✦ Figurines & Ceramics

101 Dalmatians Ceramic Puppy Figurines — Matching Pair, 1960s

Two small 1960s ceramic Dalmatian puppy figurines, one standing and one seated, white with black spots

A Pair of Puppies From the Golden Age of Disney Ceramics

Few images in Disney history are as instantly joyful as a cluster of spotted puppies tumbling across the screen. This charming pair of ceramic Dalmatian puppy figurines — one standing, one sitting — captures exactly that spirit, produced in the 1960s during a golden era when Disney's One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961) was fresh in living rooms and imaginations alike. Standing just two to three inches tall, these small but expressive pieces were the kind of thing that found a home on a windowsill, a bookshelf, or a child's dresser, quietly accumulating the gentle dust of decades and the affection of whoever owned them.

The Film That Made the World Love Spots

Released in January 1961, One Hundred and One Dalmatians was a watershed moment for Walt Disney Studios. It was the first Disney feature to make extensive use of the Xerox camera process, which transferred animators' pencil lines directly to cels, giving the film its famously scratchy, energetic look — a deliberate departure from the lush painted lines of earlier classics. The result was a visual style that felt modern and alive, and the characters it brought to life — Pongo, Perdita, the irrepressible puppies, and the deliciously villainous Cruella De Vil — became pop-culture icons almost overnight. Dalmatian merchandise flooded the market in the years following the film's release, and ceramics were among the most beloved forms. Small figurines like these were produced in enormous variety, from fine porcelain pieces to more modest ceramic novelties, and all of them carried the same warm, domestic charm as the film itself.

These two puppies — white bodies dotted with hand-applied or stenciled black spots — have the endearing, slightly stylized proportions that distinguish 1960s Disney-inspired ceramics from later reproductions. The seated figure tilts slightly inward with that quiet watchfulness puppies have, while the standing companion looks ready to trot right off the shelf. Together they form a natural pair, the kind of set that was clearly meant to be displayed side by side.

Why Collectors Seek Out 1960s Disney Ceramics

The 1960s represent a particularly rich hunting ground for Disney ceramic collectors, for several reasons. Production quality varied enormously across manufacturers, and identifying the maker of an unlicensed or lightly licensed piece is often part of the charm. Many small ceramics from this era were produced by regional potteries, novelty gift companies, or imported from Japan under general Disney licensing agreements — which means that no two examples are exactly alike, and discovering a variant with a slightly different spot pattern or glaze finish is a genuine find. That ambiguity of origin is part of the appeal: these were objects made to be loved in everyday life, not preserved behind glass, and the ones that survive with their character intact tell a quiet story about how Disney merchandise existed in the real world.

Dalmatian pieces from this decade are especially sought after because the film itself has never lost its cultural foothold. Unlike some Disney properties that cycle in and out of fashion, 101 Dalmatians has remained in continuous affection — helped along by the 1996 live-action remake, the 2003 sequel, and most recently the Cruella (2021) film. Each new wave of interest sends a fresh generation of collectors back to hunt for the originals, which means 1960s ceramics like this pair have seen steady, sustained collector interest for more than six decades.

Condition, Character, and the Story of Estate Pieces

This pair shows what you would expect of ceramic figurines that have lived a full life: significant dust accumulation and some surface spotting consistent with their age and storage. There are no noted chips or cracks, and the figures retain their form and spot detailing. The patina of age here is honest — this is not a pair that has been artificially cleaned or restored, which means a collector receives them exactly as they emerged from a long-held estate collection.

That provenance matters. These figurines came to us as part of a larger Disney estate collection, the kind of assemblage built over a lifetime by someone who genuinely loved the characters and the films. Pieces like this were not acquired as investments; they were kept because they brought daily pleasure. Finding them now, decades later, is a small act of continuity — connecting a collector today to that original affection.

At two to three inches tall in white ceramic with black spots, this duo would display beautifully alongside other 1960s Disney novelties, in a dedicated Dalmatian collection, or simply on their own as a quiet reminder that sometimes the best things come in small, spotted pairs.

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