Showing posts with label "Dolls for Dolls" club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label "Dolls for Dolls" club. Show all posts

Thursday, September 25, 2025

How Ma Ingles made dolls for her girls . . .

       "Often the wind howled outside with a cold and lonesome sound. But in the attic Laura and Mary played house with the squashes and the pumpkins, and everything was snug and cosy.
       Mary was bigger than Laura, and she had a rag doll named Nettie. Laura had only a corncob wrapped in a handkerchief, but it was a good doll. It was named Susan. It wasn't Susan's fault that she was only a corncob. Sometimes Mary let Laura hold Nettie, but she did it only when Susan couldn't see." Little House in the Big Woods

Mary's doll, Nettie, was a rag doll.
       Mary's doll Nettie is easy to sew using scraps from your mother or grandmother's sewing basket. You can choose any yarn color you like for her hair.

Supply List for Nettie:
  • yarn for doll hair
  • muslin or any other solid colored fabric for the doll's body
  • fabric scraps for clothes, this is a tiny doll and you won't need much
  • buttons or beads for eyes (optional)
  • leather or suede for shoes
  • embroidery floss for facial features
  • a mini doll printable pattern (below)
Step-by-Step Instructions: for a mini rag doll body:
  1. Use your home printer to print out the mini rag doll pattern here.
  2. Cut out the patterns and trace around these on top of cardboard.
  3. Then place the cardboard patterns on top of muslin and trace around the pieces twice with a soft lead pencil. Cut out the pieces leaving 1/4" seam. 
  4. Sew a straight stitch around the torso and head but leave the bottom section open for stuffing.
  5. Stuff the doll with cotton and whip stitch the opening shut.
  6. Repeat these steps for all parts of the doll. 
  7. Attach the arms and legs to the doll with needle and thread.
  8. Stitch on long strands of yarn to shape the wig and braid this on either side. 
  9. Stitch the ends of the braids closed with thread.
  10. Applique a smock-like dress to the tiny doll so that it can not be removed and misplaced.
  11. Cut a two small squares and stitch together two sides only in order to make a bonnet for your mini pioneer doll.
  12. Sew an apron and trim her dress with lace scrapes.
  13. Add facial features using embroidery floss and or buttons.
Laura's doll, Susan, was a corn cob baby.
Supply List for Susan:
  • newsprint
  • masking tape
  • beige lace trim
  • tacky glue
Step-by-Step Instructions: for a corn cob baby doll:
  • Crush newsprint into a small 2 1/2" roll; looking somewhat like a corn cob.
  • Use masking tape to cover this shape.
  • Smear on tacky glue as you twist a beige or off-white lace tightly about the paper cob. This will look something like a cob with the corn pulled off. 
  • Let the glue harden.
  • Cut a small kerchief to wrap the corn cob baby with.
       Pioneer's normally dried and kept corn cobs for several different uses on their farms. Cobs could be stripped down and used to stuff a mattress with or chopped up further to toss out into chicken pens as bedding. 

Thursday, May 30, 2024

The Doll Crafters and Young Puppet Masters Art Camp

Sample photos of novelty dolls and puppets from this craft camp for summer fun.

        Our doll/puppet crafter's camp is full of unique and interesting dolls/puppets that young students will enjoy making over the summer break. However, it will take a little time to upload all that I have for this summer camp folks, so please be patient . . .everything is on it's way!

Crafting Novelty Dolls for Summer Fun:

  1. How to make egg-carton mermaids - made from recycled materials and patterned scrapbook papers
  2. String a soda straw doll - this little doll is made using very simple art supplies
  3. Assemble accordion fanfold paper dolls - use origami papers and simple fan-folding technique
  4. Craft my envelope babies for fun! - These babies come with templates and also utilize simple envelope folding process.
  5. How to make ballerina clothespin dolls - One of many clothespin doll costume designs; if you love making these dancers there are many more thematic clothespin doll designs on our blog to try!
  6. Cut a paper-doll-chain to hang in your room - Learn two different folding techniques for this old-fashioned paper doll craft.
  7. Make a bead doll necklace - this project combines both beads and buttons...
  8. How to make an enchanted fairy doll... - These dolls are for outdoor play in the garden of course!
  9. DIY a Bead Bottle Lupita - to store your favorite beads for jewelry crafts and to also display small bouquets of flowers...
  10. How to craft adorable folk art spoon dolls - These folk dolls have been crafted by children and their parents for over 100 years...
  11. Sculpt a clay doll from a pinch pot - using traditional classroom sculpting techniques...
  12. Learn to sew an Edith Flack Ackley cloth doll - text and here are the materials you can use to stuff a doll body - This doll is more difficult and requires adult help.
  13. Craft your own vintage kerchief dolls... - printable, vintage 1950s ladies
  14. DIY a toy soldier candy container - from Thrifty Scissors blog, Fill him with your favorite candies!
  15. Learn to sculpt a newsprint African folk doll... - My version of this novelty craft includes a baby in a sling too!
  16. Paper dolls for the sewing basket - A great way to organize laces and ribbons in your trim collections.
  17. Braid and tie a modern yarn doll... - pom-pom doll head
    Cute And Tiny Dolls to Craft or Collect for Your 18'' Dolls:
    1. How to sew pillow dolls for 'sweeter than ever' dolly dreams - pillows with personality
    2. Make a princess doll themed birthday cake - for your American Girl dolls, My Generation dolls etc... 
    3. How to make a Raggedy Ann Doll - free 6'' pattern -
    4. How to make a tiny sock monkey for your larger dolls to play with - Traditional sock themed monkeys look so cute hanging from a doll's four-poster bed or rocking in a chair in her bedroom's corner. 
    5. Twist and wrap a chenille stem doll - These dolls are only slightly larger than traditional worry dolls. But, they are perfect for your 18'' dolls to dress and play with...
    6. Picking tiny baby dolls from resale... - mini doll collections 
    How to Sew Traditional Rag Dolls:
    Craft Miniature Dollhouses: coming soon.

    Make Miniature Puppets and Puppet Theaters for 18'' Dolls:
    Puppet Crafts and Collections for Drama/Theater:

    Recommended Books for Kids:

    Stanley cover, first edition.
    The Complete Adventures of the Borrowers by Mary Norton
    Mary Norton, was an English writer of children's books. She is best known for The Borrowers series of low fantasy novels (1952 to 1982), which is named after its first book and, in turn, the tiny people who live secretly in the midst of contemporary human civilization. Read more about her 'Borrower books'...

    The Borrower Films at YouTube:
    1. The Original Borrows Film from 1973 - Watch for free from The Film Detective here
    2. The Remastered Series ''The Borrowers from 1992 - All episodes here 
    3. The Borrowers Film starring John Goodman, 1997 - trailer and behind the scenes here
    4. The Borrowers staring Eccleston and Wood, 2011 - Pod's Adventure on British T.V. and behind the scenes here

    Tuesday, January 23, 2024

    Bessie's Doll

    Bessie's Doll by By Maud Montgomery

            Tommy Puffer, sauntering up the street, stopped to look at Miss Octavia's geraniums. Tommy never could help stopping to look at Miss Octavia's flowers, much as he hated Miss Octavia. Today they were certainly worth looking at. Miss Octavia had set them all out on her verandah - rows upon rows of them, overflowing down the steps in waves of blossom and color. Miss Octavia's geraniums were famous in Arundel, and she was very proud of them. But it was her garden which was really the delight of her heart. Miss Octavia always had the prettiest garden in Arundel, especially as far as annuals were concerned. Just now it was like faith - the substance of things hoped for. The poppies and nasturtiums and balsams and morning glories and sweet peas had been sown in the brown beds on the lawn, but they had not yet begun to come up.
           Tommy was still feasting his eyes on the geraniums when Miss Octavia herself came around the corner of the house. Her face darkened the minute she saw Tommy. Most people's did. Tommy had the reputation of being a very bad, mischievous boy; he was certainly very poor and ragged, and Miss Octavia disapproved of poverty and rags on principle. Nobody, she argued, not even a boy of twelve, need be poor and ragged if he is willing to work.
           "Here, you, get away out of this," she said sharply. "I'm not going to have you hanging over my palings."
           "I ain't hurting your old palings," retorted Tommy sullenly. "I was jist a-looking at the flowers."
           "Yes, and picking out the next one to throw a stone at," said Miss Octavia sarcastically. "It was you who threw that stone and broke my big scarlet geranium clear off the other day."
           "It wasn't - I never chucked a stone at your flowers," said Tommy.
           "Don't tell me any falsehoods, Tommy Puffer. It was you. Didn't I catch you firing stones at my cat a dozen times?"
           "I might have fired 'em at an old cat, but I wouldn't tech a flower," avowed Tommy boldly - brazenly, Miss Octavia thought.
           "You clear out of this or I'll make you," she said warningly.
           Tommy had had his ears boxed by Miss Octavia more than once. He had no desire to have the performance repeated, so he stuck his tongue out at Miss Octavia and then marched up the street with his hands in his pockets, whistling jauntily.
           "He's the most impudent brat I ever saw in my life," muttered Miss Octavia wrathfully. There was a standing feud between her and all the Arundel small boys, but Tommy was her special object of dislike.
    Tommy's heart was full of wrath and bitterness as he marched away. He hated Miss Octavia; he wished something would happen to every one of her flowers; he knew it was Ned Williams who had thrown that stone, and he hoped Ned would throw some more and smash all the flowers. So Tommy raged along the street until he came to Mr. Blacklock's store, and in the window of it he saw something that put Miss Octavia and her disagreeable remarks quite out of his tow-colored head.
           This was nothing more or less than a doll. Now, Tommy was not a judge of dolls and did not take much interest in them, but he felt quite sure that this was a very fine one. It was so big; it was beautifully dressed in blue silk, with a ruffled blue silk hat; it had lovely long golden hair and big brown eyes and pink cheeks; and it stood right up in the showcase and held out its hands winningly.
           "Gee, ain't it a beauty!" said Tommy admiringly. "It looks 'sif it was alive, and it's as big as a baby. I must go an' bring Bessie to see it."
           Tommy at once hurried away to the shabby little street where what he called "home" was. Tommy's home was a very homeless-looking sort of place. It was the smallest, dingiest, most slatternly house on a street noted for its dingy and slatternly houses. It was occupied by a slatternly mother and a drunken father, as well as by Tommy; and neither the father nor the mother took much notice of Tommy except to scold or nag him. So it is hardly to be wondered at if Tommy was the sort of boy who was frowned upon by respectable citizens.
           But one little white blossom of pure affection bloomed in the arid desert of Tommy's existence for all that. In the preceding fall a new family had come to Arundel and moved into the tiny house next to the Puffers'. It was a small, dingy house, just like the others, but before long a great change took place in it. The new family were thrifty, industrious folks, although they were very poor. The little house was white-washed, the paling neatly mended, the bit of a yard cleaned of all its rubbish. Muslin curtains appeared in the windows, and rows of cans, with blossoming plants, adorned the sills.
           There were just three people in the Knox family - a thin little mother, who went out scrubbing and took in washing, a boy of ten, who sold newspapers and ran errands - and Bessie.
           Bessie was eight years old and walked with a crutch, but she was a smart little lassie and kept the house wonderfully neat and tidy while her mother was away. The very first time she had seen Tommy she had smiled at him sweetly and said, "Good morning." From that moment Tommy was her devoted slave. Nobody had ever spoken like that to him before; nobody had ever smiled so at him. Tommy would have given his useless little life for Bessie, and thenceforth the time he was not devising mischief he spent in bringing little pleasures into her life. It was Tommy's delight to bring that smile to her pale little face and a look of pleasure into her big, patient blue eyes. The other boys on the street tried to tease Bessie at first and shouted "Cripple!" after her when she limped out. But they soon stopped it. Tommy thrashed them all one after another for it, and Bessie was left in peace. She would have had a very lonely life if it had not been for Tommy, for she could not play with the other children. But Tommy was as good as a dozen playmates, and Bessie thought him the best boy in the world. Tommy, whatever he might be with others, was very careful to be good when he was with Bessie. He never said a rude word in her hearing, and he treated her as if she were a little princess. Miss Octavia would have been amazed beyond measure if she had seen how tender and thoughtful and kind and chivalrous that neglected urchin of a Tommy could be when he tried.
           Tommy found Bessie sitting by the kitchen window, looking dreamily out of it. For just a moment Tommy thought uneasily that Bessie was looking very pale and thin this spring.
           "Bessie, come for a walk up to Mr. Blacklock's store," he said eagerly. "There is something there I want to show you."
           "What is it?" Bessie wanted to know. But Tommy only winked mysteriously.
           "Ah, I ain't going to tell you. But it's something awful pretty. Just you wait."
           Bessie reached for her crutch and the two went up to the store, Tommy carefully suiting his steps to Bessie's slow ones. Just before they reached the store he made her shut her eyes and led her to the window.
           "Now - look!" he commanded dramatically.
           Bessie looked and Tommy was rewarded. She flushed pinkly with delight and clasped her hands in ecstasy.
           "Oh, Tommy, isn't she perfectly beautiful?" she breathed. "Oh, she's the very loveliest dolly I ever saw. Oh, Tommy!"
           "I thought you'd like her," said Tommy exultantly. "Don't you wish you had a doll like that of your very own, Bessie?"
           Bessie looked almost rebuking, as if Tommy had asked her if she wouldn't like a golden crown or a queen's palace.
           "Of course I could never have a dolly like that," she said. "She must cost an awful lot. But it's enough just to look at her. Tommy, will you bring me up here every day just to look at her?"
           "'Course," said Tommy.
           Bessie talked about the blue-silk doll all the way home and dreamed of her every night. "I'm going to call her Roselle Geraldine," she said. After that she went up to see Roselle Geraldine every day, gazing at her for long moments in silent rapture. Tommy almost grew jealous of her; he thought Bessie liked the doll better than she did him.
           "But it don't matter a bit if she does," he thought loyally, crushing down the jealousy. "If she likes to like it better than me, it's all right."
           Sometimes, though, Tommy felt uneasy. It was plain to be seen that Bessie had set her heart on that doll. And what would she do when the doll was sold, as would probably happen soon? Tommy thought Bessie would feel awful sad, and he would be responsible for it.
           What Tommy feared came to pass. One afternoon, when they went up to Mr. Blacklock's store, the doll was not in the window.
           "Oh," cried Bessie, bursting into tears, "she's gone - Roselle Geraldine is gone."
           "Perhaps she isn't sold," said Tommy comfortingly. "Maybe they only took her out of the window 'cause the blue silk would fade. I'll go in and ask."
           A minute later Tommy came out looking sober.
           "Yes, she's sold, Bessie," he said. "Mr. Blacklock sold her to a lady yesterday. Don't cry, Bessie - maybe they'll put another in the window 'fore long."
           "It won't be mine," sobbed Bessie. "It won't be Roselle Geraldine. It won't have a blue silk hat and such cunning brown eyes."
           Bessie cried quietly all the way home, and Tommy could not comfort her. He wished he had never shown her the doll in the window.
           From that day Bessie drooped, and Tommy watched her in agony. She grew paler and thinner. She was too tired to go out walking, and too tired to do the little household tasks she had delighted in. She never spoke about Roselle Geraldine, but Tommy knew she was fretting about her. Mrs. Knox could not think what ailed the child.
           "She don't take a bit of interest in nothing," she complained to Mrs. Puffer. "She don't eat enough for a bird. The doctor, he says there ain't nothing the matter with her as he can find out, but she's just pining away."
           Tommy heard this, and a queer, big lump came up in his throat. He had a horrible fear that he, Tommy Puffer, was going to cry. To prevent it he began to whistle loudly. But the whistle was a failure, very unlike the real Tommy-whistle. Bessie was sick - and it was all his fault, Tommy believed. If he had never taken her to see that hateful, blue-silk doll, she would never have got so fond of it as to be breaking her heart because it was sold.
           "If I was only rich," said Tommy miserably, "I'd buy her a cartload of dolls, all dressed in blue silk and all with brown eyes. But I can't do nothing."
           By this time Tommy had reached the paling in front of Miss Octavia's lawn, and from force of habit he stopped to look over it. But there was not much to see this time, only the little green rows and circles in the brown, well-weeded beds, and the long curves of dahlia plants, which Miss Octavia had set out a few days before. All the geraniums were carried in, and the blinds were down. Tommy knew Miss Octavia was away. He had seen her depart on the train that morning, and heard her tell a friend that she was going down to Chelton to visit her brother's folks and wouldn't be back until the next day.
           Tommy was still leaning moodily against the paling when Mrs. Jenkins and Mrs. Reid came by, and they too paused to look at the garden.
           "Dear me, how cold it is!" shivered Mrs. Reid. "There's going to be a hard frost tonight. Octavia's flowers will be nipped as sure as anything. It's a wonder she'd stay away from them overnight when her heart's so set on them."
           "Her brother's wife is sick," said Mrs. Jenkins. "We haven't had any frost this spring, and I suppose Octavia never thought of such a thing. She'll feel awful bad if her flowers get frosted, especially them dahlias. Octavia sets such store by her dahlias."
           Mrs. Jenkins and Mrs. Reid moved away, leaving Tommy by the paling. It was cold - there was going to be a hard frost - and Miss Octavia's plants and flowers would certainly be spoiled. Tommy thought he ought to be glad, but he wasn't. He was sorry - not for Miss Octavia, but for her flowers. Tommy had a queer, passionate love for flowers in his twisted little soul. It was a shame that they should be nipped - that all the glory of crimson and purple and gold hidden away in those little green rows and circles should never have a chance to blossom out royally. Tommy could never have put this thought into words, but it was there in his heart. He wished he could save the flowers. And couldn't he? Newspapers spread over the beds and tied around the dahlias would save them, Tommy knew. He had seen Miss Octavia doing it other springs. And he knew there was a big box of newspapers in a little shed in her backyard. Ned Williams had told him there was, and that the shed was never locked.
    Tommy hurried home as quickly as he could and got a ball of twine out of his few treasures. Then he went back to Miss Octavia's garden.
           The next forenoon Miss Octavia got off the train at the Arundel station with a very grim face. There had been an unusually severe frost for the time of year. All along the road Miss Octavia had seen gardens frosted and spoiled. She knew what she should see when she got to her own - the dahlia stalks drooping and black and limp, the nasturtiums and balsams and poppies and pansies all withered and ruined.
           But she didn't. Instead she saw every dahlia carefully tied up in a newspaper, and over all the beds newspapers spread out and held neatly in place with pebbles. Miss Octavia flew into her garden with a radiant face. Everything was safe - nothing was spoiled.
           But who could have done it? Miss Octavia was puzzled. On one side of her lived Mrs. Kennedy, who had just moved in and, being a total stranger, would not be likely to think of Miss Octavia's flowers. On the other lived Miss Matheson, who was a "shut-in" and spent all her time on the sofa. But to Miss Matheson Miss Octavia went.
           "Rachel, do you know who covered my plants up last night?"
           Miss Matheson nodded. "Yes, it was Tommy Puffer. I saw him working away there with papers and twine. I thought you'd told him to do it."
           "For the land's sake!" ejaculated Miss Octavia. "Tommy Puffer! Well, wonders will never cease."
    Miss Octavia went back to her house feeling rather ashamed of herself when she remembered how she had always treated Tommy Puffer.
    "But there must be some good in the child, or he wouldn't have done this," she said to herself. "I've been real mean, but I'll make it up to him."
           Miss Octavia did not see Tommy that day, but when he passed the next morning she ran to the door and called him.
           "Tommy, Tommy Puffer, come in here!"
           Tommy came reluctantly. He didn't like Miss Octavia any better than he had, and he didn't know what she wanted of him. But Miss Octavia soon informed him without loss of words.
           "Tommy, Miss Matheson tells me that it was you who saved my flowers from the frost the other night. I'm very much obliged to you indeed. Whatever made you think of doing it?"
           "I hated to see the flowers spoiled," muttered Tommy, who was feeling more uncomfortable than he had ever felt in his life.
           "Well, it was real thoughtful of you. I'm sorry I've been so hard on you, Tommy, and I believe now you didn't break my scarlet geranium. Is there anything I can do for you - anything you'd like to have? If it's in reason I'll get it for you, just to pay my debt."
           Tommy stared at Miss Octavia with a sudden hopeful inspiration. "Oh, Miss Octavia," he cried eagerly, "will you buy a doll and give it to me?"
           "Well, for the land's sake!" ejaculated Miss Octavia, unable to believe her ears. "A doll! What on earth do you want of a doll?"
           "It's for Bessie," said Tommy eagerly. "You see, it's this way."
           Then Tommy told Miss Octavia the whole story. Miss Octavia listened silently, sometimes nodding her head. When he had finished she went out of the room and soon returned, bringing with her the very identical doll that had been in Mr. Blacklock's window.
           "I guess this is the doll," she said. "I bought it to give to a small niece of mine, but I can get another for her. You may take this to Bessie."
           It would be of no use to try to describe Bessie's joy when Tommy rushed in and put Roselle Geraldine in her arms with a breathless account of the wonderful story. But from that moment Bessie began to pick up again, and soon she was better than she had ever been and the happiest little lassie in Arundel.
           When a week had passed, Miss Octavia again called Tommy in; Tommy went more willingly this time. He had begun to like Miss Octavia.
           That lady looked him over sharply and somewhat dubiously. He was certainly very ragged and unkempt. But Miss Octavia saw what she had never noticed before - that Tommy's eyes were bright and frank, that Tommy's chin was a good chin, and that Tommy's smile had something very pleasant about it.
           "You're fond of flowers, aren't you, Tommy?" she asked.
           "You bet," was Tommy's inelegant but heartfelt answer.
           "Well," said Miss Octavia slowly, "I have a brother down at Chelton who is a florist. He wants a boy of your age to do handy jobs and run errands about his establishment, and he wants one who is fond of flowers and would like to learn the business. He asked me to recommend him one, and I promised to look out for a suitable boy. Would you like the place, Tommy? And will you promise to be a very good boy and learn to be respectable if I ask my brother to give you a trial and a chance to make something of yourself?"
           "Oh, Miss Octavia!" gasped Tommy. He wondered if he were simply having a beautiful dream.
           But it was no dream. And it was all arranged later on. No one rejoiced more heartily in Tommy's success than Bessie.
           "But I'll miss you dreadfully, Tommy," she said wistfully.
           "Oh, I'll be home every Saturday night, and we'll have Sunday together, except when I've got to go to Sunday school. 'Cause Miss Octavia says I must," said Tommy comfortingly. "And the rest of the time you'll have Roselle Geraldine."
           "Yes, I know," said Bessie, giving the blue-silk doll a fond kiss, "and she's just lovely. But she ain't as nice as you, Tommy, for all."
           Then was Tommy's cup of happiness full.

    Wednesday, April 5, 2023

    The Old Baby Doll's Family Album

    An antique baby doll with her stuffed puppy relax on the floor.

           The following doll family, photo album collection photographed by Edna Knowles King has been restored by Kathy Grimm in 2023 on her family blog. This slide show is an excellent doll reference for serious research by collectors and also for those who simply love antique dolls. There are over 100 photos of dolls including babies, ladies and child dolls too!

    ABOUT MRS. KING AND HER DOLLS

    A composition cowboy doll called Dan Whistling,
    a whistler doll with a cloth body, and composition
    arms and head. He holds a tiny harmonica in
    this photo. (1920s)
            'Have you ever wondered what becomes of the old dolls that little girls have loved and then outgrown? Many of them are broken or lost or burned up or thrown away. This is a sad fate for a doll which has been kissed and cherished, put to bed and taken to tea parties by a once-loving mother.
           A lucky few of these old dolls have been treasured by the grown-up girls who owned them, and passed on to a second generation of little daughters. Perhaps that is the nicest fate which an old doll could have, but many are not so fortunate. If they have been saved at all, they are hidden away with torn frocks and dirty faces in dusty attics or old trunks.
           Forgotten dolls have one good friend. Her name is Edna Knowles King, and she has turned her lovely house into a sort of doll heaven. If you should go to call on Mrs. King, you would be greeted by a dignified lady doll, almost as large as a child, who sits in her own chair by the fireside. She is a lady of 1860, and the shy smile, which she gives you from the shadow of her plumed bonnet, tells you how happy she is to have been rescued from her attic. As you look about Mrs. King's living room you will see that there are lots more beautiful old dolls smiling at you from shelves and chairs. But you will soon discover that these are only a few of the many, many dolls which live upstairs and downstairs, in cabinets and drawers and closets in Mrs. King's house. There are old dolls and new dolls, big dolls and little dolls, boy dolls and girl dolls, and dolls of all nations - nearly two thousand in all - and like a true mother, Mrs. King loves every one of them.
           You can readily see that, while this is a paradise for dolls, it is also a paradise for little girls. Wouldn't you love to live next door to Mrs. King? The next best thing is to see the beautiful photographs which Dr. Joseph T. King makes of the dolls. My little girl and I have enjoyed them for a long time, and we are both very happy to know that they have been made into a book for the enjoyment of children all over the country. It is a pleasure to have a small share in introducing Edna Knowles King and her numerous family to doll lovers everywhere, and to wish her success with her family album and the many other doll picture books which should come after it.' Carol Ryrie Brink

    Monday, February 20, 2023

    What are the names given to dolls belonging to American Girl Dolls?

           These are names given to toy dolls in the American Girl historical doll collections.

    1. Addy Walker's rag doll was named Ida Bean.
    2. Kirsten Larson's rag doll was named Sari.
    3. Molly McIntire was given a Red Cross, nurse doll for Christmas
    4. Felicity Merriman's fashion doll was carved from wood and Felicity named her Lucy.
    5. Kit Kitteredge's Amelia Earhart, Aviator doll.
    6. Josephina Montoya's rag doll, Nina.
    7. Elizabeth's wooden fashion doll named Charlotte.
    8. Nellie O'Malley's china doll named Lydia
    9. Samantha Parkington's china doll named Clara came with an even tinier nutcracker

    Monday, January 23, 2023

    How did you decide to name your doll?

    When 800 children were asked why and how they came up with the name of their doll, 521 gave the following responses:

    1. The number one reason for renaming or just naming a doll... 199 children said that their doll was named after a friend.
    2. 87 children said that they chose the name of their doll because they thought it was pretty or fancy.
    3. 54 children said that they chose their dolls name because the doll looked like someone they knew with that name.
    4. 35 children said that the name of their doll was from a story they had heard.
    5. 33 children said that the doll was named after the person who had gifted it too them.
    6. 34 children said that their doll had no name at all and was simply called, Dolly.
    7. 21 children said that they always gave their doll a new name, not the name that came with the doll.
    8. 20 children polled said that their doll was given a name that described a quality that they thought their doll had. The doll's name was not a typical name but a attribute like: precious, patience, sleepy etc...
    9. 9 dolls were given the exact same name of it's owner.
    10. 6 dolls were given a name after the place where they received the doll.
    11. 5 dolls were named after a feigned likeness.
    12. 4 dolls had purely imaginary names.
    13. 2 dolls had very 'ugly names' because they were so disliked!
    14. In two instances the dolls were named after the materials they were made from.
    15. Ten dolls were given formal christenings along with their name.
    16. Sometimes the dolls were all given the same family name. 
    17. Dolls that had frequent name changes rarely seemed to have distinct personalities attached to them upon further discussions.
    How to name a doll...

    Saturday, July 9, 2022

    How to make an enchanted fairy doll...

           Fairy dolls have been in fashion for over 100 years and the Irish have been spinning yarns about them for at least three thousand years!
           You can make a wire thin fairy doll for your little one to play with using whatever you have hoarded inside a craft drawer or bin. Use your imagination to make every little person uniquely different. Before you know it, there will be a fanciful village of fairy dolls living somewhere in and around the home!
           After a fairy tires from entertaining small children, she will usually prefer to rest inside Christmas collections for the tree until some other small person spies her among the holiday branches and carries her off for a new adventure. It's true, I have even read a story about it in a book by Rumer Godden here!

    Finished fairy in the garden! If you make
    her even smaller she will fit nicely into
    the arms of an eighteen inch doll for 
    playtime and adventures.
    Supply List:

    • printed butterfly wings: blue butterfly, brown and blue butterfly wings
    • cardboard (cereal box)
    • 1" wooden bead
    • 2 pom-poms of the same color
    • clippings of artificial flowers (silk petals/leaves)
    • two chenille stems
    • two cotton balls
    • ribbon
    • hot glue gun and hot glue
    • white school glue
    • paint for the face, arms and legs
    • lace trims and ribbons
    • Mod Podge (optional)
    Step-by-Step Instructions:
    1. Bend both chenille stems in the middle and cut approximately three inches from the arm extensions.
    2. Measure down the length of the bend on each 1/2 inch and mark this lightly with a pen. This fuzzy area of the chenille stems will be glued inside of your 1/2" wooden beed and should not be shaved off with scissors. You want this part to be bulky so that the beed will nestle over it with a snug attachment.
    3. Shave the armature (chenille stems for arms and legs) with a pair of scissors.
    4. Unravel the cotton balls and layer the shaved stem parts with white glue and batting. Roll these areas between the palms of your hands until the chenille wire stems are neatly coated.
    5. Bend the stems in half and glue the unfinished fuzzy areas of the armature inside the wooden bead. This will be the head of the fairy doll.
    6. Roll up the tips of the arms and legs just a bit for the hands and feet of the fairy.
    7. Paint the armature the color of your preference with acrylic.
    8. Now wrap or sew a ribbon to the torso of the wire fairy figure.
    9. Take apart a silk flower carefully. Detach the petals and hot glue these to the wire fairy's torso to look like a skirt.
    10. Print, cut and paste butterfly wings onto light weight cardboard and brush on Mod Podge.
    11. Hot glue the wings to the doll body at the back
    12. Hot glue on pom-poms to the doll's head for hair
    13. Glue on lace trims at the neck
    14. Paint a simple face on the doll's bead head.
    15. Glue on any remaining trims like a button for the collar or extra leaves to the head for a fanciful fairy doll look.

    Left, the chenille stem armature. Center, details of our enchanted fairy doll. Right, the tiny fairy feet.

     More Fairy Links:

    Saturday, April 16, 2022

    Twist and Wrap a Chenille Stem Doll

    A finished chenille stem doll.
           This tiny chenille stem doll may be made the size of a worry doll or slightly larger like my example here. Worry dolls are mostly hand-made. In Guatemala, they are made of wire, wool and colorful textile leftovers. The dolls are then dressed in traditional Mayan style. The size of the doll can vary between ½ inch and 2.0 inches. In western culture, the dolls are mostly made of pressed paperadhesive tape, paper and colorful wool. Here, the dolls can be remarkably larger in size. Modern variations most usually are made with chenille stems.
           Our little doll is approximately two inches tall. Her body is wrapped with embroidery floss as is her hair. Her tiny clothes are made from bits of ribbon and lace.
            For this mini doll craft you will need the following supplies: a chenille stem, colorful embroidery floss, white school glue, scissors, a needle with thread, a cotton ball, tissue, ribbon and lace.

    Left, the head is wrapped in tissue to begin with. Center, the head is trapped between the stem's
    first bend, with a simple twist beneath the doll's chin. Right, the flesh colored floss is wrapped
    around the head's stem and cotton ball all together.

    Step-by-Step Instructions:

    1. Roll half a cotton ball into a tiny head about 1/2 an inch wide, between your fingers. 
    2. Take a small square of tissue and wrap this around the cotton ball and twist it at the bottom where the neck of a doll would normally be.
    3. Bend the chenille stem in half and slip the cotton ball head under this bend while twisting the stem under the head to trap it in place.
    4. Using a flesh colored piece of embroidery floss, wrap the tiny head and stem together until the entire stem disappears under the floss. Use very tiny drops of white glue as you proceed to wrap the body to hold the floss in place.
    5. Wrap a neck and the shoulders using the same color of floss. (See picture above)
    6. Bend the arms on either side of the doll and then twist the stem at the torso. 
    7. Now bend the length of the torso and and the right leg, repeat for the left leg. This is the point where you will determine the height of the doll by deciding how long the leg will be before bending these upright. (See picture above.)
    8. Now wrap the arms and legs with colorful embroidery floss until the stem is covered. 
    9. Wrap the tips of the hands with flesh colored embroidery floss.
    10. Wrap the tips of the feet in shoes if you wish.
    11. To make long hair loop a bunch of floss and tie it in the middle (3"). 
    12. Take your matching needle and thread and whip stitch the hair in place about the head.
    13. Measure, wrap, tie and clip tiny pieces of ribbon and/or lace about the body of the chenille stem doll to make her clothing. Use a threaded needle to attach pieces securely.
    Left and right, see how the arms, torso and legs are wrapped with embroidery floss.

    See above, how the hair is attached to the doll.

    Saturday, August 21, 2021

    The Dolls' Beauty Pageant

            Clara and Matilda are two little cousins, who live together in the same house, to to the same school and share the same playroom. One day, when there had been a season of very bad weather, so that it was not pleasant to play out of doors for long periods of time and when several more days of even harder storms were predicted by their Uncle George, who knew all about weather signs, Clara and Matilda grew a bit restless and decided they would like to invent some perfectly new kind of play, something that could be played indoors and which would be very absorbing. They thought and thought for a very long time, when suddenly there were interrupted by the arrival of their Aunt Lillian.
           "Oh, Aunt Lillian, what shall we play that is brand new?" they cried.
           "Well," said Aunt Lillian, without waiting a single moment to think, "why don't you have a doll's beauty show?"
           Clara and Matilda looked at each other with wide eyed admiration, because they had never thought of such a thing as a doll's beauty show before, and they were perfectly delighted with the suggestion. "It's just the very thing," they said.
           They started in at once to make their arrangements. First they made a huge placard of cardboard and on this they printed in big letters the words "Dolls' Beauty Pageant, Friday afternoon, after school, at Clara and Matilda's House, No. 3 Union Street, All Entries Must Be in by 3 o'clock, Prizes, Prizes, Prizes."
           Then they wrote several similar notices on small cards, put them in envelopes and sent them to the houses of their little girl friends. The large sign they meant to take to school with them and ask the teacher to permit them to put the notice up inside the cloakroom.
           After the announcement of the show had been made the next thing to do was to select the prizes. Clara and Matilda and their Aunt Lillian hunted through the family jewel boxes for trinkets which could be awarded as prizes. Of course, these were the dolls' jewel boxes, not those of the human beings.
           Clara and Matilda had each four dolls, all of which were quite well provided with jewelry, so that there were really plenty of things that could be given to the dolls who were to compete in the contest.
           "Here is Eleanor Maud's watch," said Clara; "perhaps that would do for one prize. She has had it a long time, and she really ought to be willing to give it away."
           Eleanor Maud was Matilda's very best Paris doll, and she had quantities of clothes and some very handsome jewelry.
           "I don't really think Eleanor Maud would care to have her watch used as a prize for the beauty contest," said Matilda rather coldly, for she did not much like the idea of giving away Eleanor Maud's watch.
           "Perhaps," she suggested "we could take Bo-Peep's bracelet for one of the prizes."
           It was now Clara's turn to look gloomy, because Bo-Peep was her best doll and her bracelet was her favorite possession. She prized it even more highly than her sheep.
           It looked for a moment as if there were to be no prizes and perhaps not even a show, but just at this most trying moment Aunt Lillian came to the rescue.
            "I don't really think," she said "that we should take away the other dolls' jewelry for prizes. That would be hardly fair. But we can make some very attractive new jewelry from beads, and I happen to have some beads that are exactly right for this purpose."
           Aunt Lillian then brought out a most fascinating box which contained beads of all colors and several sizes, and sewing silk, cord and wire and some small pins for the dolls hair.
           First Aunt Lillian showed them how to make pearl earrings with some beautiful pearl beads which were fastened to thin wire so that they could be placed on the lobe of the doll's ear very neatly, while the wire was extended back to the ear and up to through the hair.
           For the first prize they made a lovely pearl necklace, such as even the proudest doll would be glad to win, and for the second prize they made a necklace of blue beads that was almost as pretty and quite as valuable. There was a necklace of read beads for the third prize and a bracelet of beautiful gold glass beads for the fifth. The earrings were the sixth.
           Other prizes were pins for the hair of gold, crystal and colored jewels, which were made on hairpins, the beads being strung on a small wire and twisted around the hairpin.
           When they had finished making the prizes there were the honorable mention ribbons to make. These were made of white ribbon, on which the words "honorable mention" were written in ink. It was very difficult to mark them without having the ink run, and so Aunt Lillian got her indelible pencil, which is used to mark table linen, etc., do that it will not get lost in the laundry. This did very nicely. After the honorable mention ribbons were marked as follows: a blue ribbon for first prize and a red for second prize. All the rest of the awards were third prizes, and they were to be accompanied along with yellow ribbons marked third prize.
           By this time all of one afternoon was used up and Clara and Matilda were obliged to wait until the next day before anymore work was done on the doll's beauty show. When they went to school the next day they were met by a twitter of excitement, for most of the girls had received the notices of the show and they were anxious to learn all about it. Those to whom notices had not been sent gathered eagerly about the sign which the two cousins put up in the cloak room. Clara and Matilda were showered with questions about entering the show.
           It was explained that there was no charge of admission and that everybody who had a doll to show was welcome as an exhibitor. At recess tine the cousins were more popular than they had ever been, it seemed and all the girls at school declared that they were going to exhibit in the show even though some of them had not played with dolls for a long time.
           The excitement grew as the time for the doll show drew near. Some girls made entire new costumes for their dolls and others got out their old playfellows and tried to renovate their complexions and smooth their frayed locks into new hair styles. Meanwhile Clara and Matilda arranged the playroom at home with rows of benches all against the walls for the doll contestants were to sit. At the door a small table was placed so that Aunt Lillian could pin a number on each doll's skirt which was recorded with the name of it's owner and the name of the doll.
           Friday afternoon a large group of little girls carried dolls of all sizes to the home of Clara and Matilda. There were so many dolls entered into the competition that the benches were not sufficient enough to display them all. More tables had to be set up for all of the dolls to be presented and more chairs needed to be added to the center of the room so that everyone could be seated.
           There were dolls of every country as well as a large number of lovely bisque dolls fashionably dressed. There were old Dinah dolls, funny rag dolls, wax-head dolls, Asian baby dolls, indigenous dolls with long black hair, quaint German dolls, frivolous French beauties in elaborate coiffures and tiny peg dolls exquisitely dressed by some great aunt long ago. There were more dolls displayed there than any one child had ever viewed in the finest doll shop!
            Jane Austen, a doll dressed to represent the well known authoress, was the most famous doll in attendance. There were also several bride dolls. One of the most interesting dolls displayed there was Gretchen, a German character doll, who was so full of childlike spirit that she attracted the attention of all who admired her.
           Cinderella, a fairy tale doll, was dressed in the finest satin gown, but she had only one glass slipper on her right foot and her left foot was bare! Another striking doll at the beauty pageant was Elizabeth, a Hessian doll wearing full peasant costume. There was also a boy doll who was busy reading a book all through the show, he never looked up from his intent study of it. One of the dolls had visited a doll hospital and had a gold tooth added where another had been chipped out; she was indeed a very proud doll! The most forlorn looking doll in the pageant was a rag doll named Sarah; this doll belonged to Jennie Marsh. Sarah had been handed down to her little owners through three generations in the Marsh family.
           Instead of having judges who would decide which doll was to receive the first prize, it was decided that all those who entered a doll into the pageant would vote for their favorite in a secret ballet. Aunt Lillian would then count these votes. The doll to be awarded first prize would have the most votes and the second prize would go to the doll with the second largest tally of votes and so on.
           Because every doll had a number attached to her garments, children were able to write down the assigned numeral in order to cast a ballet for the doll they most preferred. There were also many mothers, fathers and siblings at the pageant who were also allowed to vote for their favorite doll and these votes were thought to be far less prejudicial, assuring the pageant contestants would not all be voted for by their respective owners.
           At last the final count was determined by Aunt Lillian after carefully counting every vote contained inside the ballet box. Everyone gathered around in breathless silence, all except Lillie de Lille, who was so certain that her French doll would win first prize. She thought it best to politely pretend to be interested in the many doll contestants all the while believing in quite confidence that her doll was the finest and would surely receive the first prize.
           Aunt Lillian looked very pleased and also a bit puzzled too. She smiled at the little exhibitors and said mysteriously: "Things have turned out very oddly. I am very much surprised, and I think you will be too, but I am also very much pleased as I am sure you will be also."
           The exhibitors waited expectantly, what on earth could Aunt Lillian mean?
           "The first place prize," continued Aunt Lillian, in a clear voice, "goes to the oldest doll in the show -- No. 17 -- which is Sarah, the big rag doll that belongs to Mary Marsh."
           Everybody looked perfectly astonished at this unexpected outcome and then suddenly there was a burst of laughter, followed by prolonged applause.
           Then such a lot of conversation! The room rang with it. Everyone was explaining how poor old Sarah, the homeliest doll in the beauty pageant, had happened to win the first prize.
           "You see," said Janie Marks, "I voted for her because she looked so forlorn that I thought she wouldn't have another vote."
           "And I thought the same." said Matilda, "and I did too." said Sallie Redfern, "and I," "and I," chorused a host of others.
           Then everybody had another laugh and they all danced around Aunt Lillian while she fastened the long beautiful pearl necklace over Sarah's plain calico frock.
           Then the other prizes were awarded. The beautiful French doll took the second prize and everybody was satisfied with the way the other awards were distributed.
           After it was all over the girls declared that the doll beauty pageant was the very best fun they had ever had in all their lives. "But the best of it all was that Sarah got the first prize." said Lillie de Lille, "That was perfectly glorious," and for once, everyone agreed with her. (edited, 1910)

    Tuesday, May 25, 2021

    Paddington Bear

    This tiny Paddington bear belongs
     to our 18" dolls.
           The first Paddington Bear stuffed toy to be manufactured was created in 1972 by Gabrielle Designs, a small business run by Shirley and Eddie Clarkson, with the prototype made as a Christmas present for their children Joanna and Jeremy Clarkson (who later became a well-known British TV presenter and writer).

    Just right, our Paddington Bear is from Eden Toys, 1987. He is posable, five inches tall and wears a red felt hat, black 'rubber' boots and a handmade yellow felt 'rain coat.'

           Shirley Clarkson dressed the stuffed bear in Wellington boots to help it stand upright. (Paddington received Wellingtons for Christmas in Paddington Marches On, 1964.) The earliest bears wore small children's boots manufactured by Dunlop Rubber until production could not meet demand. Gabrielle Designs then produced their boots with paw prints moulded into the soles just like those on our doll's bear in the photo.

    Paddington Bear is a fictional character in children's literature. He first appeared on 13 October 1958 in the children's book A Bear Called Paddington and has been featured in more than twenty books written by British author Michael Bond and illustrated by Peggy Fortnum and other artists.

    The friendly bear from "darkest Peru"—with his old hat, battered suitcase, duffel coat and love of marmalade—has become a classic character from British children's literature. An anthropomorphised bear, Paddington is always polite – addressing people as "Mr", "Mrs" and "Miss", rarely by first names – and kindhearted, though he inflicts hard stares on those who incur his disapproval. He has an endless capacity for innocently getting into trouble, but he is known to "try so hard to get things right." He was discovered in London Paddington station, by the (human) Brown family who adopted him, and thus he gives his full name as "Paddington Brown" (his original Peruvian name being too hard for them to pronounce).

    Paddington books have been translated into 30 languages across 70 titles and have sold more than 30 million copies worldwide. A much loved fictional character in the UK, a Paddington Bear soft toy was chosen by British tunnelers as the first item to pass through to their French counterparts when the two sides of the Channel Tunnel were linked in 1994. Paddington Bear has been adapted for television, films and appeared in commercials. The critically acclaimed and commercially successful films Paddington (2014) and Paddington 2 (2017) were both nominated for the BAFTA Award for Outstanding British Film.

    Largest Fan Collection I've Ever Seen!


    Sunday, May 2, 2021

    Polly Pocket Dolls

    Polly Pocket doll sets from a
     JCPenney catalogue 1995
    make wonderful mini dolls 
    for larger 18" American Girl
    Dolls to play with.
           The original Polly Pocket toys, designed by Chris Wiggs in 1983, were plastic cases which opened to form a dollhouse or other playset with Polly Pocket figurines less than an inch tall. The dolls folded in the middle, like the case, and had circular bases which slotted into holes in the case interior, allowing them to stand securely at particular points in the house. This was particularly useful for moving points in the case. Because the dolls were so small, sometimes they came enclosed in pendants or large rings instead of the more typical playset cases.

     34 inches (9.5 cm) plastic jointed dolls. They gave a new spin on fashion dolls; instead of traditional cloth clothing, Polly Pockets used unique "Polly Stretch" garments, created by Genie Toys, rubbery plastic clothes that could be put on the dolls and removed. There are also some boy dolls (Rick, Steven, etc.). Like Barbie and Bratz dolls, they also star in Polly Pocket movies, books, and sites.

           On February 12, 2018, Garrett Sander announced on his Instagram page that Polly Pocket would be making a comeback. The new toys are miniature dolls in play sets, like the original 1990s Polly Pocket, rather than the larger Fashion Polly. However, they are slightly larger than the original 1990s version. Rather than slotting into holes in the case, the new Polly is made of a flexible plastic that sticks to certain surfaces, but also bends so she can sit in a chair.

    Polly Pocket 2019 World of Compacts Commercial

    See also Polly Pocket Polly Pocket  Backpacks


    Polly Pocket doll sets from a
     JCPenney catalogue 1999.

    Wednesday, November 11, 2020

    How to Make a Raggedy Doll (free 6" pattern)

    The finished Raggedy Ann using the pattern below.
     

           Just the other day, I had been reading Raggedy Ann to our little people. And the children decided they wanted something to do. So we decided to make our own raggedy dolls with muslin scraps.
           We gathered cotton, muslin, buttons, yarn, watercolor paints, needle and thread, and flowered calico. I cut the pattern, body and head in one piece.
           Below is the diagram and dimensions. The pattern allows a seam, with stitching on the dotted lines. Leave the ends open to stuff. Close seam at end of body after stuffing. Sew on the stuffed arms and legs.
           Sew two shoe-buttons on the face for eyes, and draw the nose and mouth with good black pencil or trace carefully with ink. Paint the cheeks and shoes red with water colors, red wax crayons, wet red crepe paper, or red ink. Sew brown, red or black yarn in loose loops all over the head, closely.
           Then cut the loops in two, making her scraggly hair. Make her a dress and apron as you would for your other six-inch dolls. Now you have a sweet little doll who can tell her own stories about doll adventures in the playhouse or nursery!


           Left, print and cut out the pattern provided below. Center, trace around the paper pattern pieces and cut these out leaving a 1/4" boarder. Right, use a straight stitch to sew the two sides of each arm, leg and torso together, leaving open the ends of each for stuffing.


           Left, the pieces are sewn together by hand because the doll is so small. Center, turn the doll limbs and body inside out to stuff. Right, after the body has been stuffed and assembled, wrap a strong thread around the ends of the arms to make simple mitt-like hands.


           Left, the body has been stuffed and assembled by hand using a needle and thread. Center, the features and skin color are applied with acrylic paints. Right, the classic red yarn hair is both stitched and glued firmly to our Raggedy Ann's head.
     

           Left, I decided to applique a dress onto my doll's tiny body instead of making it removable. Sometimes I decide to do this for sample dolls. Center, I also used black puff paints to fill in the doll's pupils here. Right, the hands were also painted.
     

           Left, details of ribbon on the apron of the doll. Center left, Raggedy has red and white stripped socks in the classic illustrated version by Johnny Gruelle, so I included these on our doll too. This rag doll has navy shoes however to match her dress. Center right, her hair bow is hot glued to her yarn head. Right, a tiny silk rosette at her collar adds a finishing touch to this sample Raggedy Ann doll.

    The Free Pattern for Raggedy Ann and Andy measures approximately six inches when finished.


    Raggedy doll pattern and illustration.

    Read Raggedy Ann Stories and Read more about the history behind Raggedy Ann and Andy Dolls

    More Patterns for Raggedy Type Dolls: