Monday, February 7, 2022

Lantern Festival Cissy

Hello my lovely friends!  Just sitting here enjoying a comforting cup of jasmine tea in my pretty Year of the Tiger mug.  After it became apparent that the first shipment was never going to make it here, the seller overnighted a replacement for me.  Unfortunately, this all didn't commence until after February first, but I'm happily drinking cup after cup of "good luck" tea now.  Chinese New Year lasts fifteen days, and I've been enjoying scratching off a fortune each day from this pack of Chinese New Year fortune cards that I bought.  We make our own fun, and why not?  I could make a month-long celebration of any holiday or theme just by sewing something special for a doll!

After finishing Good Luck Gracie, I'd received four tiny crochet dolls (amigurumi) from the artist that makes them for me.  I'd asked her to make the ghosts of Christmas past, present and future, along with Marley's ghost.  They weren't going to be done in time for last Christmas, so I asked her to 

take her time with them.  And, by the way, they came out adorable!  But she had asked me how my tiger came out.  Tiger?  What tiger?  It was then that I remembered that I asked her if she thought she could crochet me a Chinese New Year tiger.  Realizing he would be a skinny little doll, I thought best to needle felt him myself.  Then I got busy with Good Luck Gracie and forgot all about him!  So, when she asked how he turned out, guilt hit me, and I got my needle felting stuff out and made the tiny tiger.  He was the perfect size for Gracie, so I tucked him into her arms.  The story is, she received her cuddly toy from Grandmother at one of the dinner festivities.  Below you'll see a photo of Gracie with him and a close up of the tiger.  I did not make up this design.  It was inspired by a crochet pattern I found on Pinterest.  

Shortly after I finished the tiger, I'd been thinking about the Lantern Festival, which falls on the 15th of the month.  It's the final celebration of Chinese New Year falling on the first full moon of the lunar year.  If I had not mentioned it, Chinese New 

Year's date is chosen by the date of the first new moon of the lunar new year. During this two-week cycle families still gather and there are observations of keeping taboos in check.  On the night of the Lantern Festival, streets and homes are decorated with colorful lanterns, often with riddles written on them.  People eat sweet rice balls called tangyuan, watch dragon and lion dances, and set off fireworks.

The festival can be traced back 2000 years, with Buddhist origins.  Ruling the beginning of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Emperor Hangmindi heard that some monks lit lanterns in their temples to show respect to Buddha on the 15th day of the first lunar month and respectfully followed suit. 

The lighting of lanterns symbolizes illuminating the future.  It is a way for people to pray for a smooth future and good luck for their families.  I think it's a beautiful custom.  There isn't much that doesn't intrigue me about the Chinese culture.  With this in mind, I chose one more doll to give a Chinese New Year outfit to.  I'm planning on sewing more for Cissy this year anyway, and I recalled this outfit on a vintage pattern that would be perfect

to make up.  I loved the illustration on the pattern front and decided to make it up just like the picture and follow the directions to a "t".  I may have to read them several times to figure it out, but this was definitely one of easier patterns to follow.  I'm grateful this Etsy seller made these vintage patterns available for us.

Cissy's Lantern Festival outfit is what they called pajamas back in the 50s.  To me, it's a hostess outfit to wear for a dinner party, and this year Cissy will host her own Lantern Festival dinner party.  The outfit is entirely made up from Shantung silk.  I even followed the directions for using bias tape for the trimming of the sleeve and neck edges, as well as making the frog closures.  However, I made my own bias tape from the red silk.  I had to try this.  Personally, I think real bias tape would be too chunky and large to work with, but out of silk it went very smoothly, although it was definitely a lot of fiddly work.

There are many ways to make frog closures and someday I'd like to try them with Chinese knots, in miniature of course.

What I loved about this pattern were the side slits at the hems of the pants and jacket.  Making this pattern taught me how to do this correctly and what I'd have to do when drafting my own pattern for something similar.

The tediously little frog closures were made by "opening" the bias tape, ironing it flat, sewing the edge 1/8" and turning the doggone thing inside out by attaching a thread and needle at one end.  With silk it was a breeze.  Out of study normal bias tape, it would have been a nightmare.  My tape was 1" wide.  

You cut a 3" piece, make a knot in the center of four pieces then slip stitch the ends together in the center.  Same for the unknotted pieces, but you leave a hole for the knot on the other side to go through.  I hand-stitched these eight pieces on, but it wasn't specified how you should sew them on.

Just the back view.  The jacket even has pockets which I love.
For Cissy's hair, I made little Chinese clip-ons.  Ruby Red Galleria makes these for their doll outfits and I love them.  Mine are not as elaborate, but I did order a ton of these very tiny hair clips back when I was first sewing for Peggy Sue and used them for bow clips.

Cissy's hair clips have "cherry blossoms" on them and three graduating chains ending in tiny pearls.

I made her a pair of red tassel earrings to go with the outfit since the tiny gold fortune cookie charms weren't going to arrive anytime soon. I loved this pattern and will most likely make a second one, maybe with full length pants in aqua and yellow silks.  We can make her the fortune cookie jewelry for that outfit.

Earlier I'd been looking for paper lantern crafts on Pinterest and found this image which led me to a website that had pdf files of tiger lanterns.  If you printed them out on A4 and in portrait, they'd be perfect for a doll.  I made one of the tiger ones (see final photo), but decided I was being lazy and I ought to get to work, so made up a cherry blossom lantern in the same manner.
Cissy's cherry blossom lantern was made from using the image of a paper or wallpaper, then folding and cutting the lantern shape as the tiger one was.  I added gold paper to the top and bottom and used it also for the handle.  For the dangling "charm", I found a Double Happiness image and glued it to a gold paper circle.  The charms are the same image back and front.  

So, the theme of Cissy's cherry blossom hair clips are continued with the lantern. I've enjoyed celebrating Chinese New Year with my dolls, and now Valentine's Day is coming up.  Rachel of the Virtual Doll Convention offered a Club Grace outfit for Valentine's Day that was pink with white polka-dots.  I might make Dolly Dingle a dress to go with it, but I'm not sure.  I do need to get both dolls out of their Christmas wear.  And the color theme would last through Easter if you think about it.  Decisions, decisions.  I have a big project I want to begin, so maybe I should do that first.

I hope you've enjoyed learning a little about Chinese New Year and some of the traditions.  I love that the Lantern Festival falls on the full moon.  I'm a moon watcher and this make it all the more special this year.  I 've attached some beautiful photos of Lantern Festival in China, and one of the "soup" with the sweet rice balls.  No, they are not eggs.  This is must have treat and the roundness of the balls symbolizes wholeness and completeness.  The sweet taste symbolizes a sweet and happy life.  How fun to eat special foods that are symbolic!

Wishing you all a happy Valentine's Day.  Is it any wonder that I also collect vintage Chinese Valentines, ephemera and New Year's cards?  Some are simply gorgeous!  Always inspirational.

Love, Melissa









 

Monday, January 31, 2022

Good Luck Gracie - Happy Lunar New Year - Year of the Tiger

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




First jacket I saw.








I want!!!!


Hat I found the ear design on.

Dawn

Sophie

Belinda

Good Luck Gracie

 

Friday, January 14, 2022

Agatha Hood or Agatha Primrose as Red

Ahhhh!  A sunny, quiet afternoon in the second week of the new year.  Winter came and went.  Two weeks of snow and rain and I was in a blissful state of winter.  Then "whoosh"!  It all went away.  Sure, it worries me, but there's nothing to be done about the weather, so I'll hike the trails in the earliest of spring growth.  Oh, I don't know.  Winter may return, and I have a couple of doll projects that are winter related, but it brings me back to my childhood growing up here.  I couldn't understand why it snowed in New York and only rained in California.  No one bothered to explain it to me either, but I "played snow and winter".  Even it meant freezing a pan of water for my troll doll to skate on.  My imagination has gotten me through life.

Remember last September when I spent the entire month celebrating Little Red Riding Hood?  I got a surprise one day by my lovely friend, Diana Vining, when she shared with me, a Red paper doll that she had created.

This was towards the end of September and I was already deep into Peggy Sue's Mechanical Man costume and "playing Halloween".  I knew however, the moment I saw this set, that I HAD to make the Red costume with the furry wolf hat.  OMG!  Just how adorable is that anyway?!  Some of the costumes Diana created were child outfits, but this one had a bit of sass to it, in a grown-up way.  It didn't take a lot of guessing who I'd want to use for it, and Tonner's Agatha Primrose got the honors.

Agatha is probably one of the lesser known and appreciated dolls that Tonner made.  His 12" Marley and assorted characters seemed to find more popularity and approval.  Which made bookish little 13" Agatha with her glasses, all the more appealing to me.  Not a mini me, but her personality is more in line with my own.

If my poor memory serves me well, Robert introduced her at

the MDC (Modern Doll Convention), in Reno, the year I went.  I could drive there.  A good three hours, but it beat a trip to the airport.  He got the standard applause as he continued with his slide show, but I don't think she took off as well as his other lines.  I got everything I could lay my hands on for her as Ebay sellers would offer the outfit only auctions.  I was even lucky enough to get the Alice outfit from the Agatha he brought to ComicCon.

I display two Agathas on my Tonner "12 shelf".  A blonde I dress up, and the short haired blonde in the houndstooth pants, looking rather collegiate.  I bought the anime dark haired one for the pink sailor outfit, then put her away, and that was that, until now.  I'm so glad I kept her!  I knew with her dark tresses, she'd be a winner for Diana's costume.  And this would be a challenge as I'd never sewn for this size before.

So, let's talk about the dress first. I'm pretty punch proud of how this came out.  The funny thing about considering buying someone's patterns, is that 

they never have the style I'm looking for.  But this dress is very similar to Cissy dresses, so I reduced in size, one of the patterns I have for Cissy for the bodice.  It almost fit but needed to be taken in at the sides and shoulders, and the weird thing is that I had to move the back dart over towards the side.  I'm still not comfortable with darts, even though I understand what they do and their purpose, so moving it over a quarter inch took a leap of faith.  It worked out perfectly.  I can't tell you why.

The next task was making the pattern for the jacket and hood.  Now some of you might interpret what Diana drew as a head band with wolf ears on it.  Obviously, we can't see the back of it, and while I could have asked her what she intended, it was more fun to wing it.  Maybe I was being original here, which is not the point, to me, when bringing her fashions designs to life, but to me it called for being a hood.  I made a pattern like a baby's bonnet for the hood, and the jacket was a reduced Cissy-sized blouse altered at the front.  What did I use for the fur?  Here's the fun part.  Something I can share with you!

After receiving the December Club Grace box that included this soft, and darling little fur coat in it, I started doing a bit of research on what Ruby Red Galleria may have used for their fur.  A lot of this has to do with what you put into an Internet search.  "Mini fur for dolls" did the trick.  What came up as a result was "mini teddy bear fur".  Mini Teddy Bear Fur.  I had no idea there was such a thing, much less that it could be purchased.  

A seller on Etsy had six pieces of this fabric in the gray you're looking at.  All other sellers of "mini teddy bear fur" were either in the U.K. or China.  So, I purchased it all because it was both inexpensive and came in small sheets.  So small that I had to piece two together to place the pattern for the back of the jacket on it.  Why?  Because like velveteen that has a nap, the fur goes one way.

I figured I'd just test this gray fur out, work with it, and if it was nice, I'd buy more from this one U.K. seller who directed me to her "soft" mini fur.  As it turns out, I bought a piece from a China seller, and one from her.  I feel like I hit the jackpot for doll fur coat needs.  No more using chunky, bulky people size faux fur for dolls!  Is it easy to work with?  No.  Fur isn't.  If you've never sewn with fur or faux fur, watch a good Youtube on how to cut it and sew it.  While I've only worked with it as trim on doll coats and for collars, I feel confident now, that I could make a nice fur coat for Grace or Cissy, or any sized doll because the mini teddy bear fur is the correct size.  And it does come in different fur lengths and lots of colors.

Again, it is not easy to work with.  It's very soft and silky, but if you have patience and determination, you can smooth the fur down in the front to meet the edge of your lining as you pin it together to sew.

The hood was equally tricky and attaching the wolf ears was something else.  I've never done this before, and don't plan to do it 

again.  You might normally position the ear ends in slits and sew them on, but this slippery fur did not allow itself such a process.

The little wolf paw print on the hem of her red pinwhale corduroy dress is of black leather. Gray tights and little boots purchased from Marcia Friend of Facets By Marcia, rounded out the look.  

Agatha Primrose is a lovely, youthful doll to dress and play with.  In my mind, she's about 19-20 years old and full of fun, life and promise.  Now that I have a good dress pattern that will fit her, I might do something like this again in the future.

As I was compiling stock photos to celebrate Agatha Primrose, I became very sentimental and sad that Tonner Doll Company is gone forever.  Just typing the name makes me shake my head.  I'll have a Tonner doll arriving in the mail the day I breathe my last!

Below is a photo celebration of Agatha Primrose.  Also, another Diana Vining Red Riding Hood that she created for a Bleuette paper doll.  Just love the Becassine in the basket!  Her Bleuette paper doll was fairytale themed.  Maybe someday.  Think I'd skip the Goldilocks though with that smocking on the pinafore.  I did smocking with Mary Lennox, and that was plenty with a capitol p.

The last of December and the first two weeks of January have had me buying a few new dolls for special projects. The illustrators of beautiful children's books, and the art of paper doll artists like Diana Vining keep me inspired and contently creating away.  However!  If winter returns, I'll be back on the snow in no time flat.  

Love, Melissa










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