Living dead dolls biography of nancy
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Series 32's variant set has more color variety than the previous Halloween series. The body sculpts and size also closely echo the Kelly/Tommy dolls in the Barbie doll line at the time. His name, meaning "dead carrot", might more properly be rendered as "Carotte Morte".
Probably the most extreme example is Isaiah, who goes from a realistically-colored vintage newsboy with a hit-and-run head wound to an uninjured modern cyborg/hacker-styled kid with a hoodie and stark white skin in his Res dolls. She's also in the series themed on a ritual with a spirit board assembled through the five dolls, though her poems don't explicitly describe her as psychic.
- Hemlock and Honey wear cute girlish masks to disguise their freaky zombie disfigurements—Hemlock is green-skinned, bald, and missing one eye, and Honey has unnaturally dark skin, cracks, sparse plugs of hair, and a destroyed lower left face, possibly from decomposition or burning.
- Angus Litilrott in Series 8 wears a bag as a hood over his face, covering a cross-shaped forehead scar and either a burn wound, a gory torn cheek and bruised eye, or a screaming face with two irises in his left eye.
He's a well-put-together zombie with slicked hair, a velvet coat and a brocade waistcoat, and he's the only male Living Dead Doll to wear the pointy-toed heeled boots, typically used for dolls reflecting fancy women.
Said spider is depicted through paint as dangling from a thread under the doll's right eye. He also has a stitched mouth and creepy patchwork details.
- Scary Stitches: Several dolls feature gruesome stitching or staples for the same effect.
- Dahlia in Series 5 has staples holding together the cuts on her cheeks and the bisection scar around her waist.
Blood paint on her torso and dress sells the stabbing even further. At the end of the page, once the full picture settles of how the ghosts of the children are disrupting the town in the current day, the LDD mask comes off to promote the dolls the story was written around, who depict the ghosts of the children themselves.
- Amazing Technicolor Population: The skin colors of the Living Dead Dolls have a very wide range, with several human colors, greyscale colors, and several dolls with bright saturated fantasy colors to illustrate a more monstrous nature or colorful aesthetic.
- Ambiguous Gender:
- Series 31's boogeymen play with this to create a more otherworldly tone for its inhuman spooks.
The sack mask itself forms the doll's primary gimmick—he was released with three variant face surprises under the bag, and only opening the doll and taking it off would let you discover which variant you got.
- Sailor Fuku: Maggot's dolls invoke this style of sailor dress, and her Resurrection dolls lean into a more Japanese manga/anime influence with her hairstyling and eyepatch and face mask.
- Saw a Woman in Half: Viv, the Great Zombini's assistant, has been actually sawn in two without any trickery, and her doll's body can separate into the two gory pieces.
- Scare 'Em Straight: Frozen Charlotte's death certificate poem is written like a Victorian cautionary tale for children, using her example of dying in a frozen pond after disobeying her mother as a warning for children to listen to what they're told.
- Scary Scarecrows: Isaac is a scarecrow doll with straw hair and a floppy plush body with longer limbs and branch-like plastic hands.
The LDD Ghost of Christmas Present is depicted as female, running counter to the concrete gender presentation of the only gendered member of the three spirits in the book. The Minis are set apart stylistically by a more toddler-like sculpt design and a wicked smirk on the face. Minis series lineups started as replicas of the main series (i.e., Minis Series 1 copied the Series 1 main lineup) before diverging in cast assortment.
Thump has no makeup and short curly hair, making for a gender-neutral appearance, and is labeled with "it" pronouns. These dolls often feature character sculpts developed for the Presents line which do not feature in the main dolls, and are packaged in more traditional window boxes rather than coffins.
- Resurrection: A line of reimagined older characters in their own assorted Roman-numeraled series, offering two variants for each Resurrection doll.
Her face is a different sculpt from Siren's, with stitches crossed over each other. Purdy's doll in the Lost in Oz series, where she's cast as the Scarecrow, has the brain missing per the role she's playing. She's named indirectly for a woman reported to have DID and she's dribbling and said to have had her brain removed, though her restraints could indicate that as an undead, she hasn't totally vanished.
Her exposed skull is hidden under her paper mask.
- Series 31's boogeymen play with this to create a more otherworldly tone for its inhuman spooks.
- Tears of Blood:
- Lamenta has bloody tears, but unlike most examples she doesn't seem to suffer from them.
The third of three sisters who pollute our world
The offspring of a witch who had three little girls
Lamenta is the most beautiful and holds the most power
Her sweet tears of blood shall rain down like a shower
- The Hopping Vampire's doll has them, though its description doesn't mention them at all.
- Theme Naming:
- Three of Series 26's witches are named for festivals honoring specific times of the year—Beltane, Samhain, and Lammas.
- Series 28's debuting characters are all color-coded and have names that relate—Ruby is red, Hayze is purple (per the Jimi Hendrix song "Purple Haze", Onyx is black-and-white like the precious stone, and Tina Pink is pink.
- Series 29's dolls are all "nameless" and referred to with epithet phrases that give them a spooky ghost-story or urban-legend tone.
- Series 33's dolls have morbid French names to suit the cabaret setting.
- Theme Twin Naming: Hazel and Hattie, the conjoined twins, both have disyllabic names that start with "H".
- The Tooth Hurts: Sweet Tooth was beaten toothless, with candy corn replacing what she lost.
- Things That Go "Bump" in the Night: Series 31, "Don't Turn Out The Lights", is based on boogeymen and the fears of a darkened bedroom.
Series 35 featured four regular dolls plus a set of six Resurrection-style dolls based on Series 1's cast and Candy Rotten, with each purchased set of Series 35 having one of these dolls as a random acquisition in the "mystery" slot as the fifth doll in the set.
- Dahlia in Series 5 has staples holding together the cuts on her cheeks and the bisection scar around her waist.