| Hint | Doll |
| Male soldier doll which led to the coining of the term 'action figure' | |
| This doll was the likeness of a 1930's child star with curly hair | |
| This doll with a rhyming name was one of the first drink and wet baby dolls. | |
| This doll is colorfully dressed, and her friends are the 7 Color Kids; the character started as an animated TV series | |
| Native American men of the Hopi tribe carve these dolls & give them to the children to acquaint them with spiritual beings. | |
| This thin, flat doll is cut out with scissors, as is her wardrobe. | |
| Ugly(?) little dolls with wild hair based on creatures from Norse mythology | |
| Well muscled man doll whose limbs could be pulled & extended without breaking | |
| Large headed fashion dolls debuting in 2001. | |
| Small dolls made to resemble people one knows for the purpose of casting spells on them | |
| Mattel's tiny (less than 1 inch) doll that comes in a compact case filled with tiny accessories | |
| Dolls made to order to resemble their real owners in skin tone, facial features, eye color & hair color & style | |
| She started out as a paper doll in a ladies' home magazine, and was later made into a 'little girl' doll by Ideal. | |
| Sold in the 1940's and '50s, this 'little girl' doll was one of the first that had separate outfits available for purchase. | |
| Hasbro's lifelike baby doll made in several versions that do various things, such as eat, wet, poop, talk, sing, cry, etc. | |
| Buffy's 'lady' doll on Family Affair, which was also produced by Mattel | |
| Most popular selling baby doll of the '60s; she wiggled & squirmed like a real baby; her name is taken from a tiny Hans Christian Andersen character | |
| Rag doll with a prairie type dress and bonnet created from greeting card artwork by an artist of the same name | |
| Popular in the '50s & '60's, she really cried!! | |