Antique Izannah Walker Dolls · Izannah Reproduction Doll Class · Izannah Walker History · Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll · Painted Cloth Doll Making · Reference Materials

A Dollmaker’s Reflections on Izannah Walker and her Dolls; with Insights on Pressed Cloth Heads

Many articles have been written about Izannah Walker and her hauntingly beautiful, iconic cloth dolls.  I have found all of them extremely interesting and well worth reading.  However, it occurred to me that none of the articles that I have seen were written by someone who has actually made full size reproductions of Izannah’s pressed cloth heads and has experienced first hand the joys and frustrations of this unique type of doll making.  So I’ve decided to join the ranks of doll lovers and historians who have gone before me in writing about this fascinating woman and her exceptional dolls.

It feels like I have loved Izannah Walker dolls for my entire life, although I know that can’t be true.  When I look back, I think that I first became aware of her dolls right around the time that we moved to New England, 22 years ago.  I do know that I have loved, and always wanted to own, antique dolls since my very early childhood.  As soon as I knew that such things as really old dolls existed, I wanted one (or more!).

Izannah Walker and her dolls hold a very special place in doll history.  On November 4, 1873, she was the first woman to receive a United States patent for making dolls.

Izannah Walker was born in Bristol, Rhode Island on the 25th day of September in 1817.  I have read there is documentation that she started making dolls in 1828.  She would have been 11 years old in 1828, the same age that I was when I first learned to sew.  Norma H. Robertson, Izannah Walker’s grand-niece, stated that her great aunt began making stockinette dolls in 1845 for friends, and as her business developed, she put her three sisters to work painting faces.  Other research and information that I have seen states that Izannah had two sisters, plus several older half-siblings, and that Izannah, her older sister Jane and her aunt Jane Hintz were all three doll makers.

One of my favorite Izannah stories is a reminiscence by Mrs. Helen Pierce of when the Walker sisters were living on Main Street in Somerset Village, MA.  Mrs. Pierce tells a tale of the Walkers hanging their dolls out on the clothesline to dry when it was too damp in the house and how the air in the neighborhood was then permeated with the smell of oil paint.  I can certainly relate to that, having hung my share of dolls out on the clothesline.

The Mystery of Molds and Lessons Learned About Pressed Cloth Heads

One of the things that I find most endearing about the Walker dolls is their differences.  This may be because three individual women had a hand in their construction, either working together or apart. It is also, in my opinion, a very basic fact of life when a doll maker is creating dolls with pressed cloth heads.  While all of the original dolls are recognizable as Walker dolls, they do come in many sizes, from 13 to 27 inches* in height, and often have very striking differences from one another.  The majority of the dolls are girls, although there are a few boy dolls and even fewer black dolls with lovely, short, nubby black wool hair.

There has been a great deal of speculation in the doll world about the number and origin of the molds Izannah Walker used to make her dolls.  I can’t offer any clues about how the molds were made.  Did she sculpt her own prototype heads and then have them made into metal molds?  Did she hire others to create both the original sculpt and molds?  Or did she commission molds from commercially available European dolls? Her patent information shows the use of a metal mold and dye, but did she always use metal molds?  Is it possible that her earlier dolls were created using plaster molds, which were long established in the doll making industry at that time, and would wear out and need replacing more frequently?

Example #1 of dolls with pressed cloth heads made from the same mold.
Example #2
Example #3
Example # 4
Example #5
Example #6 Notice how much rounder and fuller the cheeks are on this doll.

What I can say with some confidence is that it is very likely that she used fewer molds than many people think.  Obviously, she had to have a variety of molds for the different sized dolls that she made and it is equally obvious that her early dolls used very different molds than her later, patented dolls. What I have found when making pressed cloth heads is that heads made using the same mold will turn out quite differently from one another.  When making pressed cloth heads, you do not get the same consistency as you do when casting materials, such as bisque, papier-mâché and wax, that can be poured into a mold and hardened.  Izannah’s pressed cloth heads were made in sections that had to be joined together, a process that sometimes causes individual heads to come out a bit larger or smaller than each other.  After the front and back sections of the head were sewn and or glued together, the head was stuffed with cotton, horsehair, sea grass or other materials.  The pressed cloth heads are not rigid like the heads of a china or porcelain doll.  They are somewhat flexible and their shape can be altered by how tightly the stuffing is packed into the head.  All of these factors can and will change the appearance of the finished pressed cloth head.

Photo taken with Canon Digital Rebel
Photo taken with Olympus Digital FE-20 camera

Another point that I would like to mention here is that when studying photographs of Izannah Walker dolls, it is important to remember that the photographs do not always look the same as the doll does in person.  I am by no means a professional photographer, but I am a person who takes an inordinate number of doll photos, using several different cameras and lenses.  The type of lens used to take a photograph will have a big impact on how the doll looks, as will the lighting and angle from which the photo is taken.  People who have only seen Izannah Walker dolls in photographs are often very surprised when they first see one of the dolls in person.  The dolls are smaller and much more delicately proportioned than they often look in photos.  Their eyes are not as large and their foreheads aren’t quite as curved and pronounced as people expect.  I am fortunate enough to have been able to visit several museums and view dolls in person that I had previously only seen in photos and I can attest that there is a real difference.  I see this same difference when I photograph both my antique Izannah Walker dolls and the reproductions of them that I make.  So some Walker dolls may look more similar in person than they do when compared in photographs.  Especially when they are photographs taken by different people, using different cameras, lighting, etc.

Photo taken with an Olympus FE-20 digital camera
Photo taken with a digital Canon Rebel camera

The painting style is another variable from doll to doll.  Again, this may be due to more than one person wielding her brush, or it may be because when a doll maker paints a doll, each one is slightly different from the next.  Even if you have never made a doll in your life, I’m sure that you can relate.  Think about your signature. It is something you do over and over again.  Is it exactly the same every time?  When you make your favorite recipe, the one you know by heart and don’t have to look up, does it turn out just the same every time?  Izannah Walker’s dolls were made over a long period of time. Even if a single person painted them all, it is natural that they would change.  When I paint my dolls, the colors will vary a bit since I don’t use a “recipe” to mix my paints.  Some days, I paint finer lines than others, paint better curls, make more blushing cheeks and crisper bootlaces.  Such is the nature of hand made artistry and it is why Izannah Walker dolls are so well loved and enduring.  The hand of the doll maker shows in each and every one of them.  They are similar and yet individual works of artistry.

I like to think that the women all worked together, even when they were separated by distance (which they were during different periods in their lives).  My sister and I make reproduction samplers together, even though she lives in Nebraska and I live in Connecticut.  Both of us work on every sampler that we make, each doing our own part to create the final product.  It would have been possible for the Walker sisters and their aunt to do the same, and I hope that they did.  My sister and I enjoy working together and I’d like for the Walkers to have had the bond that shared goals and joint work brings about.

 Construction Features of the Walker Dolls

Like any other reproduction-sewing project, making an Izannah Walker doll is an eye opening experience to the difference between 19th century and 21st century sewing construction.  People in the 1800’s obviously viewed pattern making and sewing construction differently than we do today.  The shapes of many of the pattern pieces used to make these dolls and their clothing are unfamiliar to modern seamstresses.

Izannah’s earliest dolls had heads that were made of molded and pressed cloth joined to the bodies at the neck.  This is different than the later patented dolls that had molded and pressed cloth heads and shoulder plates that were glued onto the bodies.  I think the early dolls are prettier than their later sisters, and they are the type of Izannah Walker dolls that I prefer to reproduce.  The front of the pre-patent doll’s head is joined to the back just in front of the ears.  The back of the head has a partial center seam.

Often you will see that the dolls have repaired ankles.  This is because they have a seam at the ankles that connects the foot to the leg.  Modern cloth dolls are seldom made this way.  The dolls have narrow waists, with wide shoulders and hips.  The unpainted portions of their bodies are covered with a “second skin,” which gives them a neat, finished appearance, and points to the care with which they were made.

I find all of these details intriguing.  They are part of what draws me to study Izannah Walker’s dolls and have kept my interest in them so strong for many years.

Izannah Walker dolls were made using molds.  That does not mean that they took less work or are less desirable than a doll that has a one-of-a-kind sculpted face.  For me, understanding how the Walkers made their dolls and using those same techniques to make dolls of my own gives me an even deeper love and appreciation for the originals.  Through years of experience, I know exactly why some of the dolls have that characteristic crease at the hollow of their throat, why the paint on the earliest dolls cracked and peeled, why the hands have such a wonderful shape and how to make that slight curve at the wrist.  I treasure the experience, the knowledge and the insight and I would urge you to try your hand at making a doll using Izannah’s methods.  It will give you a wonderful glimpse into her world and her art.

Collection of the author

Izannah Walker managed to capture an evocative moment of American history and very firmly convey a sense of her time and place in a child’s toy. These  toys  continue to be treasured, loved and marveled at today.

* There are rumors of a “life-size” doll that was owned by members of the Walker family.

 Sources for some of the information used in this article and additional reading:

American Folk Dolls by Wendy Lavitt (Knopf 1982)

American Rag Dolls Straight From The Heart by Estelle Patino (Collector Books 1988)

“An American Master of Cloth” by Helen Nolan, Dolls, February 1995 (this article is about Martha Chase and only has a brief mention of Izannah Walker)

“The Art of Dolls 1700-1940” by Madeline Osborne Merrill, Doll Reader, April 1985

Cover Photo by Dorothy McGonagle, Doll News, 1989

“Dolls by Izannah Walker” by Donna C. Kaonis, Antique Doll World, September/October 1993

The Doll Collection of Helen Gage, Auction Catalogue by Marvin Cohen Auctions, December 1984

“Dolls of Rhode Island” by Carolyn Guise, Two Hundred Years of American Dolls, The New London Doll Club United Federation of Doll Clubs Region Fourteen Meeting, May 1977

Early American Dolls in Full Color, by Helen Nolan (Dover Publications 1986)

“Early American Stockinette Dolls: Part 1- Izannah Walker and Martha Chase Dolls” by Judy Beswick, The Cloth Doll, Fall 1998

Encyclopedia American Dolls by Ruth S. Freeman (Century House 1952)

The “Holy Grail” of Early American Dolls by Catherine Riedel, Yankee magazine, November/December 2009

“Izannah Walker – Godmother to Cloth Doll Makers” by Susan Hedrick, Soft Dolls & Animals, Summer 1998

“Izannah Walker’s Iconic Dolls” by Edyth O’Neill and Dixie Redmond, Early American Life, Christmas 2011

“An Izannah Walker Reunion” by Carol Corson, Antique Doll Collector, August 2011

“Izannah Walker: The Mystery Deepens” by Helen Nolan, Dolls, August 1994

“The Little Doll With The Little Curl” by Maurine S. Popp, The Jenny Lind Doll Club of Southern Connecticut Region 14 of The United Federation of Doll Clubs, April 1968

Made to Play House: Dolls and the Commercialization of American Girlhood, by Miriam Formanek-Brunell (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998)

“The Mystery of Izannah Walker” by Helen Nolan, Dolls, September 1993

“The Search for Izannah Walker” by Monica Bessette, Doll News, Spring 1994

“Stitches in Time” by Diane Goff, Doll Reader, July 1993

Summer in Marseilles at the Turn of the Century Auction Catalogue by Theriault’s 1993

“They’re Just Down-Home Folk” by Wendy Lavitt, Dolls, May 1993

The Treasury of Beautiful Dolls, by John Noble (Weathervane Books, 1978)

“Walker Dolls: A Family Affair” by Monica Bessette, Doll News, Summer 1998

This article and the accompanying images, like all posts and photographs on this site, are copyrighted by Paula Walton and may not be published or reproduced in any form without the express written consent of the author.

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Studio News for August 1st – New Dolls, Ebay Auctions, More…

A family photo of the dolls in my studio this week. Not all of them are fully finished and dressed, but all are currently available for sale. 9/29/11 Update - the doll in the pink bonnet, the doll in the brown and red dress and the doll with the blue body have been sold.

Here is a glimpse of the dolls that I am currently working on.  Email or call me if you would like to see more photos of a particular doll, or would like to ask questions and prices. Paula@ASweetRemembrance.com or 860-355-5709.

SOLD - Thank You!

She has SOLD, thank you for looking.

I got a little carried away when I was listing items and set up twenty five auctions.  I’m selling several antique dolls,  vintage teddy bears and some antique cooking implements.  If you’d like to look at every thing I have listed on eBay, click here.  Most of these auctions have closed, but there are a few still running for Izannah and Spun Cotton Classes.

Do you want to learn how to make reproduction Izannah Walker dolls???  The sign up deadline for my September doll making retreat is approaching fast.  If you can’t come to Connecticut, my class by mail is the next best thing.

My favorite reading this week is the August issue of Antique Doll Collector magazine.  It has a fantastic eight and a half page article about the Izannah Walker Reunion held last November by the Doll Collectors of America.  The article is full of glorious photos of the 31 antique Izannah Walker dolls that attended.  If you don’t already have a copy of this magazine, you need to get one immediately.

Another Izannah Walker article to be on the look out for is one being published in the Christmas issue of Early American Life magazine.  I’ve just finished working on my advertisement for that issue, nothing like thinking of Christmas in July!  I’m very proud to say that I will be in the 2011 Holiday Directory of Traditional Crafts that will also be in the EAL Christmas issue.  Thank you Early American Life!!! This is the 24th time that I’ve been chosen for the Directory 🙂

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Doll Making Retreat September 9-12, 2011

The 2012 retreat is September 28th – October 3.  Click here to read all the details.

 

***Are you interested in attending an Izannah Walker Doll Making Retreat in 2012???  If so please follow this link to my “planning” post and leave a comment to let me know the time of year/dates that work best for you.

I haven’t tried to schedule many in person classes in the past couple of years because I know that traveling to a doll making class would be quite a splurge in this economy.   However, since I’m doing a number of  special events to celebrate my 25th anniversary, I thought that I would see if anyone is interested in coming here, to New Milford, CT, for a long weekend of doll making in September.

An Overview of the Retreat

Reproduction Dressmaking for your Izannah Walker Dolls

On Friday, September 9th, I will be teaching an intensive one-day class focusing on the fine details of making reproduction mid 19th century doll clothing suitable for Izannah Walker dolls.  We’ll start with my Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll Clothes Pattern for an 18- 1/2 Inch Doll and move on from there to explore some of the  intricate and exquisite techniques that make 19th century dress making so beautiful.  Attendees will need to purchase one of my doll clothing patterns and do some prep work prior to 9/9, so that we can make the most of our class time.   Tuition is $115 for the day, plus $29 for the pattern (the pattern comes with the doll making class instructions, so if you are taking both classes, you do not need to buy the pattern for the Friday session) .

Making Izannah Molds, Pressed Cloth Heads and Bodies

A three-day condensed version of my Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll Class starts on Saturday morning, September 10th.  Just like in the clothing class, students will need to order my doll class and do some homework ahead of time.  Once you get to class we will be making two types of molds, forming pressed cloth heads, and constructing the doll’s body. This is a wonderful class for anyone interested in antique cloth dolls and for those who would like to learn to incorporate pressed cloth heads into their own doll designs.  Tuition is $285 for 15 hours of class room time, plus $250 for the doll class.

You may take just one class or sign up for both.  Both classes are intended for fairly experienced doll makers.  To get the most out of them you need to already know how to sculpt, paint and sew.  I need to have a minimum of 3 students registered (per class) by August 15th in order to hold the retreat.

If you already have one of my Izannah doll clothes patterns, or are currently a class member in my Class by Mail group, then obviously you would just need to pay the classroom tuition when you register for the retreat.

General Information About Both Classes

Classes will be held at my 18th century farm (sorry, no farm animals except cats).  We will be working out of my studio  building and a tent*, so that you can enjoy a bit of autumn splendor,if the weather cooperates.

Students will get a tour of my antique doll collection which  features cloth dolls including Izannah Walker originals, and early papier-mache milliner’s models (plus more), as well as my c.1790 house.

Classes run from 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. each day, with the exception of Sunday, September 11th.  On Sunday class will start at 1:00 p.m., so you will have a chance to go to church, sleep in, have a leisurely brunch, or go shopping at The Elephant’s Trunk Flea Market, one of the best flea markets in New England.

On Friday, Saturday and Monday I will whip up something simple for lunch, using fresh produce from my gardens, or you may choose to bring a lunch with you.  Tea and coffee will be available all day, because I work best with constant infusions of caffeine :).

You will need to bring supplies along with you, as they are not included in the classes.  A supply list will be sent out well in advance of September.  The exception to this is that I will  provide  all the plaster you need.   If you are flying in and weight is a consideration, you may make arrangements to have silicone mold putty sent here directly.  I have numerous sewing machines that you can use,  you are also welcome to bring your own portable machine.

Due to space limitations, class sizes are going to have to be kept fairly small.  Sign up early to avoid being disappointed.  If I do have to cancel, due to lack of registrations by 8/15, I will refund your tuition.  Otherwise tuition is non-refundable.  What is the reason for this policy? Once you book space in the class, it will potentially keep other people from being able to sign up and also will effect whether or not the class will meet the minimum number of required students. People need to be able to make their travel plans in advance, so if you register and then cancel it creates huge problems.

If you are purchasing the pattern or the doll class by mail and are sure you will still want them, even if the retreat has to be canceled, I will send them to you as soon as you register.  Otherwise, I will mail them to you just as soon as I have three confirmed students.

There are several hotels and inns located in New Milford.  The Homestead Inn is the closest to me, and is within walking distance of the town green.  Restaurants are plentiful on the green and in the historic downtown area, although it helps if you like Italian food 🙂 .  If you don’t mind a short drive, Kent, CT, just north of New Milford on Route 7, has some nice places to stay.  Last year Yankee magazine named Kent as one of it’s Top 25 Foliage Towns.

* I regret that the classes are not handicap accessible, because of the terrain and antique buildings.

Other Fun Events and Excursions In This Area

The Brimfield Antique and Collectibles fall shows are September 6 – 11th, so you could easily attend the shows, which are about 2 – 1/2 hours north of here, before heading to New Milford for the retreat.  If you love antiques, another great show in this area is the Harwinton Antiques and Design Weekend on September 3 & 4 (formerly held in Farmington, CT).  The Stormville Antique and Flea Market is also being held the same weekend, 9/3-4.

If you are in the mood for more rustic pursuits, a Farmer’s Market is held on the New Milford green every Saturday from 9:00 – 12:00.  I can also recommend the Averill Farm in Washington, CT for pick your own apples, or Maple Bank Farm in Roxbury, CT. for apples and other great produce.  There are some delicious, fun places to stop for lunch along the way to either Averill’s or Maple Bank Farm, just ask and I’ll provide details. A picnic at Kent Falls, is another delightful way to spend a fall afternoon.  Two scenic covered bridges are just a short drive away and are well worth a visit.  If you go to the bridge in West Cornwall be sure to stop in for a meal at The Wandering Moose Cafe.

Do you like life in the fast lane?  Visit Lime Rock Race Track  for their 29th Historic Festival and watch a century of cars in 10 categories compete in sprint races September 2-5.  Or visit the big city, New York City (2 hours) and Boston (2 – 3/4 hours) are both within easy driving distance.

Need more?  I can make enough suggestions to keep you busy sight seeing for at least another week!  Ask me.

How To Register

Simply call me at 860-355-5709 or email me, paula@asweetremembrance.com, to sign-up or to ask questions.  Payment is due when you register.  You may send me a check, money order, or Paypal payment (special instructions apply to Paypal , so that I can refund the entire amount to you in the event of cancellation,  without having to deduct Paypal fees).

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A Year Full of Celebration, Contests, Surprises and Special Events!

This year is the 25th anniversary of my business, A Sweet Remembrance, which I began in June, 1986.  To mark the occasion I am planning a year filled with fun, whimsical, interesting, informative and sometimes down right silly events, drawings, contests and classes!

This is the antique fabric and lace that I am giving away in the drawing. Can't you just picture it made up into the perfect summer dress for an Izannah Walker doll? All she would need to celebrate the 4th of July would be a tiny vintage flag!

The first drawing for all of my Reproduction Izannah Walker Doll Making students will be for a dress length of antique fabric and enough antique lace to trim a full set of underclothes for your doll.  All of the details are posted on the class member site.

If you would like to take the class and have a chance at winning the fabric and lace, there is still plenty of time.  The drawing will close on Memorial Day.

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Yuletide Sale

I love this time of year!  In honor of Christmas I have put all of my reproduction Izannah Walker dolls, Spun Cotton Ornament Classes, and Izannah Walker Doll Making Classes on sale through 12/31/10.

The base price of my dolls is normally $1500, but if you purchase a finished doll or place an order for a custom made doll during the sale the base price of the doll will be $1050.  That’s a savings of $450, or 30 %!  The sale price for the Spun Cotton Class is $110 and $220 for the Doll Making class.

If you have been thinking about buying one of my reproduction Izannahs, this is the time.  I don’t anticipate offering them at a lower price anytime during the upcoming year.  Each doll takes between 85 – 95 hours to make.  That’s two forty hour weeks, plus overtime.  🙂

You can view and purchase the finished dolls at www.asweetremembrance.com. Dolls currently in progress can be seen here at the Izannah Walker Journal.  Call me at 860-355-5709 or email me at Paula@asweetremembrance.com with questions, to place a custom order, or to reserve one of the dolls I’m working on. Custom orders require a 25% deposit.

I’m happy to offer lay away for any purchase, usually for four months, but I’m pretty flexible so if you need longer, we can work that out.

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Happy Birthday Izannah Walker

Today is the 193rd anniversary of Izannah Walker’s birth, September 25, 1817 – February 15, 1888.  Happy Birthday Izannah!!!

You made exceptional dolls and I think about you whenever I look at my own dolls that you made.  Even after all this time and all the loving hands they have passed through, they still have the power to enchant everyone who encounters them.

The girls and I decided that we needed to have a celebration today in honor of Izannah.  I baked a Birth-day Pudding and plan to spend the day making a new batch of molded heads.

In case you would like to celebrate with us, here is the recipe for the pudding:

Birth-day Pudding

Butter a deep dish, and lay in slices of bread and butter, wet with milk, and upon these sliced tart apples, sweetened and spiced.   Then lay on another layer of bread and butter and apples, and continue thus till the dish is filled.  Let the top layer be bread and butter, and dip it in milk, turning the buttered side down.  Any other kind of fruit will answer as well.  Put a plate on the top, and bake two hours, then take it off and bake another hour.

This receipt (aka recipe) is from Miss Beecher’s Domestic Receipt-Book by Catherine E. Beecher.  Catherine Esther Beecher was born in 1800 in East Hampton, Long Island.  She founded the Hartford Female Seminary in 1823 as well as other schools for young women in Ohio, Illinois, Iowa and Wisconsin.  She wrote A Treatise on Domestic Economy (1841) and Miss Beecher’s Domestic Receipt-Book (1846).

Notes:

After buttering my dishes I dusted them with sugar, before layering in the bread and butter.

I cut the crusts off my bread, as the pudding was for a special occasion, but you certainly don’t have to.  I saved the crusts as a treat for the wild birds in my yard.  You may also save them to make  stuffings, bread crumbs, or croutons.

I chose cinnamon, mace and nutmeg as my spices.

I baked my doll sized pudding in a custard cup, which would also be nice if you want to bake yours in individual portions.

I preheated my oven to 350 degrees and baked my puddings for 15 minutes, then I reduced the oven temperature to 250 degrees and continued baking for the remaining 2 hours and 45 minutes.  I removed my doll size pudding from the oven after 30 minutes of total baking time.  Your baking time is going to depend a lot on the size of your dishes and the thickness of your pudding, so check your oven fairly frequently.  It’s also a good idea to put a cookie sheet under your dish, because my pudding bubbled over as it was baking.

For any of you that would like to celebrate Izannah’s 193rd birthday by learning how to make dolls like Izannah made hers, I am having a special sale on my Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll Making Class by Mail. The class is on sale through tomorrow, Sunday September 26th at midnight, for $193.00. Its regular price is $250.00.

If you would rather celebrate by buying a finished doll, please contact me this weekend, September 25 & 26, to order your own custom-made reproduction Izannah Walker doll.  I will give you a discount of 30% off of my normal prices, for any doll that you order today or tomorrow.

Email me at paula@asweetremembrance.com or call me at 860-355-5709 to describe what you want your doll to be like (distressed, pristine, fully dressed, au natural, boy or girl, accessories, etc.) and I will be happy to give you an exact price quote before you place your order.  Because of all the variables that you may choose from it’s very hard for me to list prices, and I found out that people were getting confused, so call me or email me and I’ll talk you through the ordering process.  Remember lay away is an option 🙂 !

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Reproduction Izannah Walker Class Member Margie Herrera’s Doll

Recently, Margie Herrera, one of the students in my Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll Making Class, finished her first Izannah.  Margie is an extremely talented doll maker and her doll is beautiful.  I feel just like a proud mother.  So in the tradition of Moms everywhere, I am posting photos of Margie’s doll here for you all to admire.

Margie currently has this doll up for sale on eBay. Her auction ends on September 11th.

One of my very favorite things about teaching is “meeting” all of the wonderful people who take my classes.  Being able to chat with each other online via my Ning site exclusively for students is the next best thing to having everyone all together in one big classroom.

Margie, just like all of my students, has been a joy.  She keeps assuring me that she had a lot of fun working her way through the class – even on the day she re-made her shoulders three times 🙂 !  Now you can see why I love the people who take my classes!

I thought I would share some of Margie’s kind words about her experiences with the class.

“I can only say that even though I have been sculpting and making dolls, I didn’t have the information about Izannah Walker doll design that your class has offered, as well as your other sewing information, and ongoing online assistance with the challenging areas of sculpting and mold making too.  It’s a lesson as well as the real up close information, like patterns, body design and history. Those of us who never saw a real Izannah doll can get a closer look from this class. Much enjoyed! Thank you Paula.”

– Margie

If you want to see more of Margie’s work, add her to your list of favorite sellers on eBay.

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Period Appropriate Dress Trim

In the mid-nineteenth century dressmakers applied many intricate trims to the garments they fashioned.  One of my favorites is a very economical and ingenious trim, made by cutting apart striped fabric, turning under the edges and sewing it onto contrasting dress material.

I made this dress using the Izannah Walker Doll Clothes pattern that I sell, which is also included in my Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll Making Class.  Instead of using brown polished cotton to face the hem, I used a red floral print.  The trim was cut from alternating rows of striped fabric and applied around the skirt, cuffs and shaped waistband.  I also used it for the band around the neckline.

Other alterations to the pattern include a shorter skirt length and additional fullness in the skirt, which I was able to add by making cartridge pleats rather than gathers.

I always enjoy making this type of trim, mainly because I think it’s such a neat idea.  It doesn’t cost much money to do, which would have been an important consideration at the time.  All you need is striped fabric, new or recycled,  scissors, an iron and some time.  I find that spray starch is also helpful, but it’s not a necessity.

Here are two more examples of the same type of trim.  Both are reproduction children’s dresses that I have made.  The photos show both the original dresses and the reproductions.

c. 1830’s to Mid-1840’s Dress for a Very Young Boy

please visit my website for details and price.

Late 1840’s to Late 1850’s Young Child’s Dress

please visit asweetremembrance.com for details and price.

Want to know more about mid-1800’s dress trims?  Click here to read my post on waved braid.

Izannah Reproduction Doll Class · Where to Shop

Just Two More Days to Save $37.50!

If you’ve been thinking about taking my Izannah Reproduction Doll Making Class, this would be a good time to buy.  My Mid-Summer Sale ends at midnight on 7/28.  If you order the class before the end of the sale you can save $37.50,  and as always, I ship within the US for free.

Izannah Reproduction Doll Class · Where to Shop

Mid-Summer Sale

One of my favorite things about summer is that my best friends and I usually manage to work in at least a day or two to get together and work on something “crafty”.  This summer it looks like we’ll be spending a day rug hooking and maybe another day experimenting with pink Rockford red heel socks, making “girly” sock monkeys.  I’d also like to find time for us to get together to make plant markers out of vintage silverware and concrete “fairy houses” for our gardens.

So I thought that I’d run a mid-summer sale on my Spun Cotton Ornament Class by Mail and my Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll Class by Mail to make your summer crafting more affordable.  Take advantage of this 15% off sale to learn something new, either with a group of friends or on your own.  Visit  http://www.asweetremembrance.com/store/WsDefault.asp?One=40 to order my Spun Cotton Class and http://www.asweetremembrance.com/store/WsDefault.asp?One=273 to order my Izannah Class on sale through July 28.

If you would like to be notified of future sales and other news, please sign up for my mailing list, the form is located at the bottom of my website home page.