Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Happy Birthday Daisy!











On March 15th, we celebrated Daisy's 100th Anniversary. In keeping my priorities straight, I launched into making some wonderful things for collectors of the doll to help in celebrating her birthday in style. I'd had a bit of set back with the Lettie Lane Doll House in that my table saw needed a new blade, and once had, I needed to install it properly and "calibrate" it to perform smoothly and with a straight cut. All of this mechanics work put me in a mood to do something a bit more fun, so I began making party hats and cornucopia favors for the doll.
I'd attended a doll show in a nearby town and found that Harrison Cady, one of my favorite illustrators from long ago, was a featured illustrator and story teller in the Ladies' Home Journal back when Lettie Lane's paper dolls were being made and Daisy, herself, was introduced. I'd found a page of his work, which were cut-out stand-ups that a child could play with to further enjoy the story on the adjacent page. Of course I had to miniaturize them on wood and make Daisy some for her party table. I'd also found another antique wooden puzzle with four complete puzzles, and miniaturized one for Daisy to play with.

A miniature version of an antique linen Alice in Wonderland book was added to the series, along with a die-cut coloring book and a set of real, tiny colored pencils in a reproduction wooden slide top box. I'd offered the coloring book and pencils with the eyelet paper doll party hat, but for some reason this did not go over well, so it will go to convention with me this summer.

Two other items I made for Daisy were a miniature version of herself from a Nada Christensen Petit Bleu, and a miniaturized copy of the Ladies' Home Journal where Daisy debuted. The magazine was one of the most difficult things I've done and I swore off doing another, although I'd made three of them. Then I acquired, luckily, three other issues with Daisy's dress pattern pages by Sheila Young, so I guess I'm going to have to miniaturize them, too. I'm only missing the December issue, and hope to find it this year. The next issue was the bridal issue of April 15th. My intent is to get one "hot of the press" the first week of April.

In the Daisy debut issue of March 15, 1911, there was also an ad on page 44 stating a contest for girls to sew their best and send the outfits in for judging. The prize was Lettie Lane's Sewing Box and $100. I'd been scrolling for antique sewing baskets and boxes and found this adorable woven purse basket with tiny baskets inside holding scissors, a tomato-strawberry and a thimble. Naturally I HAD to miniaturize this! It was one of the cutest things I've made so far for Daisy, and a miniature antique reproduction tape measure followed. It was quite an achievement getting the tape to pull out and wind back up nicely, and at this point, I'm not giving that secret away.
I'd so much fun making the sewing basket, that I made one more sewing accessory to satisfy my creativity. This one was Daisy's Duck Sewing Caddy. I was tickled when someone saw it and said, "I know how you did it, and it is worth every penny". Well she does not know how I did it, but she can certainly guess at how it was done. This one took my three tries to get right and the duck, whose beak holds the scissors, caused me more grief than it was worth. Yet in the end this duck caddy will remain a favorite. I'd made one more tape measure and topped the crank with a tiny wooden duck bead that I'd made. When you pull the tape measure out, and rewind it, the duck spins! This was a happy accident, but it has given me ideas for mechanical toys.

Another process in the sewing accessories was in making the tiny tomato-strawberries. The one in the basket is made from vintage red velveteen, and the other in the duck caddy from cotton. If put to the task, I'm sure I'd try making one in pieces to have a smoother finish, but for these collections, I feel they came out very sweet. There really is no limit to the length I'll go to to create some of these things, but sometimes I wonder just how many hours should be spent on a single item? Well, I can answer that. If I'm intrigued, there is no limit!

One of the things that has troubled me about this blog site, is that I've never been able to figure out how to move photos about on the page. Because of this, I'm afraid they are often just a jumble, but I do hope you'll enjoy them.

Right now I'm working on yet another miniature Cracker Barrel Trunk for a miniature Bleuette and its giving me the fits. I swore I'd never make another, but here I am doing something special for a customer. And, while I'm tearing my mousy fur out over this, when the wood arrives, I'll make a slightly larger one for the Petit Bleu, which is 4" in height (the same size doll as Daisy's mini self). The mini-porcelain Bleuettes are about 2 1/2" tall.

And, why is this mouse working so hard these days? Because she's trying to get herself to the UFDC doll convention in Anaheim this summer. Its rather funny, but most of my customers do not really understand that I have to invest to create, and often have to purchase an item so I can miniaturize in perfect scale. A little goes in, a little goes out. But, its certainly hard to save for events like the convention.

And, what of the Lettie Lane Doll House? Well, the roof sits on my table and I will continue to work on it just as soon as I get a bit caught up.
Tomorrow is St.Patrick's Day and I wish you all a lucky day filled with pots of gold and rainbows. Back to my hole in the wall.

Love,
Miss E. Mouse







































Monday, February 7, 2011

The square of the hypotenuse is equal to...



...the sum of the square of the other two sides. Ah, don't you love geometry! Well, this little mouse has had it up to her round little ears already in three-dimensional geometry. As my husband puts it, solid geometry is visual, and not analytic. sigh At least he paused a moment to help me get the proper dimensions for the roof of the wee Lettie Lane Dollhouse.

As I'd mentioned, I was going to build it first from cardboard, and then attack the wood pile. Seems I'm having difficulty with my old Jarmac table saw, but I did (pat, pat, pat myself on the back) get the angles right to make the pyramid roof. Of course, last night's cardboard image you see in this photo does not have the basement on it. I only got to the point of creating the proportions of the rooms and floor of the house - enough to tackle the cardboard roof and beg for help from the inhouse mathematician.

I'm posting right away because I had a wonderful visit with my darling father-in-law on the phone today, and we were discussing my new project. I steered him to my blog so he could follow my progress and see the photos as the project continues. Ray is turning 90 next month and has been my dearest supporter in all my endeavors. So today's blog is in his honor so that he can see the Ladies' Home Journal page of the original Lettie Lane dollhouse, and see just what I'm trying to accomplish. More to come!

Love,
Miss E. Mouse


Saturday, February 5, 2011

I'm just a lonely doll, lonely and blue...

February is upon us and thoughts turn to hearts, flowers, valentines red and pink. January, was a busy month and one of the pieces I finished for a dear customer was a special gift for her stepmother.

A few years back I'd made a miniature storybook trunk set, Wee Edith the Lonely Doll, and the stepmother saw it on my website and fell in love with it. So, I was asked to do another. Goodness me! This is alot of work. I'd forgotten how much. But, it was fun to recreate it with new bears, and with my skills in better shape to handle domed trunks - although the first came out lovely, too. Thank goodness I never throw out fabrics as these were handy for covering the trunk and dressing another little doll.

Wee Edith II is 2 3/4" tall, hand-sculpted and painted, and the trunk, if my mousey brain still remembers, is about 3 1/2" tall. Wee Edith in pink makes for a perfect valentine for the collector. Don't you think?

And, now we are in the Year of the Rabbit. The Chinese Lunar New Year was celebrated on the 3rd of this month and we can hopefully look forward to a kind and gentle year. Although, as much as I love rabbits, they tend to chase me if I'm out in the garden.

Currently my paws are turning towards a tiny Lettie Lane doll house, built for an 18" Daisy doll, complete with the furniture and tiny doll. The original was for a child to play with and was 17" tall, built of cardboard, as was the put together furniture. If my calculations are correct, the house would be 5.1" tall in scale for the 18" Daisy. This house would be built of wood and hand painted...the furniture of wood as well, although since the original was all just cardboard sets, I'll paint the details such as plates in the cabinet on the piece.

This project has been twitching my whiskers for a few months now and I finally decided that the best way to approach it is by building one of cardboard first to get the angles and sizing right. Why I hadn't thought of this earlier, who only knows! But, this blog is about the making of etrennes and the creative process, so I will take you though this wee adventure with me.

A bit of history: The Lettie Lane Doll House was offered through the Ladies' Home Journal in the early 1910s. It was for a child to play with, was a 17" tall bungalow house, and a 3 1/2" porcelain doll came with it. Because this is Daisy's 100th anniversary year, her birthday falling on March 15th (that being the issue date of the magazine), and that Daisy was Lettie Lane's most beautiful doll, an 18" doll children could own and sew for, I thought it would be sweet for Daisy to have her very own Lettie Lane Doll House. It will be one-of-a-kind. Not another will be made!

And, so the wee mouse is off on another adventurous project! If you don't hear from me because I'm paw deep in sawdust, Happy Valentine's Day!

Love,
Miss E. Mouse

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Hibernating in January






I can hardly believe that tomorrow is the last day of January. This month has just flown by and I've been a very busy little mouse. Early on in the month I had decided (once again) to try making etrennes for the French Fashion dolls. After making two French Fashion jewelry boxes, and a lovely little chaufferette (a wooden coal burning box that mademoiselle would put by her feet to keep warm on carriage rides), I thought I had three lovely, and desirable items. Sadly I was wrong! They did not sell, and I'm afraid I'll never know why. The only thing I can imagine is that the people that collect for their reproduction dolls, want antique items for them. I've yet to see an antique miniature chaufferette for sale anywhere, but like much of what I make, it sometimes must wait for the right collector.

While finishing these lovely little items, I was asked to make a Wee P'sich. A collector had seen the storybook trunk set I'd made in the Susan Quinlan Doll and Teddy Bear Museum, and wanted just the little doll. P'sich is a story by Marianna about a lonely little doll that lives in an attic. She doesn't really begin living until the day she discovers self-worth through educating herself by reading and painting. P'sich (pronounced "seech") ends up turning the head of a handsome pirate doll and marries him, living happily ever after.

P'sich is a 2 3/4" hand sculpted doll and carries a book on Greek mythology. In her other hand is the mystery item! When I first did the storybook trunk set, I thought what she held in her hand was a lizard, or a red turtle! I'd borrowed the book from Susan to make the set, and while I had read the story, the mystery of the red turtle was never resolved. So, when I was asked to do another Wee P'sich, I had to find a copy of the book for myself. And, I did. When it arrived in the mail, I reread the story and discovered she was holding a reticule. Well, several years ago, French Fashion dolls were new to me and I wouldn't have known a reticule, from well, a red turtle! A reticule is a little, beaded drawingstring hand bag. I truly got a good chuckle over that. It became the focus of this little doll for me, and while the photo provided for you doesn't show it well, I made an ittty bitty red drawstring purse and sewed black beads to it.

Just when I thought the month couldn't get better, I'd offered to make a friend of mine three tiny wooden dolls for her mignonette doll house. She'd found some teensy vintage furniture for the mignonettes to play with and they needed wee dollies to go with the set. She'd asked for one 3/4" doll and two just 1" tall. The 3/4" dolly needed to be a baby to lay in a rocking cradle and the two others would sit in bitty chairs.

Several years ago I'd learned to carve tiny dolls from basswood with an X-Acto blade. I'd made very tiny Hitties, and discovered I could even make jointed dolls carving toothpicks, which I'd tried. Like making P'sich, I had to recall how I'd made such dolls in the past. I think its pretty much like riding a bicycle, although you may be a little shaky when you first start out again. I realize this post is getting rather lengthy, so I'll try to wrap this up.

I wanted to make three very different and colorful little dolls for the mignonettes to play with. After all, what kind of dolls would a child at the turn of the 20th century have played with? Varied, different and amusing little dolls! I'd also read the wonderful article in Winter Doll News on Queen Victoria's Tuck Comb dolls. I'd planned to make some tiny ones with the French Fashion collector in mind to display with her French Fashion dolls, but...well...no sales put a stop to that. Here was the perfect venue to try one. What I ended up making was a baby, a little German girl doll, and a tiny Tuck Comb or Penny Wooden as they were often referred to. The only trouble I really ran into was the fact that once the dollies were dressed, they couldn't sit nicely, and the purpose for making them was to have them sit in the furniture!

I asked my friend what she wanted me to do and she requested I dress the German girl, and leave the Tuck Comb undressed. Then I thought, what would a little mignonette dress her Tuck Comb in? A snippet of lace became a shawl and I sewed a tiny blue crystal bead on it for a brooch. The doll could sit, and she could be warm and colorful as well.

So with the last day of January dawning just a few hours from now, I think I'll crawl back into my little hole and curl up tight for the night.

Love,

Miss E. Mouse

































Sunday, December 26, 2010

Z is for Zither



The presents unwrapped, the eggnog is done, and the yule log still burns merrily. Ah, what lovely Christmas has past. And, now on December the 26th, it is time to get busy again and think about all the pretty things I'd like to make in the coming year. But, first, it was time to finish the little zither today, and finish it I did. Displayed by my own Marie Terese, the little zither, if you recall, was made for the same doll who is being turned into Annabelle from Tasha Tudor's darling poetic story of a French Fashion doll who has everything she needs A to Z. I would like to imagine Annabelle spending many a comforting winter day playing lovely tunes on this wee zither.

When I look back on the process of creating this instrument, I have to admit that it was quite the challenge to miniaturize such an elaborate and complicated instrument. For one thing, there were all the angles and curves to consider, but also all the many strings a real zither has. Thirty to forty-five I've read, but just today when I had to admit (which was difficult) that I'd not enough room for thirty, I read that there is a zither which only has 25 strings. The most important thing to remember about miniatures is that they are most often an illusion of the real thing. With 1:12 scale, drawers may not open, water is not in flower vases, and stairs may lead to a ceiling in a doll house. However, I try my very best to make my creations as real as possible.

Presenting: the zither! I had to work up the nerve today to drill the holes for the tuning pegs, but the thing that took the most patience in finishing the piece, was the stringing. The musical strings are actually wound around the pegs as a real instrument would be, and the frets on the side bar are there, however hand painted in gold leaf. Only 3 3/4" in length, Annabelle will now have the finest zither in town.

And, what is in store for 2011? It is time to begin a focus on the 18" Daisy doll's toys and accessories. Wooden circus pull toys in the Schoenhut style, and a larger carousel (like the Becassine one) with circus animals just for starters!

Should I not post before the new year, Wishing you all a very magical New Year, propersous in every way imaginable.

Love,

Miss E. Mouse








Friday, December 10, 2010

"Unto you a child is born!"




The rain comes down and skies remain gray. The leaves slowly, very slowly begin their final descent to the earth. Winter where I live is soggy and soft. The rich soil soaks up the rain and when a storm comes, the creeks fill and rush from pond to pond keeping the geese happy and winter bulbs full of promise.

Since the weather keeps me indoors, I just finished this lovely little creche for Bleuette. It is made from mahogany, oak bark and moss. The inspiration was a creche that the company Fontanini made some years ago. The little porcelain nativity figurines came all the way from France. My favorites are the little animals - the lamb, the camel, the donkey and cow. So tiny, so sweet!

And, what did Miss E. Mouse get for Christmas? Well, a new home! Not so much a home, but a little retreat for when I need to mouse away to rest and read. Thank you for popping in to take a look at my new etrennes, and thank you for enjoying my work. If you have a moment, I'd enjoy hearing from you in the comments section. I hope you're enjoying the holiday season, and for this little mouse, a few Christmas television shows are on my agenda.

Love,
Miss E. Mouse


Saturday, November 27, 2010

Trim up the tree with Christmas stuff...

...Like bingle balls, and Whofoo fluff! No one sings Christmas like the Whos down in Whoville. Memories of watching this darling Dr. Suess cartoon when I was little bring back such bright times. Well, it is a bright time, and despite the cold, rainy day, my little paws are dancing around the tree as I've just finished my 2010 Becassine Toy of the Year. I cannot begin to tell you how difficult a task this was for me! Of course I'd had the 1" Becassine wood cuts painted and ready to mount since, well, November 7th, but when I went out to drill the holes in the little top and turn platform, the drill press was broken! Alas! Tools. Where is a mouse without her tools? So I trotted down to the local Home Depot and bought another one, then quickly went to work again. However, measuring little disks to find an exact center, measuring tiny areas where to drill the hole for the ribbon ties, and getting this thing all put together to function properly was quite the challenge.

As it turns out (that's a pun, hee-hee) it took a couple of tries and lots of wasted silk ribbon. The silk was too fine and hooks onto the pole no matter how much you sand to smooth it. But, I didn't give up. I never do. I found a different kind of 1/16" ribbon to use and in a sweep of looping it all together, it finally came to be! Yay!

You twist the platform around the pole then let it go. As it winds down, back up again, and winds back down, it spins the figures like a top! So cute. I often wonder if I'll ever run out of ideas for these toys and then something comes along and goes off like a light in my furry little head.

And, what am I working on now? Why a zither! The zither is an ancient instrument going back as far or beyond 433BC. It is played very much like a dulcimer, laid across your lap. And, why a zither? Well, the 10" French Fashion doll, Marie Terese, made by Alice Leverette, is being made into Annabelle, from the story A is For Annabelle, by Tasha Tudor. In this story, set in poetry, Annabelle has all the items a French Fashion doll should have A-Z. And, Z is for Zither. So yes, it will be a tiny one.

While I've bent wood on my own before, I may be looking into a wood bending tool soon. Micro-Mark has a miniature one and it bends the wood through a heated device much like an old fashioned washing machine clothes wringer. Indeed! I think the larger ones are used a bit differently, but for my purposes, a miniature one would come in handy. I have, my friend, Martha Nichols, and her wood working husband to thank for this information.

And, so we are on to yet another dear and wonderful project. The holiday season is upon us so trim up tree with Christmas stuff...then run out to get some more!

Love,
Miss E. Mouse