Freemountain Toys, Inc. was a company based in Bristol, Vermont, USA that produced anthropomorphic vegetables and fruits called Vegimals and other plush toys and hats with stuffed appendages.
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The company was founded in 1975 by Beverly Red in her home in Burlington and moved from there to a loft, then a storefront and finally to a former grist mill in Bristol that was renamed the Vegimill.[1][2] In 1978 the company's gross income was almost $6 million.[1][3] Products were sewn by as many as 140 local women in addition to a staff of ten at the Vegimill, where the grain bins were used in cutting, assembling, and boxing merchandise.[1][4][5][6]
In June 1980, Red sold Freemountain to Michael Balser.[5][7][8] The company's trademarks have since expired.[9][10][11]
Vegimals, the company's initial product, were velour and fur-covered vegetables and fruits, some with Velcro fastenings, which had embroidered faces.[12] They included peas in a zippered pod (the most popular product), a tomato, a stalk of broccoli, a cauliflower, a giant carrot, a slice of watermelon with removable stuffed seeds, an olive with removable pit, a peelable and segmentable orange, a shuckable ear of corn, two peanuts in a peanut shell, and a banana with Velcro-fastened peel.[5][13] Non-vegetable, non-fruit characters included an egg that unzipped to release a stuffed fried egg, a zippered can containing four Velcro-attached sardines, animals such as a fish inside a fish inside another fish, a whale with a baby inside, a mother sheep with lamb, and "Emile Bearhart" with a pocket containing a red velour heart, and also an 11-inch velour pyramid containing a blue velour mummy.[1][5][14][15] In 1978 the company was producing 43 different types of Vegimal.[4]
The company started producing baseball caps with stuffed wings after Red made one for herself.[4] A separate division, Freemountain hats, produced caps with horns, antennae, and lightning bolts sewn on in addition to wings, with considerable sales success.[1]
Freemountain was awarded a certificate of commendation by the Public Action Coalition on Toys for its safe, imaginative products in non-sexist packaging and inspiring constructive and non-violent play.[5][16]
The United States Department of Agriculture National Agricultural Library includes several Vegimals in its library of educational materials, to assist pre-school and elementary-school children in learning about foodstuffs.[17]
The Peas in a Pod in the 2010 movie Toy Story 3 and the 2011 animated short Hawaiian Vacation are based on the Vegimal peas.