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Watch children react to ‘average Barbie’ with acne, stretch marks

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It began for Nickolay Lamm as a question: What would Barbie look like if she had the dimensions of an average woman?

His answer came in the form of the Lammily doll: a shorter, broader, brunette version of the idealistic blond Mattel doll.

Now Lammily is ready to make her debut, complete with a sticker pack that features pimples, moles, cellulite and scars that can be applied.

“I feel she looks so real, so ordinary, that you don’t focus on what she looks like but … on what she does,” he said by telephone on Wednesday.

That perspective helped propel Lamm’s crowd-funding effort to build the doll.

The 26-year-old toy maker said the dolls will be mailed to his crowd-funding backers no later than Black Friday, the traditional kickoff for holiday shopping. Thousands more, which were preordered, will also be shipped before the holidays, he said.

Here’s what you need to know about Lamm and the doll:

Germ of an idea

It began in 2013, when Lamm began playing with the idea of what Barbie would look like as an average woman.

But what were those dimensions? He got the answer from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (For the record, the CDC says the average American woman weighs 166.2 pounds and has a 37.5 inch waist.)

The initial version of the doll was an art project of sorts, with Lamm creating a model of the average woman and doing a side-by-side comparison with Barbie.

The response to the project was overwhelming, with even actress and singer Demi Lovato taking to Twitter to call Lamm’s doll “awesome.”

The response in turn prompted Lamm’s crowd-funding effort to create the doll. He raised nearly $100,000 in a single day, and within 30 days he had raised more than $500,000.

Average is beautiful

The doll, with its wide hips, thick legs and rounded rump, goes against the concept of the perfect figure.

“The message I want to send is that it’s not what you look like. That doesn’t define you. What you do does,” he said.

Lamm said he took inspiration for the doll from his own experience in high school, which he described as the “worst time in my life.”

“I really cared about how I looked, and I didn’t feel good about myself,” he said.

Acne and a clothing line

Billed as Lammily Marks, the $5.99 accessory pack will be on sale in January.

The idea, Lamm said, is two-fold: Realism and innovation.

People have acne, tattoos, moles and scars, he said.

While realism is an issue, Lamm said to grow the fledgling company there also has to be innovation.

“You have to be one step ahead,” he said.

Part of the step also includes launching a doll clothing line, dubbed Lammily’s World of Fashion.

Down the road, Lamm said he plans to release a boy doll. Eventually, he said he would like to follow the Build-A-Bear Workshop model, where children could design their own Lammily dolls with custom features.

What’s in a name?

The doll is not named Lammily. Rather, Lamm said, that’s the name of the company.

“With the name, I combined by my Lamm and family,” he said.

A number of his family members have played a role in helping him develop the doll, including creating the box and the stickers.

So, what’s the doll’s name? Whatever you want it to be, Lamm said.

The dolls come with a numbered passport that allows you to name the doll. Lamm said the company website will eventually include a database where people can register the name of their doll.

What does Mattel have to say?

Nothing at the moment. Mattel did not return a telephone call from CNN seeking comment about the doll.