Happy Lunar New Year! 2022 is the Year of the Tiger. The tiger is known as the king of all beasts in China and is associated with bravery, confidence and strength. Also known to be strong-willed, opinionated and stubborn, the tiger years are 1938, 1950, 1962, 1974, 1986, 1998, 2010, 2022, and 2034.
The tiger is associated with Yang (masculine, active) energy. Tigers do things their own way and hate being told what to do. This is not only the Year of the Tiger, it's the year of the Water Tiger. Water years bring out our emotions more than any of the other elements. Water Tigers are family-oriented and have wonderful interpersonal relationships. They are extremely driven and selfless.
Not a tiger? Strength, confidence and bravery are still yours to look forward to in 2022.
I love Lunar New Year. It is also Spring Festival in China, yet still winter. I was visiting with a friend of mine recently and trying to remember when it was exactly, that I started celebrating the Lunar New Year. The only thing that came to mind was falling in love with Asian dolls, Chinese dolls in particular. And, when something like this strikes me, I absorb myself in reading up on the culture, practices, and celebrations. So, when was it? Maybe the first time I went to Chinatown in San Francisco as a child. That far back.
This year was no exception, but I took decorating a little further and decided to make myself a Year of the Tiger doll. I was thrilled when Ruby Red Galleria introduce Dawn (14") in their "Friends" line, followed shortly by Belinda (8") and Sophie (6.5") in Chinese New Year outfits. (see photos below) I actually bought two Dawns. One to keep dressed, and one to dress on my own for Chinese celebrations and seasons. Not knowing when any of these dolls would show up, I took matters
into my own hands with a Robert Tonner Gracie. I'm calling her Good Luck Gracie and she will remind me to be strong and brave and creative as the years unfolds.
I'd been on Pinterest searching "2022 Year of the Tiger" for anything inspiring when I came upon this photo of a pretty little girl dressed in traditional winter New Year costuming, and knew I had to make this. I'd been working on a winter outfit for Fancy Nancy and not getting anywhere very quickly since I kept having to order this and that to finish the project, so I set it aside with little time to spare to get Gracie dressed. If the costuming is not incredibly detailed, poses a challenge, or a new opportunity to learn something, it's often not worth the effort to me. So, I dug my heels in and pushed to get this done from pattern to finish in a week and a half.
I discovered many things about this child's outfit as I went along. It was all guesswork and study as I proceeded from the shoes to the
final piece, the purse. I did make the shoes first, but we'll talk about them in a bit.
Good Luck Gracie's outfit consists of a pair of loose trousers, a white kimono sleeved blouse, a winter vest, winter hat and tiger purse. This little outfit was also an opportunity for me to play with the mini teddy bear fur I'd worked with on Agatha Primrose's Red Riding Hood costume.
The trousers are pale peach silk with an elastic waistband. The vest is silk-lined silk with inset fur at the arm holes, fur trimmed on the bottom, and a fur circlet that hooks in the front at the top of the vest.
The white silk blouse with Chinese collar was made with closed kimono sleeves piped in red silk. This was the first time I'd tried such a thing and had to carefully study the child's blouse. The sleeve ends are not squared, but rounded, and I simply shaped and clipped until I had the look I wanted with them. The closure on the blouse is
the same as the closures on the vest. Tiny Chinese knots or any knot wasn't going to do it, even though I've made frog closures before. These were ornate and delicate. I used a combination of gold beads and crocheted thread loops for them.
When it came time to decorate the vest with the elaborate Chinese tiger design, I was thinking that I'd have to embroider this. But the child's vest, I discovered, was hand painted and so I followed suit. Most likely it was done with silk screening the artwork on. I had to free hand draw the design on with a white charcoal pencil, then paint the images as I saw them. The artwork is not an exact replica, but this makes it unique for Gracie's little shape and size.
The critics will tell me the fur is not in scale to the original costume. Duh. I know this. The only "fur" I can think of that may have come close to this look is silk velvet in white. Think about it. I studied a winter outfit Ruby Red Galleria did for a
convention and followed their direction.
None of this was easy, and because I was winging it like always, I was tempted to toss the whole project at one point in frustration. Yet, I learned a lot creating this vest and the next one I make will go a lot more smoothly. Dawn is due to get something similar. And, due to her larger size, I can create her something more elegant. In the photos below you'll see another red jacket with tigers on the hem. This was the first jacket I saw when searching for inspiration, and then I found this child's vest and accessories and felt it was best for Gracie.
There are many beautiful styles of these vests, jackets and coats and if I lived in China, I'd have a closet full of them. Gorgeous!
In the photo of the back of the costume, you can see how the ears were sewn onto the hat. It was the study of similar winter hats that tipped me off on how to do this.
And the shoes. Little pale peach silk slippers embroidered with a baby tiger face. This pattern, design, was one I picked up from a Year of the Tiger emblem on Pinterest. Yes, the little ear was bent. I did the embroidery work before assembling the slippers. The soles are white linen like the shoes Ruby Red Galleria makes.
Then the fun began. The hat and the shoulder bag. I can't tell you how many hours I studied the several photos of the little Chinese girl in this outfit. There were possibly five on Pinterest showing the costume on her in different poses. Again, I detected that the imagery, the artwork was hand painted on. However, there was the addition of beading or knotting at the nostrils of the Chinese tiger design and tassels for whiskers. How clever! And the purse to match was done the same way. The hat was made as the vest. Silk-lined silk.
The red leather shoulder bag, probably the cutest (hate that word, but) accessory of the outfit was hand painted as well, and the artwork was completely free hand painted as I couldn't draw on the leather. If I used an ink pen and made a mistake, the bag would have been ruined. So was the case in painting the vest and hat, but I was careful, slow and methodical in rendering the design.
I will note that plain old Ceramcoat acrylic paint was best for all of this, but I did use fabric paint on the vest. It was a mistake. I mean, it looks fine, but the painting would have gone better using the bottled acrylic. Fabric is not easy to paint on. When an artist paints on canvas, the canvas is coated in Gesso. This reduces the problems microscopic fibers that a fine, four ought brush catches on and can mess up a smooth line.
I'm simply enchanted by the Chinese Lunar New Year costuming the women and girls in China wear to festivals and parties. One of the other and modern traditional outfits is a red dress in a skirted 50s style. American Girl made one of these last autumn for their travel series. I bought one for Blaire and decorated her hotel room for the season. You can see a photo of her in it below.
The Chinese, a warm and fun-loving people, also make New Year's winter costuming for their pets. I had to chuckle at some of the hats and jackets, and to entertain you, I included a couple of photos below. I surely wish I recall where I found that Chinese tiger bag below, because I'd buy one. It may have been a kit, and that would have deterred me, but its precious. Things like this, I hang on doorknobs.
If you wish to observe the Lunar New Year in a simpler way, go out to a Chinese restaurant or order in like Blaire did. Buy a bag of fortune cookies to munch on and read the fortunes while watching television. Make some jasmine tea with real tea leaves and when they settle, try to make up a fortune from them. My sister and I used to do this. A rather Rorschach thing.
So Gung Hay Fat Choy! Happy Chinese Lunar New Year! Be strong and brave and let the tiger bring you good luck, prosperity and protection.
Love, Melissa