Showing posts sorted by relevance for query peaches. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query peaches. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Sculpt Fruits from The Rose Family

Left, are the unpainted peaches. Right are the finished peaches painted with orange,
red, yellow and white colors.

       The first fruits we have crafted for our doll's farmers market from the Rose family include peaches and pears. They were made using Sculpey oven-bake clay and acrylic paints. In the future, I will upload many more photos of fruits from this family.

Left, the pear unpainted, simply sculpted with Sculpey. Right are the finished pears painted
green with hints of orang and red on their flesh. Each pear also has a brown stem and deeper
shade of green in their leaves
.
 
Rosaceae/Rose Family - It includes many edible fruits and herbs, shrubs, and trees. Most species are deciduous, but some are evergreen. They have a worldwide range, but are most diverse in the Northern Hemisphere. Read more...

Fruits From the Rose Family Include: Plums, Cherries, Peaches, Apricots, Almonds, Apples, Pears, Quinces, Apricots, Raspberries, Loquats, Strawberries, Rose hips, Hawthorns

Sunday, July 9, 2023

Peach

 
"Our family's not hard to suit,"
Said Mrs. Peach. "We're simple fruit;
We like most any kind of weather
If the sun shines, and we're together."

       Assemble a mini doll sized book: Right, is the peache's illustration and verse. Visitors can collect all the vegetable illustrations and verse from "Mother Earth's Children" to print and construct a small book of verse for their dolls. Simply drag each png. into a Word Document, print, cut out all of the images the same size and staple the pages together at the left edge. Squeeze out some white school glue along the stapled edge of the pages and attach a cardboard cover.
 
Back to the Mother Earth Index.

Thursday, July 18, 2019

How I Restored An "Our Generation Gourmet Kitchen Set"

The before and after photos of my "Our Generation Gourmet Kitchen." I papered the back
 splash, painted the burners, painted the lighter pink trim and shelving white, replaced the clock,
 covered the old hinges, added a view behind the window panes (free alternative here) and then
 papered hot pink shelves.
 
Restoring The Food and Accessories That Once Came With The Kitchen

Above are the vintage doll foods from Japan that I purchase from a local
estate sale. I paid fifty cents for two small, unopened bags. Each piece
measures approximately 3/4" across. Top Left fruit are: watermelon, pear,
pineapple, lemon, bananas, grapes, two apples, pomegranate and orange.
Top, Right breads are: two toasted cheese, three plain glazed donuts and
and one larger bagel. Bottom Left meats are: two hamburgers, hot dog,
two pork chops, Cornish hen, lobster and two fried eggs that are sunny-
side-up. Bottom Right vegetables are: two small iceberg lettuce heads,
two carrots, one tomato, one yellow onion, head of cauliflower, celery
stalks, one red beet, a cucumber, one green pepper and one lonely potato.
All of the play foods are made of paper mache and hand-painted. I don't
know a date but the packaging looked very old. One of the hamburgers
is marked Japan.  This tiny collection adequately replaces similar food 
 items that once came with the collection belonging to the Our Genera-
tion Gourmet Kitchen. In fact, I'd say it greatly improves it altogether.
       This doll kitchen set came with a large collection of food items. However, I was only able to purchase the single, larger unit from resale for $4.99.  So over a period of several weeks, I managed to collect & craft most of the following items to replace what once accompanied it. Below I've listed the original contents of the sets normally sold at Target, and now also at Amazon, so that visitors may also be encouraged to undertake a similar challenge.
       The bad news is, as you may also have noted, I did not obtain the original refrigerator with the used kitchen! The good news is that I will be making a DIY for a doll refrigerator in the near future and link it up to this post when it has been completed.
       I've included lists of those items accompanying three popular doll kitchen sets so that you can decide which of the three you might prefer to purchase in the future or, you could go the least expensive route like myself, and hunt one of these down at resale or on ebay. Printing the lists out and working off of these makes crafting or purchasing similar items easier. 
  • To see a review of the original Our Generation Kitchen set by IconaDollies. My set is the version with a hot pink kitchen counter. This review is of a red kitchen set with the same design features.
Above are custom grocery items made from my vintage label printables.
Shown here are: a sack of flour, country ham, Five Roses Cake Flour,
two bags of dried peas and two frozen packages of Ozark Strawberries.
The Original Food Items: Note - I have seen alternative, updated food sets for My Generation Kitchen set that come with egg trays + removable brown eggs, plastic milk cartons, butter with a transparent container and removable lid, a raspberry fruit basket, an additional skillet with a clear plastic lid, realistic salt and pepper shakers, a clear plastic cookie jar with a removable lid, a clear bottle of olive oil with a silver spout, peanut butter jar and Nutella jar etc... So depending upon when and where you purchased this set will determine what is included in your version of this play kitchen.
  1. colorful marshmallow flavored cereal box (empty)
  2. fruity crunch flavored cereal box (empty)
  3. a paper container for pretend orange juice (empty)
  4. hot chocolate mix, including 2 sachets inside
  5. a paper container for pretend milk (empty of course)
  6. 100 percent hamburger patties, freezer box (empty)
  7. rainbow pops made with 100 percent fruit juice (empty)
  8. a Sunday ice cream kit (empty)
  9. an egg container for 12 extra large eggs (empty) - farm fresh eggs here!
  10. a small empty bag for All Purpose Flour
  11. two 3 dimensional chocolate chip muffins
  12. two 3 dimensional cup cakes (red and blue icing) - see how we mad blue and red cupcakes with rosettes
  13. three chocolate chip cookies
  14. one small plastic can of tuna fish
  15. one small plastic can of peaches - fresh peaches here, not canned
  16. two small plastic sandwiches sliced in cross length shapes
  17. three plastic eggs stuck together
  18. a soft red plastic tomato
  19. a soft orange plastic orange
  20. a soft, red plastic pepper - peppers and tomatoes sculpted using oven-bake clay
  21. a wedge of Swiss cheese 
  22. a cardboard box of butter - handmade dairy items for play
The vintage labels for doll canned foods above include: yams, asparagus, pineapple, pickles, spinach, tuna
baking powder, pumpkin, and pet foods for both a dog and a cat. The copyrights for my versions of these
labels are free for people to print out and craft with but not sell. Link back to the originals if you wish but
don't republish or redistribute them from alternative other websites please.
Kitchen Dishes, Tools, Accessories & Decorative Items:
  1. a blue, transparent, plastic serving pitcher
  2. a pink plastic drying rack + the draining tray that accompanies such kitchen equipment
  3. a plastic cookie sheet
  4. a plastic muffin baking tin
  5. two blue plastic glasses that match the serving pitcher
  6. three plastic shakers with red, white and blue caps for spices
  7. a set of red plastic measuring spoons
  8. a plastic spatula with a blue handle and grey tip - doll kitchen utensils crafts
  9. a plastic spoon with a grey handle and blue tip
  10. a remote, plastic, red phone and charging unit (phone can be removed)
  11. a red, plastic hand mixer (grey beaters that are permanently attached)
  12. a plastic, soft soap dispenser (red lid, white container)
  13. white and red, plastic spray bottle for pretend cleaning fluid
  14. a grey frying pan with a red plastic handle - how to make doll sized pots, pans and skillets here
  15. two blue polka-dot plates made from plastic (polka-dots are white)
  16. a plastic, blue polka-dot mixing bowl (goes with plates)
  17. a white sponge for cleaning counter tops
  18. a transparent measuring cup
  19. two small decorative plants with attached plastic pots
  20. Three plastic, white canisters for: flour, sugar, and coffee beans (Traditional canister sets usually include four pieces, the fourth being used for tea) - spool craft canister set
  21. two red plastic soup bowls
  22. two tall, white plastic chocolate mugs (not coffee mugs, the shapes are traditional to hot chocolate sets crafted a couple of centuries ago) - how to craft hot cocoa
  23. one grey, plastic loaf pan - Our version of this craft here.
  24. a pale pink sink strainer ( These are made to fit over the top of a sink so that veggies and fruit may be washed thoroughly; directly under the faucet.)
These tiny granola cereal boxes are made from advertising on
the side panel of an actual cereal box. They are just the right
size for a Barbie doll. See how to make the same for 18" dolls.
*Note, the colors of items may vary according to the color combinations of your kitchen set.
*Second, many of items in all sets are doubled up to increase the count of how many accessories and pieces of food come in each play kitchen set. 
* I don't mention the kitchen hardware on the lists.

Here is a listing also of all kitchen items normally included with the Journey Girl Gourmet Kitchen set originally sold by Toys-R-Us. You can view the exact toy kitchen sets here by Just Craft It.

The Original Food Items:
  1. white, plastic milk carton - Doll dairy container crafts pictured here.
  2. one paper juice carton
  3. one box of butter (empty)
  4. three, orange plastic carrots stuck together
  5. three, yellow plastic bananas stuck together
  6. one plastic orange
  7. one red condiment bottle of ketchup
  8. one yellow condiment bottle of mustard 
  9. two plastic pieces of toast
  10. one green plastic head of lettuce - How to make Bibb lettuce for your dolls
  11. one red plastic tomato
  12. one brown, plastic chocolate cake sliced into four pieces - pretty pom-pom chocolate cake craft
  13. four chocolate cup cakes
  14. four sugar cookies iced with pink plastic - Our sugar cookie star versions with jelly filled, heart shaped centers...
  15. one large uncut sandwich
  16. one cardboard cereal box (empty)
  17. one box of processed macaroni and cheese (empty) - how to make pasta boxes for doll pantry...
  18. one plastic green celery or broccoli? - doll size celery handmade
  19. one box of Neapolitan ice cream for the freezer (empty)
  20. two boxes of frozen veggies (empty)
Our set of very realistic looking desert erasers are now
kept in the doll's kitchen. These include: ice cream cones,

ice cream pops, ice cream sandwiches and dishes of
ice cream.
Kitchen Dishes, Tools, Accessories & Decorative Items:
  1. a free standing, green colored mixer with matching beaters
  2. a grey, plastic mixing bowl
  3. one white plastic mixing bowl
  4. a set of pale green measuring spoons
  5. a green, plastic toaster - two versions of cardboard toaster crafts here
  6. a grey, plastic drying rack
  7. a grey, plastic ice cube tray (comes with 6 pieces of removable, heart shaped, plastic ice)
  8. a grey, plastic pot with a detachable lid
  9. two, green canisters with attached lids
  10. a pale pink, plastic cake stand
  11. two transparent containers with grey lids
  12. a grey cookie sheet
  13. two, red, heart shaped serving bowls
  14. a pale pink strainer
  15. two see-through plastic cups
  16. one lemon scented, liquid dish soap bottle
  17. a set of little salt and pepper shakers - button-top salt and pepper shakers here
  18. one plastic spatula
  19. one cookbook (doesn't have actual pages)
  20. two pale pink plates
  21. two pale pink coffee cups - Our paper tube coffee mug craft here.
  22. two see-through glasses
  23. one pink oven mitt
  24. one pink hot pad - braid vintage fruity potholders for dolls
  25. two sets of grey, plastic silverware including:one knife, one fork and one spoon - See how you can make silverware for dolls from cardboard here.
  26. a transparent measuring cup with a spout
  27. a pink hand mixer with attached grey, plastic beaters
  28. a green container for mixing spoons and spatula
  29. a plastic shaped bread box with a bread shaped lid
  30. a grey plastic cutting board
Our dolls now have a selection of sushi erasers to eat.
Last, but certainly not least, is a listing of all the supplies sold along with a Gourmet American Girl Doll kitchen set: Review by American Girl Spirit

The Original Food Items:
  1. one box of baking oats (empty)
  2. one box of apple cinnamon stars cereal (empty) - How to make cereal boxes for your dolls here.
  3. one box of pet food (empty) - Can labels for doll pet food here.
  4. one box of brown sugar (empty)
  5. one tiny box of baking soda (empty)
  6. four plastic chocolate chip cookies
  7. four plastic dark brown chocolate brownies - make rich chocolate brownies in a casserole here
  8. half a loaf of bread
  9. three slices of cut bread to insert into the toaster
  10. one green basket of strawberries (removable)
  11. one green basket of blue berries (removable) - Baskets of fruits with free pattern too!
  12. two canisters: one for flour and the other for sugar (clear plastic, contain glitter, color labels, non-removable lids)
  13. white plastic milk jug - Milk containers both glass and paper here...
  14. clear plastic olive oil bottle
  15. white plastic egg carton with eggs
  16. plastic butter on a blue butter dish (comes with a clear plastic lid) - See our dairy for dolls to learn how to make butter sticks.
  17. rolled out sugar cookie dough
  18. pet food and water (removable) - Dog water and food bowl craft here.
A collection of food shaped erasers are just the right size
 for our 18inch dolls. pizza slices, burger, hot dogs,
 fries and sandwiches all look delicious!
Kitchen Dishes, Tools, Accessories & Decorative Items:
  1. one grey square brownie tray - Our replacement versions here.
  2. one grey bread pan
  3. a green toaster that pops your doll's toast up and lowers it down with a built in spring - our craft version of toasters here
  4. one grey plastic skillet with a pink handle
  5. one grey plastic pasta pot with blue handles
  6. two dark pink soup/cereal bowls
  7. two white plastic plates with colorful designs
  8. two metal spoons
  9. two metal forks
  10. a salt shaker made of clear plastic and grains of salt
  11. a pepper shaker that looks like metal - button top salt and pepper shaker craft
  12. one plastic whisk (metal looking handle, rusty orange whisk)
  13. one plastic mixing spoon (rusty orange)
  14. one plastic rubber spatula (pink and grey)
  15. multi-colored measuring spoons
  16. grey plastic measuring cups
  17. one butter knife with metal looking blade and green handle
  18. a blue plastic recipe box
  19. a plastic pen for writing with
  20. note cards made of paper for recipe box
  21. eight spice jars with a sheet of sticker labels - Our replacements for doll sized spices...
  22. 2 clear plastic glasses
  23. one plastic rolling pin - Make your own rolling pin and sugar cookie dough here.
  24. one yellow mixing bowl
  25. one grey cookie sheet - My versions of a cookie sheet craft here.
  26. a polka-dot pink hot pad
  27. a polka-dot pink apron - Directions for sewing a simple doll apron here.
  28. a peach mixer that spins two alternative attachments: a whisk and a bread dough kneader
  29. a large mixing bowl with measurement markings on the side (clear plastic + handle)
  30. pink square trash can
See More Toy Kitchen Reviews for 18" Dolls:

Friday, May 5, 2023

Cherry Jam

        Aunt  Amelia  was  going  to  the  city,  shopping, and  Ellen,  with  Caroline,  was  to  stay  at  home.
       Ellen  didn't  mind,  for  she  had  a  busy  day  before her.  She  was  making  a  summer  house  for the  Popovers  out  under  the  apple  tree.  She  had gathered  little  stones  and  pebbles  wherever  she might  find  them.  She  had  a  whole  pailful,  a red  seashore  pail  filled  to  the  brim.  She  meant  to fence  off  a  bedroom,  a  living room,  and  a  kitchen for  the  Popover  family  that  very  morning.
       'The  Popovers  need  country  air,'  said  Ellen, 'and  this  is  the  best  air,  under  the  apple  tree.'
       Aunt  Amelia  and  Ellen  stood  on  the  porch steps  saying  good-bye.
       'Do  just  what  Caroline  tells  you,'  said  Aunt Amelia,  'and  perhaps  there  will  be  something in  my  bag  for  a  good  girl  when  I  come  home  tonight.'
       Ellen  put  both  arms  about  Aunt  Amelia's neck  and  hugged  her  close.
       'Do  you  think,'  whispered  Ellen,  "that  I could  have  jam  for  my  luncheon,  so  that  I  won't miss  you  so  much?  The  jam  we  had  yesterday is  all  gone.   Caroline  told  me  so.'
       Aunt  Amelia  nodded  with  a  smile.
       'You  certainly  may  have  jam  for  your  luncheon,' said  she,  'and  you  may  get  it  from  the preserve  closet  yourself,  if  you  like.  Do  you know  what  kind  you  want?'
       'Cherry'  answered  Ellen  promptly.  'It  is my  favorite.  And  I  will  know  it  on  the  shelf because  I  can  see  the  cherries  through  the  jar.'
       Ellen  waved  until  Aunt  Amelia  turned  the corner.  Then,  packing  the  Popovers  into  a  little brown  basket,  she  carried  them  out  under  the apple  tree.
       She  seated  them  comfortably  against  the  root of  the  tree  and  for  a  long  time  the  Popovers watched  Ellen  hard  at  work,  building  their summer  house.
       She  sorted  the  pebbles,  the  large  from  the small.  She  laid  them  in  long  lines,  as  straight  as a  string.  She  turned  the  corners  nicely,  with the  greatest  of  care.  And  when  Ellen  had  built a  bedroom,  a  living room,  and  a  kitchen,  she felt  warm  and  tired  and  quite  ready  to  stop.
       'I  think  I  will  go  down  now  to  the  preserve closet  after  my  jam,'  said  Ellen  to  the Popovers. 'And  you  must  come  with  me,  for  I  am  afraid  to leave  you  here.  Blinky  might  get you.'
       So  into  the  little  brown  basket  went  the  Popovers  and  down  into  the  cellar  trudged  Ellen, for  there  stood  the  preserve  closet,  as  Ellen  well knew.
       'Do  you  hear  Caroline?'  asked  Ellen  of  the Popovers  as  she  climbed  slowly  down  the  cellar stairs.
       Yes,  the  Popovers  heard  a  swish,  swish, swish  from  above,  though  they  made  Ellen no  answer,  but  stared  at  her  with  unwinking eyes.
       'That  is  Caroline  sweeping,'  said  Ellen.  'She is  upstairs  in  Aunt  Amelia's  room.  I  can  tell. She  is  busy,  so  she  mustn't  be  bothered  about the  jam.  Now  you  sit  down  on  the  floor  outside the  closet,  and  when  I  come  out  you  must  guess what  kind  of  jam  I  have.'
       The  Popovers  were  ranged  in  a  row  along  the closet  wall,  and  with  a  farewell  smile  Ellen pulled  open  the  door  and  stepped  inside.
       The  preserve  closet  was  built  across  one  end of  the  cellar.  It  was  lined  with  shelves,  and  on those  shelves  stood  jars  of  all  sizes,  filled  with all  kinds  of  good  things.
       There  were  jars  of  jelly,  currant  and  crab apple  and  grape.  There  were  pickled  peaches and  pickled  pears  and  pickled  water  melon  rind. There  was  orange  marmalade  and  peach  marmalade, and  great  jars  of  preserved  blackberries and  raspberries,  too.  There  was  quince  preserve and  plum  preserve.  There  was  jar  after  jar filled  with  pickles,  too.
       But  best  of  all  Ellen  liked  the  shelf  where stood  the  jams,  strawberry,  raspberry,  blackberry,  peach,  and  Ellen's  favorite,  great  tall jars  of  rich  red  cherry  jam.
       Straight  to  this  corner  went  Ellen,  and  after studying  the  jars  for  a  moment  picked  out  the tallest  jar  of  cherry  jam  that  she  could  find.
       Then  she  sat  down  on  the  chair  Caroline  kept in  the  closet  to  stand  on  and  held  her  jar  up  to the  light.  Although  Aunt  Amelia  called  this cherry  jam,  the  cherries  were  left  in  it  round and  whole  and  Ellen  could  see  them  plainly  as the  light  from  the  window  shone  through  the jar.  The  color  was  a  deep  ruby  red,  the  cherries looked  plump  and  sweet,  and  Ellen  was  so pleased  that  she  hugged  the  jar,  in  its  neat paper  cap,  close  in  her  arms  as  she  sat  far  back in  the  comfortable  old  chair.  She  thought  the preserve  closet  a  pleasant  place  in  which  to  rest a  moment,  and  so  it  was.
       In  the  first  place  the  room  was  as  neat  as  a pin,  not  a  speck  of  dust  anywhere.  Caroline would  not  have  it  otherwise.  Then,  too,  it  was cool  and  shady.   Yet  it  was  not  lonely  in  the least,  for  in  at  the  open  window,  closely  screened, nodded  the  ivy  that  covered  the  side  of  the house,  pink  flowers  from  the  Rose  of  Sharon bush  fluttered  sociably  down  on  the  grass,  and a  plump  brown robin  strutted  past  the  window, looking  so  important  that  Ellen  laughed  to  see him  go  by.
       Outside  the  closet  door  in  the  quiet  of  the cellar  the  Popovers  felt  sleepy.  Inside  the  closet in  her  comfortable  chair,  Ellen  felt  drowsy,  too.
       She  twisted  round  in  the  chair,  she  put  up  her arm  for  a  pillow,  and  with  the  cherry  jam  lying snugly  in  her  lap  Ellen  fell  asleep.
       Upstairs  Caroline  finished  her  sweeping.  She dusted  and  tidied  the  rooms.  She  swept  her  way down  the  stairs,  she  swept  her  way  through  the hall,  and  when  she  stepped  into  the  kitchen Caroline  looked  at  the  clock  and  saw  that  it  was past  the  hour  for  luncheon.
       'Ellen  will  be  faint  with  hunger,  playing  so nicely  out  under  the  trees,  too,'  thought  Caroline.
       She  made  haste  to  prepare  luncheon,  and presently  she  stepped  out  under  the  apple  tree to  call  Ellen  in.
       Of  course  there  was  no  Ellen  there,  not  even a  Popover  to  smile  up  into  Caroline's  face. Blinky  was  there,  stretched  out  asleep  in  the Popover's  dining room,  but  he  didn't  know where  Ellen  was,  even  if  he  could  have  told.
       Then  Caroline  called  to  Ellen,  over  and  over again,  and  Ellen,  asleep  in  the  preserve  closet, heard  not  a  single  sound.
       Caroline  hurried  into  the  house.  She  looked all  round  downstairs  and  upstairs  and  even  in the  attic.  And  she  saw  no  sign  of  Ellen  no matter  where  she  looked.
       Then  Caroline  became  frightened.  She  stood out  on  the  sidewalk,  gazing  up  and  down  the street.  Oh,  how  she  longed  to  see  the  figure  of  a little  girl  with  yellow  curls  and  a  blue  dress  come running  toward  her!  Oh,  how  she  wished  Aunt Amelia  had  not  gone  away !  Oh,  how  she  wished that  Uncle  Henry  were  at  home  to  help!  What should  she  do  next?  Where  should  she  look  for Ellen?
       While  Caroline  stood  there,  her  pleasant  face puckered  into  a  hundred  anxious  wrinkles, across  the  way  there  came  strolling  a  tall  policeman, swinging  his  stout  stick.
       Caroline  knew  him  well.  His  wife  was  the aunt  of  Caroline's  cousin.  So  Caroline  eagerly beckoned  Mr.  James  to  come  over  and  in  less than  two  minutes'  time  she  had  told  him  how Ellen  had  disappeared.
       'I  don't  think  she  has  gone  down  the  street,' said  Caroline,  shaking  her  head.  '  She  is  a  good child.  She  wouldn't  run  away.'
       'Let  us  go  through  the  house  again,'  said  Mr. James.   'I  think  we  shall  find  her  there.'
       So  Caroline  and  Mr.  James  went  through  the house,  and  Mr.  James  peered  in  places  where Caroline  had  not  thought  to  look,  behind  boxes and  in  closets  and  even  under  beds.
       At  last  the  cellar  was  reached  and  still  no Ellen  had  been found until the Popover family was seen leaning up against a wall near the cellar closet door. Soon Mr. James, Caroline and a very sleepy Ellen were reunited inside the cellar where jars of jams, pickles and jellies were stacked  for the winter.
      Caroline  hugged  Ellen  because  she  was  not  lost.  Then the  Popovers  were  put  in  their  basket  and  every one  went  upstairs,  Ellen  holding  fast  to  her  jar of  cherry  jam.
       Mr.  James  was  obliged  to  go,  though  Caroline and  Ellen  invited  him  to  stay  to  luncheon.  And Caroline  drank  four  cups  of  tea,  she  was  so  upset, and  Ellen  ate  all  the  cherry  jam  she  wanted.
       But  the  Popovers  were  the  happiest  of  all,  for when  they  were  alone  and  could  talk  outloud Mr.  Popover  said:
       'If  it  hadn't  been  for  us,  sitting  there  by  the closet  door,  Mr.  James  and  Caroline  might never  have  found  Ellen.'
       And  so  all  the  Popovers  believe  to  this  very day.

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Friday, December 10, 2021

Christmas Company

 CHRISTMAS COMPANY
By Harriet Whitney Symonds


I'm tarrible busy, I tell you, an' haven't a minute to play,
So, dollies, my dear little children, I'll just haf to tuck you away
An' leave you to 'muse one another (I know you won't quarrel nor fight),
'Cause company's cornin' for Christmas, an' mebby the'll get here to-night‚-
An auto-car cram-full of kinfolks, now what do yo think about that?
We're all in gret splutteration, from Grampa clean down to the cat.
The's bushels of cookin' to 'tend to; it's startin' in now- you can tell
By the simmery sounds in the kitchen, an' sniffin's of nut-meggy smell.
An' all Granny's crimpy tin cutters are set in a shiny-bright row;
We're gonto cut flowers an’ fishes an' birds out of ginger-bread dough,
An' a fat cooky-bear for the baby-the one that we never did see,
'Cause it's nearly bran-new, but they've named it Clarissy, for Granny an' me.
The mince-meat's all chopped; I helped Granny to make it, an' wasn't it fun!
I seeded the raisins an' currants, an' sampled it when it was done,
An' children as true as you're liven', it tasted just like it was made
Of clover an' honey an' peaches an' pansies that grow in the shade.
My Uncle Josiah is fixing to go after cedar an' pine
Right now, an' I got to go with him an' hunt for some bittersweet vine  
An' holly with shiny red berries to hang on the mantel an' wall,
For yon know that to-morrow is Christmas, the loveliest Birthday of all.
The house must be put into order, with everything spicky- an'-span;
My aunties an' Huldy are sweeping' an' dustin' as fast as they can;
So, dollies, be good little children, an' don't get to fretting' for me;
You see, on the day before Christmas, how busy your muvver must be!

Sunday, May 29, 2022

Fruits and Vegetables

        Fruits, as well as vegetables, have been important in man's diet since the beginning of civilization. What is a fruit? Generally speaking, a fruit is that part of a plant that bears seeds. There are three kinds of fruits: (1) fleshy fruits, which have their seeds in the pulp (apples, oranges, cucumbers); (2) stone fruits, which contain pits or stones (plums, cherries, peaches); and (3) dry fruits (beans, nuts).
       Fruits are found growing all over the world. All fruits, however, are not used in the same way. To  the people of the tropics, the banana, fig, coconut, date, and breadfruit are staple articles of food. These fruits are nourishing because they contain much protein. They are used as substitutes for meat and other protein foods.

Produce market in Spain.

       The apple is the most popular of fruits and has been cultivated from prehistoric times. No other fruit is found growing over as great an area as the apple. The United States is the greatest apple-producing country of the world, with the state of Washington leading all other states in output. The apple tree is hardy. It is able to grow in many different climates and in many kinds of soil. Its fruit has good keeping qualities.
       Second to the apple in popularity is the orange, with its relatives, the lemon, lime, and grapefruit. These citrus fruits are tropical plants; yet the United States leads the world in citrus fruit production. All citrus fruits have thick oily rinds that are bright orange or yellow in color. Citrus fruits are extremely sensitive to frost. Vitamin C, found in all citrus fruits, is valuable in preventing and treating colds.
       What is a vegetable? Frequently we use the word vegetable‚ in place of the word plant‚ for example, vegetable kingdom. Vegetables may be any part of the plant: the leaf stalk (rhubarb, celery), the leaves (spinach, lettuce, cabbage), or the root (carrots, beets, radishes). The root vegetables are especially high in energy value.
       The onion is one of the most widely used of vegetables. Although it neither looks nor smells like the Easter lily, the onion is closely related to it. The people of ancient China and India enjoyed the onion's pungent taste just as we do today and served onions both raw and cooked. Closely related to the onion and used for the same purpose are garlic, leeks, shallots, and chives.
       Some plant parts, such as peas, beans, tomatoes, peppers, okra, squashes, and avocados, are popularly known as vegetables although they are really true fruits. These fruit vegetables are used in salad dishes and main-course dishes. Probably the most popular of these foods is the tomato. Once known as the love apple, the tomato was long considered poisonous and was grown only for ornamental purposes. When people learned that the tomato was not poisonous it became very popular. Today, tomatoes are used in a greater variety of ways than any other vegetable.
       Vegetables are particularly nutritious because of their high vitamin and mineral content. Vitamins and minerals are substances found in many foods. They are necessary for the normal functioning of the body as well as for the development of sound teeth, bones, and other structures. The greater part of many vegetables is made up of water and much smaller amounts of sugar and starch. Because vegetables contain so much water they are sensitive to weather changes and tend to spoil easily.
       Fruits and green vegetables should have a place in every meal. Not only are these foods valuable in furnishing one's body with vitamins and minerals but they also give back much of the water lost through perspiration. 


Fruits vs Veggies by 2 Minute Classroom.

Monday, June 5, 2023

DIY Doll Farmer's Market Stand

Above is our families Farmer's Market Play Set. The rocker was handcrafted using cedar.
I do not know who made this; it was purchased at resale. At the stall is also a real mini
scale and doll sized calculator that we use to add up the cost of the produce.
  
 
        I honestly think this doll market set is more adorable than those sold in toy stores today. Which is a good thing, given the prices toy companies charge for them. Most all of the fruits and veggies shown on this post  were made by hand using Sculpey and then painted using acrylics. The cast iron stand and rocker were purchased at a flee market.  

"An abundance and great variety of vegetables and fresh green lettuces are flooding our
 doll's farmer's market. Fine homegrown corn and peppers for roasting are just a few our
 featured vegetables on display."

"Soon a delectable crop of peaches will arrive and every doll knows how marvelous
these taste with homemade ice cream during the summer months."

"Don't forget our berries make the very best fruit preserves for canning and no doll's
breakfast table should lack for blue berries served on top of their morning cereal!"

Our dolls market stall made from recycled crates.
 
     I've included from our crafted vegetable and fruit selections, the typical food items sold at a Mid-Western farmer's market during the summer months of June, July and August in the United States.  If you live abroad or in a Southern state or on an island, the selections you might include in your own toy market could look quite different from ours!

Edible Family Groups at Our Farmer's Market: veggies, fruit, nuts, legumes, herbs, grains, etc...

  1. Rose - Peach, Apricot, Nectarine, Apple, Pear
  2. Mustard - Cauliflower, Broccoli, Brussels sprout, Cabbage, Bok choy, Radish, Turnip, Red cabbage, Mustard greens
  3. Lily/Onion - Asparagus, Onion, Garlic, Leek, Green Onion
  4. Nightshade/Potato - Tomato, Potato, Sweet potato, Peppers (all varieties)
  5. Cucumber/Melon - Cucumber, Watermelon, Cantaloupe, Squash, Chayote
  6. Carrot - Carrots, Parsnips, Celery, Cilantro, Coriander, Fennel, Anise, Caraway
  7. Sunflower/Daisy - Artichoke, Lettuce, Sunflower
  8. Legume - Beans, Peas, Bean sprouts, Snow pea, Lentil, Jicama, Peanuts
  9. Goosefoot/Beetroot - Swiss chard, Spinach, Beets
  10. Palm (tags) - Coconut, Dates
  11. Mallows - Okra
  12. Zingiberaceae- Ginger root, Turmeric, Cardamon, Galangal
  13. Rhubarb - Rhubarb root
Left, heritage tomatoes. Center, chip wood baskets full of berries etc... Right, fresh basil.

Left, the Swiss Chard, mushrooms and butternut squash. 
Center, three kinds of potatoes: sweet, red and Idaho.
Right are the giant shallots.

Left, details of pears. Right, details of cauliflowers.

Left, one of our larger doll crates made using big tongue depressors. Right,
the watermelons are painted wooden eggs.

Left the sign details up-close. Right, the back side of our market sign left unfinished
for now... Wew! we are tired!

 Additional Crafts for The Doll's Farmer's Market:
We had so many fruits and vegetables to play with that we needed extra tables! See
how to make the larger one in the back here.

  More Market Stalls for Dolls:

What's cool about the farmers market? by Foodwise

More About Farmer's Markets:

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

3 Dolls from Hungary


  These dolls from Hungary are colorful as peacocks. The boys, Istvan and Feri, wear red boots. Their aprons are trimmed with lace and embroidered in brilliant colors. Each boy's jacket glitters with gold braid and bright buttons. Both wear plumes and red roses in their hats. Truly, there is enough cloth in their big sleeves to make dresses for small dolls. Their accordion-pleated trousers are as wide as skirts.
       Maria Theresa was named after a famous Hungarian queen. The remarkable thing about her way of
dressing is that she wears eight petticoats. Little girls often used to wear an even greater number.
       In Hungary these dolls belonged to a little Hungarian girl named Margaret. This little girl used to take the best of care of her dolls. She gave them good things to eat, cherries, apricots, peaches, apricot jam and candied strawberries.
       When their clothing became soiled, Margaret washed it in a nearby stream, just as her own clothing was washed.
       Margaret made feather beds and embroidered feather pillows for all three little doll beds. At night she helped her dolls to bed.
       On Sunday afternoons Margaret often took the dolls for long walks, so that they could see other children and other children could see them.
       Margaret was lonely for awhile after the dolls left for America, but now that she has a family of American dolls to care for and teach her the language, she seems busy and satisfied. Besides, she often hears from Maria Theresa, Istvan and Feri.

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

The Powhatan Natives

Reconstructed Powhatan village at the Jamestown Settlement 
living-history museum.
       One of the most famous stories in our American history centers about a fun-loving Indian girl known as Pocahontas. She is said to have saved the lives of Captain John Smith and other early English settlers when they aroused the anger of her father, the chief of the Powhatans. Later, she married an Englishman, went to England, and was received in London as a princess.
       The Powhatans formed a strong federation of tribes living in the region extending from the Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay inland to the fall line. The word Powhatan comes from "pawa tan" which means "falls in a current of water."
       When the English reached Jamestown in 1607, the tribes occupied some 200 villages. Each had from 50 to 500 families. The people lived in wigwangs. These were made of saplings thrust into the ground in an oblong shape and bent over at the top. When these had been securely tied with root strings, or with white oak thongs, they were covered with sheets of bark. Each village also had small huts shaped like beehives. Doors and windows were simply openings, which were closed with bark shutters in stormy weather. Fires were made by turning a dry, pointed stick about in a hole in a piece of dried wood. When it ignited, tinder was added and the blaze applied to the materials in the clay fire-hole in the center of the house. Smoke passed out through an opening directly above.
       The English were much surprised at the crops raised by their native neighbors. At first, they were friendly with the Indians, who supplied them with several kinds of corn, peas, melons, pumpkins, fruits and tobacco. The Indians were very fond of peaches which had been dried in the sun, and of sweet, juicy, green corn roasted in the ear before the fire. Bread was made of corn, wild oat or sunflower seed meal. No salt was used, but ashes of the hickory or of stickweed supplied the seasoning needed. Hominy was eaten by itself or cooked with fish or the flesh of animals. Barbecuing whole deer was a favorite means of celebrating a feast or ceremony.
       The Powhatans believed in a great spirit known as Okee or Kiwasa. This giver of all good things was thought to dwell in the heavens above. Images of this god were placed in their burial temples. They also worshipped many forces capable of doing them harm, such as fire, water, lightning and thunder. The priests and magicians controlled the life of the community.
       The divisions of the year, months and days were very interesting. If Pocahontas wished to tell that something happened at noon, she would say it occurred during the power of the sun; morning was - the rise of the sun; afternoon and evening, the lowering of the sun. Months were counted by moons. For instance, one was the moon of stags, another, the corn moon. We divide our year into four seasons, the Powhatans had five: the budding time; the roasting-ear time; the highest sun time; the corn harvest or fall of the leaf time, and the winter, or cokonk time. It was then they heard the call of the wild geese. Trading and account records were kept by means of knots on a string or by notches on a stick.
       Like other native tribes, they were fond of personal decorations. Copper pendants were their most prized possessions. Next came the necklaces, wristlets and kneelets of pearls, beads and shells. The usual dress of the men consisted of a fringed apron or mantle of deerskin belted at the waist. When on the warpath, their bodies were painted with designs fantastic and strange.
       Pocahontas and her brothers were very straight. At birth, they had been dipped head and ears in cold water and then bound onto boards which had coverings of cotton, wool or fur. Against the board the first years were spent. Often the board was hung from the limb of a tree. When the brothers grew up, their hair was cut so as to leave a short, stiff ridge standing up on top of the head exactly like the comb on the head of a rooster. Sometimes, the rest of the head was shaved, but usually the back hair was allowed to grow and fastened in a knot back of the left ear. The hair on the right side of the head was kept flat so as not to interfere when the Indian was using the bow and arrow.
       From the Powhatans, the Jamestown colonists learned how to hollow out trunks of trees and make them into dugouts for fishing, and how to plant and harvest the corn and beans which have become such important foods to Americans. Cornell

Monday, July 31, 2023

DIY pineapple upside-down-cake for dolls!

       To make these mini cakes for your dolls you will need the following supplies: cardboard scraps, Sculpey oven-bake clay, white school glue, acrylic paints, a paper napkin and puff paints. 

Above on the left are the finished upside down pineapple doll cakes, including maraschino
cherries inside of the pineapple rings; this is traditional in the United States. Maraschino
cherries are preserved and sweetened. Right is what our doll cakes look like on the bottom.
 These are single servings of cake, intended to be plated individually on dolly china.

       An upside-down cake is a cake that is baked "upside-down" in a single pan or skillet with its toppings at the bottom of the pan. When removed from the oven, the finished upside-down preparation is flipped over and de-panned onto a serving plate, thus "righting" it, and serving it right-side up.
       Usually chopped or sliced fruits like: cherries, peaches, or pineapples — melted butter, and crumbled brown sugar are placed on the bottom of the pan before the batter is poured in, so that they form a baked-on topping after the cake is inverted. A yellow cake batter is frequently used with these recipes. Boxed cakes are suitable for these recipes too; just replace the water with the juices of the fruits and add water to make up the difference when there is not enough fruit juice.
       The first American recipes for upside-down cake, using prunes, appeared in newspapers in 1923.
       In the United States, pineapple upside down cakes became popular in the mid-1920s after Dole Pineapple Company sponsored a contest for pineapple recipes. They received over 2,500 various submissions for the inverted pineapple cake and ran an advertisement about it, which increased the cake's popularity.

Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Cut the size of the cakes you prefer using the cardboard.
  2. Glue multiple pieces of these identical cuts together using white school glue. Let dry.
  3. Shape the pineapple rings using the Sculpey. Using a toothpick score the tops just as pineapple rings look when canned.
  4. Roll out a maraschino cheeries from the Sculpey and lightly press it into the center of your pineapple rings. Bake as directed. 
  5. After the clay, fruit elements have cooled, glue these onto the cardboard cake pieces. Let dry.
  6. Cut out, from paper napkin, the bottoms of the cakes to glue underneath. This rippling from the napkin makes the cardboard surface look more like cake. Let dry.
  7. Paint each cake yellow on the sides and bottoms.
  8. Now paint the fruits.
  9. Squeeze a butterscotch puff paint color on to the top of each cake to make these look like brown sugar toppings.

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

30 Vintage Labels for Crafting Doll Foods

The finished doll canned goods made for our American Girl Doll's food pantry.
        Here I have pictures of how I used my vintage labels to make canned goods for our American Girl Doll kitchen. You will need the following supplies to make the miniature doll foods: Mod Podge, white school glue, a printer, some thin cardboard (like cereal boxes), masking tape and silver acrylic paint.
       First you will need to print out the labels. These labels are very old, some of them date from as far back as 1915! I have cleaned, colorized and taken some of their elements out and improved some of the graphics. You may use them for your child's own doll food collection but, do not redistribute the labels from your own website. Read the terms of use here.
Left, cut out the labels. Center, cut long strips of cardboard to fit each individual canned food label
 after you have printed them out. Right, roll up the strips and tape the sides down once you have
 determined how tight these roll must be. It is not necessary for the rolls of cardboard tube to be as
 dense as you see them above here. These miniature cans are quite durable enough for play if they
 have much thinner interior walls.
       Next, cut a strip of cardboard for each canned food label measuring approximately sixteen inches in length and the width of the label's height. It is very important that you use relatively flimsy cardboard for this project. Because next you will need to roll it into the shape of a tube.
       You can 'soften' the cardboard up a bit by crushing it against the edge of a table. This will help it to curl up easier. Roll it up tight and then hold it between the tip of your index finger and thumb while wrapping the label around the cardboard form to see the size ratio of the cardboard can. If it is too small and the label overlaps too much, simple release the grip of your finger tips gently to let the cardboard spring out a bit. Use a piece of masking tape to stick the sides together once you have determined how thick the can shape needs to be.
       Set the tube on top of a piece of cardboard scrap and then drip white school glue down inside the tube. Allow the glue to dry. When it is dry, trim the bottom of the can and turn it over to glue a top piece of cardboard onto the remaining open end.
       Now apply the labels with Mod Podge. Let the glue dry and repeat several more layers of Mod Podge. If you don't have anything but white glue, you can use this to seal the labels as well. The Mod Podge just dries clearer.
       To give your canned food a professional look, paint the tops and bottoms of each can with grey or metallic silver paint.
Left and Center are the canned foods tubes lined up and waiting to dry before I trim the cardboard,
flip them over, and glue on a top for each. Right, is a photo of how the label will fit around the rolled
 tube once I apply the Mod Podge.
       Some of my food labels are for products that come in bags and frozen box food stuffs. I will post how I turned these into miniature groceries on a separate blog post and link it up below.
Food labels for asparagus, dill pickles, pineapple, cat food, strawberries, and pears.
Food labels for coffee, a sugar cured ham, a large sack of flour, spinach,
 apple sauce, pumpkin and peaches.
Food labels for cake flour, dried peas, evaporated milk, yams, 
dog food, loaf of artisan bread and tuna.