The Mollye Goldman Ann (the untagged one) is probably the more valuable. She was violating the Gruelle copyright and was stopped from producing the dolls in a short amount of time.
B-Rad, if they are that old, they look to be in AWESOME shape. My sister and I had that pair as kids in the 60's but I couldn't tell you if these two are the same!
First one looks like a Molly E doll, looks like it could be a genuine one from the 1930s and not the applause one (newer, remade version). maybe im wrong, thats just a guess :P but i found a listing of one that looks identical in style on etsy, it says its from the 1930s and that its also some kind of baby doll variant of her.
@Urban 1940-1946 “Awake Asleep” Raggedy Ann & Raggedy Andy Georgene Novelties These “Awake Asleep” dolls were unique in that they were reversible and had two faces - one awake and one asleep. Turning the doll around was all that was needed to show the other face. They were made in the early 1940s. At the same time, home seamstresses started making their own Raggedy Ann & Andy dolls from a pattern published under license in 1940 by the McCall’s Pattern Company. 13″; noses were outlined until 1944.
The Mollye Goldman Ann (the untagged one) is probably the more valuable. She was violating the Gruelle copyright and was stopped from producing the dolls in a short amount of time.
B-Rad, if they are that old, they look to be in AWESOME shape. My sister and I had that pair as kids in the 60's but I couldn't tell you if these two are the same!
Y love raggedy and your are rare and worth a lot so kep them and thear no boot legs
First one looks like a Molly E doll, looks like it could be a genuine one from the 1930s and not the applause one (newer, remade version). maybe im wrong, thats just a guess :P but i found a listing of one that looks identical in style on etsy, it says its from the 1930s and that its also some kind of baby doll variant of her.
@Urban
1940-1946
“Awake Asleep”
Raggedy Ann & Raggedy Andy
Georgene Novelties
These “Awake Asleep” dolls were unique in that they were reversible and had two faces - one awake and one asleep. Turning the doll around was all that was needed to show the other face. They were made in the early 1940s. At the same time, home seamstresses started making their own Raggedy Ann & Andy dolls from a pattern published under license in 1940 by the McCall’s Pattern Company. 13″; noses were outlined until 1944.
Excellent big thanks for this
They are the stuff nightmares are made of. If legit, great scores!
I think one is. They are both alive-at-nighters
Great find!
I brought a knickerbocker raggedy Andy but made in Taiwan is it real
I’m pretty sure one of those is the original Annabelle.
No is not is raggedy ann not annabelle
@@maritzaperez6248 The original Annabelle IS a Raggedy Ann Doll. Come on - KNOW your famous haunted objects! :)
He looks legit. She does not. The I Love You is important. And Ann's dress is all wrong, not to mention no button eyes.
That's all I know. :)
So you're saying it's a CivWar era one of one PROTOTYPE!!! 😂 Thank you for commenting ♥️
Don't do dolls sorry but I hope that you find out what you want to know.