love comments like these on bnbh vids. it doesn’t matter how crude they are they’re just nice young men
“I LOVE that game!” (watched a letsplay and commentary about it)
Posting it on tumblr too
From reddit
clockwork orange edit with only a lad from oingo boingo! i thought it fit
from usamaru furuya's short cuts
I'm honestly not entirely certain as there were definitely dolls available in 1918 that would seem to fit Ruth's criteria.
(source: Sears catalog, Fall/Winter 1918)
My best guess is that she was either referring to quality, and/or she wanted a doll with a bisque porcelain head and limbs - as that would have been the predominant style when her mother was a child.
By the late teens most doll heads/limbs were made of composition - a material consisting mainly of sawdust and glue. Composition dolls were marketed as "almost unbreakable" (as you can see above) which, considering how many late 19th/early 20th century letters to Santa involve stories of broken porcelain dolls, was definitely a needed innovation.
The most prized dolls at the time were made in Germany and France - which obviously meant that WWI severely interrupted the supply chain.
The fact that so many little girls coveted German-made dolls took a rather hilarious turn once the US and Germany were at war. I've found many, many dear Santa letters from children vehemently declaring that they would rather not have a doll at all than one made in Germany. Some went as far as to purposely break their German dolls in tiny fits of patriotism - such as Nancy from last year who had to request a new doll from Santa after she took her German-made doll and "chop it head off".
(source: Grand magasins du Louvre catalog, Christmas 1918.)
If you compare the Sears catalog dolls to dolls from a French catalog from the same period, you can definitely see the difference in quality - as well as the fact they more closely resemble dolls from when Ruth's mother was growing up.
Tiny Tim with comically large comb, circa 1968