Black Mammy
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![]() 1917 Yos Honey to Yo Mammy Jes The Same black Sheet Music Brockman Kershaw US $5.99
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![]() Black Americana Mammy Stringholder US $10.00
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![]() McCoy Black Americana Cream Mammy String Holder US $16.00
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Handmade dolls are beautiful and unique. They usually represent a country, culture, and history. They have also been around since the earliest decades. As a matter of fact, archaeologists have discovered ancient miniature dolls in Egypt. However, the handmade dolls back then were not as sophisticated and realistic as the dolls sold in the market now. They were typically made from wood, cloth, and stone. Nonetheless, they were just as good and useful as the miniature playthings found in various countries today. The miniature dolls in India, for instance, are very good representations of Indian culture and art. The dresses of these miniature figures usually depict actual dresses of rural and urban people. Some of these toys are even traditionally dressed.
Anyway, handmade dolls can also be a good source of income. If you start selling miniature dolls today, you can even become popular in the industry of crafts. These days, weird and ugly dolls are in. A lot of people have actually earned good money by selling handmade dolls like these. However, these dolls are not really intended for children. These miniature toys are usually intended for display and are more preferred by grown-ups who collect these playthings. The assortment, uniqueness, and newness of these miniature dolls make them popular to people. They sort of give that thrilling and mysterious air; thus, making collectors excited and want to buy some more.
Anyway, you can start by making and selling stump dolls. These miniature dolls are very easy to make, so you do not really have to be an expert toymaker. You do not even have to make these miniature figures beautiful because doll collectors will like them the way they are. Then, you can also make and sell Raggedy Ann dolls. These handmade dolls are part of tradition. They have been popular ever since they were invented. If you make primitive and country versions, you can really earn significant amounts. Also, you can offer Mammy Dolls or Black Dolls to customers and collectors. These handmade dolls are actually full of controversy because of their appearance. They are regarded as miniature dolls that make a racist statement. In reality, they are just normal dolls that show a part of history.
In addition, you can try making and selling truck dolls. Miniature dolls like these are fun and unique. If you often experience difficulty in making the lower bodies of your lifelike miniature figures, then truck dolls are ideal for you. Truck dolls are dolls that are often inserted into boxes because they do not have legs. Moreover, you can market OOAK or one-of-a-kind miniature toys. These handmade dolls are really popular today. If you want customers to do repeat business with you, you have to make sure that your handmade dolls are really one-of-a-kind. Use your creativity and imagination to produce strange yet amazing miniature figures. You can gain inspiration from other miniature dolls, but you still have to design your own.
MadeItMyself is a rapidly growing, unique and fun artisan online marketplace that lets you post your handmade creations and share them with the rest of the world.
MadeItMyself provides endless possibilities for the people who love art and originality and want to make a good living from their respective trades.
(c) Article Copyright - MadeItMyself.com.
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Mammy - $24.99 Mammy features Al Jolson as the star of a travelling minstrel show, appearing in a small Southern town. Jolson falls in love with an actress in the troupe (Lois Moran), but she loves another. One of Jolson's fellow minstrels (Lowell Sherman) is shot backstage, and it is assumed thanks to several plot convolutions that Jolson is guilty of the deed. He heads for the hills, but returns to the show, his reputation restored but his love for the actress unrequited. Maudlin in the extreme, Mammy is salvaged by several enjoyable songs by Irving Berlin and by its Technicolor photography (though most TV prints are black and white). The film's fascination with modern viewers rests with the presence of Al Jolson--and with the casual use of profanity during his confrontation scene with Lowell Sherman. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi |
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Mammy $3.99 Mammy |
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Mammy (DVD) $24.05 MAMMY features Al Jolson as the star of a travelling minstrel show, appearing in a small Southern town. Jolson falls in love with an actress in the troupe (Lois Moran), but she loves another. One of Jolson`s fellow minstrels (Lowell Sherman) is shot backstage, and it is assumed thanks to several plot convolutions that Jolson is guilty of the deed. He heads for the hills, but returns to the show, his reputation restored but his love for the actress unrequited. Maudlin in the extreme, MAMMY is salvaged by several enjoyable songs by Irving Berlin and by its Technicolor photography (though most TV prints are black and white). The film`s fascination with modern viewers rests with the presence of Al Jolson--and with the casual use of profanity during his confrontation scene with Lowell Sherman. |
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The Mammy $11.99 "Mammy" is what Irish children call their mothers and The Mammy is Agnes Browne--a widow struggling to raise seven children in a North Dublin neighborhood in the 1960s. Popular Irish comedian Brendan O'Carroll chronicles the comic misadventures of this large and lively family with raw humor and great affection. Forced to be mother, father, and referee to her battling clan, the ever-resourceful Agnes Browne occasionally finds a spare moment to trade gossip and quips with her best pal Marion Monks (alias "The Kaiser") and even finds herself pursued by the amorous Frenchman who runs the local pizza parlor. Like the novels of Roddy Doyle, The Mammy features pitch-perfect dialogue, lightning wit, and a host of colorful characters. Earthy and exuberant, the novel brilliantly captures the brash energy and cheerful irreverence of working-class Irish life. |
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Japanese Mammy, Vol. 1 $22.99 Japanese Mammy, Vol. 1 |
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WITTAKER,ROGER: MAMMY BLUE $8.59 WITTAKER,ROGER: MAMMY BLUE |
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Montenegro, Hugo: Mammy Blue $12.43 Montenegro, Hugo: Mammy Blue |
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Mammy's Donut Waffle Shop $39.99 Mammy's Donut Waffle Shop - Giclee Print |
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Al Jolson, Mammy $64.99 Erik Rohman Al Jolson, Mammy - Giclee Print |
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From Mammy to Miss America and Beyond $245.73 From Mammy to Miss America and Beyond |
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The Room of Mammy and the Small Girls $17.99 Carl Larsson The Room of Mammy and the Small Girls - Art Print |
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Mammy (Restored And Remastered) $16.77 Center stage, singing his heart out - that's how fans love Al Jolson. And that's what they get in Mammy. It's an ideal showcase for the master showman, giving full rein to Jolson's unique talents in a melodramatic story of a lovelorn minstrel man innocent |
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Mammy Blue $19.52 As his career progressed, easy listening artist Hugo Montenegro began to push his unique, loungy interpretations of pop music in ever more adventurous directions by incorporating state-of-the-art engineering techniques and musical instruments. On 1971's M |
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Gone with the Wind Scarlett Mammy Salt and Pepper Shakers $12.99 Let Scarlett & Mammy season to taste! The Gone with the Wind Scarlett & Mammy Salt and Pepper Shaker stands approximately 4 1/2-inches tall. Order yours today! Ages 13 and up. |
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RAND,MICHAEL: MICHAEL RAND PRESENTS OEDIPUS & THE MAMMY JAMMERS $13.47 RAND,MICHAEL: MICHAEL RAND PRESENTS OEDIPUS & THE MAMMY JAMMERS |
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Dance a Baby Diddy What Can Mammy Do Wid'e ? $39.99 Dance a Baby Diddy What Can Mammy Do Wid'e ? - Giclee Print |
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Mammy (Restored & Remastered) $18.09 Rated: NRSynopsis: Center stage, singing his heart out - that's how fans love Al Jolson. And that's what they get in Mammy. It's an ideal showcase for the master showman, giving full rein to Jolson's unique talents in a melodramatic story of a lovelorn minstrel man innocently involved in murderous intrigue. But, as always with Jolson, the star is the story. Here he gets top support from Irving Berlin's jazzy-melodious score, including the jaunty Let Me Sing and I'm Happy. The film's most memorable sequences feature Jolson in full-scale recreations of a genuine minstrel show, complete with interlocutor-end man gags, dancers, tambourine chorus, tunes aplenty and a daffy mock-opera version of Yes, We Have No Bananas. |


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