We’re doing my 87-year-old mother-in-law a favor by selling a few of her Barbie dolls on eBay.

There are lots and lots of Barbies on eBay, but not many of them have exquisitely hand-crocheted outfits in their wardrobes. My mother-in-law is a genius with the crochet needle.

I took pictures for this effort and grew contemplative – it’s a different world than the one in which these Barbies were the gift of choice for little girls.
And that’s a good thing. A thing to celebrate.
Barbie may still be with us, but the automatic “dolls for girls” association is an anachronism.
Bye-bye, Barbie.

© 2018 Glover Gardens
Neither of us had Barbie, but I had Sindy and my sister had Tressy (her hair grew when you pressed a button on her stomach). Sindy looked like a teenager, Tressy was of Barbie proportions which I found puzzling. My mum also made small costumes, but she knitted. Both dolls and outfits are long gone. I loved dolls, but I also wanted a toy farm for Christmas one year and was dismayed when the ladies at church told me that was a boy’s toy. I got it anyway! I’m not sure how much better things are now – I think they got better then regressed. All the pink plastic marketed at girls these days.