Other Types of Doll Making

Look for my article on Common Linen Dolls in Early American Life Christmas 2009

If you are looking for a fun cloth doll project to make with kids over the holidays, I have a great one for you.  Check out my article about Common Linen Dolls on pages 67-69 in the Christmas 2009 issue of Early American Life magazine.  The article comes with patterns and instructions as well as a bit of history concerning these pocket sized dolls.

The dolls first appeared in print in The American Girl’s Book written by Eliza Leslie, published in 1831 (numerous reprintings followed).  The American Girl’s Book is a wonderful collection of games, amusements and projects for girls.  If you ever have your chance to get your hands on a copy, hold on hard and fast!  I wanted one for many years before my husband was finally able to locate a copy for me (the internet is a wonderful thing – and so are the many used and collectible book sellers that religiously post up their inventories).

I’ve made these dolls with kids many, many times and they absolutely love them.  In September we held a Colonial Family Day at the museum with lots of demonstrations and hands on activities.  Making Common Linen Dolls was by far the most popular station.  That’s saying a lot when some of the other choices were churning ice cream (and eating it), stuffing scarecrows, dipping beeswax candles and bobbing for apples.

My poor volunteers that were helping the kids make dolls were totally overwhelmed.  The room they were in was so crowded you could barely walk through it.  Little girls with a needle and thread in their hands were bent over linen everywhere you looked.

If your favorite child is a bit too young to sew their own doll, make one for them.  These dolls are wonderful toys for very little children.  As we all know, cloth dolls are the best!

Due to space considerations, Early American Life edited and condensed my instructions.  That’s a very common occurrence when magazines print how- to craft articles.  Any of you who have one of my patterns know that when it comes to instructions, I am a firm believer in the more the merrier! 🙂  If you buy the magazine and want to make the dolls, but feel you need additional help, just contact me and I will be happy to answer any questions you may have.

Antique Izannah Walker Dolls · Izannah Walker History · Reference Materials

Yankee Magazine Article

There is a very nice two-page article on Izannah Walker dolls in the current  (November/December 2009) issue of Yankee magazine, written by Catherine Riedel of Skinner’s Auctioneers.  Thank you Catherine for referring readers to this blog for additional information about Izannah Walker dolls.

If you happen to see a copy of the magazine for sale it is certainly worth purchasing.  As an added bonus the magazine contains some interesting recipes for using up your Thanksgiving leftovers

Uncategorized · Where to Shop

Wilton Historical Society Fine American Craftsman Show

Next weekend on November 14 & 15 the Wilton Connecticut Historical Society is presenting it’s 24th annual Fine American Craftsman Show.  I’ll be exhibiting at the show again this year and I’d like to invite you to visit the show and to stop by my booth for a chat.

I will have a good selection of some of the various things that I make.  Currently I’m rushing against the clock to finish painting an antique Parker carousel horse.  In between coats of paint I’m frantically gluing crepe paper and glitter on to spun cotton ornaments and stitching antique white mohair into teddy bears.  I’m not going to be able to take along every that I make (for example I’m not taking patterns this year).  So if there is something in particular that you want to buy, you can email me ahead of time and if I have one available I’ll bring it to the show and hold it there for you to pick-up.

For details about the show, please visit the Wilton Historical Society website  at www.wiltonhistorical.org/craftsmanshow/index.html .  I hope to see you there!

Doll Clothing · Where to Shop

Pattern Sale

From now through Halloween all of my patterns, cross stitch charts and  spun cotton ornament class by mail kits are on sale at 20% off.  This includes my Izannah Walker Doll Clothes Pattern.  Visit A Sweet Remembrance to shop the sale.  The 20% discount is my Halloween “treat” to you.

Other Types of Doll Making

Moravian Style Cloth Doll Class

Moravian Church Doll 500As I’ve mentioned previously, the museum that I’m the Director/Curator of has a Moravian cloth doll in it’s collection.  In December I’ll be teaching a class at the museum on how to make a doll like the one owned by the museum.  While it isn’t an Izannah type of doll, I thought some of you might still be interested in taking the class anyway.   It’s a charming, well made cloth doll that has of lot of very nice details.

Moravian Style Cloth Doll.  December 12, 2009 10:00-4:00

Come join us for a creative, informative day of sewing.  Learn to make a cloth doll in the style made by the Sewing Circle of the Moravian Church.  The pattern for the doll that students will be making in this class is based on the Moravian Rag Doll (1950-18) that has long been a resident in the Knapp House “Toy Room”.  This cloth doll has painted features and is traditionally dressed in either pink or blue gingham.  Participants in this class must know the basics of machine sewing.  A list of materials and equipment to bring along with you will be sent upon receipt of your registration.  Tuition includes the doll pattern and a printed cloth face (either for reference or for you to use instead of painting).

Tuition: $80 for members, $89 for non-members.

The Class is being held at the museum, 6 Aspetuck Avenue, New Milford, CT.  A minimum registration of four students is necessary for the class to be held.

Moravian Doll Close Up 600Registration Form

Name___________________________________________________________________

Address_________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________

Telephone Number______________________________________________________

Email___________________________________________________________________

Class___________________________________________________________________

Check enclosed for $___________________

Please fill out and return along with your payment to

The New Milford Historical Society

P.O. Box 359

New Milford, CT  06776-0359.

Antique Izannah Walker Dolls · Stray Comments

Happy Easter!

The Izannahs and I would like to share a few photos with you from our Easter celebration yesterday.  We hope that you spent the day in the company of your nearest and dearest and that it was a glorious day for all.

Click on photos to enlarge.

Stray Comments

My New Job

As of two weeks ago, I have a new job. I am now the director and curator of the New Milford, Connecticut Historical Society Museum. I will still be running my business, A Sweet Remembrance. The only difference will be that I am working at the museum on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursday mornings.

The museum has a very nice doll collection, although only one of the dolls is cloth. It is a Moravian Polly Heckewelder doll. Other collections you might find of interest are the extensive costume and quilt holdings.

If you are in the area and have time to visit, the museum is open on Thursday, Friday and Sunday from 1:00 – 4:00 p.m., starting the last week in April through September. The first exhibit of the season this year is on Abraham Lincoln, in honor of his 200th birthday.

Antique Izannah Walker Dolls · Reference Materials

Sources for Photographs of Antique Izannah Walker Dolls

magazine-photosThis is a resource list of photographs in magazines, books and on post cards. The entries listed here are for photographs only, with just an accompanying caption. Actual magazine articles and books that also have photographs are going to be listed under a separate heading. I plan to make this an ongoing list that I will add to as I run across photographs in my huge stash of Izannah resources (I’ve been saving Izannah information for years and years, not necessarily in an organized manner).

Early American Life Magazine, December 2001, page30.

Wenham Historical Association and Museum, Inc., Wenham, MA 01984, postcard.

Mary Merritt’s Doll Museum, Douglassville, PA, postcard.

Better Homes and Gardens Holiday Decorating, 1999, page 45.  This is a wonderful photograph that shows an Izannah Walker doll plus eight other painted cloth dolls, two papier-mache dolls and a whole Christmas tree full of wooden peg dolls (penny wooden).

Stray Comments

Belated Valentine

valentine-front4I hope all of you had a very sweet Valentine’s Day. Brian and I drove to Riverton, CT on Friday the 13th. Riverton is a very tiny town that was the former home of the Hitchcock Chair Company. We had huge, delicious sandwiches and pots of tea for lunch at the Catnip Mouse, and on the way home we went to Buggy Whip Antiques in Southfield, MA. I bought this Valentine along with a handful of others and a purple Staffordshire transferware sugar bowl there at the multi-dealer shop.

Even though I’m running two weeks behind in getting this posted, this Valentine is just too perfect and it would be a shame not to share it with all of you who sew. So Happy Valentine’s Day, a little late!

valentine-back

Doll Clothing · Painted Cloth Doll Making · Stray Comments

Copyrights and Ethics

I am quite fond of antique hooked and shirred rugs. I enjoy working on rugs because it is a very peaceful occupation. Although to be honest, the thing I like best about rug hooking is that it gives me a great reason to dye wool.

Last night I was reading a book that one of my sons gave me for Christmas, entitled Creating an Antique Look in Hand-Hooked Rugs by Cynthia Smesny Norwood, ISBN 978-1-881982-59-3. It’s an excellent book that I highly recommend. As I was reading, I was reminded again how very scrupulous rug hooking books and magazines (in particular Rug Hooking Magazine) are about copyrights.

Cynthia Norwood has written a very detailed, yet clear and easy to understand definition of what copyrights are and how they pertain to you as a craftsperson, whether you sell your work or not. She also discusses copyrights as they apply to antiques. Page 17 of Creating an Antique Look in Hand-Hooked Rugs should be required reading for any and everyone who creates any type of art or craft.

By now, I’m sure that you will have noticed that I am very careful to only sell patterns and finished dolls that are based on antiques that I own, or my original designs. This keeps me out of the murky waters of possible copyright infringement. Even though antiques no longer have copyright protection, you should give credit to the original artisan. Also be aware that the current owners of the antique item do have rights as well.

Speaking of antique reproductions, another thing I should mention is that you need to sign and date your work. Obviously it would be a miracle if we were able to perfectly recreate an antique doll or antique doll clothing. Knowledgeable collectors are going to be able to immediately tell the difference between a newly made doll and a genuine antique. Even so, you want to make sure that you very clearly mark your work. People that do not know as much about antiques could be deceived, especially if your work should ever be sold on the secondary market.  The more hands an item passes through, the more chance there is that information concerning it will be garbled or lost.   Remember what happened when you played “Telephone” as a kid?

My husband Brian and I run into this all the time with antique carousel horses. We find reproduction horses that are being sold by people who honestly believe that they are antiques, due to their inexperience in the field.