Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Bird Houses

        If you ever built a bird house in your yard and painted it nice and bright in red, yellow, green, white, etc., you probably wondered why the birds would not make it their home. Here is the reason: They did not like your bright-colored paint. They prefer dark colors, as near as possible to the color of the bark of trees. If you will build your bird house in the fall and stain it a dark brown color by spring it will lose its newness and appear weather worn; then some of the earliest birds to come back for the summer will take possession of it.
       A house should be about six by eight inches in size at the base and ten inches or a foot in height, with an entrance only large enough to admit birds. For wrens, do not make the door large enough for the English sparrow to enter, for it may drive out the little wrens. Do not make it possible for cats or squirrels to climb up to the bird house, for they will try to catch the young birds. Set the house on a pole, where there is shade, and around the bottom of the pole put a wide piece of tin to prevent any animal from climbing. 

Bird house plans that please the birds, proportions and finishing.

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Bird's Nests

       There are few birds which do not build nests for themselves and their mates; two of the most important of them are the cowbird and one species of the cuckoo. The European cuckoo is not a bird you will like when you learn a little about it. It has no home; it will lay eggs on the ground and then carry them to the nests of other birds and expect the owners of those nests to hatch the eggs and feed the young when they hatch. It never deposits more than one egg in a nest; it thinks the owner will not notice one extra egg. The cowbird is like the cuckoo. It will not rear its own young; like the cuckoo of Europe it puts its eggs in the nests of other birds. Most birds will allow the cowbird's egg to remain in the nest and will hatch it, but see in the videos below what blue birds do to prevent a cowbird eggs from hatching.

       All other birds build nests for their families. Some of these are soft and downy, being made of grasses and lined with feathers, little bits of cloth or down, while others are rough and coarse, constructed with sticks and stones and built high on rocks where enemies cannot reach them. The penquin lays its eggs on bare rocks. The only nest of the ostrich is a hole dug in the warm sand, where the heat of the sun hatches the eggs. One of the most carefully built nests is that of the oriole. It is from six to eight inches in length and is swung from a tree branch which is well protected with foliage. The oriole isa careful builder; it uses grass, string, hair, strips of bark, etc. Not all nests are made of materials we have named. Some birds, among them the swallow, build of mud or clay; others, like the kingfisher, build tunnels into the bank of river or lake, with an opening near the water, and lay their eggs deep away from sight.
       Many birds return to the same nest a second year, while others, like the robin, may keep their homes only long enough to rear one brood of little ones and then abandon it. Leonard and Hill


 Varieties of nests illustrated above:

What Birds Eat

        Some farmers do not like a good many or the birds because they eat growing crops and fruit. They see the damage done by the birds, but they do not always see that these same birds more than pay the farmer for all they destroy. There are more than 300,000 kinds of insects; not all of these varieties live in America, but thousands of them are found on every farm, and many are very injurious to crops. Without the birds many crops would be ruined each year. There are some kinds of caterpillars that in twenty-four hours eat more than a hundred times their own weight in food; one scarlet tanager, a beautiful red bird, has been known in eighteen minuets to eat 630 caterpillars. The tanagers eat little fruit, but do you not think they earn it? There may be a million plant lice on a single tree; the birds destroy thousands of these in a single day. Army worms are dreaded by the farmers, and so are tussock moths and many small beetles, like potato bugs; birds eat these by the million; if they did not, our crops would not be half as large as they are.
       The rose-breasted grosbeak eats so many potato bugs that in some sections it is called the ''potato-bug bird.'' One pair of brown thrashers will destroy 60,000 insects in one season; a dozen pairs of wrens and their young in a season will eat fully one hundred twenty-five pounds of insects. Can people not afford to lose a few cherries and other fruit in exchange for the constant warfare of the birds against these insect pests?

Jo Alwood talks about Rose-brested Grosbeak.

       The stories about the quantity of food a bird eats may seem to you like fairy tales, but they are true. You have noticed that birds are always active-always flying or hopping about. You know that when you play hard you get very hungry. Birds are always hungry because of their constant activity, and their great problem is to keep supplied with food. Then too, when the baby birds are hatched-from two to five in a nest-there are more hungry mouths to feed. Little birds grow very rapidly, and so they require a great deal to eat. Have you ever watched the mother and father birds feeding their young? Does it appear that the little ones ever get enough to eat? The heads of a bird family are about the busiest things out of doors until their young are able to hunt their own food.
       When you were a baby your father and mother protected you with loving care. Bird parents show just the same attention to their little ones. They are tireless in bringing to them the almost unbelievable amount of food they require; they watch over them while they are helpless, and protect them even at the risk of their lives from all bird enemies; they keep the naked little bodies warm until they are covered with feathers, and when grown strong enough they teach them to fly. Within a few weeks the little ones are on the wing, and soon they begin to prepare homes of their own. Some kinds of birds will raise four broods of little ones in a season. Leonard and Hill

Thursday, May 16, 2024

The Little House in the Woods

       "The Little House in the Woods'' is a story that young students may print out and fill in the blanks themselves with your very own adjectives. Every student who participates in this exercise should have a different story when read aloud in front of the classroom. There are three pages included below.
The children go for a walk in the woods and discover a mysterious house.

The old woman who lives in the house greets the children.

The children and old woman have tea and cakes together.

Friday, May 10, 2024

Canine Cross Stitch Patterns

       These cross stitch patterns of pet dogs and puppies are free for students to work from. They come from a German Library Collection and are in the public domain. Our versions here have been cleaned and colorized. 

Two little dachshunds sit together on the lawn.

A large hunting dog in the wilderness.

A small hound hunts for duck.

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Craft a few toys for your pretend pets...

The small pink rug above was cut from a real bath mat. Students can recycle all
kinds of things about the house to use in ordinary dollhouse play or displays.
Our doll's pet dog and bunny are romping around this tiny rug with their
new chew toys.
 
       Here are a few toys that can be crafted from limited supplies for your doll's pets. The first is a bone sculpted from oven-bake clay. The shape you see above in the photo is very simple and an ordinary one for pets to play with in real life too. 
Cat pointers for doll pets.
       The second to is made using yarn and a few beads from our sewing notions box. Choose three colors of yarn to braid together and then slip one or two beads over the braid. These should have extra large holes so that the braid may fit easily through the openings. Then tie off the braid in a loop so that the beads won't slip off. 
       Now your pretend pet dogs can chew and toss these toys around as much as they like!
       To make a cat pointing toy you will need a hot glue gun and hot glue. A parent or much older sibling should help younger kids when glue guns are being manipulated. 
       Glue a colorful pom pom and a feather or two at the tip of one toothpick in order to make something similar to the cat picks shown in the photograph.
       Cats love to chase, flip and jump after these simple toys in real life. So, items like this make playtime fun for pretend as well. 
Colorful toy tubes for cats and dogs.
       The next pet toy shown on the left, is made from paper straws, paints and pom poms and a small amount of metal tape.
       First, cut the paper straws to the same length, at least one inch.
       Then glue these together in a bundle using a tacky craft glue. Let the glue dry completely before painting the tubes. 
       After the paint is dry, apply some decorative metal tape. When the light hits the tape it will reflect it and make the toy even more interesting.
       The last step is to insert tiny pom poms inside two or three of the tubes using tacky glue. Do this on both sides of the toy in random places.This toy is good for tumbling and giving your doll's pet something interesting to toss about the room!

Thursday, April 18, 2024

Roaring Robbie


Roaring Robbie
by Reuben Ryley

Roaring Robbie,
Roguish Ruthie
Ran a race 'round
Robin's rose.
Ruthie's ruthless,
Restless ruffles
Relaxed rev-er-rent
Repose.

Romping Robbie's 
Rigorous rompers,
Ripping, running
Round and roundly,
Rendered rumbles
Rarely roisterous,
Rather recklessly,
Re-sound-ly!

Paper Furniture for A Paper Dollhouse

       ''When you have mother's consent to download and print this page, paste it upon lightweight cardboard and press it under heavy books until it is quite dry. Then carefully trim along the outlines and cut the plain lined along the sides of the chair seat. Then fold on the dotted lines as indicated, and paste flaps A and B to sides of chair. If you will use your watercolors to decorate the wingback chair and footstool these furnishings will be all the prettier.'' Harvey Peake

And easy chair (wingback design) and a matching footstool, sometimes called an ottoman.

Find More Paper Dollhouse Furniture Patterns:

One-Color Effects For Dollhouse Decor

        Designing dollhouse rooms with monochromatic color choices is just one method to ensure that items like carpets and rugs, wallpaper and paint, and upholstery and pillows all coordinate in good taste. Below, paintings by Charles Webb demonstrate the same den/family room space in five distinct singular colors: yellow, green, red, blue and brown.

Left, green is the color of choice.  Right, yellow is the main color used for the same space.

Left, if the same den was made over in red; this may be how it could look. Center, here the
 one-color selected is blue. Right, how does the room look with everything in brown?

       Did you know that people have been attaching meanings to color forever it seems? Below are some of the customary feelings attached to colors in rooms, although I don't believe that these attributes are always legitimate. There are many more experiences unique to people's lives that can affect the way they feel about color. It is best in the long run to make selections based upon what you have and what pleases you. At the end of the day, a dollhouse is a personal space and every dollhouse should reflect the person designing it.

  • Red - means stimulation to some - irritation to others
  • Yellow - means irradiating cheer and vivacity - yet your neighbor's complexton may not harmonize!
  • Blue - the color of purity and peace - yet some claim it depresses.
  • Green - is for tranquility, as in the cool shade of foliage and field
  • Brown - suggests a cozy comfort in the living-room. Which color do you like best?

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Play

 Play
by George Cooper

Play you were a princess,
And this was your diamond throne
Play I was a fairy--
''That is the truth, my own!''

Play you were a giant,
And I was a poor lost girl;
Play this was your castle;
''Think I could harm one curl?''

Play this was my carriage,
And I was a lady grand;
Play that was a ball room:
''Lady, I kiss your hand!''

Play the sun was a kite,
And this was the yellow string;
Play I was a robin;
''Sing, little birdie, sing?''

Play you were a shepherd,
And searching with weary feet;
Play I was your lambkin;
''Come to your fold, my sweet!''

Soon eyelids are drooping,
And that was a sigh, so deep;
Play this was the night ma:
And play I had gone to sleep!

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

The Flossie Fisher Paper Dolls

  Dear Girls and Boys:

       Flossie Fisher has her very own set of paper dolls that you may print, color and cut out from the pattern below. Color them as prettily as you can. You may dress them in the clothes I have drawn or make costumes of your own. You may use colored tissue paper for the costumes if you like.
       The stars and stripes costume is for Flossie because she is getting ready to march in the 4th of July parade along with her good friends, Hardy the dog, quiet bunny and Tommy Kirby the cat.

Sincerely, 
Helen Nyce
(The original letter from the illustrator has been modified.)


       ''Read'' with your eyes the series of events from top to bottom, left to right, to discover what happens to Flossie and her little companions below. Then, write in your own words a brief descriptive narrative describing based upon what you see. Below is a introductory sentence to help student begin there own narratives...

       Tommy Kirby will fill an old sock to frighten Flossie and bunny with.

Silhouettes of Tom Kirby acting naughty with a sock snake.

       Over 100 years ago, Helene Nyce organized children's writing competitions for The Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine editors would include her silhouette cuts to illustrate a series of adventures for a little girl named Flossie. Children would then write a short story to accompany the illustrations and submit it through the mail to win a prize.

How Flossie Made Valentines

  Dear Girls and Boys:

       One time Flossie Fisher and her cat thought it would be fun to make valentines. Here is the picture story of how they did it. 

Sincerely, 
Helen Nyce
(The original letter from the illustrator has been modified.)

       ''Read'' with your eyes the series of events from top to bottom, left to right, to discover what happens to Flossie and her little companions below. Then, write in your own words a brief descriptive narrative describing based upon what you see. Below is a introductory sentence to help student begin there own narratives...

         Flossie and cat are bored. What to do, what to do?      

       Over 100 years ago, Helene Nyce organized children's writing competitions for The Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine editors would include her silhouette cuts to illustrate a series of adventures for a little girl named Flossie. Children would then write a short story to accompany the illustrations and submit it through the mail to win a prize.

Flossie and Her Playmates Go Camping

  Dear Girls and Boys:

       Tommy Kirby wanted to go to the seashore, and he felt very sorry when he heard Flossie's mamma and papa say that this year they would spend their vacation at home, instead of going away.
       Hardy said:''Never mind Tommy. I have a good deal better plan than the seashore; we will take our tent and go camping down in the woodsy corner of Grandpa's back pasture. We can take lots of supplies with us and stay a long time.''
      Flossie was as delighted with the plan as were John and Tommy, and in spite of Tommy's accidents they are having lovely times.

Sincerely, 
Helen Nyce
(The original letter from the illustrator has been modified.)

       ''Read'' with your eyes the series of events from top to bottom, left to right, to discover what happens to Flossie and her little companions below. Then, write in your own words a brief descriptive narrative describing based upon what you see. Below is a introductory sentence to help student begin there own narratives...

         Flossie and her friends Tommy(cat) and Hardy are setting up camp at Grandpa's place.   

Silhouettes of Flossie and Friends camping in backyard.

       Over 100 years ago, Helene Nyce organized children's writing competitions for The Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine editors would include her silhouette cuts to illustrate a series of adventures for a little girl named Flossie. Children would then write a short story to accompany the illustrations and submit it through the mail to win a prize.

Monday, April 15, 2024

Flossie Fisher on a Farm

Dear Girls and Boys,

       Well, the Early Garden page must have come to a great many places just when the first touch of spring, with its bluebirds, its blackbirds, its robins and its song-sparrows all flew in together on the south wind, for there was a perfect deluge of mail for me at once. And all the stories showed how nearly winter was over, so that I could almost see how warm and bright the sun shone where you all were. Every day since then the sun has been getting higher and higher, the days longer and longer, and the thoughts of everyone are turning to the countryside, their gardens and vacations. Below is a storyline cut in silhouettes that should bring delight to those of you who love the farm and it's animals!

Sincerely, 
Helen Nyce
(The original letter from the illustrator has been modified.)

       ''Read'' with your eyes the series of events from top to bottom, left to right, to discover what happens to Flossie and her little companions below. Then, write in your own words a brief descriptive narrative describing based upon what you see. Below is a introductory sentence to help student begin there own narratives...

       Flossie had lots of fun on the farm. She was sorry for the little piggies shut up all day, so she decided to let them out. Here are some of her adventures... 

Flossie taking care of farm animal friends.

       Over 100 years ago, Helene Nyce organized children's writing competitions for The Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine editors would include her silhouette cuts to illustrate a series of adventures for a little girl named Flossie. Children would then write a short story to accompany the illustrations and submit it through the mail to win a prize.

How Flossie Made Her Early Garden

 Dear Girls and Boys,

       Flossie wants all of the students learning to write while using this exercise, to write very plainly. Don't forget to write your name at the end of the story before handing it into your teacher! Make sure also that you only write about what you see and that the events are in order of the appearance of each pictured silhouette. Use your very best handwriting and do not forget to capitalize the letter of each first word in a sentence. Also include a period at the end of every sentence too!    

Sincerely, 
Helen Nyce
(The original letter from the illustrator has been modified.)

       ''Read'' with your eyes the series of events from top to bottom, left to right, to discover what happens to Flossie and her little companions below. Then, write in your own words a brief descriptive narrative describing based upon what you see. Below is a introductory sentence to help student begin there own narratives...

       Flossie Fisher and her little dog tried to make an early garden. Below are the silhouette cuts that show how they worked and the troubles they had.

Flossie and friends plant a Spring garden.

       Over 100 years ago, Helene Nyce organized children's writing competitions for The Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine editors would include her silhouette cuts to illustrate a series of adventures for a little girl named Flossie. Children would then write a short story to accompany the illustrations and submit it through the mail to win a prize.

Flossie and Her Friends Have A Picnic

 Dear Girls and Boys,

       I wonder how many of the Flossie Fisher children colored Easter eggs as Flossie and her pet rabbit tried to. I don't believe many had the same sort of fun, because Flossie does seem to have a way with her that makes all the animals want to do just what she would have them do. But then we have all known dogs that could almost talk, cats that surely think, and horses that are really members of the family! Even the goat below appears relatively cooperative for his kind, at least for a short while anyway...       

Sincerely, 
Helen Nyce
(The original letter from the illustrator has been modified.)

       ''Read'' with your eyes the series of events from top to bottom, left to right, to discover what happens to Flossie and her little companions below. Then, write in your own words a brief descriptive narrative describing based upon what you see. Below is a introductory sentence to help student begin there own narratives...

       Here is the story of Flossie's picnic. Don't you wish you could have been with her?

Flossie silhouette story for Easter picnic and egg hunt.


       Over 100 years ago, Helene Nyce organized children's writing competitions for The Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine editors would include her silhouette cuts to illustrate a series of adventures for a little girl named Flossie. Children would then write a short story to accompany the illustrations and submit it through the mail to win a prize.

Flossie Helps Her Bunny Color Easter Eggs

  Dear Girls and Boys,

        Flossie and her bunny friend had a great deal of trouble in getting eggs to color for Easter. When they at last succeeded they boiled most of the eggs, and the last few pictures will tell you what happened to the unboiled ones...      
Sincerely, 
Helen Nyce
(The original letter from the illustrator has been modified.)

       ''Read'' with your eyes the series of events from top to bottom, left to right, to discover what happens to Flossie and her little companions below. Then, write in your own words a brief descriptive narrative describing based upon what you see. Below is a introductory sentence to help student begin there own narratives...

       Easter is approaching fast so Flossie must meet up with her friend to make sure all is ready for the big egg hunt on the Saturday after Good Friday.

Flossie silhouettes for Easter story.

       Over 100 years ago, Helene Nyce organized children's writing competitions for The Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine editors would include her silhouette cuts to illustrate a series of adventures for a little girl named Flossie. Children would then write a short story to accompany the illustrations and submit it through the mail to win a prize.

Thursday, April 11, 2024

Paint a bur acorn to look like a blue Hubbard squash!

Hand painted bur oak acorns dried and painted to look like
baked Blue Hubbard squash. See index for more cooked
doll foods to craft.
        Where I live there are all kinds of oak trees growing within blocks of each other. But, the finest one of them all is the Bur Oak. It's acorn seeds are simply magnificent! These are the largest acorns of any North American oak. But what do these acorns share in common with Hubbard squash? This craft project, that's what.
       It just so happens that dried bur oak acorns look exactly like blue Hubbard squash when dried and painted for our 18'' doll larder. These acorns are edible, but I am not so very interested in their taste as much as I am interested in drying these properly for crafts. 

These giant bur oak acorns have been drying-out in a cupboard drawer for two years.
The outer husks with furry edges will be saved for a future craft as well as the tough shell
 of the inner nut meat. This time, I painted the dehydrated nutmeat of this bur oak acorn.



Left, you can see the texture of the nut's outside skin looks just like blue Hubbard squash,
 once it has been painted over with a dry brush and several acrylic paint colors: a bluish
 green, tan, and a much lighter tinted tan color. Right are the rich golden insides of the
nut painted and sealed with several layers of Mod Podge.



A raw blue hubbard squash cut open. The
seeds and pulp must be removed before 
baking the squash in the oven.
      "Hubbard squash usually has a tear-drop shape and is often used as a replacement for pumpkins in cooking. According to one source, the name comes from Bela Hubbard, settler of Randolph Township, Ohio, in the Connecticut Western Reserve. Other sources conclude that this variety came to Marblehead, Massachusetts via Captain Knott Martin where Elizabeth Hubbard brought it to the attention of her neighbor, a seed trader named James J. H. Gregory. Gregory subsequently introduced it to the market using Hubbard as the eponym. Gregory later bred and released the Blue Hubbard, a variety with bluish-gray skin. Another variety, the Golden Hubbard, has a bright orange skin. Gregory advertisements for Hubbard squash had begun by 1859.The Hubbard squash, including questions regarding the name, is the subject of a children's ditty, "Raising Hubbard Squash in Vermont". More about Cultivar squashes here...

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Tiny needlepoint roses for your doll's house...

Four patterns for wild rose needlepoint or cross stitch. 
Students are free to make their own versions of 
needlepoint pillows for the dollhouse.

       All of these tiny rose needlepoint patterns are antique and from Germany. Although flowers in needlepoint do not need to be strictly copied from patterns, it is nice to have a few charts for beginners to reference as they work for the first time. The reds and pinks could easily be substituted with golds or coral colors if they prefer.

Tiny rosebud needlepoint pillows with lace trim inside of my 
daughter's antique dollhouse. The left has been laundered, 
the right still needs to be cleaned.
Two patterns for a rose wreath or swag.

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Mouse sized rhymes...

 Miss Mouse Longing

Little Miss Mouse
Ran through the great house,
Coming out in the pantry with satisfied squeak;
''If I had but a pocket,''
She sighed, ''I could stock it 
With dainties enough to last me a week!''



A Happy Family

A little white hen, duck, and a mouse,
Together they lived in a little white house.
The mouse went to market on dark, dark nights,
and they ate cake and cheese with keen appetites.

They are cheese and cake till the mouse broke his leg,
Then the little white hen laid a little white egg.
The duck took them sailing when 'twas fine weather,
And so they lived happily, all three together.



The Little Boy Pleads for Mouse

Little Boy Pleads...

Shh, ma', speak to pussy and kitty,
They are dragging all over the house,
Without any mercy or pity,
A poor little innocent mouse.

I hate to see such wicked cunning,
For pussy allows it to go,
And just as the mouse thinks of running
She catches and teases it so.

Mother Answers

My son, our puss cannot reason,
And therefore she is not a sinner;
Perhaps this is not hungry season,
And this teasing is cooking her dinner.

But when children, my darling, are cruel,
And injure the brutes heaven made,
They sully the beautiful jewel,
That with a kind heart is inlaid.

Molly and the Mouse

Molly and the Mouse
by Maurine Hathaway

Five -year-old Mollie
Was holding her dollie
In the shade at the side of the house,
When what should she spy,
In the path running by,
But a poor little mite of a mouse.

With a wild, frantic shout,
Mollie quickly leaped out
Of the pathway and ran in a fright
To her mother and cried, 
"There's a mousie outside;
Get a trap that will catch it to-night."

Mother said, as she smiled,
"Why, you dear little child,
Mousie never would hurt you a bit,
And I'm sure, if you knew,
'Twas more frightened at you
Than you could have been frightened at it."

And her words were quite true,
For that mouse fairly flew
To it's mother who lived in the wall,
And she squeaked "Mother dear,"
As she trembled with fear,
"There's a girl out there frightfully tall.''

 ''Ha, ha,'' laughed Mother Mouse,
As she tidied her house,
''Did you run away home just for that?
What I thought had occurred,
When your scream I first heard,
Was that you'd seen a fierce pussy cat.''

Monday, April 1, 2024

Old-fashioned prints for Victorian themed dollhouses

        Elizabeth Hector illustrated children's books at the turn of the last century. I have restored three of her charming prints in three different sizes for a nursery wall inside of a Victorian dollhouse. Students may print them freely for personal projects only. Enjoy!

Victorian creeping cat, lovable sheep and red squirrels - all would look period appropriate in a
dollhouse nursery!

Make an empty tomb doll cake for Easter!

       A three tiered layer cake decorated for a doll Easter celebration may be crafted using the most ordinary materials found around the house. How it looks in the end will be much determined by the supplies that you can gather. 
       The tiny ''candy'' flowers used in our sample cake were cut from various Fimo flower canes. Alternatively a child could substitute details like these with: buttons, stickers or ribbon flowers. My flowers were already cut and sold in a pack but I will link to this craft from Youtube for those of you who would like to craft the canes from scratch. 

The Easter Empty Tomb Cake is covered with a
plastic cake 'dome' that I cut from a recycled
plastic cake container. You can also see a 
similar craft here.
Supply List:

  • scrap cardboard
  • recycled egg carton
  • white school glue
  • masking tape
  • tiny clay flowers (cut from cane)
  • decorative gravel (very small)
  • green and brown acrylic paint
  • little sawdust
  • brown paper bag
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. With multiple circles of cardboard glued together and stacked, students can make doll-sized cakes to decorate for Easter.
  2. I also cut a cave shape from a recycled paper egg carton to secure to the top of the cake with more glue and tape.
  3. Let the glue dry and cover the entire cake using masking tape Before painting it and gluing on details.
  4. I covered the Spring hillside using green acrylic paint. 
  5. Paint the path leading up to the tomb with brown and glue a layer of sawdust on this to add texture.
  6. Glue on a few tiny pebbles or stones to outline the path and emphasize the tomb. In the U.S. cake shops sell pebble candy that looks like the real thing.
  7. Paint the remaining tomb surface to look real and then glue on the flower cane slices on top of the green painted icing.
  8. Cover your cake creation with Mod Podge and set the dessert table for a dolly's Easter celebration!
More ideas for empty tomb cakes at Easter:

This plastic cake container once was used to package a angel food cake from the market. See the
form at the center inside, when cut apart from the package, it is a perfect shape and size to use
as the dome of a 18 inch doll-sized cake stand.

Above see how I layered cardboard to make the Easter cake. Also I am making sure it fits 
perfectly under my recycled plastic cake dome.

Decoupage the masking tape layer with another layer of brown paper bag before painting this 
pretend confectionary. 

The three tier Easter cake with pretend candy decorations is finished.

How to make dog collars for doll sized pets...

Left, our 18'' doll pets stand five inches tall when seated on their haunches. Right, the doll 
collars with split rings and dog themed charms.

        Does your doll's pet have a collar to identify who they belong too? These sweet little paper wire collars are as unique to your pet as you would make them. Choose different papers and charms to add one-of-a-kind touches.

Supply List:

  • paper covered wire 
  • decorative scrapbook papers
  • white school glue
  • masking tape
  • metal dog charms
  • Split Rings (20mm for dogs 5'' tall)
Left, paper covered wire frequently used in packing lettuce in supermarkets and what it looks 
like after it's been cut and covered with masking tape. Right, the dog collars are decoupaged
with white glue and scrapbook papers.

Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Twist the paper covered wire into a circular shaped collar for a stuffed pet dog. The circumference should be approximately 2 1/4 inches across. This size will easily slip over the top of a standard sized plush pet dog measuring 5 inches tall when seated on it's hind legs. If your doll's dog is smaller simply use a shorter wire for it's collar. Twist the ends together of several lengths of wire to determine what size works best for your doll's pet.
  2. Cover the paper wire with masking tape.
  3. Decoupage the dog collar using any decorative scrap paper you wish and the white school glue. Let the glue dry over night.
  4. Slip a split ring onto the collar and then add a dog charm.
  5. Now squeeze the plush dog's head a bit to fit the collar on over it's head and around it's neck.

Saturday, March 30, 2024

Dollhouse Prints for Horse Loving Dolls

        The following clip art is of four paintings by Martin Stainforth. The prints are for student personal use only. If your doll loves horses, you may print and frame these samples below to hang in your dollhouse for fun...

Horses in brown, bay and chestnut: some stand in front of fences, others in front
of stables.


Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Giving by John Martin

 


Giving by John Martin

Give smiles, and more will come to you;
Give help and never trouble.
Give joy to others here and there,
And yours will surely double.

Give of your strength to those with less;
Give reverence to sorrow.
Give thoughtful gentleness to-day,
And then again, to-morrow.

Give with an open hand and heart;
Give with full faith, believing
That open hands and open hearts
Are constantly receiving.

Give love to every thought you think,
For love is constant giving;
Then wait, and watch real riches come
To all your life and living.

Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Craft a Whale of A Weather Vane!

A whale weather vane with wire bent letters for the pretend wind to spin so that the dollhouse
residents know from which direction their breezes and storms are blowing; N for north, S for 
south, W for west and E for east.

        I designed this miniature weather vane for my daughter's thrifty dollhouse flip. You will need a few supplies to make one like it: Sculpey, cereal box cardboard, masking tape, white school glue, a wooden skewer, two or three beads, paper covered wire and paint.
       First, cut out a cardboard whale and cover it with masking tape so that Sculpey or oven-bake clay may be spread and sculpted over the form before baking. (This makes the sculpture super strong.) Also poke a whole into the bottom half of the whale so that it can be mounted onto a skewer after baking. Use a tacky glue for this and let it dry over night.
       Then thread onto the skewer a wooden bead. Twist paper above it and below it to keep the bead in position. 
       Then bend a wire approximately a foot (not too long or too short), into the shape of a capital "W" on one end and then wrap it around the skewer below the bead and give it a bit of space and then bend the end of the wire into a capital ''E''. Clip the excess wire off of the ''E.''
       Next, bend a wire approximately a foot (not too long or too short), into the shape of a capital "N" on one end and then wrap it around the skewer below the east and west part of the weather vane and give it a bit of space and then bend the end of the wire into a capital ''S''. Clip the excess wire off of the ''S.''
       Wrap a bit of paper to stop the directional signs from falling off the skewer. Cut the weather vane to fit your doll's house through a whole on the roof. 
       To paint the weather vane to look like weathered copper: spray paint it first with copper paint and then second dry brush on a light coating of black acrylic and second of green. If you wish more copper to show through, gently rub the painted surfaces gently so that the spray paint shines through. repeat these steps if necessary until you are happy with the results.
       On the inside of the dollhouse, glue a small block in place under the pitch of the roof to hold the weather vane in position. Do not put glue into the hole directly because this will prevent the whale weather vane from spinning altogether.

The Prairie-Schooner

A ''praire-schooner'' is a covered wagon. Above are
children playing with their version, a rocking horse
and tent make a great imaginary toy!

 The Prairie-Schooner
Picture and Verse by Charles S. Chapman

I was an Indian Chieftain,
Head of a warlike band;
She drove a prairie-schooner
Out on the desert land.

I was the first to sight her,
And lead the wild attack;
I carried her off to the mountains,
Far from the beaten track.

There in my tent, a captive,
Bound hand and foot she lay
Till she promised me my squaw she'd be
In the far-off time, "Some Day."

Now, as I look from my window,
Our children's children play
In the same old prairie-schooner,
In the same old tireless way.

Though the drivers may be many,
And each of them fair and tall,
I know that the first fair driver
Was lovelier than them all.

And I wonder, as I watch them
Playing the new-old game,
Beginning in jest, as we once began,
Will the ending be the same?

Monday, March 25, 2024

The Weaving of Native Americans

Vintage albumen print. Original caption "Aboriginal life among
 the Navajoe Indians. Near old Fort Defiance, N.M. / T. H."
         One of the chief arts of the North American Natives is that of weaving blankets. When the Spaniards came to our country they found beautiful blankets and fine weaving among the Pueblo and Navaho people of the southwest. Perhaps these people learned this art from their neighbors to the south; or they may have originated it themselves because they needed and sought something better than mere skins for clothing.
       In the early days, the Hopi Indians wove principally their own cotton to which they added some fibers of the yucca plants and animal hairs. When sheep were introduced by the Spaniards, they began to use a little wool. Their weaving is more complicated than that of other tribes. They not only produce a plain weave, but a checked one, and another which shows a repeated figure, usually a diamond.
       Among the Hopis it is the men who do most of the weaving of the blankets, shawls, sashes, and clothing. A lovely custom is still followed in weaving the bride's clothing. After the most important of the wedding ceremonies, the bridegroom's father distributes cotton to all his men relatives and friends. They spin and weave this cotton for the bride, working for several days or weeks. During that time, the bride stays with her husband and his family helping to cook and feed the weavers. Very carefully and beautifully the men weave a large white robe, a small white robe, and a wide, white belt with long fringe.
       When all are finished the bride wraps the small robe about herself, puts on white buck-skin boots and prepares to go to her mother's house where the young couple make their home for a while. She carries the large robe and belt in a rolled mat made of reeds bound together. After the wedding she uses the robes on ceremonial occasions and finally, the small one is wrapped around her body when death takes the little native woman to ''Maski,'' the Home of Hopi Souls.
       The indigenous people of the northwest coast seem to delight in color and movement. Perhaps their main thought is of the clan or family symbol which is expressed in totem poles, house fronts, house interiors, canoes, boxes and blankets. The Chilkats weave the most beautiful, fantastic blankets full of myths, and made in three colors: black, yellow, and greenish-blue. Although the women weave the blankets they are not supposed to be familiar with the designs and so copy them from patterns which have been drawn on boards by the men. The design contains the clan emblem and is usually of one or several animals so highly conventionalized that some natives themselves can hardly explain them.
       Not only the designs, but the materials used are different from those of other native blankets. The Chilkat woman takes the soft wool of the wild mountain goat and twists it around fibers of the inner bark of the cedar tree. These very strong threads of natural color are hung on the loom for the warp. The other threads, colored and containing no cedar fibers, are worked in and out of the strong warp threads. It takes about a year for a Chilkat woman to prepare the wool and weave one blanket, but it lasts for several generations.
       The weaving of Chilkat blankets is almost a thing of the past. The younger girls are not interested in spending so much time on robes whose ceremonial uses are almost forgotten. Only a very few old women are left who understand the art of weaving. Soon, even they will weave no more.
       Perhaps the best known of indigenous blankets are those made by the wandering Navahos. They practically live out-of-doors and the beauty of this is worked into their blankets. The women make these blankets, spinning the sheep's wool, dyeing it, and weaving it on hand looms. They often weave in crosses for good luck and symbols of the sun, moon, stars and lightning to bring the much needed rain.
       The colors worked into the blankets by the older Navahos were symbolic. They were considered sacred, ''gift of the best of their gods.'' Take for instance red - it means the blessed sunshine in which they move and live. No wonder these weavers love red and put the glorious warmth of it into their blankets. White stands for the early morning light which comes from the east and carries with it the hope of a new day. Blue stands for the cloudless afternoon sky in the south. The western sunset brings the yellows. Black comes from the far north where dark clouds gather and will, perhaps, bring the rain.
       Thus the Navaho woman of yesterday and today weaves her very life into her blankets. Often she sings the night chant as she works, ''With all around me beautiful, may I walk.''  Wood