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There are also colored Rainbow Magic books for younger readers, which are also published by Scholastic. The books are usually six chapters long, and tell one overarching story spanning out over seven books in the earlier series, four books in the later series. Each set of books is based on a theme, such as 'The Sporty Fairies' and 'The Jewel ...
Ruby the Red Fairy: The Rainbow Fairies: 2003: Narinder Dhami: 2: Amber the Orange Fairy: Narinder Dhami 3: Saffron the Yellow Fairy (US name: Sunny the Yellow Fairy) Sue Bentley 4: Fern the Green Fairy: Narinder Dhami 5: Sky the Blue Fairy: Sue Bentley 6: Izzy the Indigo Fairy (US and original name: Inky the Indigo Fairy) Narinder Dhami 7 ...
Georgie Ripper (born London, 1977) is a children's book illustrator, who is best known for her work on the Rainbow Magic series of fairy books. She won the Macmillan Prize for Picture Book Illustration in 2000 with My Best Friend Bob and Little Brown Bushrat which she authored and illustrated. [1]
In the Rainbow Magic Book Mia the Bridesmaid Fairy by Daisy Meadows the fairy must find 'lucky items' that are "Kirsty's grandmother's brooch as something old, Esther's wedding dress as something new, Kirsty's golden anklet as something borrowed, the blue feather as something blue, and Rachel's sixpence anklet as the sixpence."
Sadly, several fairies (Hannah, Cara, the other 3 Princess Fairies) are missing. They haven't updated it since they added Natalie. Anoymonous — Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.63.31.182 03:38, 1 June 2012 (UTC) I don't really like this website. By the way She wrote appraxipatly 165 books. This website should have more information.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rainbow_Magic:_Return_to_Rainspell_Island&oldid=809878796"
The history of the show started in 1996 with Harmony, Rhapsody, Barnaby, Elf and four tots. The producers of the series made three direct-to-video releases: two in 1998 (The Fairies/Fairy Hello! and A Fairy Merry Christmas) and one in 2000 (Farmyard Magic, along with re-releases of the first two videos from ABC).
An anime adaptation of the series, titled Rilu Rilu Fairilu: Yōsei no Door (Japanese: リルリルフェアリル ~妖精のドア~, Hepburn: Riru Riru Feariru: Yōsei no Doa, Rilu Rilu Fairilu: The Fairy's Door), began airing in all TXN stations in Japan on February 6, 2016, replacing Jewelpet: Magical Change on its initial time-slot, and ...