For everyone's information, I was able to buy this very doll at Target tonight for [..]
Don't waste your time buying this doll online from someone who is just looking to scheme money out of you! I urge you to contact your local Target stores and you will find one that not only has them, but will sell it to you for a FRACTION of what this person is trying to get.
What a greedy person this seller is!
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I was delighted to see that there's a Tinkerbell doll (to go along with the new Tinker Bell DVD) that looks very age-appropriate for the little girls who'll be watching it. My own toddler picked her out of the Tinkerbell product lineup at Wal-Mart to buy with her birthday money from her grandma.However, once we got her home and out of the usual ironclad package (@#$@#T#!), I was a little disappointed.
In my opinion, she's got two things going for her: She looks like a little girl and is shaped like that, not like a supermodel. Her wings are soft and won't poke my gal in the face while they're sleeping together.
She's got more against her: For one thing, she's pretty hard and stiff-not too good for snuggly bedtimes. For another, her wings are part of her dress, not part of her body. This is supposed to be a real fairy, not a blonde girl doll in a fairy costume. (Believe me, my gal will soon notice the difference.) Finally, Tinkerbell's dress is extremely flimsy (ie netting) around the shoulders, and is hard enough to take off that I'm pretty sure it will rip once a toddler starts yanking at it.
But it IS Tinkerbell in doll form. And because of that, my three year old doesn't seem to mind any of the details too awful much. I'm disappointed, though, that Disney didn't put a little more thought into her design.
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