Our Generation Dolls - Dolls - Toys and Games


Are the accessories for Our Generation Dolls compatible...?

Are the accessories for the Our Generation Dolls compatible with the American Piece Dolls? My neice has an American Girl Doll...are the clothing and accessories such as stool, bed, horse and outfits compatible?


Our Generation has clobber, horses, and fun accessories just as American Betrothed Dolls do, but they aren't as nice and authentic as the American Girlfriend things are. In Target, I was looking at the Our Generation items and I found that the bed was made out of a mouldable that wasn't as nice as American Mouse Doll stuff. It wasn't penurious, just not as nice. The bedding looked very insolent and was not cheap or ugly. the Our Generation things are cunning with a girly touch and can be loved by any 18" doll.

The horses vocation great for American Girl Dolls. My friends have some and they are very cold-blooded. The American Girl horses have a velvety take responsibility to make them soft, and the Our Generations don't, but it isn't indeed a huge problem. The saddle has a delightful grip to keep the dolls from sliding off the side and when the dolls hold the reins the dolls can sit up jolly without you having to hold them. The horses have accessories and chance upon in a cool box and are alot less expensive than the AG horses. I entirely reccomend these horses.

The Our Generation items profession very, very well for AG dolls, and are alot less expensive. I would totally reccomend their things. Their items are pretty and very inexpensive.

As far as I know, all of their things line for AG dolls. The shoes might not, because doll feet are in many distinctive sizes. I'm not sure of the size of Our Generation feet, but Springfeild doll feet are a bit longer than AG feet. Springfield sneakers and boots and things like that travail for AG dolls, but my pair of Springfield sandals are much too big. I would reccomend buying Springfield shoes, but peradventure stick with sneakers or something.

:)



My new our generation doll

I unswerving not to call it the first annual doll opening party lol

10 ways mobile gadgets have changed our lives

(CNN) -- It's a movable society.

Call it good. Call it bad. It just is.

With an estimated 5 billion responsive phone connection s in the world, not to mention the emerging numbers of tablet computers and other on-the-go connectivity gadgets, animated technology has altered the way we live.

It's as hard to suppose spinning a rotary dial or fumbling for a ninety days for the pay phone -- both staples of the generation before us -- as it is imagining what new unfixed technology may exist in the generation to come.

But, for now, here's a look at 10 ways the omnipresence of movable gadgets has already changed the way we live.

Meeting up is easier

"We'll fulfil you there."

There was a time when those words would have required a bunch of observe-up details. That time is called "all of human biography before everybody had a mobile phone."

Now, all we need to do is get our friends in, largely, the same geographical region. To finish the drill, run off a quick "Where R U?" text. (Or, "Where are you?" if you're not into the whole brevity thing. Or if you like grammar).

The nostalgic impacts of an icon

In 1997, I was 6 years old. Bill Clinton was president, we had a budget unused and all I wanted was a Buzz Lightyear doll ended with working buttons and foldable wings. There was nothing in the superb that would have made me happier. My mother called every toy store in Los Angeles asking if they had any more Drone Lightyear dolls in stock.

“I’m sorry Ma’am, but we’re all sold out,” they told my mummy. It turned out other boys wanted Buzz Lightyear dolls, too.

“Would I ever get a Phone call Lightyear?” I asked. “Some time,” my mother would say. “Soon.”

One Tuesday after prime I returned home to find a Woody doll on my bed. It wasn’t faultlessly Buzz Lightyear but the Woody doll was still top. It looked just like Andy’s Woody doll from the big. You could even pull Woody’s back string and get it to say things like: “There’s a worm in my boot” and “Somebody poisoned the waterhole.”

I never did get a Stir Lightyear doll. At the much wiser, worldlier age of 7 and half I was qualified to look back on the absence of a Buzz Lightyear doll in my life as a boon in disguise. If you remember anything from “Toy Story,” Woody and Buzz regularly exist in a state of constant bickering and edginess. I realized I didn’t want to put my toys through that systemize of turmoil. Granted, “Toy Story” had a redemptive ending wherein Andy’s Woody and Telephone learned valuable lessons in tolerance and fellowship, but at 7 and half I imagined Andy’s case to be an peculiar one.

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