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

Friday, August 3, 2018

DIY Pool Floats for Your Doll

This inflatable, Barbie pool with solid colored pool floats dates from the mid seventies. It is in excellent condition.
The straw float craft is an easy one, but like most of the crafts included here, children need adult supervision to complete it.
        Now is the time for having some fun in the sun with your dolls! Above is an inflatable pool and blue floats from my childhood collection. The straw floats with alternating colors are easy to make at home. But you will need adult supervision because these are melted together using a hot iron.

Supply List:
  • drinking straws
  • parchment paper (to protect the iron and other surfaces from melted plastic)
  • iron and ironing board
  • scissors
  • clear plastic bags (this will act as a layer of glue)
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Choose a pattern you would like for the pool floats. I alternated purple and green straws for one pool float and teal and red straws for the other.
  2. Heat up your iron to it's highest temperature, and ask your parent to watch and help you in your progress.
  3. Lay a sheet of parchment paper on the ironing board. The parchment will separate the straws from the hot iron and keep the appliance clean from melted plastic. The parchment is very necessary for this craft.
  4. Lay the straws side by side and then layer a sheet of plastic bag on top of the straws and fold the parchment paper over the straws before pressing them with the hot iron.
  5. Press down on top of the parchment with the hot iron. It only take a few seconds to melt the straws together.
  6. Now lift the parchment and remove the melted straws carefully.
  7. Turn off the iron.
  8. Trim the excess plastic around the edges of the straws. Turn the straws over; the front side of your melted straws should not appear melted.
  9. You can trim the edges of the straws with scissors if these are uneven.
  10. Now your 12" dolls have new floats for the pool to play with!
Left, fold the parchment paper over the straws before pressing them with the hot iron. Center, Trim the excess plastic
 around the edges of the straws. Turn the straws over; the front side of your melted straws should not appear melted.
Right, Now your 12" dolls have new floats for the pool to play with!

Saturday, October 3, 2020

The Silent Pool

 THE SILENT POOL

Away in the wood where it's dark,
There's a pool that is purplish green,
With whispering rushes around,
That murmur of things they have seen.

I once lay and listened all night,
And heard why the pool lies alone;
Not even a fairy goes near
And only the sad rushes moan.

I heard how there once lived a witch,
Who weaved wicked spells night and day,
And used the pool's purplish deeps
For things which I wouldn't dare say.

Then one day she vanished and went,
And never was seen any more,
But silent and still lay the pool,
And darker than ever before.

No fairy knows what the pool holds,
And none guesses what secrets lie
Hid safely away in its deeps.
But shuddering, all pass it by.

Take heed when you go through the wood,
And pass where the pool lies alone -
Not even a fairy goes near,
And only the sad rushes moan! 

by Enid Blyton

Friday, May 27, 2022

How to sew doll swimsuits using socks...

This Wellie Wisher doll, Kendall, wears a
cute purple and pink striped swimsuit made
from a sock. There are straps for the suit 
that tie around the neck to hold it in place.

       Young girls can design cut and fashion small socks into swim wear. Pictured here is one of our Wellie Wishers and a Best Friends Club Doll, Addison, modeling different variations of this simple sewing craft.
       The swimsuits when made of socks need to have their raw edges sewn down tightly or these will unravel. Sewers may also use a glue made especially to prevent this called No Fray, Dritz Fray or Sit n Sew as an alternative.
       I chose pastel striped socks for our dolls to wear but socks come in so many different, colorful designs these days, it's difficult to choose which print to try for this simple craft.
       I cut the sock straight across where the leg and heal come together. Then I slip this tube onto the doll's body to measure where the leg openings should be and the top of the bathing suit should end.
       Next I sew a small seam between the legs and finish all of the openings with seams both at the bottom and top of the sock tube.
       Finally, I sew on ribbon or straps to hold the swimsuits on the dolls body.

More Ideas for Crafting Doll Swimwear:

Day At The Pool for Dolls:

Our Addison doll wears a bathing suit made from a green and white striped sock. It is trimmed 
at the top with calico print, cotton ribbon and has a snap in the back to tighten and close the 
swimming suit snug against her body.

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Learn About Environmental Activism With Kailey Hopkins

American Girl Doll, Kailey Hopkins,
came with only one book, simply titled
"Kailey" by Amy Goldman Koss.
       Kailey Hopkins lives near tide pools in California and is an avid swimmer and surfer. When development threatens to destroy the tide pools she loves and surfs in, she and her best friend engineer a protest to make a difference. Kailey's collection included various beach outfits and accessories. She was the second girl of the year, released in 2003, retired in 2004.
Our Artifacts for the Kailey Hopkins Doll:
Themes Associated With Kailey's Story:
Saving Our Shorelines:
Learn About Tide Pools:
Research How Women Can Make A Difference Through Environmental Activism:
  1. Learn About Dana Miller director of Grow Local Colorado.
  2. Sylvia Earle pioneered a movement called Mission Blue for ocean exploration.
  3. Winona LaDuke is the Executive Director of Honor the Earth and White Earth Land Recovery Project at the White Earth Reservation, Minnesota. A Fight for the People's Land.
  4. Climate activist Anna Jane Joyner working with the Western North Carolina Alliance and co-founder of creation care alliance and videos from The YEARS Project.
  5. Dr. Bhatt works with many women through the Navdanya Project ("nine seeds") in order to save seeds for biodiversity conservation. This foundation from Dehradun, India.
  6. Read about One Plastic Bag, a recycling movement that began with Isatou Ceesay.
  7. Theo Colborn, was the Founder and President of The Endocrine Disruption Exchange (TEDX), in Eckert, Colorado. "Our mission is to reduce the production and use of chemicals that interfere with healthy hormone function." TEDX website.
  8. Professor Wangari Maathai founded the Green Belt Movement (GBM) in Nyeri, Kenya. 
  9. May Boeve helped start a website called 350.org.
  10. Katherine Hayhoe, a climate scientist has an interesting website for her research here.
  11. Joelle Novey (interviewed) is the executive director of Greater Washington Interfaith Power and Light.
  12. Maggie Fox is the President and CEO, Climate Protection Action Fund or ACE. Their mission, "We educate young people on the science of climate change and empower them to take action."
  13. Majora Carter is an American urban revitalization strategist and public radio host from the South Bronx area of New York City. Carter founded and led the non-profit environmental justice solutions corporation Sustainable South Bronx from 2001 onward, before entering the private sector in 2008.  Visit the Majora Carter Group.
  14. Read Jessica Posner's Story and visit Shining Hope for Communities, Kenya  
  15. See film by Bata Bhurji and visit Barefoot College in Rajasthan, India
Crafts for Kailey Hopkins Doll:

    Friday, September 14, 2018

    Collage a Baby Swimming Pool for Your Dolls

    First, apply the stickers to the inside walls of
    the transparent container.
           It's fun to make this simple craft with containers you can recycle from your own kitchen. Cover it with fishy stickers and just a bit of paint and your ready to have a splashing good time with your dolls.

    Supply List:
    • a recycled food dish (plastic)
    • fish stickers
    • blue paint
    • Mod Podge
    • decorative paper (mine had printed tiles)
    Step-by-Step Instructions:
    1. Clean the discarded, transparent food container with warm soap and water. Let it dry.
    2. Adhere stickers on the inside of the container.
    3. Apply Mod Podge to the inside of the container over the stickers. Let the glue dry between several applications.
    4. Paint the outside of the container with blue paint and let this dry.
    5. Decoupage clippings from a decorative sheet of paper on the exterior of the container if you want even more detail on the baby doll pool.
    6. Layer Mod Podge on top of the outside walls as well.
    Both Above and Below, you can see our Mary Kate doll baby sitting and having fun with the baby doll pool.

    Wednesday, June 24, 2020

    12 Fascinating Creatures Of The Surf

    Sea anemones, Anthopleura sola engaged in a battle for territory
           Millions of tiny plants and animals that live in the sea are brought to shore by the tide. They make up the food supply of the animals that live near the beach. Shore-dwelling animals must be prepared to grasp this food and must also be able to live through the time when the tide is out. Consequently, the animals of the surf have developed very interesting forms and habits to meet these conditions. Some float in the water and are washed about by the waves; others cling to the rocks; some have hard coverings that prevent evaporation and give protection, while others have no coverings and therefore burrow down into the sand or mud along the beach.
    1. The Sea Anemone has a soft body and can slide along the rocks, but usually it holds fast to the rocky ledge and looks more like a flower than an animal. It's long tentacles may be white or blue or red and look like flower petals as they wave about. They sting and grasp tiny animals for food.
    2. Jellyfish, that float in the sea, may be as much as two feet in width. From the opened, umbrella-like top hang numerous tentacles with cells that sting their prey until it is numb. 
    3. The Portuguese Man-of-War is one of the most beautiful of the larger jellyfish. His bright red top is very noticeable.
    4. Barnacles, protected by conical shells, cling to rocks or any hard object partially covered by the sea. Through a hole in the top of the shell, the barnacle gets its food as the water washes over it. The hole can be closed during the time when the barnacle is exposed to the air. 
    5. Among the barnacles, as well as on the sandy beach, are thousands of pointed periwinkles. Like the true snail, the periwinkle carries its house on its back and moves very slowly by putting its one foot forward and drawing its body up to the foot.
    6. The shore snail has eyes and it can look out and up to see what is going on as it slowly “one-foots” along over the sand. The traveler keeps an eye out for danger, for at any moment a crab may come along, and then—woe unto the snail.
    7. The Hermit Crab has no shell over the soft, hind part of its body, and if it does not provide protection, it may be eaten by some hungry creature. Therefore it fits itself into a snail shell.
    8. The Fiddler Crab has an oversized claw on one of its front feet. This is its weapon of defense and with this claw it also protects the female. A large company of Fiddler Crabs is a funny sight. They walk along together until something frightens them, and then, as one body, they move from one side of the road to the other until they get close to their homes. Then they suddenly break rank and scoot for cover into their burrows.
    9. Some bits of broken shell, sand and seaweed cemented together may be a chimney that leads to the underground home of a sand-burrowing worm. One of these worms is a beautiful creature clad in steel-blue armor with red plumes on the upper part of its body. With long, tapering tentacles it reaches out for the tiny creatures in the sand that make up its food supply.
    10. The five-rayed starfish is common along the shore. There are starfish with as many as forty rays but such starfish are rare on the beach. When a starfish comes into a neighborhood, all the clams close their shells or hurriedly dig into the sand, for they are well aware that they may become its victims if it is hungry. With its long rays it can pull their shells open, and with its mouthlike stomach it can draw the soft bodies of its victims from their coverings.
    11. Sea Urchins, of which Sand Dollars are a flat form, are cousins of the starfish, but they eat plants instead of animals. They draw in mud from the floor of the shallow water where they stay, and from the mud they get the plants. The Sea Urchin is globe-shaped with long, stiff spines, and the Sand Dollar is a flattened disk with short, soft spines. Both walk more by means of their spines than by their tube feet. 
    12. Another cousin of the starfish is the Sea Cucumber, a long, cylinder-like creature with a fringe of tentacles around its head. When it moves it stretches forward, then pulls its body up to its head, much as a worm crawls. If an enemy approaches, the Sea Cucumber throws away some of its' body parts to scare off the intruder—a very effective defense. Later it can grow new parts to take the place of those thrown out. Thomas.
    More About Animals Of The Surf:
    The site of a tide pool in Santa Cruz, California showing sea starssea anemones, and sea sponges.

    Monday, August 14, 2023

    The Fairy School

    The Fairy School by Marjorie Barrows

    At goldenrod and aster time
    The fairies near our pool
    Put on some freshly laundered wings
    And flutter off to school.

    They sit at little toadstool desks
    And do their fairy sums,
    And learn to color autumn leaves
    Before the frost king comes.

    And then they study very hard
    So they can spin cocoons
    And sing the flowers all to sleep
    With little bedtime tunes.

    They'd fluttered home for tea today
    When I went past the pool,
    But I almost saw the fairy dunce
    Staying after school!

    Monday, February 12, 2018

    Make a Waterfall from Papier-mâché...

    Children can make some very charming toys from papier-
    mâché. I must warn you, however, once they get started on
     projects like this one, their enthusiasm has no boundaries!
           Do your little ones collect dinosaurs to play with? Most American children love plastic dolls like these and what better craft activity for busy little hands than one that helps them to explore and shape a world where their toys can come to life?
           Gather the following supplies from your craft supply to begin shaping a similar "waterfall" for your plastic toy dinosaurs, jungle animals or action figures:

    Supply List:
    • a tall, empty circular can (like a oatmeal box)
    • masking tape
    • white school glue
    • green tissue paper
    • brown paper bags
    • brown paper that reminds you of rock textures
    • fabric that looks like printed water
    • newsprint
    • Mod Podge (optional)
    • a small paint brush
    Step-by-Step Directions:
    1. Start by forming the shape of a papier-mâché cliff from crushed newsprint, masking tape and an empty oatmeal carton. Crushing and mashing newspapers into round rock shapes is easy to do.
    2. Wrap your rock shapes with masking tape as you go and attach these to the empty oatmeal can in a random placement. Don't worry about the tape so very much until you've got a cliff that you like. This is a messy project!
    3. When you have finished with something acceptable, neatly apply small pieces of masking tape to the entire structure. Overlap some of the masking tape as you go.
    4. Now cover the entire form with generous smears of white glue and shredded brown paper bags. You are essentially layering the paper in order to strengthen your form. Let this dry overnight.
    5. After everything has dried, you are going to decorate the structure by alternating green tissue paper and the brown or grey looking paper that has texture. Use white glue or Mod Podge to attach the paper to the papier-mâché surface. 
    6. Attach the fabric that looks like water to an area of the papier-mâché cliff where you think it might be running between the rocks. I shaped a little pool at the bottom of my cliff where my dinosaurs could drink.
    7. Apply a generous amount of glue to the entire surface of your finished waterfall to give the overall project strength. After the surface has dried, store your papier-mâché in a large plastic tub along with your dinosaurs and play mats. Special storage not only keeps your toys picked up, but helps to preserve them for future play as well.
    Above, you can see the stages of application for my papier-mâché water fall. I used a bit of artist's gel to apply the fabric water because I was worried about it adhering well. However, I found that after many applications the Mod Podge  and white Elmer's glue worked just as well. Don't be afraid to experiment with different glues, you'll find that there is a big difference in the cost of this project depending upon which glue you choose.
    A toy stegosaurus followed by his euoplocephalus companion drink from the papier-mâché pool below. 
    A tapejara balances at the top of the cliff waterfall.
    Craft projects like these are excellent ways for older siblings to make a special gift for a
    younger brother or sister's birthday or other holiday celebration like Christmas.
    Close up of the textures used in the papier-mâché water fall.

    How to make a more advanced waterfall model...

    Monday, February 13, 2023

    DIY Noah's Ark Valentine Mail Box

    Mini Noah's Ark Valentine Mailbox

           I've include a Noah's ark Valentine mailbox for those of you who are nostalgic about Sunday toys.

     Supply List:

    • faux printed wood grain paper
    • white school glue
    • masking tape
    • cardboard
    • faux water printed paper
    • black acrylic paints
    • tiny bit of oven-bake clay to shape a small dove
    • a bit of wire and green paper to make an olive branch

    Step-by-Step Instructions:

    • First you will need to cut and shape a simple boat shaped box. I made my version of Noah's ark to look like a capital letter "A" with a closed end. 
    • Then I cut an arched doorway from the side and took that cut door, bent it down and pasted it to a second piece of cardboard cut to look like a large pool of water. This pool serves as a stand for the ark.
    • Next, you will need to shape a simple 'house' with four sides and a ''V'' shaped roof. 
    • Decoupage the entire boat with faux ''wood'' printed paper.
    • Paint the interior of the ark shaped mailbox black.
    • Cut small portal "heart" shaped windows for the boat and paste them across the center of the ark's boat shaped walls.
    • Use a permanent ink marker to draw and color in the tiny details that are too difficult to cut from paper.

    Left, the front of the ark mailbox in progress. Right, the backside of the ark.
     
    Left details of the ark shape. Right, the masking tape holds everything together until the mini
    Valentine mailbox can be decoupaged.

    A side view of the Noah's ark shows a door and heart shaped portals on the ark. The water acts
    as the stand for this Valentine mailbox craft.

    More Noah's Ark Crafts:

    You can cast a vote for this Valentine mailbox entry in the Comments Box Below, if you'd like. It would be interesting to see if people/kids on the internet judge our doll's Valentine mailbox competition in the same way as the children judging them in our home.

    Thursday, February 17, 2022

    DIY A Rainbow Candy Surprise Cake for Dolls!

    This rainbow sponge cake has been sliced open to reveal doll sized candies at it's center!

           This rainbow sponge cake stuffed with doll sized candies would make an awesome cake for an A G doll Birthday or maybe even an excellent desert accessory for a doll's St. Patrick's Day party! However, I didn't use actual sponges to craft the layers with; I made it with cardboard instead. It is definitely not the easiest doll cake that I have ever made. I suggest this DIY to an older sibling or parent to make.

    Supply List:
    • two cardboard tubes, one larger than the other
    • Styro foam beads, multi-colored
    • cotton balls (maybe two)
    • white school glue
    • masking tape
    • corrugated scrap cardboard
    • acrylic paints in all the colors of the rainbow
    • decorative paper
    • lid for the cake plate stand
    • large rubber bands
    • white lace for the cake's top icing 
    Step-by-Step Instructions:
    1. To construct this unique rainbow colored cake you will first need to acquire two cardboard tubes. I made this cake using a bread crumb container and a toilet role tube. Cut down the bread crumb tube to approximately 3 1/2" in height. 
    2. I used a circle measuring 4" across for the lid to this outer tube. I cut away, approximately two inches wide, a pie shaped opening from this lid, so that my cake would look as though two pieces had been cut from it already. Of course the excess sides of the outer cake needed to be trimmed off so that the outside edges would reflect a corresponding opening to the lid.
    3. Then I glued and taped this outter tube to a masked and decoupaged lid representing the cake stand in this case.
    4. The next step was to insert a narrower tube of the same height inside the opening. I crushed newsprint to fill the open space around the inner and outer gap between the two shapes and then masked the opening between the two to form flat walls on either side. These walls became the cake layers.
    5. The inner tube should have glue applied to it's upper and lower walls where the top and bottom of the insides meet between the tube and the lid and cake stand. Let this dry.
    6. I unraveled a cotton ball and layered it onto the walls to with white school glue to give the cake layers some added texture. 
    7. I cut another wall from corrugated cardboard to glue onto the outside of my cake. Corrugated cardboard having three separate pieces may be dismantled to reveal an interesting linear texture if you carefully remove one half of the wall. You can see from the photo below that I had to wrap two large rubber bands around the cake to hold this corrugated cardboard against the sides of the larger outside tube while it dried. I wanted this unique texture on my cake, but if you feel it is two complex to attempt, smoother walls will look nice too.
    8. Next, you will need to pool the white glue and add plenty of the Styro-foam beads to the interior of this faux cake. These tiny beads may be purchased from a family dollar store.
    9. I painted the layers of this doll cake with rainbow colors: green, pink, purple, blue and orange. Be careful to separate your layers with white icing between!
    10. Then I also painted the outside of my cake with those same colors.
    11. I used a hot glue gun and stick to attach rows upon rows of lace to the lid of the cake top and then used white glue to paste on a few Styro-foam beads for the finish.

    Left, here you can see that I used rubber bands to hold layers of the cake form together while it dried
     hard enough for me to proceed further. Right, the backside of the cake will have rainbow stripes
    with texture as well. This cardboard siding comes from the interior of a corrugated cardboard piece.

    Left, the cake seen from above. I have yet to paint the layers of the sponge. Right I glued on the white
    lace icing before painting the cake actually, but this should be done last for cleaner results, if you are
    not an experienced painter. I glued on the tiny Styrofoam balls with white school glue. You do not want
    to glue these using hot glue, they will melt! Pool the white glue in the inner tube, add the fake candy
    and lay the faux cake on it's side to dry overnight. When it is done drying, the cake should look like
    it's just been sliced and the candy has tumbled out.

    Above are three views of the rainbow cake taken at different angles.

    Cynthia Vera made this real awesome rainbow surprise cake! 

    Visit her YouTube channel to see even more recipes 

    Tuesday, May 9, 2023

    The Blackbird

    Collect all pages-cleaned and sized to make a miniature
    book for your dolls
    .

    Assemble a mini doll sized book: Right, is the Blackbird's illustration and verse. Visitors can collect all the bird illustrations and verse from "Bird 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.

    Flitting 'round the swimming pool,
    Where the air is nice and cool,
    Red-winged Black Bird sings in glee:
    "Gloogle-ee, Gloogle-ee-e."
     
    Additional Authors: 
     
    THE BLACKBIRDS' HOME

           Jim was a careless boy. He hung the Gardener's basket on a nail on the wall, and forgot all about it for several days. Then, the Gardener missed it, and Jim was sent to look for it. When he came back without it, the Garderner was angry.
            "Please, sir," said Jim, "the basket's on the wall right enough, but there's a nest in it, and a blackbird sitting on it, and I hadn't the heart to hurt her."
           "That's right, Jim," said the Gardener, laughing. "We'll let the little mother have a house rent-free for a bit, I think."
           After a time, the little ones were hatched - four of them. At last, their feathers appeared, and it was time for their first flying lesson.
           "Tomorrow we will begin," said the Mother Bird, and the babies cheeped for delight. They made such a fuss, indeed, that the smallest one got pushed close to the edge of the nest, and, before the parents had noticed it, the poor mite tumbled out onto the ground!
           In a moment, the big gray Persian Cat basking in the sun on the lawn, sprang up and ran towards the poor chirping birdie. The parent Blackbirds shrieked so loudly in their grief that the Gardener and Jim both stopped digging. Jim picked up the frightened little creature, and put it gently back in the nest.
           And Mistress Pussy was chased away in disgrace, and kept out of the garden till all the little Blackbirds had flown away for good.
           "After all," said Father Blackbird that evening to his wife, " it was a lucky thing we took this house. We never had such a nice big one, and the Gardener and Jim have been very pleasant neighbors."
           And all the Birds about the farm, even to the cross old Turkey-cock, agreed that Jim was the very nicest kind of a boy. Henry Altemus Company.

    MIRANDA AND THE BLACKBIRD.

    HEAR the song of Yellow Beaky!
    (That's the Blackbird's other name.)
    See his sparkling eyes so cheeky!
    (Mister Impudence is tame.)

    He is singing to Miranda
    (Who is getting well from mumps:)
    "Come and play on the veranda,
    And forget about those lumps!

    "Sing a song of Blackbirds,
    All have fled but two;
    And Yellow Beak and Bright-eyes
    Have stayed to sing to you."
     
     Additional Content About Blackbirds:

    Tuesday, May 2, 2023

    The Rude Bag of Clothespins

            Mr.  Popover  lay  on  the  floor  under  Aunt Amelia's  dining-room  table.  Ellen  had  dropped him  there  not  five  minutes  ago.
           She  had  carried  all  the  Popover  family  down to  the  dining room  to  play  at  ice-skating  on  the slippery  polished  table.  But  perhaps  because it  was  a  warm  afternoon  the  Popovers  didn't seem  to  feel  like  skating.  They  wouldn't  or  they couldn't  stand  upon  their  feet,  and  as  for  taking hold  of  hands  and  gliding  gracefully  about  over the  ice,  Ellen  simply  couldn't  make  them  understand how  it  was  done.
           "Perhaps  we  had  better  play  that  this  is  a swimming-pool,'  said  Ellen  at  last.
           She  slipped  off  the  warm  pink  flannel  coat  that Mr.  Popover  was  wearing,  but  before  she  could prepare  the  rest  of  the  family  for  a  dip  in  the waves  Ellen  heard  Aunt  Amelia  calling  to  her.
           'Ellen,  where  are  you?.'  called  Aunt  Amelia. 'Come  upstairs.   I  want  you.'
           Ellen  hastily  bundled  the  Popovers  into  the skirt  of  her  dress  and  ran  with  them  up  to  the playroom.  She  knew  Caroline  would  be  far  from pleased  to  find  her  neat  dining-room  in  disorder. But  Ellen  was  in  such  a  hurry  that  she  did  not see  Mr.  Popover  slide  out  of  her  dress  and  roll under  the  table,  nor  did  she  miss  him  when she  tucked  the  Popovers  into  their  Little  Red House.
           At  first  Mr.  Popover  didn't  mind  lying  there on  the  floor.  It  seemed  cool  and  restful  to  him after  the  trouble  he  had  had  trying  to  learn  to skate.  He  was  glad  to  be  rid  of  the  hot  pink coat,  too.  But  presently  Mr.  Popover  felt  lonely. Why  didn't  Ellen  come  back  and  pick  him  up? He  had  done  his  best  to  skate  and  please  Ellen. It  was  high  time  that  Ellen  did  something  to please  him.
           A  fly  came  walking  delicately  over  the  rug toward  Mr.  Popover.  Here,  at  least,  was  some one  to  whom  he  could  talk,  and  Mr.  Popover had  just  opened  his  mouth  to  speak  of  the  heat when  into  the  room  from  the  kitchen  bustled Caroline.
           She  pulled  down  the  dining-room  shades  to keep  out  the  sun,  and  the  foolish  fly,  instead  of
    sitting  still  and  unseen  under  the  table,  buzzed his  way  over  to  the  windowsill  under  Caroline's very  eyes.
          'Ugh,  a  fly!'  said  Caroline.
           And  flapping  her  apron  she  drove  him  away from  the  window,  under  the  table,  and  out through  the  kitchen  door.
           As  she  chased  little  Buzz-Fuzz  out  of  the room,  Caroline  spied  Mr.  Popover  lying  on  the floor  under  the  leg  of  the  table.
           ' How  in  the  world  did  a  clothespin  get  in  my dining room?'  said  Caroline.
           She  hadn't  an  idea  that  this  was  Mr.  Popover.  She  didn't  notice  his  little  face  -  his  two black  eyes,  his  dot  of  a  nose,  his  tiny  mouth. And  as  Mr.  Popover  was  dressed  for  the  water in  nothing  at  all  but  his  dark  brown  skin,  he looked  to  Caroline  like  a  plain  ordinary  clothespin and nothing  more.
           So  Caroline  picked  up  Mr.  Popover  and carried  him  into  the  laundry,  and  there  she dropped him  into  the  blue-and-white  striped bag,  hanging  on  the  wall,  in  which  Caroline kept  her clothespins.
           'Dear  me!'  said  Mr.  Popover,  as  he  tumbled head-first  into  the  bag.  'Where  am  I  going  and what  has  happened  to  me?'
           The  other  clothespins  in  the  bag  didn't  say a  word.  They  drew  away  from  Mr.  Popover  and stared  him  up  and  down.
           Mr.  Popover  gazed  eagerly  about,  hoping to  see  a  familiar  clothespin,  one  who  had  held clothes  on  the  line  with  him  when  he  had  been a  boy.  But  though  he  looked  from  one  to  another, over  and  over  again,  he  didn't  see  a single  friendly  face.  They  all  seemed  very  young clothes-pins  to  him,  light  and  clean  and  small, not  one  so  old  and  dark  and  tall  as  he.  And  so it  was.  The  clothespins  who  had  held  clothes on  the  line  with  Mr.  Popover  had  long  ago been worn  out  and  thrown  away.  While,  on  the other  hand,  the  new  clothespins  in  the  blue and white  striped  bag  had  no  idea  who  Mr. Popover  was  and  thought  him  a  strange looking, old-fashioned  clothespin  indeed.
           For  a  long  time  the  clothespins  simply looked  at  Mr.  Popover  and  Mr.  Popover  looked back at  them.
           At  last  it  was  Mr.  Popover  who  spoke  first.
           'Do  you  live  here  in  this  bag?'  asked  he.
           'Certainly.  Where  else  would  we  live?'  was the  answer  the  clothes-pins  made.
           Mr.  Popover  thought  this  rather  rude.  He hoped  Velvetina  and  Baby  Popover  would never talk  to  strangers  in  this  way.
           But  he  answered  politely.
           'I  didn't  know  whether  you  lived  here  or  not. When  I  was  in  your  business  and  held clothes on  the  line  I  lived  in  a  basket,  a  grape-basket. I  never  was  in  a  bag  like  this  before.'
           ' How  do  you  like  it,  now  you  are  here? '  asked a  clothespin  with  a  saucy  smile.
           'Very  much  indeed,'  answered  Mr.  Popover stiffly.
           He  didn't  care  at  all  for  the  manners  of  these young  clothespins.  He  meant  to  be  very particular with  Velvetina  and  Baby  Popover  when once  he  reached  home  again.
           'Where  do  you  live  now?'  asked  another clothespin,  tilting  his  head  on  one  side  in  a  bold fashion  as  he  spoke.
           'In  a  house,'  answered  Mr.  Popover,  feeling provoked  at  being  treated  so;  'a  red  house  too. It  has  four  rooms,  and  windows  with  curtains, and  rugs  on  the  floor.  There  are  chairs  and tables  and  beds  and  sofas  in  it.  It  is  the  prettiest house  for  miles  around.  So  there!'
           And  Mr.  Popover  stared  as  boldly  at  the clothespins  as  they  stared  back  at  him.
           'If  they  can't  be  polite  to  me,  I  shan't  be polite  to  them,'  thought  Mr.  Popover.
           Now  of  course  that  wasn't  the  right  spirit  for Mr.  Popover  to  show.  He  should  have remembered how  surprised  those  clothes-pins  must have  been  at  having  him  come  tumbling  in unexpectedly  at  the  top  of  their  house.  On the  other  hand  Mr.  Popover  had  tried  to  be agreeable,  and  it  was  really  the  fault  of  the clothespins  that  he  felt  he  must  speak  to them  so.
           But  the  clothes-pins  were  now  more  impolite than  ever  to  Mr.  Popover.  They  began  to whisper  to  one  another.  They  spoke  so  softly that  Mr.  Popover  couldn't  hear  what  they  said. Then  they  all  spoke  at  once  in  a  very  loud voice,  quite  shouting  in  poor  Mr.  Popover's ear.
           'Oh,  you  live  in  a  house,  do  you? '  shouted  the clothespins  all  together.  'And  a  red  house  too.
           Well,  perhaps  you  would  like  to  go  home  to your  red  house  again.  It  isn't  good  enough  for you  here.'
           And  scarcely  were  the  words  out  of  their mouths  than  they  began  to  push  Mr.  Popover.  
           They  pushed  him  down,  down,  down  toward  the bottom  of  the  bag.  They  crowded  on  top  of him.  They stepped  on  his  toes.
           'Some  one  will  break  my  leg,'  thought  Mr. Popover.
           But  there  was  no  use  saying  so,  for  the clothespins  wouldn't  have  cared  if  they  had.
           They  pushed  and  pushed  Mr.  Popover  down to  the  very  bottom  of  the  bag  and  then  they began  to  push  him  over  into  a  corner.
           And  once  the  corner  was  reached  Mr.  Popover  saw  what  they  were  about.  For  in  the corner  was  a  hole  and  out  of  the  hole  they  began to  push  Mr.  Popover.
           You  may  imagine  that  Mr.  Popover  didn't want  to  stay  in  the  bag.  He  squirmed  and  he wriggled  as  hard  as  he  could  to  get  through  the hole,  and  what  with  Mr.  Popover  squirming and  the  clothespins  all  pushing  it  wasn't  long before  Mr.  Popover  dropped  with  a  click  down on  the  laundry  floor  under  the  blue and white bag.
           He  was  so  glad  to  be  out  of  the  bag  that  he lay  quite  still  for  a  moment  without  even thinking a  thought.  He  didn't  bother  to  answer  when he  heard  the  clothespins  calling  to  him from the  bag  above  his  head,  and  he  simply  shut  his eyes  tight  when  a  saucy  clothespin  stuck his face  out  of  the  hole  and  laughed  to  see  him  lying there  below.
           But  by  and  by  he  began  to  wonder  how  he would  get  home  again.
           'I  am  afraid  my  leg  is  broken  too'  said  he  to himself,  'and,  if  it  is,  it  will  never  be  so straight and  so  beautiful  again.'
           He  tried  to  roll  toward  the  laundry  door. But  his  leg  was  painful  and  he  felt  stiff  and  sore, so  he  was  forced  to  lie  still.  And  there  he  lay for  hours  and  hours  and  hours.  Or  so  it  seemed to  poor  Mr.  Popover.
           He  dozed  and  woke,  he  dozed  and  woke again.
           '  Suppose  no  one  ever  comes  to  help  me  home' thought  he.
           The  house  grew  still.  Every  one  was  in  bed. There  was not  a  footstep  to  be  heard.
           Never  before  had  Mr.  Popover  felt  so  lonely and  so  sad.  He  thought  of  his  big  gilt  bed. He thought  of  Mrs.  Popover  and  Velvetina  and Baby  Loo-Loo,  watching  for  him  and  wondering why  he  did  not  come  home.
           Then,  in  the  quiet  of  the  laundry,  Mr.  Popover,  tired  and  sore  and  homesick,  heard  a gentle  scratch,  scratch,  scratch  in  the  wall.
           'Peanut!'  thought  Mr.  Popover.  'It  is Peanut,  come  to  save  me.'
           He  raised  his  head  from  the  cold  hard  floor to  look,  and  sure  enough,  out  of  a  crack slipped Peanut,  his  bright  little  eyes  peering  hither and  thither  for  a  sight  of  his  old  friend.
           'Peanut!  I  am  here!  Save  me!'  called  Mr. Popover.
           And  a  second  later  Peanut  was  slowly  rolling Mr.  Popover  toward  home.
           'Go  gently,'  begged  Mr.  Popover.  'I  think my  leg  is  broken.'
           So  gently  Peanut  rolled  him  over  the  laundry floor,  through  the  kitchen,  the  dining room, the library,  over  to  the  foot  of  the  stairs.
           'I  shall  have  to  carry  you  up  the  banisters' said  Peanut.
           Mr.  Popover  shut  his  teeth  and  bore  it  bravely while  Peanut  carried  him  by  way  of  the  banisters up  the  stairs.
           It  was  only  a  short  way  to  the  playroom, and  there  were  Mrs.  Popover  and  Velvetina  and Baby  Loo-Loo  watching  eagerly  at  the  window and  hoping  with  all  their  little  hearts  that Peanut  would  find  Mr.  Popover  and  bring him  home  soon.
           How  happy  they  were  to  see  him!  How Velvetina  and  Baby  Loo-Loo  clapped  their hands  for  joy!
           Mrs.  Popover  helped  Mr.  Popover  go straight to  bed.  She  wouldn't  let  him  talk  until  it  was found  that  his  leg  was  not  broken  and  until  he had  been  well  rubbed  from  top  to  toe  to  take the soreness  out  of  his  bones.
           '  We  can  all  thank  Peanut  that  you  are  safe at  home,'  said  Mrs.  Popover,  shaking  the  bottle
    of  liniment  to  and  fro.  'He  came  to  call  and found  you  gone,  and  he  hasn't  rested  a  moment since.  He  has  run  from  one  end  of  the  house  to the  other,  looking  for  you.  Oh,  what  a  night I have  had!  I  shall  never  forget  it,  never!'
           'Neither  shall  I,'  said  Mr.  Popover.
           And  sitting  up  in  bed  he  told  all  that  had  happened to  him  that  day.
           'Poor  dear,'  said  Mrs.  Popover  tenderly, when  he  had  finished,  'you  need  a  good  rest. We  will  all  go  downstairs  now  and  let  you  sleep.'
           But  as  they  tiptoed  out  of  the  room,  Mr. Popover  called  Peanut  back  to  his  bedside.
           'Thank  you  again,  my  friend,  for  saving  me from  those  rude  clothespins,'  said  Mr.  Popover drowsily.  'But  let  me  tell  you,  clothespins didn't  behave  like  that  when  I  was  a  boy.'
           And  then  Mr.  Popover,  tired  out  by  his  exciting day,  fell  asleep.

    Previous Chapter  or Next Chapter

    Saturday, July 17, 2021

    Crafts for "Playscale" Dolls Like Barbie

    Sample projects shown above from the listing below include: floaties for Barbie, a soap
    dish transformed into a playscale bathroom sink, a heart-shaped tufted doll bed and
    mid-century modern doll chairs.

      
           Our Giant listing of dollhouse crafts below are for Fashionistas, Monster High, Disney Princess Dolls and Descendants, Rainbow High, Spin Master Dolls, Kelly dolls, Fresh Dolls,  Bratz, etc... any dolls that are comparable to Barbie's twelve inch height. This would also include the dolls made to be the smaller children or siblings to the 10" - 12" scale dolls. 

    Doll & Toy Storage:

    1. How to Upcycle a Child's Suitcase Into Doll Storage - for smaller than playscale dolls but the same transformation of a larger suitcase may be used for larger doll versions.
    2. Decoupage A Doll's Storage Trunk - 12'' scale dolls and wooden trunks like the one depicted on this post may be purchased for very little money at resale.

    Collecting & Crafting Dollhouses: 

    1. Apartment Dollhouse Modernized with Elevator - Vintage dollhouse plans for visitors to print and study for the building of their own versions...
    2. My Vintage Tudor Doll House - a Rich Keystone dollhouse from 1938
    3. Every Child Needs a Fabric Dollhouse - A fabric dollhouse is easy to fold up and store or to carry anywhere to play with.
    4. Turn a Bookcase Into A Dollhouse - This is a dollhouse for miniature dolls but a larger bookcase may be treated the same for 10"-12" dolls.
    5. Aunt Marlene's Doll Cupboard - A built in cupboard makes a nice place to display or play with your dolls...

    Furniture and Accessories for Dollhouse/Doll Related Crafts: 12 inch dolls: Barbie Dolls and Fashionistas: These doll sizes are called "playscale"

    1. How to make trash cans for a doll's garage - realistic looking garbage cans for Barbie and Ken's garage rubbish
    2. Craft Lawn Care Tools for A Doll's House/Garage -doll sized rakes and shovels made from plastic forks and spoons
    3. Mini Campfire Bundle - craft one of these using colorful chenille stems and twigs
    4. DIY a Washer and Dryer for Barbie - Ours were made using recycled food containers, foil, buttons and juice tin caps...
    5. DIY a Gas Stove Top and Oven for Barbie's Family - This stove is constructed from cardboard, aluminum tape and tiny details using toothpicks and buttons.
    6. DIY Pet Beds for Your Doll's Dog or Cat - Barbie has pets of course and these cozy little beds are perfect places for them to nap.
    7. Craft a Unique Doll's Table Using Only Four Tiles! - This one would look lovely in a small breakfast nook or on a patio used for informal dining.
    8. DIY Pool Floats for Your Doll - A classic craft using plastic straws and an iron. Ask an adult for help with this DIY.
    9. Use A Vintage Display Box for Barbie's Living Room - We show how to decorate with shells our little ones found on the beach.
    10. Distressing a Sideboard or Buffet for Barbie & Family - Transform an old music box into formal dining room furniture for Barbie and other dolls.
    11. Collecting Rugs for Your Doll's House - How to be frugal and imaginative about decorating the floors of a doll's house and all dollhouse floor tags here.
    12. Tile A Bathtub From An Ordinary Shoebox - This one has real tiny tiles and a faucet made from a recycled soap pump!
    13. Craft a Faux Stainless Steel Doll House Sink - Made using a recycled soap tray, stainless steal measuring cup, foil and cardboard, it looks amazingly realistic!
    14. Assemble a Bathroom Pedestal Sink and DIY a Custom Backsplash - Turn a glass candlestick upside down and add a tiled cardboard back splash...and you've got an instant dollhouse bathroom sink.
    15. DIY a birdbath for a doll's garden - This convincing bird bath looks like it was cast from concrete, but it's just made with ordinary craft materials.
    16. Make Mini Golf Tee Flashlights - Young crafters will also need to collect small gems or yellow beads for this dollhouse accessory.
    17. Craft tiny canteens for a doll's camping trip... - Barbie should be prepared for camping and never leave the campsite without taking water.
    18. Roll and Sew A Tiny Bedroll - This cozy little blanket may be carried over the shoulder of any small doll while hiking and camping in the woods.
    19. Craft a sleeping bag with a doll inside - Make a small baby for your dolls to look after while camping; this one is bundled inside a sleeping bag.
    20. DIY a rope basket - A rope basket makes the perfect container for dirty laundry and also a fun place for pets to hide in.
    21. Craft a miniature ironing board and iron - Every small doll must do chores, especially when it comes to keeping their wardrobes tidy and wrinkle free.
    22. Mini Breakfast Skillet for Dolls 10 - 12 inches - these have bacon, sausage and eggs sunny-side up!
    23. Sew a Stack of Felt Pancakes - A yummy breakfast treat made using felt and paper.
    24. Construct a paper mache or papier-mâché utility cabinet - Barbie and Ken need a place to store all of their cleaning supplies.
    25. Craft a Utility Sink and Hamper for Your Doll's House - These clever utility room accessories are made entirely from recycled plastic containers.
    26. Update a Wooden Doll's Cradle - I repainted a 12" doll sized cradle and made bumper pads and a mattress for it to decorate a nursery for a tiny baby doll.
    27. DIY Feather Dusters for Your Doll's House - craft easy cleaning supplies
    28. Refinish Wicker Doll Furnishings - A little paint and a few sewing supplies can revive tired old wicker furniture.
    29. Sew a Set of Towels for A Doll House Bathroom - easy first sewing project for kids
    30. Glue Together & Paint Two Night Stands - Easy, quick furniture craft for kids to make for a doll's bedroom.
    31. Painting and Upholstering A Doll's Bedroom Bench - Little doll sized furniture from resale can be made to look brand new!
    32. Knot a Felt No-Sew Throw for You Doll - An easy first no sew doll blanket project for young crafters.
    33. Upcycle A Box Into A Doll Bookcase - This classic dollhouse craft can be made to match any dollhouse decor and costs virtually pennies to make.
    34. Convert a Convertible For a Doll - How we changed a former video tape player into a doll's bed.
    35. Shelving for A Car Themed Bedroom - Sometimes packaging can be used to accessorize a dollhouse room.
    36. Assembling A Plant Stand - Turn a former votive candle holder into an interesting dollhouse plant stand.
    37. Sew Groovy Textile Art for A Doll House - Textile art looks just as cute on a dollhouse wall as a framed painting.
    38. Make a Foam Flat Screen T.V. - This doll technology is made with craft foam.
    39. Decoupage A Llama Dresser - Decoupage with paper or fabric and a bit of Mod Podge to transform any furnishings into unusual possibilities.
    40. Refinish A Doll's Rocking Chair - What is intended for one thing, may be better suited for another...
    41. Transform a Curio Cabinet for Barbie - How we updated an adorable doll sized shelf with lavender paint and figurative papers.
    42. Mid-Century Faux Fiberglass Chairs for Barbie - Made with paper mache shoe forms and faux wood shelf paper.
    43. Sew Bean Bag Chairs for Your Doll (free pattern)
    44. Craft a Sunny Little Ball Pit - This unusual craft is made from a recycled tomato container.
    45. Collage a Baby Swimming Pool for Your Dolls - This craft is made cuter with the stickers you choose.
    46. Make Rainbow Hair Extensions for Fashion Dolls - Search for supplies at the dollar store for this craft.
    47. Craft Doll Tennis Rackets (free pattern)
    48. How to DIY A Doll Playpen - Made entirely from recycled materials.
    49. Craft a Car Shaped Ball Pit for Your Dolls - Make something new from discarded, unwanted toys.
    50. The Tissue Box Cover Bed - Turn a tissue dispenser into a bed frame for a dollhouse.
    51. DIY Clamshell Laptop for Your Favorite Doll - This version is made using cardboard.
    52. Turn a bookcase into a changing table - This doll sized bookcase was turned into nursery furniture for our dollhouse.
    53. Craft a rainbow yarn rug for a dollhouse - This craft requires a lot of drying time but the end results can be very interesting.
    54. DIY Big Rig Toy Box - A fun addition to a tiny toddler doll's bedroom.
    55. Cut and Paste Doily Rugs - very easy craft for young dollhouse decorators
    56. Simple Chenille Stem Christmas Wreaths - If you enjoy this Christmas craft, why not visit our doll holiday index on the right hand margin to make more?
    57. Craft Couture Bags for Barbie - An adorable way to recycle old purses.
    58. Make a Soft Sock Sofa for Dolls - This method for making a 10"-12" doll couch is much simpler for young people to accomplish.
    59. How to Assemble A No-Sew Couch for Barbie - Not to difficult to assemble but the materials are sometimes not as easy for children to come by. Be on the look-out for soft foam for this doll craft.
    60. Craft a Heavenly, Heart Shaped Bed for a Little Doll - A cute way to upcycle a old heart shaped chocolate box from Valentine's Day.
    61. Barbie's Bohemian Patchwork Sofa - Dollhouse furniture for beginner quilters.
    62. Easy To Craft Dollhouse Windows - An easy way to make dollhouses look more sophisticated.
    63. Spruce Up a Heart Shaped Rocker For a Doll! - How to decoupage a chair seat in order to restore a rocking chair for your doll's home.
    64. Sculpt a Stone Faced Fireplace for a 12" Doll's House - Every little child needs one of these to make a dollhouse cozy in winter!
    65. Build a Breakfast Banquette for Barbie - plans for two kitchen benches and table for 12-16 inch dolls
    66. How to make handker-shifts from 1966 - make better use of those old-fashioned handkerchiefs!
    67. Sew Sock Slacks for Fashion Dolls - Knit coordinates are always in fashion for dolls.
    68. Spaghetti String, Summer Top for a Curvy Fashionista - Embroidered socks made into quick and easy doll clothes.
    69. Quick and Easy Skeleton Costume for a Doll - Don't like to sew so much? Find out just how quick it is to convert a stuffed softie into a costume for a doll this Halloween or for Mardi Gras if you prefer.
    70. How To Sew a Straight Knit Skirt for A Fashion Doll  - Yet another easy fashion for Barbie made from socks without partners.
    71. Sew a Jersey/Sweater for Ken or Barbie - 10" - 12" dolls need not go cold this winter!
    72. Snow White Redressed...
    73. Belle From Beauty and The Beast Redressed
    74. DIY Conical Hats for Fashionable Princesses - A necessary craft for princess play. (free pattern) 
    75. The Pompon Puddle Pet from the 1960's - Directions for an original vintage pink poodle from 1960s as well as a newer set of directions for a contemporary version are included here.
    76. Craft a Doll Bathtub From a Recycled Soap Bottle - Give your Kelly dolls a real bath with soap bubbles inside this waterproof, dolly bathtub!
    77. Craft a Clothespin Cathedral Rocker - this design fits 10", 11", and 12" dolls perfectly and all you need are spring clothespins and a hot glue gun to make!
    78. Make a traditional wooden rocker for a Barbie... - a design with a slatted back and seat, made using spring clothespins
    79. How to assemble a 'Sunburst' Twin Rocker... plus close-up photos of paint design
    80. Make doll sized patio furniture using clothespins - Great craft for summer fun!
    81. Craft a Shoebox Bed for Barbie - fancy faux carved headboard, kerchief sheets, you'd never guess it was so easy to make!
    82. DIY A Vanity Chair for Barbie - This one is made from a cardboard tube.
    83. Make three boxy bunk beds for your small dolls - holds for climbing into bed instead of ladders
    84. How to make a faux leather club chair for Barbie dolls - this one uses leather-like paper and a wooden block base...
    How to Build Or Assemble A 10"-12" Scale Dollhouse From YouTube:
    Furniture made from spring clothespins fit 12" dolls like Barbie perfectly.