Showing posts with label doll types. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doll types. Show all posts

Friday, May 1, 2026

Barbie's Boyfriend Ken and Other Male Fashion Dolls

       The Ken doll was first marketed by Mattel two years after Barbie in 1961. The ''back story'' to Ken is that he first was introduced to Barbie on the commercial television set where Barbie worked. These two dolls have been both friends and also a couple for over forty years.
       Ken's only fashion accessory in the beginning was a swimsuit! This is why so many boy toy fans thought him original to the beach . . . 
       Ken hair styles have varied textures from flocking to rooted acrylic strands to sculpted vinyl. His eyes are most usually painted blue, hazel or brown. He always has a strong masculine jaw line. 



 Ken Face Molds Pictured Above:

  1. Cody Simpson fashion doll from The Wish Factory
  2. Ken with rooted brown wig was produced in 1992
  3. Western Fun Ken,1989
  4. Black Steven Doll, 1991
  5. Ken face mold produced in 2007
  6. Black Ken with broad shoulders, 2009
  7. Pet Pals Keven, 1991
  8. Zack Morris Doll from "Saved By The Bell" - 1992
  9. Wedding Day Alan, 1990

Monday, June 3, 2024

Vintage REMCO Dolls From The 60s and 70s

"This fabulous new REMCO doll will truly warm your heart. When Baby Grow-a-tooth
goes through her amazing performance, she is so life-like you will scarcely believe 
your eyes. While she is lying in her crib she wiggles her arms, then she sits up all 
by herself and she plays with the cradle toy in her crib. When you offer her her 
pacifier and then take it away, she has miraculously grown her fist tooth!"
 
REMCO did their own 
versions of Kewpies in 
1968. Go here to read
about the original.
      Remco Industries, Inc. was a toy company in the United States founded in the 1940s. It was best known for toys marketed and sold in the late 1950s and early 1960s, like the 'Johnny Reb Cannon', 'Mighty Matilda Atomic Aircraft Carrier', 'Remco Voice Control Kennedy Airport' (which featured model airplanes of American, TWA and United Airlines, a record player and an album which played a voice giving landing and take-off instructions) and the tethered 'Electronic Falcon Plane' that "flies itself". The company's slogan was "Every Boy Wants a Remco Toy...And So Do Girls!"

       Remco was founded by two cousins, Isaac "Ike" Heller and Saul Robbins. Armand Daddis soon joined the two as the company gradually moved from simple 'walkie-talkies' to a variety of sophisticated remote control toys. The name Remco comes from the two words "Remote Control". Originally located in Newark, NJ, the company later moved to nearby Harrison, New Jersey. 
       The boxes and toys were printed with just the company name and the city on them, but there were a few more clues as to the company's physical location on packaging. A street address listed on the back of the 1960 light bulldog tank box is "113 North 13th Street, Newark 7, NJ." The address on the instruction sheet for factory service return of the 1966 Lost in Space Robot is "Cape May St., Harrison, NJ." The Harrison location is now occupied by the Red Bull Arena, while the Newark location is now occupied by a furniture outlet. 

"She's a tricky little scamp-who'll give you a tumble whenever you push the magic button!
And you don't even have to touch her-it's all done by remote control inside of a tiny pocket-
book attached to Baby Tumbles' ankle bracelet."

       In the mid-1960s, Remco acquired several licenses for popular culture groups and TV shows and proceeded to make a variety of toys. Some of these were the Beatles, the Monkees, Lost In Space, The Munsters, Batman and Star Trek. However, the company often paid little heed to faithfulness to the property: Star Trek for instance, the merchandise Remco released for that series was usually generic toys from previous unrelated lines and had decals of the series simply placed on them, which is a technique called "label slapping." The most derided of Remco's licensed toys for Star Trek is a white helmet with a red rotating light and siren with either Kirk or Spock's name on it. One popular toy in the early 1960s was the 24 inch long functioning scuba diver with mask, knife, utility belt, rifle, walkie-talkie, air tanks, and floating location buoy.
 
"This little baby comes with a magic harness and tiny 
pocketbook. Attach her training strap...and watch 
her crawl across the floor."
       From the 1980s through the 1990s, Remco made a variety of generic diecast and plastic trucks and other vehicles, usually uniformly made about four inches long. Vehicles were attractive and sturdy, though not uniform in scale, and included a tanker truck, fire truck, delivery van, cherry picker truck, skid steer, Jeep, and many more. A few vehicles were larger, like the seven inch long "Tuff Ones" "Recyclable Waste Management Corp." truck with opening side doors for "cans", "glass", and "paper". 
       The company was known by toy collectors for their many Universal Monsters figures produced during the 1980s. These figures were a continuation of the license and figures first produced by AHI during the 1970s. Steel Tec was distributed by Remco Toys, Inc. of New York, New York, from 1992 to 1997 and was a division of parent company Azrak Hamway International. In 1997, Jakks Pacific acquired Remco from Azrak-Hamway.

"Spunky and Heidi can play waterball. Their arms really move and hit the ball. Hildy
can take a shower in the real working stall shower."

'Meet Elly and Andy the lovable baby toy mice twins who live in a tree house that is three
stories tall!"


The REMCO Dune Buggy Baby: seen here in the ALDENS Christmas
Catalogue, 1972 edition from Berrien Springs, Michigan.
Our family's version of this doll came with a yellow dune buggy.


Tiny Tears and many more by Remco, 
commercials and interview.


"In 1968 Chew Chew baby's would suckle her thumb, a bottle or her blanket." 

"This little toddler doll has to be watched every minute or she may get away from you!"

More REMCO Doll Fans at YouTube: