Becassine Costumes
Doll Reader (October 1985) Monsieur Bru; Becassine; Rohmer Dolls; Hollywood Dolls; Sarotti Moor Doll; Ginnny; Austrian Doll; Smoking Flapper Costume; Miniature Sweing Technique; Sara Ploos Van Amstel; Gone with the Wind; Barbie Festival (Vol. XIII, Issue 7)
Highlighted Features
Features
Information
- Best Choice - #1 Becassine Costumes
- Checked on 07/05/2023
- Based on 57 Reviews
Becassine Figure
Highlighted Features
- Company: Plastoy
- Release date: 2014
- Material: PVC
- Theme: Bécassine
- Condition: New
Collectible PVC figurine from Plastoy: Bécassine wearing a green dress pastiching traditional Breton with an umbrella. Bécassine is a comic strip and the name of its heroine, appearing for the first time in the first issue of La Semaine de Suzette on February 2, 1905. She is considered the first female protagonist in the history of comics. The character Bécassine is a young Breton housemaid, usually depicted wearing a green dress pastiching traditional Breton peasant costume, with lace coiffe and clogs. She is said to come from Finistère, the area most associated with traditional Breton culture. However, her clothing has non-Breton elements, reminiscent of the local costume of Picardy. She is usually portrayed without a mouth. Seen as a stereotype and remnant of the contempt with which the Bretons were long seen, she is the typical provincial girl as seen by the more refined city people of Paris, the target audience of the young girls' magazine La Semaine de Suzette. But over the course of the stories, and coupled with the success she has, she is depicted more and more favourably. "Bécassine" is a nickname, derived from the French word for a number of birds of the family of the snipe, which is also used as a way of saying "fool" in French.
Features
Information
- Best Choice - #2 Becassine Costumes
- Checked on 07/05/2023
- Based on 40 Reviews
Becassine Figure
Highlighted Features
- Company: Plastoy
- Release date: 2014
- Material: PVC
- Theme: Bécassine
- Condition: New
Collectible PVC figurine from Plastoy: Bécassine wearing a green dress pastiching traditional Breton with a pile of gifts. Bécassine is a comic strip and the name of its heroine, appearing for the first time in the first issue of La Semaine de Suzette on February 2, 1905. She is considered the first female protagonist in the history of comics. The character Bécassine is a young Breton housemaid, usually depicted wearing a green dress pastiching traditional Breton peasant costume, with lace coiffe and clogs. She is said to come from Finistère, the area most associated with traditional Breton culture. However, her clothing has non-Breton elements, reminiscent of the local costume of Picardy. She is usually portrayed without a mouth. Seen as a stereotype and remnant of the contempt with which the Bretons were long seen, she is the typical provincial girl as seen by the more refined city people of Paris, the target audience of the young girls' magazine La Semaine de Suzette. But over the course of the stories, and coupled with the success she has, she is depicted more and more favourably. "Bécassine" is a nickname, derived from the French word for a number of birds of the family of the snipe, which is also used as a way of saying "fool" in French.
Features
Information
- Best Choice - #3 Becassine Costumes
- Checked on 07/05/2023
- Based on 47 Reviews
Plastoy - Becassine and the bouquet of flowers
Highlighted Features
- Company: Plastoy
- Release date: 2014
- Material: PVC
- Theme: Bécassine
- Condition: New
Collectible PVC figurine from Plastoy: Bécassine with his bunch of flowers. Bécassine is a comic strip and the name of its heroine, appearing for the first time in the first issue of La Semaine de Suzette on February 2, 1905. She is considered the first female protagonist in the history of comics. The character Bécassine is a young Breton housemaid, usually depicted wearing a green dress pastiching traditional Breton peasant costume, with lace coiffe and clogs. She is said to come from Finistère, the area most associated with traditional Breton culture. However, her clothing has non-Breton elements, reminiscent of the local costume of Picardy. She is usually portrayed without a mouth. Seen as a stereotype and remnant of the contempt with which the Bretons were long seen, she is the typical provincial girl as seen by the more refined city people of Paris, the target audience of the young girls' magazine La Semaine de Suzette. But over the course of the stories, and coupled with the success she has, she is depicted more and more favourably. "Bécassine" is a nickname, derived from the French word for a number of birds of the family of the snipe, which is also used as a way of saying "fool" in French.
Features
Information
- Best Choice - #4 Becassine Costumes
- Checked on 07/05/2023
- Based on 20 Reviews
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