10. 'Delighted to be presented with the artefact, Bunny said: "Oswald the Lucky Rabbit is a very important rabbit because it was designed by Disney for Universal Pictures." ' express.co.uk/showbiz/tv-rad…
11. 'Bunny and the Roadshow team returned to Woodhorn Museum in Northumberland for the recent episode, which saw the expert dealing with a collection of antique toys and movie memorabilia...'
Woodhorn is the museum of mining and coal TUNNELS.
12. What ever is wrong with Bunny's neck? ..
Are we looking at Big Bunny..?..🤔
13. This effigy doll below has 'real hair' ..it is horrible.
14. What is in the 'bisque' as in bisque porcelain heads?🤔
15. 'Bisque dolls allowed a more realistic skin tone. Antique bisque dolls at first had leather or cloth bodies, then composition bodies. Today, bisque dolls are too breakable and expensive to be made as play dolls and are only made for the collector market.'
16. 'Literally thousands of companies have produced bisque dolls throughout history. Most bisque doll productions started in France, and then transferred to Germany in the 1880s and 1890s.'
17. 'In the early 1900s, the production mostly transferred to the United States, and then, towards the end of the 20th century, to China. Nearly all bisque dolls created today except for dolls made by doll artists are made in China.'
18. Bisque 'porcelain'.
Bone china in other words...
19. What would be the equivalent of 'kid' leather for '***' bone china?
KIDs bones crushed and/ or powdered to make China...🤔
20. 'Collectors prefer bisque dolls on jointed composition bodies which allow more posing that simple carton (paper mache) bodies jointed only at the hips and shoulders, or stiffer all-leather bodies. For bisque French Fashion dolls..'
..a jointed wood body or other body allowing posing is preferred to an all-leather body.'
21. Small dolls, known as all-bisque, were all the rage from the late 1800s to about 1930, many of them were known as "penny dolls." web.archive.org/web/2011070707…
Peter Brabeck-Letmathe - Part Three (18+)
-Former Nestle Chairman and CEO
1. Peter Brabeck, chief executive of Nestle SA speaks at the Efficient Consumer Response conference.
'BELGIUM - MAY 25: Peter Brabeck, chief executive of Nestle SA speaks at the Efficient Consumer Response conference in Brussels, Belgium, Tuesday, May 25, 2004. Nestle SA, the world's largest foodmaker, is considering a bid for General Mills Inc. to add brands such as Cheerios cereal and Betty Crocker dessert mixes, people familiar with the matter said.'