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Celluloid doll
Title : Celluloid doll Celluloid doll
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Creator : Luck toys
Source : [Celluloid doll] [toy]
Place Of Creation : Made in Japan
Date of creation : 1930s
Format : Toy
Dimensions : 380 mm
Contributor : State Library of South Australia
Catalogue record
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Donated by : Misses Linley and Athalie Shannon
Copyright : Reproduction rights are owned by State Library of South Australia. This image may be printed or saved for research or study. Use for any other purpose requires permission from the State Library of South Australia. To request approval, complete the Permission to publish form.
Description :

A Japanese celluloid baby doll with moulded and painted features and closed mouth, on a five piece bent limb baby body dressed in teddy bear patterned dress and pants. The doll was manufactured by Luck Toys of Japan.

Celluloid was first used for the manufacture of dolls in the 1860s and remained a popular and cheap method for nearly a century until manufacture was halted in the 1960s because of the flammable nature of the material. Celluloid dolls were made in Europe, England, America and Japan, with the peak of production during the period from 1900 to the 1940s.

A great variety of types of doll were created using celluloid including baby, walking dolls and even bathing dolls. Black baby dolls were also popular, particularly as the manufacturers could then avoid the typically bright shiny pink of the material.

Subjects
Further reading :

Coleman, Dorothy S. The collector's encyclopedia of dolls, New York: Crown Publishers [1968]-c1986

Fainges, Marjory. The encyclopedia of Australian dolls, Kenthurst, N.S.W.: Kangaroo Press, 1993

King, Constance Eileen. The collector's history of dolls, London: R. Hale; New York: St. Martin's Press, 1978, c1977

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