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Blaze was featured prominently during children's television advertising (Mattel was the first toymaker to advertise year around with television commercials). Unlike other rocking-horses of the time, Blaze was mounted on a stand that was said to be "untippable" and had no springs. The apparatus prevented pinched fingers, and was fitted out with ...
A rocking horse in the collection of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. A rocking horse is a child's toy, usually shaped like a horse and mounted on rockers similar to a rocking chair. There are two sorts, the one where the horse part sits rigidly attached to a pair of curved rockers that are in contact with the ground, and a second sort ...
William Wallace Denslow's illustrations for a variant of Ride a cock horse, from a 1901 edition of Mother Goose. A hobby horse (or hobby-horse) is a child's toy horse. Children played at riding a wooden hobby horse made of a straight stick with a small horse's head (of wood or stuffed fabric), and perhaps reins, attached to one end.
A Dutch spring rider.. A spring rider or spring rocker is a bouncy, outdoors playing device, invented in the 1960s in Italy by the company Pozza. [1] It mainly consists of a metal spring beneath a plastic or wooden central beam or flange, with 1 to 4 plastic or fiberglass seats above it.
Rocking Horse Christmas is a 1997 children's fiction Christmas picture book by Mary Pope Osborne and illustrated by Ned Bittinger. It was originally published in 1997, by Scholastic. [ 1 ]
Argos (syn Agenora) Usage on www.wikidata.org Q27701421; Wikidata:WikiProject sum of all paintings/Creator/Peter Paul Rubens; Wikidata:WikiProject sum of all paintings/Copies; Wikidata:WikiProject sum of all paintings/Collection/Museo del Prado/P001000 to P001999; Wikidata:WikiProject sum of all paintings/Collection/Museo del Prado/17th Century