Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- Why Rainbow High Doll Names Matter
- The Original Rainbow High Core Series
- Special Editions, Collector Dolls, and Fan-Favorite Side Releases
- Rainbow Vision and Performance-Themed Dolls
- Pacific Coast, New Friends, and Other Major Rainbow High Expansions
- Shadow High: The Stylish Rival School
- Junior High, Littles, and the Rainbow World-Era Dolls
- The Complete Master List of Rainbow High Doll Names
- What It Feels Like to Collect Rainbow High: The Experience Behind the List
- Conclusion
If you have ever stood in the toy aisle whispering, “Wait, do I already own Violet in this outfit, or is this a different Violet in an entirely more dramatic outfit?” welcome. You are among friends. Rainbow High is one of those doll lines that starts with a simple idea six fashion-forward girls, one for each rainbow color and then absolutely sprints into collector territory with sister schools, music groups, junior versions, holiday editions, magical pets, snow gimmicks, crystal kits, and enough names to make your display shelf feel like an elite arts academy yearbook.
This complete list is designed to make sense of the chaos in the most useful way possible. Instead of treating every outfit refresh like a separate species, this guide focuses on the full roster of named Rainbow High dolls and groups them by the series or subline where they appeared. That means you will find the original core students, Shadow High rivals, Rainbow Vision performers, Junior High releases, collector dolls, Littles, and the newer Rainbow World-era characters in one place.
In other words: if a Rainbow High doll had an actual name on the box, there is a very good chance she or he is in this guide. If the release was a generic DIY body sold by eye color or blank customization style, it is not counted as a named character entry. That keeps this article useful for collectors, parents, resellers, and anyone trying to figure out whether “Marina” is a doll, a playlist, or the moment your budget gave up.
Why Rainbow High Doll Names Matter
Rainbow High built its popularity on more than bright hair and glossy eyes. The brand gave dolls clear identities, signature colors, school “focuses,” and social circles that made collecting feel more like building a cast than buying random fashion dolls. That is why names matter so much in this franchise. A Bella Parker release is not just “the pink one.” A Shadow High doll is not just “the gray one with attitude.” Fans remember characters, not just colors.
That naming strategy also explains why the line became so collectible. The early waves introduced students by rainbow color. Later lines expanded the universe with music groups, beach students, rival-school artists, collector exclusives, and reboot-era dolls aimed more directly at play features. The result is a franchise with a surprisingly large named roster. If you are trying to complete the collection, identify a thrift-store find, or write product copy that actually makes sense, a clean master list is essential.
The Original Rainbow High Core Series
The first five main series built the backbone of the brand. These dolls are the characters most people think of when they hear “Rainbow High.”
Series 1
- Ruby Anderson
- Poppy Rowan
- Sunny Madison
- Jade Hunter
- Skyler Bradshaw
- Violet Willow
- Avery Styles
This was the lineup that launched the obsession. Ruby, Poppy, Sunny, Jade, Skyler, and Violet became the core six, while Avery Styles helped establish that Rainbow High was already thinking beyond a simple color wheel.
Series 2
- Stella Monroe
- Bella Parker
- Karma Nichols
- River Kendall
- Krystal Bailey
- Amaya Raine
Series 2 widened the cast and made it clear the line was not going to stay limited to one red, one orange, one yellow, and so on. Bella Parker and Amaya Raine quickly became major fan favorites, while River Kendall helped broaden the lineup with a core male character.
Series 3
- Daria Roselyn
- Georgia Bloom
- Sheryl Meyer
- Daphne Minton
- Gabriella Icely
- Emi Vanda
Series 3 is where many collectors felt Rainbow High hit a sweet spot. The palette was gorgeous, the fashions were strong, and names like Georgia Bloom and Daphne Minton still pop up constantly in collector conversations.
Series 4
- Mila Berrymore
- Meena Fleur
- Delilah Fields
- Jewel Richie
- Coco Vanderbalt
- Lila Yamamoto
Series 4 added some of the most distinctive designs in the main line. Delilah Fields and Lila Yamamoto, in particular, became standout names among long-term fans.
Series 5
- Victoria Whitman
- Priscilla Perez
- Michelle St. Charles
- Olivia Woods
- Kim Nguyen
- Aidan Russell
Series 5 rounded out the later pre-reboot main waves. Victoria Whitman became especially notable for her softer aesthetic, while Kim Nguyen and Aidan Russell gave the wave a fresh personality mix.
Special Editions, Collector Dolls, and Fan-Favorite Side Releases
Rainbow High did not stop at the basic shelf waves. It branched into exclusives, holiday dolls, collector pieces, and themed packs that added major names to the brand.
- Kia Hart
- Laurel De’Vious
- Holly De’Vious
- Jett Dawson
- Lily Cheng
- Roxie Grand
- Maria Garcia
- Paris Hilton
- Brianna Dulce
- Marisa Golding
- Robin Sterling
- Vanessa Tempo
- Lyric Lucas
- Carmen Major
These releases helped push Rainbow High beyond a regular playline into collector-friendly territory. Lily Cheng and Maria Garcia brought a higher-end presentation, while the Slumber Party dolls and Rockstars added names that still have strong recognition in the secondary market.
Rainbow Vision and Performance-Themed Dolls
If Rainbow High ever looked at Eurovision, battle-of-the-bands reality TV, and a glitter cannon and said, “Yes, all of that,” the result was Rainbow Vision. This part of the franchise gave us some of the most memorable group-based character waves.
The Rainbow Divas
- Meline Luxe
- Sabrina St. Cloud
- Ayesha Sterling
Neon Shadow
- Mara Pinkett
- Harley Limestone
- Uma Van Hoose
The Royal Three
- Tiara Song
- Tessa Park
- Minnie Choi
These groups gave Rainbow High a built-in reason to do bolder fashions, themed accessories, and more theatrical identities. Collectors who enjoy “complete the band” energy usually rank these dolls very high.
Pacific Coast, New Friends, and Other Major Rainbow High Expansions
Pacific Coast High
- Finn Rosado
- Simone Summers
- Harper Dune
- Margot De Perla
- Hali Capri
- Phaedra Westward
- Bella Parker
Pacific Coast gave the line beach styling, vacation energy, and one of the most immediately recognizable spin-off casts. Margot De Perla and Simone Summers remain especially easy to spot thanks to their soft, seaside palettes.
New Friends
- Pinkly Paige
- Blu Brooks
- Lilac Lane
This small but memorable subline mattered because it expanded body diversity in a way many collectors appreciated. Even though it was not the biggest wave, its three names are important for any truly complete Rainbow High character list.
Costume Ball
- Bella Parker
- Robin Sterling
- Violet Willow
These were paired in the broader Halloween-style rollout with Shadow High Costume Ball dolls, which we will get to in a second. Rainbow High was never subtle, and thankfully neither were these outfits.
Shadow High: The Stylish Rival School
You cannot make a serious “complete list” of Rainbow High dolls and ignore Shadow High. Technically it is the rival school, but practically it is a major branch of the same collecting universe. Also, many fans buy Shadow High with the same enthusiasm they reserve for Rainbow High sometimes more.
Shadow High Series 1
- Natasha Zima
- Heather Grayson
- Ash Silverstone
- Nicole Steel
- Luna Madison
- Shanelle Onyx
Shadow High Series 2
- Karla Choupette
- Zooey Electra
- Dia Mante
- Monique Verbena
- Reina “Glitch” Crowne
- Rexx McQueen
Shadow High Series 3
- Pinkie James
- Rosie Redwood
- Scarlet Rose
- Berrie Skies
- Oliver Ocean
- Lavender Lynn
Shadow High Special and Theme Dolls
- Ainsley Slater
- Naomi Storm
- Veronica Storm
- Lola Wilde
- Eliza McFee
- Demi Batista
Shadow High became a collector favorite because it twisted the color gimmick into grayscale, smoky tones, and muted neon shades. Natasha Zima, Heather Grayson, and Zooey Electra in particular have become nearly iconic in the wider doll community.
Junior High, Littles, and the Rainbow World-Era Dolls
As the franchise evolved, Rainbow High shifted toward younger-skewing play patterns while still keeping plenty of recognizable names. This era brought smaller dolls, magical pets, bubble legs, crystals, and feature-based lines that felt more fantasy toy aisle than fashion-school semester abroad.
Junior High
- Ruby Anderson
- Poppy Rowan
- Sunny Madison
- Jade Hunter
- Skyler Bradshaw
- Violet Willow
- Bella Parker
- Stella Monroe
- Karma Nichols
- River Kendall
- Krystal Bailey
- Amaya Raine
- Avery Styles
- Kia Hart
- Laurel De’Vious
- Holly De’Vious
Junior High Pajama Party
- Sunny Madison
- Skyler Bradshaw
- Violet Willow
- Bella Parker
Junior High Rock Band
- Bella Parker
- Sunny Madison
- Skyler Bradshaw
- Amaya Raine
Rainbow World Series 1
- Ruby Anderson
- Sunny Madison
- Jade Hunter
- Skyler Bradshaw
- Violet Willow
- Amaya Raine
Rainbow High Littles
- Blush Parker
- Kandy Hart
- Magenta Monroe
- Daisy Madison
- Sapphire Bradshaw
- Amethyst Willow
- Indigo Bailey
- Opal Raine
Rainbow Fantasy Fairies
- Apple Anderson
- Emerald Hunter
- Sapphire Bradshaw
- Amethyst Willow
- Opal Raine
- Astrid
Be Dazzling
- Adeline Rose
- Vivienne Rouge
- Celine Turquoise
- Genevieve Bleue
- Noemie Violette
Creative Crystals
- Skyler Bradshaw
- Violet Willow
- Bella Parker
- Amaya Raine
- Iris Bow
Hair Chalk & Style
- Amaya Raine
- Meline Luxe
My Fashion Style
- Sunny Madison
- Violet Willow
- Bella Parker
- Amaya Raine
Rainbow Shimmers
- Skyler Bradshaw
- Violet Willow
- Bella Parker
- Iris Bow
Winter Wonderland
- Bella Parker
- Sunny Madison
- Skyler Bradshaw
- Violet Willow
Sparkle & Shine
- Rosetta
- Clementine
- Marina
- Viola
- Leilani
- Dawn
- Misty
- Whitney
The newer Rainbow World-era dolls changed the collecting experience a bit. Earlier Rainbow High waves leaned harder into premium fashion and second outfits; newer releases often focused on interactive features like slime, crystals, pets, hair chalk, magic snow, or liquid sparkle legs. That does not make them less “real” to the franchise it just means the line evolved from fashion-first collector bait into a hybrid of fashion dolls and feature-driven playsets.
The Complete Master List of Rainbow High Doll Names
Here is the full master list of distinct named Rainbow High universe dolls, including Shadow High, grouped alphabetically for easy reference:
Adeline Rose, Aidan Russell, Ainsley Slater, Amaya Raine, Amethyst Willow, Apple Anderson, Ash Silverstone, Astrid, Avery Styles, Ayesha Sterling, Bella Parker, Berrie Skies, Blu Brooks, Blush Parker, Brianna Dulce, Carmen Major, Celine Turquoise, Clementine, Coco Vanderbalt, Daisy Madison, Daria Roselyn, Dawn, Delilah Fields, Demi Batista, Dia Mante, Daphne Minton, Eliza McFee, Emerald Hunter, Emi Vanda, Finn Rosado, Gabriella Icely, Genevieve Bleue, Georgia Bloom, Hali Capri, Harley Limestone, Harper Dune, Heather Grayson, Holly De’Vious, Indigo Bailey, Iris Bow, Jade Hunter, Jett Dawson, Jewel Richie, Kandy Hart, Karma Nichols, Karla Choupette, Kia Hart, Kim Nguyen, Krystal Bailey, Laurel De’Vious, Lavender Lynn, Leilani, Lila Yamamoto, Lilac Lane, Lily Cheng, Lola Wilde, Luna Madison, Lyric Lucas, Magenta Monroe, Mara Pinkett, Margot De Perla, Marina, Marisa Golding, Maria Garcia, Meline Luxe, Meena Fleur, Michelle St. Charles, Mila Berrymore, Minnie Choi, Misty, Monique Verbena, Naomi Storm, Natasha Zima, Nicole Steel, Noemie Violette, Olivia Woods, Oliver Ocean, Opal Raine, Paris Hilton, Phaedra Westward, Pinkie James, Pinkly Paige, Poppy Rowan, Priscilla Perez, Reina “Glitch” Crowne, Rexx McQueen, River Kendall, Robin Sterling, Rosetta, Rosie Redwood, Roxie Grand, Ruby Anderson, Sabrina St. Cloud, Sapphire Bradshaw, Scarlet Rose, Shanelle Onyx, Sheryl Meyer, Simone Summers, Skyler Bradshaw, Stella Monroe, Sunny Madison, Tessa Park, Tiara Song, Uma Van Hoose, Vanessa Tempo, Victoria Whitman, Viola, Violet Willow, Vivienne Rouge, Whitney, Veronica Storm, Zooey Electra.
What It Feels Like to Collect Rainbow High: The Experience Behind the List
There is a very specific moment that happens when you start collecting Rainbow High dolls. At first, you tell yourself you are just getting one. Maybe two. Maybe Bella Parker because pink is always a safe choice, or Delilah Fields because she looks like she wandered out of a Pinterest board and into your shopping cart. Then, somehow, you wake up one month later comparing face screenings on two different versions of Violet Willow like you are evaluating fine art at an auction house. This is how Rainbow High gets you.
Part of the fun is how easy the dolls are to remember once you spend time with them. The names are theatrical, color-coded, and just a little extra, which is honestly part of the charm. Rainbow High never met a subtle naming convention it wanted to keep. “Celine Turquoise” is not trying to sneak into the room unnoticed. “Vivienne Rouge” definitely expects a spotlight. “Monique Verbena” sounds like she already has a fragrance deal and an interview in a fashion magazine. That bigger-than-life quality gives the dolls personality before you even open the box.
Collectors often talk about the line in phases. There is the discovery phase, where everything looks exciting and you just grab whichever doll is on sale. Then comes the sorting phase, when you realize there are mainline dolls, Shadow High dolls, Rainbow Vision bands, beach dolls, Junior High dolls, Littles, and collector editions. After that comes the dangerous phase: completion brain. That is the point where you stop asking, “Do I want this doll?” and start asking, “Wait, if I own Sabrina and Meline, can I really leave Ayesha behind?” Financially, the answer should probably be yes. Emotionally, Rainbow High knows it is no.
The experience is different depending on who you are. For kids, the appeal is obvious: bright color stories, tons of hair play, and dolls that feel like a cast of stylish friends. For parents and gift buyers, the names help a lot because it is easier to remember that your child wants “Zooey Electra” than “the mint alien-ish one from the gray school.” For adult collectors, the names become part of cataloging, display building, and resale hunting. A named list turns a pile of boxes into a collection with structure.
There is also something satisfying about how Rainbow High reflects trends in the brand over time. The earlier dolls feel more fashion editorial. The later feature-driven dolls feel more toy-box magical. Seeing those names side by side tells a story about how the franchise changed, what it emphasized, and which characters stuck around across multiple lines. Amaya Raine shows up everywhere because she is basically the Swiss Army knife of Rainbow High branding. Bella Parker is not far behind. And Poppy Rowan’s relative absence in some later waves is the sort of thing longtime fans absolutely notice and discuss with surprising seriousness.
That is why a complete list matters. It is not just a glossary. It is a map of the entire Rainbow High universe. It helps collectors organize shelves, helps parents shop smarter, helps sellers identify dolls correctly, and helps fans appreciate just how big the roster has become. Once you see all the names in one place, the franchise feels less like random colorful plastic and more like a genuinely ambitious doll world with its own cast, eras, and collector culture. Also, yes, it will probably make you want one more doll. Rainbow High has that effect.
Conclusion
Rainbow High started with a simple rainbow cast and grew into a huge, surprisingly layered doll universe. Between the original core students, Rainbow Vision groups, Pacific Coast releases, Shadow High rivals, Junior High dolls, Littles, collector editions, and Rainbow World-era feature dolls, the line now includes a massive roster of named characters. If you are trying to identify a doll, build a complete collection, or write accurate product content, keeping the names sorted by series is the easiest way to stay sane. Or at least toy-aisle sane, which is its own special category.
