How tall are monster high dolls
Howleen or Twyla? I've also noticed that Nefera and Clawdia seem to be taller than the average MH doll. Any other MH dolls which are taller than average? Share Tweet. Views: Twyla and Howleen are the only short dolls right now, and Nefera, Clawdia and Headless Headmistress Bloodgood are the tall ones.
Howleen has always been short, ever since her first release, and I do think that Howleen and Twyla are the same height when they're not wearing shoes, of course. Abbey is a tiny bit taller then the normal sized ghouls. Select your contry below to shop and visit your account.
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Sign up to get the latest news from Mattel and its family of brands! Read reviews 26 Write a review. Find at Retail. By the end of , Mattel took some cost-cutting measures to compensate for increased production expenses. Whereas before all dolls came with doll stands in their specific signature color, Skull Shores and Sweet were the first to package the dolls of one line with a stand in a shared color.
Early even saw the introducation of dolls without stand at all, such as was the case with the ' Campus Stroll ' 2-packs. The doll brushes shared the same fate. Equally so, over the course of came a decrease in doll logs. For instance, prior to fashion packs came with a card or backstory, which were scrapped in The first set of ' Maul Session ' still had a short story printed on the back of the boxes, but the second set's doll logs were limited to a quote. Later fashion packs lacked doll logs altogether.
Since Late , a reversal in this trend seems to have been started, as more dolls than before have been packaged with booklets. An assortment, line, or series is a collection of dolls, fashion packs, playsets, or a combination of dolls and playsets. An assortment can be defined in three ways. The first is by means of an assortment number. All of the Monster High items manufactured by Mattel itself, as opposed by those made by other companies under license, have one or two numbers on the back of the packaging, usually in the lower right corner.
These are Mattel's product numbers. In case of two numbers, the first is the assortment number and the second the model number. In case of only one number, it alone is both. All items that have the same assortment number are part of the same assortment. The second way an assortment can be defined is by contextual relevance, which is necessary when there's only one number on the back of the box.
If there's only one number, it means that the item is shipped only in cases consisting only of that item, which is often true for playsets and store-exclusive dolls and always true for multipacks. Since this number is different from the one attached to diverse cases it can be taken to mean these items are not part of the assortment those other cases represent, but this often makes no sense contextually.
The third method of defining an assortment is through the name printed on the box. Expensive and elaborate lines have a name that is trademarked , whereas the bulk of other lines have an unprotected name. A handful of other lines, however, are thoroughly nameless.
The most significant of these are the early ' Signature ' sublines, not to mention ' Signature ' itself. The fandom tends to create a name on its own for use of reference in those situations and the Monster High Wiki uses these names too in to organize the information. This is the main problem with using assortment names to define assortments: not all assortments have names.
To top it off, names and assortment numbers don't always align. For instance, Dead Tired consists of two assortment numbers: V and X V is the assortment number of the dolls, which are slightly more luxurious than the post dolls, which are the ones that have X as assortment number. TV special tie-in lines also tend to fit multiple assortment numbers under one name, though sometimes they utilize a subname to distinguish between assortment numbers, like how there are a 13 Wishes line and a 13 Wishes - Haunt the Casbah line.
But in this situation, the context might not be aligned. For instance, 13 Wishes Spectra contextually fits 13 Wishes - Haunt the Casbah but only features the name 13 Wishes on the box.
And the Clawdeen doll that comes with the Room to Howl playset contextually matches Dead Tired , but is itself peculiarly nameless. As a result of all this, the Monster High Wiki has to choose how to approach the Monster High dolls, fashion packs, and playsets, and these choices may not match the choices other fandom-run websites make. This does not make either party correct or wrong, especially since, in most cases, the choices made will be tied to what website setup works best given the available resources.
There's also the aspect of estimating what the franchise's future will bring; what works now might not work in another year, and assortment definitions are also made with a website's setup in another year in mind. The Monster High Wiki identifies assortments by name first, then by assortment number, and then by context.
This means that all items sold under the same name, and if applicable the same subname, share a page, even if they have different assortment numbers and context. Everything that does not explicitly share the name is excluded. If there is no name present, the assortment numbers are the deciding factor. Nameless lines with different assortment numbers are never put together, with the exception of Classroom as it is only semi-nameless.
If nameless though, items without assortment number may be incorporated if they contextually fit, which is most often the case for ' Signature ' multipacks. Special measures are taken to cover the San Diego Comic-Con International dolls , the lone ' Signature ' dolls , the official custom dolls , and the playsets. In case of the first three categories, the dolls are all explicitly stand-alone releases, but they have a systematic connection.
Because of this, they are treated as one line each and collected on one page each for ease of organization, but named so as to make it clear they collectively don't have a context. While the playsets connected to a doll line are covered on the doll line's page, all playsets together are given their own page too, which compensates for the impossibility of most to be covered on a character's merchandise page - since many aren't character-related - and equally relieves some characters' merchandise pages from having to detail playsets too.
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