouldn't y'all know) was a Scottie rather than a cocker spaniel, since Elton John owned a cocker spaniel at the time, but then how many of us knew that???  Besides, Scotties are awesome.  The rerelease doesn't include these pets, but pets or no they make me hopeful for others that I let slip away.  Maybe Dynamite Nevra will show up, or Design Your Own (that one was freaky!), or iCandy, or oooh, oooh, everyone loves the Funk 'n' Glow lines!  The Funk 'n' Glow dolls had clothes that lit up, and the first two waves came with two outfits.  By the time the third wave rolled around extra outfits had been phased out, but they were still a cute bunch.  So I dunno.  Take that back, I DO know that walking down the doll isle makes me giddy with excitement, just like it did when I was a teenager.  Bratz are just part of it, just like they were then, but once again they're a pretty big part.  They've got a LOT more competition now, mostly from their own "cousins" (Rainbow High, Shadow High, and O.M.G., all fellow MGA Entertainment dolls), as well as good ol' Barbie and the Disney Princesses.  But still, it's lovely to see these bratty, goofy-looking dolls back, if even for a short while.  I plan on making the best of it.  Heck, there's even minis!

These dolls and accessories are small enuff to be dolls for Felicia and Tiana.  Kumi is one of the options and I was hoping to get her...

...but I got Cloe from the Rock Angelz line, and Sasha from the Wintertime Collection.  I don't hate that result!  Indeed, I liked the Wintertime Collection, because that group of dolls made dressing for cold weather look fun.  But...but the Wintertime Collection Sasha I found is dressed in gold, not green and blue.  The Sasha I have is from the Wintertime Wonderland line, which I do remember and do love.  Their clothes were warm and practical, but also colorful and stylish, very much like I tried to be during the bleak winter months that I hate so terribly.  As for the Rock Angelz, they were okay, and I liked the belly tattoos, but they didn't wow me like other lines did.  These are nice little figures, though.  Sasha looks particularly fierce.

Cloe's package is elliptical, so she's harder to photograph.  However, her two-tone hair can be faintly seen near her shoulders.  This Cloe was one of the few with dark hair (Cloe is usually the token blonde).

As far as I know the rest of the paint is spot on, though her jeans probably should've been darker.  The full-sized Cloe wore dark-wash jeans...I think.  It's been a long time since I saw these dolls in person.  Maybe the Rock Angelz will see another release just like the Pretty 'N' Punk bunch is.  So far all of the new Bratz have been reproductions...with a few exceptions.  This is the one that popped up in the local Wal-Mart.

Kylie Jenner.  I try to avoid anything associated with the Kardashian and Jenner families, but I do like this doll's dark hair and soft makeup.  The fancier doll even has her dog with her.  Bratz have been collaborating with several high-end designers lately, but I'm not sure I'd call Kylie a high-end designer.  But then I know very little about high-end fashion.  Kylie in the little black dress will eventually make her way to the Moon House, but it'll have to be at a later date because I just got paid.

But then again, I don't guess I should be shopping for more dolls when I have a box full of stuff at home that hasn't seen daylight in a couple'a years.  Felicia and Tiana left me feeling nostalgic, so I grubbed out my box of Bratz, mostly old stuff that's anywhere from ten to twenty years old.  It's just a cardboard box that's seen better days, but guess who was right on top?  My beloved old Jade, a little worse for wear but still looking saucy and sweet.

As I said before, for a long time Jade was my only one.  The Christmas after I got her she was joined by Cameron...

...then by my sister's Meygan...

...and finally by Sasha, who is not wearing her original outfit ATM.

She's still clad in one of those ensembles from a few years back, the ones that had shoes that wouldn't click onto the old Bratz' feet.  Said ensemble doesn't even fit the old Bratz, really.  Instead they're sized for the noodly, flimsy bodies that accompanied Raya and her friends from...well, THAT time frame.

I don't hate Raya, but I definitely don't like her as much as I do my old Jade, or the new reproductions.  She doesn't pose well, and she doesn't have anywhere near the 'tude that Jade and Tiana do.  This was a problem with some, but not all, of the 2015 Bratz.

They're BRATZ, folks.  They're gonna look...well, bratty!  There is a bit of a continuum regarding expressions, though.  For example, in this lineup Jade looks sultry but approachable, Tiana looks like she knows a dirty little secret, and Cloe looks like a bitch.

Not all Cloe dolls look like little Karens, but even so Cloe was never my favorite of the Bratz.  She was blonde, blue-eyed, same-o-same-o.  I DO like her first wave self, though.  Admittedly, if I hadn't been so smitten with Jade Cloe would've been my pick.  Her stock outfit was dominantly blue and brought out her eyes.  But Jade was my pick, as I've established ad nauseam.

I wanna give Cameron some love too, since he's my only boy.  He was the one who introduced me to the concept of the man purse. 

Cameron's wiki has him romantically linked to Cloe (because of course), while Jade dated Dylan, Koby, Iden, and for a brief spell a guy named Matt.  But in the Moon House, Jade and Cameron are an item and always have been.

As of right now Cameron remains my only male representative of the trendy fashion dolls.  I never got any of the male Monster High characters, and so far I don't own any of the male Rainbow High and Shadow High characters.  Rexx McQueen and Oliver Ocean are tempting, though.

Then there were the spinoffs.  I only have one of the Bratz Kidz because I never really cared for those.  Here's Yasmin; she's popped into the blog briefly in the past.

I'll admit to liking Sasha, because she had a long, beautiful skirt like I like to wear...kinda like Yasmin has got now!

That outfit is actually designed for Sasha, but Yasmin works it just fine.  She was lucky enuff to come with her own shoes, shoes that go with everything.  But for the most part I avoid these and Etsy seems to do the same; a perusal of the site turned up no new clothes for Yasmin.

The Bratzillaz, on the other hand, developed...a cult following, maybe?  I liked 'em, even though they seemed like flagrant ripoffs of both the Monster High squad and the LIV dolls.  It was WAAAAY back in the early days of the blog when I reviewed Meygana.  The Who were always on my mind back then, and here Meygana is chanelling Pete Townshend.

Gonna show you why they call me lightning!  Oh, Meygana is still around, but she's in...guess where?  Storage!  Anyway, I always loved these dolls' eyes...AND their lips.  The lips remind me of Skittles, and y'all may or may not remember that I love Skittles.

Drat, I'll have to reuse another picture from Meygana's review!  She had Skittles lips too, and SPARKLY blue eyes!  Meygana's hair was and still is a disaster, but she's still a pretty little doll.  

Midnight Beach Jade J'adore is also worth a closer look, for reasons that should probably be obvious.
Oh, those beach-themed Bratzillaz were so weird!  I love the glow-in-the-dark gimmick, but it makes Jade look...a little unalive and undead at the same time.  Doesn't stop Jade from hamming it up for the camera, though.  The elastic that allowed her to hold her cape has long since disintegrated, but oh well.
Miss Emily noted that the only character who could effectively pull off this greenish-white tone was Fianna Fins, largely because she was a mermaid (and also a witch).  Hair, on the other hand...well, that was back in the days when MGA was in love with that cheap nylon crap.  Jade's silvery bob isn't as gross as Meygana's tangled pall, but it's not great either.
I read that the first wave Jade J'adore's hair was even worse!  Bratzillaz hair did get better, but eee-yucko, why did MGA use that sh!t in the first place?  No wait, I know why!  I think we've rehashed that once.

Okay, okay, I'll stop now!  When I dig into a box of my old things I tend to get carried away.  So yeah, I know Bratz aren't for everyone, but I personally am glad to see these chicks back on shelves.  I hope that maybe the reproductions will become popular again, and maybe MGA can take up where they left off...before the nylon hair and the fish lips!  If not, well...we've still got Rainbow High and Shadow High!

Bratzy love,
RagingMoon1987

Thursday, April 19, 2018

Throwback Thursday review: Bratz Tokyo-a-Go-Go Collector's Edition "May Lin"

Warning:  this post will be setting an apparent theme for the next few weeks, as I seem to have developed a fondness for all things Japanese or Japanese-themed.  Also, I know that there are a few of our followers that are not Bratz fans.  To those of y'all I say sorry, but this week's doll is a Bratz doll.  Now that that's out of the way...I tried hard to stick to a "One Bratz Doll" rule during my teenage years (I had and loved my single Jade), but oh, how I loved to look at the others!  There were a number of these saucy, spicy dolls that caught my eye during these years, and the ones that got away may make an appearance here in the future, so consider yourselves warned.  Today's doll is from the collector's subcategory of the Tokyo-a-Go-Go line, and her name is (drum roll, please) May Lin!
Now if you're an ignorant bumpkin like I am, then you may be scratching your head and saying "Mmmkay, what's the big deal?"  Well...there are a couple of issues with May Lin, stupid things that MGA Entertainment could've avoided if they'd done their homework.  This is lengthy, but bear with me.  The Tokyo-a-Go-Go line had a Japanese theme and was thus one of my favorite Bratz lines.  The playline subcategory had several characters, but the Toys R Us-exclusive collector's line had only three:  Tiana, Kumi, and May Lin.  Kumi was and still is a favorite character of mine, but I digress.  The trio of girls were dressed in kimono and came with accessories to match the theme.  They're very pretty, well-made dolls, so what's the problem?  Names.  Yeah, names.  The dolls have a Japanese theme and are clearly meant to look Oriental, but only one of them (Kumi) has an authentic Japanese name.  Tiana's name can sort of be explained away, as it has a number of meanings and it appears to be popular among many cultures even before "The Princess and the Frog" hit theaters.  Maybe Tiana is Japanese-American and wants to embrace her culture a little?  But May Lin...oh my.  "May Lin" is a Chinese name, period.  It can't be bent or modified to fit a culture like "Tiana" can.  Even more problematic is that "May Lin" is an anglicanized version of "Meilin," a stereotypical Chinese name.  To add to the culturally inaccurate goofiness, May Lin's Wikia page gives her personality and it's a hot mess of Japanese references, stuff like enjoying Japanese fairy tales and eating sushi.  But I think the name was what raised hackles, not the personality. And because I is ignant my hackles aren't raised much at all; I'm merely documenting the reason why May Lin was a doll that lifted eyebrows.

Due to her problematic name and the controversy surrounding it May Lin was very quickly axed.  It must not have been a tremendous stink since I only learned about it years after the fact, but apparently it was enough of a stink to get May Lin canceled.  Both Kumi and Tiana survived and were included in a few more lines, but as far as I know May Lin only got one doll.  Said single doll got a relatively short run, meaning that May Lin is sort of the Bratz equivalent of Mimic.  She has subsequently become something of a collector's item, and thus I'm darn glad I found her for a good price.  Granted, my particular doll is not NRFB and I think she may be missing an accessory or two, but I can live with that because I HATE leaving stuff NRFB.  What's the fun of having something if you can't play with it a little???  Anywho, May Lin bears a strong resemblance to two of my other dolls, Jade and Maci (who are cousins, according to the Wiki).
As far as I know Jade and Maci were never given a specific nationality.  They both like sushi, a dish commonly associated (once again) with Japan, but lots of people like sushi so that really tells me nothing.  Anyway, May Lin looks a lot like both Jade and Maci.  She has shiny black hair like them, and since she's supposed to be a geisha the style is an elaborate one.  Geisha are permitted to wear their hair in a handful of elaborate styles, and this one looks to me like...well, truthfully this hairstyle is no authentic geisha hairstyle at all, but it appears to have gotten its roots from the taka shimada (worn by full-fledged geisha) and from the momoware (worn by maiko, or apprentice geisha).  It has a slightly messy bun on the top...
...and the tail of this bun tucks into a twisted strand along the back of the bun like so.
Both sides have tendrils hanging loose, both of which need a little gel to keep them from being so flyaway.
Even if I were able to smooth these tendrils down a bit I don't think it would be worth the effort.  May Lin's hair doesn't feel as coarse as an early Bratzillaz doll's hair, but it's not soft and smooth like the hair of most Bratz dolls of the time.

All geisha wear hair ornaments called kanzashi, but they are particularly copious on the maiko, whose garish makeup and clothes are supposed to do the communication for her.  These kanzashi come in a number of shapes and forms, and they have a number of meanings.  May Lin doesn't have all the kanzashi a real maiko would have as that would've been a lot more labor-intensive, but she does sport two permanently attached hana kanzashi on either side of the top bun.  The word "hana" means "flower," and thus hana kanzashi always sport flowers of some sort.  May Lin appears to be wearing pink hibiscus.
The right kanzashi (seen above) has three beaded dangles, while the left one has two beads that stick straight up in addition to the dangles.  Hana kanzashi need not always dangle, but younger maiko like May Lin usually have some sort of part that dangles or flutters.  
Usually maiko only wear a single hana kanzashi, located on the left side of the head, but they can also arch across the head or be placed on other parts of the hairstyle.  The right side is reserved for another of my favorite kanzashi, the bira-bira or bira-kan, which makes a pleasant jingling noise when the wearer moves about.  May Lin unfortunately did not come with any bira-bira, but she makes up for it with two separately packaged kanzashi.  This first one is called a "makie" kanzashi and I can't find much information about it.  I do know that these are usually rounded to fit the wearer's head, which mine is not (it's flat).  The painting is impeccable on this, though.  I can see not a single error anywhere.
This other one looks like a hybrid of a hirauchi, which has a round, flat top at the end of one or two prongs, and a miokuri, which is similar to the hirauchi but isn't always round.  Here again the paint job has been done well, though it's not as perfect as the paint on the makie; the centers of the blue flowers are not precisely done, though that wouldn't have been easy anyway.
I'm unsure yet if May Lin can wear these, or even if they were intended to be worn.  I was able to shove the miokuri into her hairstyle just above her forehead, but it looked dumb so I took it out.  If May Lin can't wear these that'll be a mega-bummer, because what's the point of having awesome baubles like that if they can't be worn!  I am pleased that May Lin has kanzashi at all though, since it's not every day a doll comes with such things.  I do have one other doll that wears kanzashi, but it's not on a scale as small as May Lin is.  My yo-SD girl Chloe wears wears a white hana kanzashi when she's in her wa-lolita garb...and it has jingle bells!
Aside from having a few flyaways May Lin's hair is in reasonably good shape.  I can probably smooth some of this back into place, and if absolutely necessary I can probably take the whole shebang down and redo it again, but I hope I don't have to do that.  Hairstyling has never been a strong point of mine; the most elaborate style I ever achieved with myself was fishbone braids.  May Lin isn't LOSING hair though, and that's a good thing.  Maiko do sometimes develop a bald spot during the course of their training due to the constant styling, but in May Lin's case I'm glad this detail was omitted.  Also good is the fact that May Lin predates the travesty that is nylon hair and has soft saran locks.  She also has one thing that none of my Bratz dolls have:  a widow's peak.
May Lin is the only Bratz I own with a hairline like this, and one of only two that I can name with a widow's peak.  The other is one of May Lin's fellow maiko, Tiana, while Kumi sported the full set of bangs commonly found on Bratz (but not on geisha).  Not all geisha have widow's peaks, by the way, but a fair amount of them do.  Also, fun fact and digression:  the geisha in the linked images is the same girl at different stages of her training.  Her name is Mamechiho, and the pictures were taken four years apart.  Just thought I'd throw that out there and show how far she came in those four years.

Now to the iconic Bratz face we go.
For this segment I'll be dragging out some of my older dolls to compare notes with.  May Lin has what I like to call the old-school look, the aesthetic that all Bratz dolls had before the first reboot in 2011.  Her eyebrows are medium brown instead of the black eyebrows that probably would've been more accurate for her ethnicity.  MGA no doubt learned from second-wave Jade that black eyebrows can look very harsh on a doll.  Underneath the eyebrows May Lin has heavily lidded eyes with long eyelashes and brown, nude, and mauve eyeshadow.  The irises are tricolored with a brown rim, a lighter brown interior, and a gray ring around the pupil. 
In addition to the usual light cluster common to all Bratz dolls, May Lin has stars in her eyes.  Overall the eye area is more detailed on May Lin than it is on other Bratz of the era.  Here's a close-up of Jade's eyes for comparison...
...and Sasha's eyes.  This particular Sasha came out after May Lin did, but she still belongs to the time frame before fish lips.
While May Lin's eyes are a little more detailed than those of the average Bratz doll, her lips are a little less detailed.  They lack the shimmery top coating that the vast majority of my old Bratz dolls have.  They're a lovely shade though, glossy salmon pink with a darker rim, plus a narrow band of teeth.
Again, let's compare May Lin's lips to Jade's...
...and to Sasha's.
The lack of shimmer on Bratz lips didn't really become commonplace until the reboot a few years back.  Remember that my Study Abroad Raya had no shimmer, nor did Miss Emily's custom doll Sadie, nor Purple Monkfish's Hello, My Name is Jade.  May Lin's face compliments the saucy but still approachable visages of my oldest dolls, Jade and Meygan...
...and it provides an interesting contrast to Movie Starz Cloe, arguably the most temperamental of my Bratz dolls, and Study Abroad Raya, who lacks lip detail and looks spacey compared to her older compadres.
I think May Lin and Cloe share a head mold; both of them have a tiny indention in their lower lip, something that the closed-mouth Bratz and the Style It! line lack.  In general May Lin has nice face paint that fits the Bratz aesthetic to a T.  It's free of flaws, but it's not authentic to her desire to be a geisha, especially one who is still training.  I'd guess that May Lin is about sixteen years of age, and if so then she probably would still be in the maiko stage of her geisha training.  Maiko usually look like this young lady, with full white face paint and rosebud lips.  But then again, full maiko face paint might have been off-putting for consumers...or it might have provided another route for MGA to make dumb mistakes.  Thus leaving May Lin relatively bare-faced was probably a smart move.  It is also possible that May Lin is a lot older than she looks; a proper geisha NEVER gives her age (LOL) so May Lin might be a full-blown geisha...but then that would render many of her clothing details inaccurate.

Ah, clothes!  This is going to be fun!  This color palatte looks familiar, and I happen to remember where I've seen it.  The pale pink/peach sateen has also been used on...what a surprise, an Oriental doll!  Lonnie, my Descendants doll, wears a dress in this color.
For some stupid reason I half-expect these two to throw off their long dresses and start singing "UFO."  Don't worry, they won't be nude under their discarded garments, just as Pink Lady was not.  LOL, now THAT is an obscure reference if I ever heard one!  Poor Pink Lady, big in 1970's Japan, but an obscure footnote in television history here in the U.S., thanks to that stupid Pink Lady and Jeff show.  The only thing good about that show WAS Pink Lady, and they weren't even allowed to sing their Japanese hits most of the time.  Their original material is actually pretty good (linked song is another version of "UFO"), but as usual I digress.  May Lin is not wearing a black and gold flapper dress or a silver bodysuit under her garb, so I won't be showing those things.  Here's what she does have.
Maiko usually wear brightly colored kimono to help establish the fact that they are still in training, and May Lin's kimono is certainly colorful.  At first I had it labeled as a furisode given the wide sleeves (tomesode sleeves are narrow) and the presence of a pattern above the waist (tomesode are usually plain above the waist).  Indeed, I've seen pictures of geisha in both furisode and tomesode (both extremely formal types of kimono), but in this case I turned out to be wrong on both counts.  May Lin is wearing a type of kimono that only maiko and some other stage performers wear, called a hizikuri.  Hizikuri are similar to furisode, but they trail on the ground...which May Lin's kimono is doing.
Regardless of the type, this kimono is wrapped the correct way, with the left side overlapping the right.  Kimono usually fasten shut with internal and external ties, but this one relies on Velcro...not the best choice for an outfit made out of sheer fabric like this.
Remember, kids:  kimono, no matter how formal or informal, are only wrapped right over left when dressing a corpse.  I had to learn this when my ball-jointed dolls started wearing yukata, the most casual kind of kimono.  Moving on, this fabric is satin or sateen or something like that, smooth and soft to the touch but easy to snag on unkempt fingernails.  It looks like it's made of brocade, but the designs are neatly printed on instead of sewn.  Most of the exterior of May Lin's hizikuri is made of dark rose fabric with little huts and cherry blossoms printed in orange and purple.
The lining utilizes the same slinky fabric but is of a completely different color and print.  The background is dandelion yellow with flowers of blue, green, pink, and purple printed on.
May Lin's ginormous sleeves have both fabrics with a band of blue piping dividing the two.  The sleeves go almost to the floor, typical of both furisode and hizikuri, though hizikuri are also made with shorter sleeves.
Now, the obi, which is an integral part of the kimono.
According to one source only girls before the maiko stage (called shikomi) wear their obi tied in a chouchou musubi (butterfly knot), but I don't know how reliable that source is, nor do I know if maiko can wear that knot or not.  It's a nice obi though, made of the same satin/sateen/whatever-this-fabric-is as the kimono.  The color and the pattern are different, being the same floral-on-yellow as the edges of May Lin's sleeves.  I thought at first that May Lin's obi was sewn to her hizikuri, but that turned out to be an optical illusion, as there is a band of pink fabric below the yellow.

 I'm not sure if May Lin's obi is tied authentically or not, but I do know for a fact that it's not the darari obi that maiko often wear.  Rather, it is tied in the aforementioned chouchou musubi, which is quite pretty and an accurate way to close a kimono...but I don't know if maiko wear this knot or not.  Regardless, this particular maiko does wear a chouchou musubi, though it's not really tied.  Underneath the knot is Velcro.
Velcro, once again, is not the best choice of fasteners when sheer material like satin is involved.  If I'd been designing these dolls I would have put in snaps, given the fact that this doll is supposed to be a collector's doll and not a toy...but I wasn't designing this doll so there's that.  I probably should have pointed out that the knot in the back is both accurate and a good thing since knots in the front are typically associated with pre-WWII prostitution.  Nowadays connotations are slightly less negative, but geisha and maiko always wear the knot in the back.  The obijime, on the other hand...well, it turns out that obijime can tie in either the back or the front, so the fact that May Lin wears hers tied in the front is no biggie.
May Lin's obijime is made of blue satin/sateen/whatever-this-fabric-is, and at first I thought it might be a touch too wide to be a proper obijime, but as it turns out they come in narrow and wide varieties.  Furthermore, the images I've found of real maiko show both, so I guess I need to just shut up and move on.  Underneath the obi and the hizikuri is the nagajuban, this yellow bit here.
The nagajuban is actually supposed to be the undergarment worn under the kimono as opposed to a skirt like this, but a full nagajuban in this material would've been VERY bulky underneath the kimono.  So May Lin's nagajuban is simulated with that yellow skirt, and also with this yellow band of fabric at the neck of the hizikuri.

Unlike regular underdrawers it's acceptable for the nagajuban to peep out a little, and since maiko are supposed to be a feast for the eyes it's allowable for them to show their nagajuban a bit more than usual.  Indeed, maiko are allowed brightly colored nagajuban for this very purpose.  The nagajuban always shows a little when a maiko walks anyway, especially if the maiko is wearing her long-skirted hizikuri, which has to be tucked up in order for the maiko to walk.  May Lin's nagajuban or skirt or whatever is an appropriately bright color, but it has no pattern on it to prevent it from clashing with the interior of the hizikuri.  It fastens with...oh goody, more Velcro to catch and snag.  I can think of no better alternative here since a snap would have been very bulky.
May Lin's skirt has a pair of underbritches sewn in; these keep the skirt from riding up too much.
May Lin's shoe-feet are just as interesting as the rest of her outfit, as they are a pair of okobo, the special shoes that only maiko wear.  Okobo have a huge platform and are designed to elevate the maiko so her kimono doesn't drag on the ground.  They're also difficult to walk in, as is the case for many platform shoes.  In addition to her okobo May Lin also appears to be wearing tabi, white socks with a separate big toe that are usually only worn for special occasions.  Geisha and maiko wear tabi more often than non-geisha do, but civilians do wear these as well.
Tabi are unique among socks in that they sometimes button at the cuff (these apparently do not).  As for the shoes, they too tell a story.  Not only is the mere presence of okobo significant, but the colors of May Lin's okobo are significant as well.  The black base is worn strictly during summer for reasons I don't know, and these shoes in particular are painted with flowers.  I don't know if actual okobo ever have flowers painted on the sides, but as with May Lin's comb these flowers were printed with extreme care.
The red straps are also significant, as they mean that May Lin is still pretty new at the maiko thing.  Yellow would signify that she's further along in her training, though still an apprentice.
Actually, now that I look closer I see that these straps are pink, not red.  I don't know if real life okobo straps come in any other colors besides red and yellow, but this shade of pink is close enough to red that I can pretend it's red.  Kumi's okobo straps really are red, while Tiana's straps are purple.  This was done to match the shoes to the clothes the dolls were dressed in, but it annoys me to see yet another inaccuracy perpetrated for the sake of color coordination.

When I got May Lin fully disrobed I was surprised to see that she's wearing a body stocking of sorts.
God only knows what this thing is for, unless it's to keep the stand from scuffing May Lin's waist (she does have a stand, which we will see shortly).  Whatever this stocking is for, it Velcros closed in the back and is tagged with the Bratz insignia.
Early Bratz had a reputation for very well-made (if scanty) clothes, and May Lin's outfit is by far the best I've ever seen.  This fabric should be a minefield for loose ends, but I saw none anywhere.  Most of the details are right, including the presence of a faux nagajuban at the neckline, and the fit is right for the most part.  May Lin's collar even fits loosely, which is accurate for a geisha.
Oh yes, May Lin also wears this black plastic stand.  It's unique among black plastic stands, though at first glance it looks pretty ordinary.  It holds May Lin by the waist...
...but it also has hollows in the base for May Lin's sizeable shoes.  Nice!
May Lin's body is typical of all Bratz bodies before the first redesign, with a bit of an hourglass shape going on.
Posing is the same as well.  May Lin has ball-jointed shoulders that move laterally and back and forth...
...and she has hips that allow full front-to-back movement but no side movement.  Sitting is no trouble for May Lin...
...and splits are a cakewalk as well.
The knees bend, but the motion is mediocre.  They click to three positions but only hold two:  straight and this forty-five degree bend.
Lastly, May Lin's neck can turn and tip, just like most Bratz dolls.
Average doll body.  Not high, not low, gets the job done without falling apart.

Now, accessories.  These geisha Bratz came with a fair amount of accessories, and unfortunately I think May Lin may be missing some of hers.  The mint-in-box dolls have little parasols, but May Lin's is missing.  She has her other items, though...and the way this fan is constructed gives a possible reason for its absence.  It's a pretty fan, made of gold paper with a plastic frame.  The paper has a floral design printed on the front, one that matches the design on the sides of May Lin's okobo.
The fan looks like it should fold, and indeed the plastic frame folds up...but I only know this because the frame came unglued from the paper.  I can reglue this easily, but it makes me wonder if May Lin's parasol fell apart long ago.
May Lin's bag is called a kinchaku, and it's made of the flowered stuff that lines May Lin's hizakuri.  The drawstrings really work.
Both men and women are allowed to carry these, if y'all can believe that.  Yukata are still widely worn during summer, and yukata have no pockets so kinchaku are acceptable accessories for both men and women.  Today these hold small items like cell phones, wallets, money, makeup for the women, Kleenex, and the like.  They can also double as small lunchboxes, carrying bento boxes and eating utensils.  Since May Lin's kinchaku functions like a full-sized one does, I use it to store her kanzashi and her little mirror.  The items fit in there nicely.
Oops, the mirror!  I thought this was a battledore at first, but it's very clearly a mirror.  The back of the mirror is ornately and impeccably painted, just like the kanzashi are.
Lastly, May Lin carries a shamisen, a traditional Japanese instrument that geisha often play.  Again, the front has molded and ornately painted decorations, while the back is plain and hollow.  Notice the three knobs at the top of the instrument; the shamisen usually only has three strings, as opposed to four or six for a guitar.
The presence of this instrument makes me giggle, as my father hated these with a passion.  "I think they're the most ugly-sounding instrument on the planet," he said.  Well...I'll have to admit that the sound is a bit of an acquired taste for Western ears, but to each their own.  The shamisen is apparently a very difficult instrument to play, and that alone makes it worthy of respect.

I keep May Lin in her box when I'm not fooling around with her, so let's take a look at it briefly.  The box is very sturdy, made out of buttery yellow cardboard in the shape of...of...heck, I don't know what this shape is.  The front has the name of the line and some cherry blossoms and butterflies printed on, along with an illustration of May Lin herself.
The sides of the box are also printed (inside and outside) with May Lin's name and image.
And the back...the back is designed like a window!  Something for May Lin to peep through and look cute.
Well, that's quite a bit to mull over, innut?  Time to sum it up!

BAD
*I very rarely list names as a flaw since a doll can be renamed, but if you're overly sensitive to cultural appropriateness beware of this doll.
*NOT FOR KIDS!!!  Most Bratz are/were intended for children, but not this one!
*Hair is very elaborately styled and would be difficult to put back up.  It also doesn't feel very nice to begin with.
*Clothes fasten with Velcro, which could be a potential nightmare for the smooth fabric the kimono is made from.
*Some of the accessories are flimsy.  I'll have to do some minor repairs to that fan.

GOOD
*Vere detailed.  This doll comes from an era where Bratz in general were gussied up with accessories and nicely made clothes, but being a collector doll May Lin took these bits to the extreme.
*Clothes, as I noted above, are well made.  May Lin's kimono is made of better stuff than my other kimono-clad doll, Midori, even though both could be considered collector's items.
*Face is well-painted and has that wonderful Bratz attitude...but not too much of it!
*Accessories, with the exception of the fan, are wonderfully made.  The fan can be easily repaired, so that's not a huge problem.
*Different from the other Bratz.  May Lin stands out in my crowd due to her elaborate traditional outfit, but she's still clearly a Bratz doll.

Most of May Lin's flaws are things that can be remedied or overlooked.  Leave her hair alone, leave her clothes alone, treat her like the collector's doll she's supposed to be, and she'll be fine.  No, the only problem I can think of really...is that name.  I'm by no means a liberal pansy, but...GEISHA DON'T HAVE CHINESE NAMES!!!  THEY DON'T!!!  Even the Chinese women I can name who became geisha had to choose Japanese names.  Hats off to Rinka for stepping up, by the way; honest-to-God geisha are becoming few and far between.  It is entirely possible that May Lin is so early in her training that she has not yet picked out a name for herself.  Indeed, I don't think maiko are allowed to pick a geisha name until a certain stage of their training, but again I could be wrong.  Bottom line, if the name doesn't bother you then this doll would be a great addition to a Bratz collection, particularly if you're one that grows weary of all the skin/vinyl that Bratz show.  May Lin's traditional garb all but covers her, and yet she still makes an appealing doll.  Don't care for May Lin's color scheme?  Kumi or Tiana might fit that bill!

As a last interesting little tidbit, my May Lin apparently isn't the only doll out there with that name.  Once upon a time, Takara Jenny had a friend named...well, it isn't spelled the same way, but the doll's name IS a variation, Mei Len.  Jenny's friend has a bit of an excuse though, as Takara has made friends for Jenny with a wide array of names from a wide array of places, and it would thus make sense that Jenny's friend Mei Len would be Chinese.  Still, my May Lin is not alone in the name department.

Cheers,
RagingMoon1987