Hello 80s. Goodbye boring. This lace kimono style tunic is sexy and totally wearable with just about anything. Dress her up with short sequined shorts. Wear her casual with leggings and rock n roll heels. Do whatever, but this top is a must. Impeccable work and guaranteed to make you stand out. Comes with seperate silk cami that can be worn with the top or alone. Im wearing mine as a sexy mini dress. Soo cute!!!!
Yoana Baraschi in not new to Hollywood. Her pieces are seen all over the place from Kim Kardashian to Nicky Hilton and Sienna Miller. Now you too can wear the coveted pieces including this silk kimono tunic. Georgeous black embroidered detail around neck, arms and hem create such a strong yet feminine feel. Wear this top with shorts, jeans, leggings and bangles and you are set to go. Pleated hidden zipper in back 100% Silk Made in India Dry clean only
Newborn cabbage patch kid Blue eyed bald boy! Features * One of a kind adoptable cabbage patch kids newborn! * Snuggly design perfect for a first baby doll. * Exclusive limited edition design! * Beautiful Blue eyed bald baby BOY with blue & white striped sleeper with silver embellishments. The original 1982 Cabbage Patch Kids license agreement with Coleco Industries was negotiated and signed by Schlaifer Nance & Company, the exclusive worldwide licensing agency for Roberts' company. SN&C was responsible for originating the name, graphics and legend of the Cabbage Patch Kids, which were all created by SN&C president Roger Schlaifer and his wife, Susanne Nance Schlaifer. Following their signing of Coleco, Schlaifer Nance & Company signed over one hundred and fifty licenses for branded products ranging from the first children's diapers and low-sugar cereal to clothing, backyard pools and thousands of other children's products — generating over $2 billion in retail sales for 1984, alone. Total sales during the Schlaifers' tenure exceeded $4.5 billion. After SN&C sold its exclusive rights back to Roberts' company, rights to the dolls were acquired by Hasbro and a succession of other toy companies. While sales of the dolls and other licensed products declined precipitously after the sale, the dolls have become a mainstay of the toy industry, and one of the few long-running doll brands.
Cabbage Patch Kids are a doll brand created by Debbie Morehead and Xavier Roberts in 1978. The original dolls were all cloth and sold at local craft shows, then later at Babyland General Hospital in Cleveland, Georgia. A notable extension to the line was the "Talking Cabbage Patch Kid", equipped with a voice chip, touch sensors, and an infrared device for communicating with other such dolls. The touch sensors enabled the toy to detect when and how the toy was being played with in response to its vocalizations, e.g. the doll might say "hold my hand" and give an appropriate speech response when the touch sensor in the hand detected pressure. A more remarkable effect occurred when one doll detected the presence of another through its IR transmitter/receiver. The dolls were programmed to signal their "awareness" of each other with a short phrase, e.g. "I think there's someone else to play with here!", and then to initiate simple conversations between the dolls themeselves with enough randomness to sound somewhat natural. The product success was limited; some reasons offered at the time[citation needed] were the high price of the item ($100 or more), the need to have multiple dolls to take advantage of the full conversational effect, for some people the spookiness of having dolls converse with each other without human intervention, and the limited play value of a talking doll over its silent counterpart.
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