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Showing posts with label Iona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iona. Show all posts

Monday, 30 October 2017

A new toddler

Ever since my younger daughter bought Edmund, her Gregor toddler (a Claudius) 2 years ago, I've been thinking about finding a girl toddler.  The prices of toddlers have gone up in the past 3 years so I knew it would be hard to find one, however I got lucky at the Sasha Celebration weekend in May as I was offered one based in the USA.  I made arrangements to collect her at the Sasha Festival in Washington DC in July.  She was shipped to Norvell as Peggy wasn't sure if she would make it to the festival even though she had booked to attend because her grandchild was due to arrive that weekend (in the event she did attend and her grandchild was born the day after the festival, perfect timing).

Peggy's photo of the minty Iona

Iona says 'Hi'
When we arrived at the hotel shortly after arriving in the USA, we met Norvell and had dinner with her before we collected two parcels from her (one for Lorraine).  I was thrilled with my new minty Iona.  Her new name didn't come straight away, she took her time telling me.

I had made a dress for her to use in the Dress a Sasha but on her first evening of the festival she changed into a Dollydoodles set of crop trousers belonging to one of her new big sisters (they were like trousers on her) and the white blouse.

The dolls on display in our hotel room in Washington DC - the new Iona wearing the Dollydoodles outfit intended for her big sisters

The next day she changed into her new Dress a Sasha outfit - 1860s fashion for well off young children included a crinoline (which I made using white pipe cleaners and cream coloured ribbons) to hold out the wide skirt of her dress.  She wore ribbons in her hair too.  She was playing the part of 'Maud' in 'An Old Fashioned Girl' by Louisa May Alcott, but she refused to keep that name afterwards.


My Iona as 'Maud' in Dress a Sasha, 2017

On the Saturday at the Sales tables I was able to buy a lovely dress for her made by Lynne F and a pair of sandals made by Monica J.  She proudly wore her new outfit that afternoon during the craft workshops to show off the felt glove puppets.


In her new outfit showing off her dress and sandals and the glove puppets along with baby Theo and Edmund at the Festival

She stayed in this outfit for the remainder of our USA trip and afterwards.  About a month later I bought a cardigan and hat from Rosie L (it is decorated with strawberries) which went well with that little dress and she sat on the Sasha shelf in the sewing room on the basket chair which my daughter was given at the Sasha Celebration Weekend.

By this time I knew what her name was - it was pretty obvious to me when we returned from the USA that her name would come from the trip which had realised my dream of visiting Concord, Massachusetts.  My new Iona told me her name had to be Louisa, after the author of 'Little Women'.

At the Chat 'n Snap in October she stood with the pram, Edmund, Timothy and babies Theo and Amy still wearing her dress and the cardigan and hat set. 

At the Chat 'n Snap 2017 - new toddler Louisa, baby Theo, Timothy, Edmund and baby Amy with the pram, in the background are Melanie, Reuben and Nina in their 2014 Sasha Festival outfits

Louisa is now wearing a new smocked dress by Marilyn H as she sits enthroned on her favourite chair. Baby Daisy has new smocked rompers in the same fabric, by Marilyn.

L-R: Miranda, baby Daisy, Louisa, baby Leo, baby Theo and Trendon Elliott

Louisa in her favourite chair
Welcome Louisa (and thank you Peggy). 

Louisa is not the newest blond in the Sasha collection, however that is for another post.

Tuesday, 5 September 2017

USA 2017 - Laura visits Dorisanne Osborn

It was a very special Tuesday on the 1 August, eagerly awaited. Hotel breakfast was over, the car was loaded with the Sasha family and the family started travelling South from Rochester, New York towards the scenic finger lakes. Laura was going to meet a very important person in the Sasha world and her collection.

Just before 11am we arrived at a house beside Keuka Lake and Dorisanne was at the door to meet us.  We had been corresponding for several years so this was another 'dream come true' for me to finally meet her, especially as she unfortunately had to cancel her place at the 2017 Sasha Festival because she wasn't quite well enough to travel all the way to Washington DC for the festival fun.

As we entered Dorisanne's house we were greeted by the glorious sight of her studio dolls sitting in a row on the sofa and it wasn't long before we were deep in conversation as Dorisanne showed them to us and explained a bit about each of them. Some of them featured in her book 'Sasha dolls through the years' published in 1999.


Dorisanne showing us the gorgeous Lucinda Jane

Dorisanne with Lucinda Jane (Lucy), named after her childhood doll.  Lucy has the rarest face shape, IV.

Lucinda Jane, body shape C, face shape IV, made of gypsum - showing the smocking detail on her yellow dress under the pinafore

Lucinda Jane, body shape C, face shape IV, gypsum

Dorisanne had been fortunate enough to spend time in Sasha's original studio making a course doll in November 1993 with 5 other Sasha collectors under the tutelage of Trudi Loeffler, Sasha's assistant, to mark 100 years since Sasha's birth. She told us all about that wonderful week as we sat and examined the doll she had made.

My girl holding Dorisanne's Course Doll which she had made herself in Sasha's studio.  This lovely doll has a very nicely painted face and is beautifully made.

Dorisanne's Course doll with our toddlers (my new Iona and young Edmund)

The tour of Sasha Studio dolls continued as we met several more treasures.

D Bebe kit doll with head painted by Sasha Morgenthaler - it came with pattern, fabric and stuffing (pages 19 and 20 of Dorisanne's book).

Both my girl and I were captivated by Caroline (now Meg), a dark haired girl with a pensive expression.

The gorgeous Caroline (now Meg), body type B, face type III, cloth body.  She was minty when Dorisanne first met her in Zurich and I agree with Dorisanne that she has the most beautiful face.
The next girl, Alice, was wearing a sweater by Diane Duke and a plaid skirt. Dorisanne also has Alice's original clothes and is building a wardrobe of clothes for her.

Dorisanne with Alice, body type C, face shape I, minty and very lovely.

A Sasha studio toddler!  This little girl, made of gypsum, was very pretty.

Dorisanne holding her red haired toddler in blue gingham, this toddler is made from gypsum.

The Sasha Studio bebe with a cream coat was discussed next. This baby has a cloth body.

My girl holding a Sasha Bebe (D Bebe) in a lovely cream coloured coat.  This baby is on pages 19 and 21 of Dorisanne's book.
Sasha the artist was even able to make a plastic doll look wonderful, her Studio sailor boy is truly special and Dorisanne has named him for her grandson.

Dorisanne showing us the wonderful Christopher Charles

Christopher Charles is a wonderful sailor boy - named for Dorisanne's grandson.  He has a type C body and type III face shape and was made in 1968, he is made of synthetic plastic.  He features on pages 12 and 25 of her book.

Close up of Christopher's face with his wonderful eye painting
Not only did Sasha devise four main face shapes for her dolls, she also occasionally made portrait dolls.  A portrait doll is the likeness of a real named child.

Dorisanne with Liesel, a very early studio doll.  Liesel has a mohair wig and is a portrait doll of a real child.  She has a cloth body which is off white rather than the skin tone fabrics Sasha used for later dolls.

Liesel's legs and her grey felt shoes with knitted socks.  Her dress is beautifully embroidered blue gingham.

When she picked up Emmalee Rose from the sofa Dorisanne explained that this was her favourite (though how could anyone choose a favourite as they were all wonderful).  She is slowly building a wardrobe of clothes for this lovely hard plastic girl.

Dorisanne holding Emmalee Rose, who came from the doll studio at Marshall Field's store in Chicago from the original owner. Made in 1963 of hard plastic, Emmalee has a C type body and type I face shape. She is a 'Modern Colored Girl' and has Sasha's signature on her left foot.  She appears on pages 70 and 106 of 'Sasha Dolls: The history' by Anne Votaw, Ann Chandler and Susanne Lewis.

Close up of the faces of Liesel and Emmalee Rose

We were enthralled as Dorisanne also told us all about the first week long Sasha Festival, held at Keuka College and in her home in 1991.  People came for as long as they could - some came for the whole week, some came for a couple of days only.  This allowed plenty more time for people to spend together and with the dolls than could normally be managed in 1.5 or 2 days as the festivals had been until then.  The first Children's Fund Auction was held at that festival (though it was done as a silent auction), there were also Dress a Sasha, craft workshops (smocking, woodwork, children's crafts), exhibitions including a fashion show and many Sasha dolls on display, an excursion to Rochester NY to see the doll and toy collections in the Margaret Woodbury Strong Museum, the building of the Marcy Street doll house and a talk by Brenda Walton. This longest of the Sasha festivals resulted in all the subsequent festivals becoming at least 3 days long.  You can read more about it in Dorisanne's profile on Theresa's blog.

Dorisanne also showed us some of the pictures of Sasha dolls on the walls around her house as well as her "Sasha Condo" which she assembled from glass shelves and wooden brackets she found in the basement of the house when they moved in.  It held lots of Sasha sized furniture and accessories plus many redressed Sasha serie dolls in room settings.  One of them was wearing the 2017 Sasha Festival outfit which I had also received (the other colourway) as Dorisanne had only cancelled one of her two registrations so she would still get the souvenir outfits.  I didn't take any photos of the "Condo" or the dolls in it.

We enjoyed tea and biscuits with Dorisanne and her husband who had a good time chatting with my husband about the band organs we had seen at Olcott Beach.  We did our own mini gift exchange - I gave Dorisanne a push-along duck kit and some felt holiday glove puppets for Sasha.  Dorisanne gave us three pairs of shoes for Sasha (including sport shoes for Edmund) and her husband presented us with a Keuka College pennant which is now proudly displayed above our Sasha doll display shelf at home.

Laura, Edmund and Iona (not her new name) took their place on the sofa with Dorisanne's wonderful collection for some photos.

L-R: Iona, Suzanne, Alice, gypsum toddler, D Bebe, Christopher John, Edmund, Liesel, Emmalee Rose

L-R: Course doll, kit D Bebe, Lucy, Iona,  Suzanne, Alice, gypsum toddler, D Bebe, Christopher John, Edmund, Liesel, Emmalee Rose

L-R: Laura, Course doll, kit D Bebe, Lucy, Iona,  Suzanne, Alice, gypsum toddler, D Bebe

L-R: Laura, Course doll, kit D Bebe, Lucy, Iona,  Suzanne, Alice, gypsum toddler, D Bebe, Christopher John, Edmund, Liesel, Emmalee Rose

Laura was pleased to meet Dorisanne and the smiles in these photos testify to the wonderful visit we had with Dorisanne and her husband. 

Laura the travelling Sasha with Dorisanne

Indoors: DollMum with Iona, Dorisanne with Laura and DollMum's daughter with Edmund

Outdoors: DollMum with Iona, Dorisanne with Laura and DollMum's daughter with Edmund
It was sad to say goodbye - we all had such a good time. We drove along the lake road between Keuka College and the lake to see the venue of the 1991 Sasha doll festival.

Keuka lake from the lake road on campus

Keuka lake from the lake road on campus

Keuka lake from the lake road on campus

Keuka College, the site of the 1991 Sasha Doll week long festival

Norton Chapel, Keuka College
And so Laura embarked on the next stage of her USA road trip as she left Dorisanne and the home of the 1991 festival behind.  The drive north to Rome, near Utica was very pleasant, the weather remained sunny and the countryside scenic, with many farms and their barns. Laura had some American history to investigate on the next phase of her road trip.

Thursday, 10 August 2017

USA 2017 - Sasha festival part 2


On Day 2 of the Sasha festival, we had a buffet breakfast with everyone else attending the festival in the big ballroom. Then we set up our Dress a Sasha entries in the room where the meet and greet took place the previous evening.  There were 6 categories altogether, 2 for adults (made and assembled by adult or assembled by adult), 2 for teenagers (made and assembled by teen, assembled by teen) and 2 for children (made and assembled by child, assembled by child).  In the event, there were no child entries and only one teen entry, in the made and assembled by category and that was my daughter's entry.  She was disappointed to not have any competition.

Several months ago when we were looking at what the theme was for the festival and the specific theme for the Dress a Sasha (Forever young - games and pass times) she opted to go for a game.  She came up with the game idea herself - Pin the tail on the donkey and decided upon the classic Winnie the Pooh characters because they play a version of that game with sad Eeyore the donkey.  She wanted to make it a birthday party game and she decided that she wanted her dolls to have the characters on their clothes - but how to achieve this was the next big question.  I suggested she draw the characters and asked my sister if she could print them onto fabric as she owns a printing company - though it is 6,000 miles away from us!  She told me she could print onto pure cotton as the inks she uses would not stick on poly-cotton, so when I went to Cape Town in March for a conference, I visited a large fabric shop (Fabric City) for plain fabrics and found some slightly thicker than I had hoped cotton fabric in pale blue and beige.  My sister also had some white pure cotton t-shirts in her shop so the designs were printed on 3 different fabrics, with space between them to allow for making several outfits. 

Pin the tail on the donkey - game (entry by DollMum's daughter in the made and assembled by teenager category)
My daughter also designed a birthday banner which was printed twice on the beige fabric (just in case there was a problem when sewing the first one, which there wasn't).  When I returned from Cape Town I was able to show her the designs she had drawn now printed on the fabric.  She had copied the classic pictures by Ernest Shepherd free hand with pencil on paper - her own interpretation of his drawings and had designed the birthday banner entirely herself.

I helped her adapt a pattern to make very simple t-shirts for Laura and Edmund (with no shoulder seams or need to set sleeves) however they required bias binding around the edges which she stitched on using the sewing machine then hand hemmed them on the inside.  Baby Amy's outfit was a bit more complicated - I had a romper pattern which she used, however it meant putting elastic into the leg edges, another technique to relearn as she had previously made the gathered shorts with sailing boats on them for Edmund.  She sewed bias binding around the neck and back opening.  All the outfits required her to sew on press studs, for the romper 2 poppers by the crotch and one on the back.  She was glad that she had trimmed the sleeves with lace, as it looked pretty and was quicker to do than the bias binding!  She made a skirt for Laura from a fat quarter of pretty fabric, gathered with elastic at the waist and a patterned stitch at the hem in contrast thread. 

Laura wore the Winnie the Pooh with Piglet drawing, Edmund the Eeyore drawing and Amy the Winnie the Pooh with his honey pot drawing.

The handkerchief around Edmund's eyes was an ancient one from my mother's collection of hankies (it even has a hole in it so she folded it so he couldn't peep!). For the tail I gave her several short lengths of grey wood tied with a ribbon and she decided to braid/plait it before inserting the drawing pin.

Edmund wearing the handkerchief, Eeyore t-shirt and holding the tail with its drawing pin and ribbon
The banner was relatively easy for her to sew.  In the workshop I made the stand for the banner, much like a simple doll stand with a thin dowel fitted into a base board (of plywood), however this needed two dowels the right distance apart and the base board needed to be no wider than 17.5 inches, to make sure it fitted within the 18 inch by 18 inch limit we had been given.  The dowels could not be glued in as the props had to travel flat in our luggage.  The fabric was folded over top and bottom and stitched, then folded over on either side to make long tubes for the dowels and stitched.  Simple but effective.
The Birthday banner behind Laura and Edmund
The stand for the Eeyore picture was a simple miniature wooden easel we found on a local market, she put a piece of card on it and the picture was printed out on A4 paper. 

Eeyore on the easel as Edmund tries to pin the tail in the right place
On the same market we had found the 'Winnie the Pooh - Eeyore's tail' book, this went in her display too.  Both Laura and Amy had patterned ribbons with a party theme from my collection of ribbon. Finally she decided that Baby Amy had to be holding something as she watched Edmund trying to pin the tail on the donkey, and we had a plastic rattle the right size.

Baby Amy in her Winnie the Pooh romper while holding her rattle
I would like to thank Inkwell Print of Cape Town for printing on fabric for my daughter's Dress a Sasha display.

My dress a Sasha entry was a favourite pass time - for a doll festival it felt right to enter 'sewing for and playing with dolls' as this is something I enjoy doing, an old fashioned and very useful skill.  This gave me the lead for period of costume - one of my favourite Louisa May Alcott books is 'An Old Fashioned Girl' - the story of Polly Milton who visits her rich friends the Shaw family in the city and becomes an example to her friends of truly embodying the essence of life in the face of financial poverty.  In one chapter, she successfully distracts the bored 6 year old sister Maud of her friend Fanny by helping her make clothes for her dolls as she sews clothes for her own younger sister's doll back home.  Later, even Fanny who has 'outgrown' dolls, gets happily involved in sewing for them, much to her grandmother's delight.

The book was published in 1870 and was probably set in the early 1860s period.  The book mentions that Polly wore simple grey or blue merino dresses with a bow in her curls.  So I bought some dark blue wool fabric and decided that Florence would be Polly for this display. However I didn't have a girl toddler for Maud (the perfect excuse to seriously look for one).

Setting up my Dress a Sasha display - An Old Fashioned Girl - sewing for and playing with dolls (DollMum's entry in made and assembled by adult category)
In my display 'Polly' wore a winter dress of dark blue merino of the 1860s, trimmed in an understated way, with black boots (the same boots she wore for my Dress a Sasha in 2012).  In the book she longed for more frills, ruffles and trimmings until her mother pointed out in a letter that true beauty is inside the wearer of the clothes, not the clothes. 

'Polly' in her dark blue merino dress, sewing for dolls

By contrast, little 'Maud' (my new Iona, Maud is not her new name), wore a fashionable slightly off the shoulder 1860s child's dress with puffed lace trimmed sleeves, red boots, lace trimmed pantaloons (which were just going out of fashion) and crinoline (just coming into fashion) to display her full gathered skirts.  I made the crinoline with white pipe cleaners and ribbons.  Both pairs of boots were made by Lisa Hartley (who delivered the new little red boots to me in record time).

'Maud' in her 1860s dress with crinoline and pantaloons holding her dolls

'Polly' and 'Maud'

I had great fun assembling all the items for Polly's sewing basket, however the basket itself was a particularly lucky find (on ebay) as every small basket I'd looked at wasn't the right size or shape.  I knew from Louisa May Alcott's descriptions that it had to be a 'work basket' and when this basket came up in the search results I was delighted. 

I had found some very tiny, short embroidery needles in their original packet in our local Oxfam shop, we already had the small cotton reels and sewing pins, the  tiny scissors from a sewing kit had ugly red plastic handles which I spray painted silver and I made the miniature pin cushion.  The trimmings were for miniature dolls clothes which I carefully rolled up and placed in two tiny dovetail boxes I had made years ago and placed them into the wooden chest.  The tiny buttons were for miniature dolls too, the bowl I put them in was also from my dolls house. Polly's sewing (a partly made skirt) includes one of the needles which was really difficult to thread as the eye was so small.

Polly's sewing basket, complete with fabric, needles in needle case, cotton reels and scissors

The reels of trimmings in their wooden boxes in the chest
The antique doll in the box was another lucky ebay find - she has a cloth body and a china head and lower legs and arms.

The antique doll (which came as displayed, only wearing a scarf, in her own little card board box) along with the pincushion and buttons on the table

I explained about Polly in the label on the display:

Polly has her sewing basket complete with scissors, cotton reels, sewing needles, pins in her pin cushion and a box with trimmings, fabric and buttons. She is making a dress for the antique doll as Maud plays happily with her redressed dolls.

An Old Fashioned Girl - sewing for and playing with dolls by DollMum (with the book in the background)
I will show the photos I took of the other Dress a Sasha entries in another post - they were all wonderful. 

After we had set up our displays we had a look at the others then went to join everyone else for the next bit of excitement in the ball room - the Gift Exchange.  Each of us put a number (our registration number) in a bowl.  The first person with a gift drew a number from the bowl and the person whose number was called went up to receive the gift, then drew the next number.  This worked really well. 

In the exchange my girl gave one of my toy kits and the Sasha sized Halloween felt glove puppets I had made.  These went to Ellen C.  My girl received a lovely white dress (made from a vintage tea towel) with a vintage mini Holly Hobbie doll to go with it, a perfect companion for Sasha.  Later she also received a surprise extra gift as Peggy had been given a super little American flag outfit by Shirley B and decided that it would be perfect for the youngest English visitor.  This outfit became Laura's (now famous on the Sasha Morgenthaler group on Facebook) travelling clothes as she explored the USA in our road trip after the festival. Thank you Peggy and Shirley for your generosity with this additional gift.

My girl at the Gift Exchange with Cheryl C who gave her the dress and Holly Hobbie

Sheila explains about Holly Hobbie to my girl at the Gift Exchange
We had some time to look at the lovely Raffle dolls on display before lunch, which of course everyone wanted to win!  We also looked at the amazing range of Helper raffle items, each with their own paper bag for our hopeful tickets.

Raffie, the Elke with repainted eyes, and her lovely outfits and accessories

Raffie and her accessories

The beautiful 'calendar girl' donated by Ellen C with her lovely outfits donated by several different people, one for each month of the year

'Calendar' girl and some of the outfits

'Calendar Girl' outfits
A long table of Helper Raffle items

Surveying the Helper Raffle items

Looking at the Helper Raffle items

View towards the Children's Fund Auction items from the 'Experts' tables, as Anne V set up her 'Expert' display

The next post is all about the Experts tables as Baby Mabel had her big moment.

If you've missed it, see part 1 of the Festival.