Doll Clothing · Izannah Reproduction Doll Class · Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll

Planning for my Izannah Walker Doll Making Retreat in 2012

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

I’m in the very early planning stages of working on an Izannah Walker Doll Making Retreat for 2012.  Because a number of people contacted me about this years retreat, but were unable to attend due to schedule conflicts, I am asking for your input.

If you are interested in attending a 2-3 day Izannah class next year, please comment on this post and let me know when the best time of year would be for you.  If you would prefer to email me, that would be great too –  paula@asweetremembrance.com.

To read more details about the retreat, click here.

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.

Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll · Where to Shop

One New Doll Added to My Website – Now SOLD

This doll has double ringlets in front of her ears and short cropped hair in back.

This doll has been sold, thank you for coming by to look at her.  We’ve just added these one new doll to my website.  Please visit A Sweet Remembrance to read all about her.  If you have any questions about this doll please feel free to call me at 860-355-5709 or email paula@asweetremembrance.com .

If you would like to be notified whenever I have new Izannahs for sale, please email paula@asweetremembrance.com.  This is a different list from my regular mailing list, you are welcome to sign-up for both or just one, as you please.

A wool felt hat and scrap of cobweb lace are all she needs to be ready for All Hallows Eve.
See her red scallop topped boots showing out from under her dress.
Her linen chemise is edged with a delicate hand gathered lace frill.
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My Latest Doll Up For Auction on eBay – SOLD

This doll is SOLD.  Thanks so much for looking.

I’ve just listed this doll on eBay.  She turned out so well!  I finished her clothes this afternoon, and immediately decided that she is one of my favorites.  I hope you agree.  Click on any of the small photos to enlarge them.

I love this 175 year old paisley dress fabric. It's a golden brown and Prussian blue print from the 1830's.
Her linen chemise has a hand gathered antique lace frill around the neck, which can peek above the neckline of her dress, or be modestly tucked underneath.
Her painted boots have scalloped tops that are trimmed in Prussian blue.
I've left her pantalettes long, so that their tatted lace trim shows, but if you prefer, I would be happy to add tucks to the hemline so that more of her boots will be visible.
I adore all of the different mourning prints in this two piece outfit. All of the fabrics work so well together .
Add a hat and a photo of some of her witchy sisters and she is all ready for Halloween!
Doll Clothing · Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll · Where to Shop

BOTH OF THESE DOLLS HAVE BEEN SOLD – September 1st – Fall is Approaching – A First Look at Autumn Works from My Studio

"Double double, toil and trouble. Fire burn and cauldron bubble." These Izzys are dressed for a girl's night out on October 31st.

These two dolls have already found new homes.  Thank you for dropping in to see them!  Just for fun, the girls are dressed in antique mourning print fabrics and wool felt hats to celebrate All Hallows Eve.  Pack their hats away after Halloween and pose them with antique daguerreotypes or tintypes for a stunning monochromatic year round display.  Check back soon to see additional pieces in their wardrobes.

If you would like more information on these two dolls or others that I am currently working on, please call 860-355-5709 or email me at paula@asweetremembrance.com .

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The Joys of Lay-Away

When I was a child, my parents gave me a modest weekly allowance.  It was designed to teach me how the save and spend money. They came up with a formula for calculating allowance rates, twenty-five cents a week starting on my fifth birthday, with a ten cent raise every year.  Saturday was allowance day 🙂

Sometimes I would spend my allowance right away, and other times I would save it in my bank, which was shaped like an upright antique wood stove.  In addition to my allowance, my grandparents would occasionally give me money that I added to my bank, along with the dimes my parents gave out for 1’s on my report card (our school used a numbered grading system instead of ABC’s, so a 1 was equivalent to an A).

Because I have always loved dolls, a large portion of my childhood savings was spent on dolls.  At first, when I was very small, I would buy tiny plastic dolls at Ben Franklin’s for a quarter.  Then came my Liddle Kiddle’s faze, where I saved up $1.79 – $2.99 to buy every different Liddle Kiddle I could find.

When I was eleven I started babysitting.  I earned 50 cents an hour.  I thought I was rich! With my new found earnings I took the plunge and opened my first lay-away account at the toy department of a local store.  For months I had been looking at all of the Madame Alexander dolls in the store.  Now I could finally buy one!  The dolls were much more expensive than any that my parents were willing to buy me for Christmas or my birthday, but I had my heart set on having a really “good” doll.  I already loved antique dolls and had I known where to buy one, I probably would have tried to purchase a china doll instead.  But eleven year olds then didn’t have all of the shopping resources that they have today, so I went with what I could buy at one of the major department stores in our town.

I would talk one parent or another into taking me to the shopping mall to make a lay-away payment every time I had $2 or $3 saved up.  I’m sure they must have gotten tired of making all of those trips, but I don’t remember them ever refusing to take me 🙂  Eventually the doll was paid for and I proudly brought her home.  Later my interest turned to clothes and shoes and I once again ventured into the land of lay-away to buy my first pair of heels.  Black patent leather Mary Jane’s with a much coveted one inch heel!

I still have my Madame Alexander doll and the Mary Jane’s and will always look back fondly on my first lay-away experiences and the joy of being able to save up and buy something special.  That is why I am  happy to offer lay-away as an option to anyone who wants to buy one of my dolls 🙂  How could I resist providing the same service to others, that allowed me to buy my first good doll?

If you would like to buy any of my dolls and place them on lay-away, just call 860-355-5709 or email me paula@asweetremembrance.com.  Lay-away is also a wonderful way to buy a custom made doll.

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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 🙂

Doll Clothing · Doll for Sale · Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll

Red Hot Summer! This Doll is Now SOLD – Thank You

The last few days have been scorchingly hot here in Connecticut!  Much too warm to garden, or work on the antique cupboards that I’m in the midst of cleaning and painting.  So I have been distracting myself from the heat by making doll clothes.  Which has worked pretty well for several hours at a time, once I finally made allowances for the heat.  It’s been too hot to sew in both my new studio and my sewing room, so I wandered around the house until I found the least stifling hot room and set up a sewing machine.  After all, that is why God made portable sewing machines 🙂

My newly claimed sewing area was not without it’s problems.  First off, I needed a flat surface to plop the sewing machine on.  I didn’t want to haul anything heavy or have to move furniture too far.   I wound up grabbing a child size Mission oak desk that was the nearest thing to hand.  Not ideal, but I was starting to work up a sweat, so I didn’t really care.

Next it was time to plug in the machine and get it threaded.  Oops!  No bobbin in the machine.  That meant a trek out to my studio through the blazing sun to get one.  I grabbed two, just for good measure and came back in the house.

With the machine finally threaded, I started sewing on some glorious early brown and red stripped fabric that I had chosen to make an Izzy dress.  More problems, the tension on the Singer Featherweight I was using was off and the machine was skipping stitches.  There ensued a small pause for the removal of the offending stitches and tension adjustment.  Back to sewing… and still skipping stitches!!!  Reread the last two sentences a few times and you’ll begin to see why I trooped back out to my studio to get a different Featherweight!  Good thing I have a spare 🙂  Once I cooled down and gulped a glass of iced tea I finally got to sew!

I am quite pleased with the way the dress is turning out and once it’s finished I’m planning to make a Turkey red sunbonnet to go with it, as well as a red embroidered apron.  I had such a good time sorting through my antique fabrics and picking out just the right ones, that I almost managed to forget I was hot 🙂

I hope that where ever you are that you’ve managed to find a moderately cool spot of your own.  This doll has been sold.  Thank you for stopping by to look at her:)

Doll for Sale · Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll · Where to Shop

Now Sold -This Doll is Ready to Travel with Her Sunbonnet to Keep Those Pesky Freckles Away

SOLD – THANK YOU FOR LOOKING

Pink, pink and more pink with tucks, flounces, ribbons and bows.

Please feel free to call or email me if you have any questions or need more information or additional photos.  You may purchase her on my website, where there is a shopping cart,  automated checkout and detailed description.  Or if you are just too hot and tired to deal with filling in the order form, call me at 860-355-5709 and I will do everything for you 🙂

Doll Clothing · Doll for Sale · Izannah Walker Reproduction Doll · Where to Shop

This Doll is Now Up for Auction on eBay – SOLD – Thank you

Thank you so much for looking!  This doll is now sold.   You may custom order her younger sister:) by calling 860-355-5709 or emailing me paula@asweetremembrance.com.

I’ve just finished listing this doll on eBay.  She is up for auction with a wardrobe of two dresses, an antique indigo print summer dress and a brown reproduction Civil War era brown cotton print dress for fall and winter.   You know how important it is for a girl to have a choice of ensembles 🙂 .