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Showing posts with label knitting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label knitting. Show all posts

Monday, 30 December 2024

Knitting my childhood outfit for Trudi

At the end of 2023 I decided to attempt a replication of an outfit my Nanna had knitted for my second birthday gift - a top and skirt with straps. I searched for the pattern she had used but wasn't able to find the exact pattern online, though I did find similar vintage patterns for knitted skirts with straps and knitted blouses which I was able to adapt and rescale for a 20 inch Sasha Studio doll. I commissioned some sandals to roughly match those I wore in one of the photos of me wearing the original outfit (thank you Lisa Hartley).

I bought 2 ply jumper weight Jamiesons & Smith of Shetland yarn (purchased via Woolwarehouse) to make the outfit and plotted out the flower garland design for the skirt on a spreadsheet grid, which is the tool I use for plotting out stranded knitting patterns. I don't think I got the proportions of the skirt and flower garland band quite right, and the skirt is a bit longer than the 'just above knee' look I had as a child. I knitted socks in finer yarn (1 ply), by Jamiesons of Shetland.

Trudi has had the outfit for several months now - I finished it before the Sasha Festival in Milton Keynes during June but was too busy and stressed about job issues to do anything about photographing it at the time. So at the close of 2024 it seems a fitting time to look back and reflect on this creative project before planning future craft projects for 2025 (after I finish knitting a current project for one of my daughters). 

I have photographed Trudi standing on the quilt given to me by my friend JoAnn when we attended the 2022 Sasha Doll festival in the USA. Despite adjusting the colours a bit on the computer, the skirt colour looks more orange in the photo than it does in real life.

Photo of toddler me in the original outfit with Trudi wearing the replica knitted outfit

Me wearing the knitted outfit on my second birthday

Me wearing the knitted outfit outdoors in the street where I grew up in Cape Town

Sunday, 19 May 2024

Scottish outfits for Sasha Festival Children's Fund auction

Earlier this year I started thinking about what to make as my Children's Fund Auction donation for the forthcoming 2024 Sasha Doll Festival in Milton Keynes. Inspired by our 9 day Scottish roadtrip last August, which Laura and Nicolas James enjoyed, I decided to continue using the yarn I enjoy knitting (which is from the Shetland islands) and combine that with genuine Harris tweed from the outer Hebrides. In our roadtrip I had picked up a bag of tweed oddments plus some small tweed squares at a shop in Oban, none of which were big enough for making a single outfit, let alone a pair of outfits, so I started searching for Hebridean weavers online and found Shawbost Weavers who are based in the Isle of Lewis. I follow them on Facebook, they share progress of their latest weaves then post notifications when they've got the fabric ready in their online shop. 

I knew for a Sasha doll the weave pattern needed to be a small repeat rather than large checks. When they shared a post of their 'Heather' weave in early April (they posted a Scottish landscape of heather photo which had inspired the colours chosen), my colour combination appreciation was triggered and I bought half a metre of the fabric as soon as it was in their online shop (£30 for half a metre, Harris tweed fabric is not cheap in quality or price but is wonderful stuff). Fortunately the fabric, though pure wool, is not too thick for a doll, if the outfit is carefully designed. I knew lining would be necessary for the two main items, so once it arrived I searched through my fabric hoard and found some gorgeous dark purple georgette which was the leftovers from a party dress I had made for Dmd for her 13th birthday when we had attended a friend's wedding.

I used the late Ted Menten's versatile pinafore pattern for the dress (whisper - I dislike setting sleeves, so love Ted's pattern because it has none!) and found a waistcoat pattern which I redrew slightly at the shoulders to accommodate the turn right side out part of the construction, as the tweed was thick enough not turn properly with narrow shoulders (I tried a first attempt and had to cut it out again). However, before I started sewing, I knitted the 3/4 length sleeve top for the girl (Jamieson's of Shetland Spindrift Aubretia), the long sleeved shirt with collar for the boy (Jamieson's of Shetland Spindrift Natural White), the shorts for the boy (Jamieson's of Shetland Spindrift Mist) and both pairs of socks (mainly Jamieson's & Smith 2ply lace Optic White with stripes of Aubretia and Mist). I also corresponded with Lisa Hartley about leather colour for the shoes and decided on a gorgeous dark purple for both the Mary Janes with button and the Lace up shoes), after sending her a photo of the tweed. Thank you Lisa, they are perfect.

Once the outfits were coming together on the dolls, I decided they both needed headgear. The girl has a headband (lined tweed, with black elastic at the back of the neck) and the boy has a Tam O'Shanter (Scottish hat) made using a beret pattern with purple bias binding for a band. I didn't line the boy's hat as it wasn't necessary. He has a heart in the centre of the hat, symbolising friendship which is one of the themes of the festival. The pinafore dress has decorative flower buttons I had bought in a fabric shop near Boston, USA in 2022 after the Syracuse Sasha Festival, they symbolise the heather flowers which inspired the tweed colours - Heather was the name of one of my childhood friends.

The tweed fabric came with some Genuine Harris tweed labels, so I have sewn one inside the pinafore and one inside the waistcoat.

Florence and Reuben got to model the outfits and will do so at the festival but they are not part of the auction donation.

Harris Tweed and Shetland wool ensemble for Gregor and Sasha,
modelled by Reuben and Florence

Tam O'Shanter, waistcoat, shirt and shorts for Gregor
 
Headband, pinafore dress and 3/4 sleeve top for Sasha

Socks and Lisa Hartley lace up shoes for Gregor

Socks and Mary Jane with button fastening shoes for Sasha

Side view of the Tweed and Shetland wool outfit for Gregor

Heart button on the Tam O'Shanter

Back view of the Tweed and Shetland wool outfit for Gregor

Tam O'Shanter at a jaunty angle

Side view of the Tweed and Shetland wool outfit for Sasha showing the headband

Side view of the Tweed and Shetland wool outfit for Sasha showing the socks and shoes


Back view of the Tweed and Shetland wool outfit for Sasha

Back view of the Tweed and Shetland wool outfit for Sasha
showing the buttons and top of the pinafore

Genuine Harris tweed labels inside the pinafore dress and waistcoat

I am pleased with how I managed to achieve my vision of these outfits and hope they help raise funds 'for the children' at the 2024 Sasha Doll Festival.

Sunday, 24 December 2023

Trudi wishes Happy Christmas

Trudi, my beautiful C1 Sasha Studio doll, wishes everyone a Happy Christmas.

She is wearing a new dress I have knitted for her in off white 2 ply Jamieson & Smith wool (from the Shetland Islands), the pattern was designed for a First Love baby doll (I knitted it about 40 years ago) however I've made the bodice and skirt longer, plus I made the sleeves with slightly more room than skin tight. I finished the dress on Christmas Eve while watching Nine Lessons and Carols from Kings College Cambridge on TV, with my family.

Trudi admires the Christmas tree

Side view of Trudi in her new knitted dress

Trudi captivated by Christmas

New sandals to go with her new dress as she admires the tree


My Schildthorn bauble in the tree from our only trip to Switzerland in 2008

Trudi in her new dress and sandals for Christmas

Trudi looks wonderful in off white


Sunday, 23 April 2023

Trudi - Part 2

On our flight back to England after the Sasha Doll Festival 2022, Trudi the Sasha Studio doll travelled in my new hard-shell hand luggage bag (carefully padded) which I bought in Boston when we were visiting friends after the festival. I had realised our existing luggage arrangements didn’t provide Trudi with a safe way of travelling and I would not put her in the hold luggage (all our dolls travelled in our hand luggage). She arrived in England unscathed by the trip and went to sit on her quilt made by JoAnn on the shelf with the other Sasha dolls. However, I knew that shelf could not be her place once she was restored, so I kept my eyes open for a suitable doll display cabinet.

In the meantime, I started corresponding with Janet about Trudi as it was clear she would need specialist attention. Although my painting skills are reasonable, I have no experience of using oil paints. Trudi needed a doll artist who could also do repairs. Janet has plenty of experience of restoring a variety of different dolls, she used to work part time for a doll hospital in New York City until it closed. Initially, I was going to visit Janet in late September; however her house move meant we postponed my visit with Trudi until 2023.

In early March, I took Trudi by train all the way from my midlands home to the Cumbria coast to visit Janet in her new home. Trudi was well-padded with a soft mohair blanket, her quilt and a pillowcase in that same hard-shell case for the journey. I spent 2 days with Janet as she examined Trudi, and then started the restoration work as I watched.

Trudi lying on a chair at Janet's house before her restoration began

The aim was to stabilise the cracks and make the repairs blend in though not conceal them completely, which would be over-restoring, they are part of her story. Trudi was made in 1965 and before Dorisanne won her at Theriault’s auction in 1993 she may have had several owners, storage, travel and display conditions. Trudi already had a hairline crack beside her left eye when Dorisanne bought her, if you look closely at the photo of her on page 16 of Dorisanne’s book (published in 1999), you can just see it.

Prolonged very cold or warm temperatures or quick extreme temperature changes could result in hairline cracks, white bloom and greening for some Sasha Studio dolls. They need to be stored or displayed away from direct sunlight and heating (radiator) or chilling (air conditioner) devices to reduce the chance of such issues occurring or worsening.

Trudi has a hint of greening on her face. Greening happens to some Sasha Studio dolls because Sasha Morgenthaler used green pigment in the colour mix and while other pigments tend to recede and fade with exposure to light over time, green emerges.

Trudi before restoration, with the white bloom on her head and a crack between her neck and chin

We don’t know the exact chemical composition of the various synthetic moulding materials Sasha used for the dolls, or what chemical effect the colouring pigments contributed to the mix. The following is speculation on my part as I am not a scientist: maybe different pigment combinations in the synthetic moulding material might make some Studio dolls more prone to cracking or greening than others.

Janet showed me how to condition Trudi’s surface to remove the white bloom which appears over time from the synthetic moulding material used to make her. I conditioned her legs with Nivea cream gently buffed on the surface using a cotton wipe, a soothing and satisfying process which brought up the warm colour, and later when Janet gently did this on her face, revealed more of Trudi’s freckles.

Janet demonstrating how to condition Trudi's surface

A cotton pad is used to buff Nivea cream onto Trudi's leg to remove the white bloom

Crack repair entailed carefully putting special plastic filler in her cracks using a pin, a painstaking and time-consuming process, then once it had dried, checking if it needed more filler before doing a test run of painting only over the fine line of filler with carefully mixed oil paints. Janet did not want to put any filler on either side of the cracks then sand it flat as this would inevitably take away some of Trudi’s surface, which we wanted to avoid, and this was impossible on her eye crack anyway. Janet only painted on the filler; she did not do anything to the existing eye paint, so the artist’s skill was in matching the subtle colour changes in her existing paint to make the filled crack blend, and on a very fine scale. We discovered a tiny crack between the eyelashes of her left eye which Janet carefully filled.

Trudi at the start of eye crack filling, with the white bloom on her face

Janet applying some filler in Trudi's neck crack

Applying filler into the eye crack

Filling the eye crack in progress (see the pin, used for applying the filler, in Janet's hand)

Partly filled eye crack, before the section over the bridge of her nose was filled. The white of the filler makes the fine crack look wider than it actually is, as white 'pops' out while Trudi's skin tone recedes in contrast.

Trudi resting on her pillowcase and under her JoAnn quilt between filler application sessions

I sat and knitted when I wasn't watching and taking photos (with Janet's permission). It is hard to have someone take photos while you're doing close careful restoration work.

Watching Janet, the artist, mix oil paints is fascinating.

Trudi awaiting paint on the filler

View from the top of Trudi's head of the filled eye crack before painting

The artist's palette of oils

A blend of colours on the palette

Janet carefully working on painting the filler in Trudi's eye

Blending skin tone colours

Right arm crack

We both concluded after the initial filler tests that what Janet was doing was working fine and it was safe to continue, so I left Trudi with Janet to continue the work, with her sending me daily progress updates for the next 2.5 weeks. Please note, these photos were taken with various lighting conditions and at different angles which makes the colour tone of Trudi's surface look different when comparing photos of the same sections of her head and body.

Filled fine cracks around Trudi's right ear, face and neck

Filled fine cracks around Trudi's left ear, face and neck

Eye and nose bridge crack filled


Left upper arm filler


Left arm filler repainted


Left under arm

Right arm and the Nivea cream


Filled right arm crack


Repainted right arm crack


Right armpit crack filled


Right armpit crack repainted


Fine cracks filled in Trudi's lower back


Filler in neck/chin crack repainted

Eye and nose bridge filler repainted

Trudi's restored face before her hair was tidied

Trudi's paint drying

The oil paint on the filled cracks had to dry thoroughly before Janet could redress Trudi. Janet kindly replaced the perished elastic in Trudi's skirts and pantaloons (the original elastics were placed in her apron pocket), then tidied her hair carefully. We had decided not to remove her wig to see if there were cracks under it and did not apply any conditioner or oil on the wig as this can sometimes damage the real hair wig.

Restored Trudi awaiting her clothes

Restored Trudi ready for dressing

Trudi wearing her pantaloons and shirt

Trudi wearing her socks, underskirt, pantloons and shirt

Trudi wearing her overskirt and boots, with socks, pantaloons, underskirt and shirt

Trudi restored in her full farmgirl outfit including the embroidered apron and scarf

Trudi's scarf is round her neck rather than her head now

Trudi's tidied hair with matching hair ties (Janet found a similar pale blue fabric in her stash)

Trudi restored and awaiting collection

While Trudi was with Janet, I made a lucky discovery in a local shop which sells vintage items – there were two matching deep bookcases made with laminated chipboard, in very nice condition, one of which still has wooden sliding doors. Once I brought them home I glued felt on the bottom of them so the unlaminated chipboard bottom edges would not scratch the surface of my late grandfather’s tallboy (now storing doll clothes) and my late mother’s chest of drawers. The unit with its wood sliding doors is now on top of the tallboy and is where I store some of our larger modern vinyl dolls, standing up. My husband added polycarbonate doors to the front of the other unit, turning it into a display cabinet, we put this on top of the chest of drawers and I arranged some of my collection in it, in readiness for Trudi.

Janet has a Studio doll called Katherine, whom she adopted from Dorisanne before I got Trudi. After the 2022 festival, I started making a coat for Trudi using the same wool (Jamiesons of Shetland Spindrift) and some of the motifs from the Sasha Shakespeare Dreamcoat which I made for the Susanna Lewis raffle doll. I resized and reshaped the pattern. I did not make the complicated embroideries; also the studio doll sized coat does not have a hood. I brought the partly-made coat for Trudi with me when I visited Janet in March; she loved the colour combinations and patterns so asked me to make one for Katherine as well. We both knew this would take a long time, just as the crack repairs were time-consuming, so when I returned home I worked on finishing Trudi’s coat then knitted it again for Katherine. It was an enjoyable task despite the time it took to complete.

The completed coats

Back view of one of the coats

Collecting Trudi in mid-April coincided with a short trip for a musical event involving our little street organ in Lancashire. After the event my husband, younger daughter and I drove into Cumbria and stayed overnight an hour’s drive from Janet and her husband. Our short visit to their home the next day was filled with laughter and conversation. Trudi and Katherine were standing side by side in front of the arts & crafts stained glass and wood shelf in the living room when we arrived and this became the place for their photo shoot, before and after they tried on their winter coats. Janet’s doll is a gorgeous CIII who normally wears a pale grey corduroy dress; however Janet had made and assembled a farm girl outfit for Katherine using the colour combinations of the coat.

Trudi and Katherine in farm girl outfits

Trudi and Katherine

Katherine

Trudi

Trudi and Katherine wearing their new coats

Trudi and Katherine

Trudi and Katherine closeup from the side - different skin tones, eye colour and hair

Trudi and Katherine

Trudi and Katherine closeup from the front

Back view of Trudi and Katherine wearing their new coats

Back view of their coats, while still on the shelf

Trudi and Katherine admire the model train

I had brought along my SCW Charity doll Russell, so he was included towards the end of the photo shoot too.

Katherine, Russell and Trudi

Katherine, Russell and Trudi from the side


Thank you, Janet for gently restoring Trudi, she is rejuventated.

Katherine and Trudi

Me holding Trudi, Janet holding Katherine

Trudi and Russell travelled home safely in the hard-shell case, well padded as before. Now they are in the display cabinet together, along with my 19” modern Gotz 2008 Anna, my childhood doll 16” Palitoy Petalskin Susie, Betsy my 16" Schoenhut doll and little Kruselings Zarni San and Thet Khin. They make me smile.

Trudi and friends in the display cabinet.
L-R Susie, Anna, Betsy with her unnamed baby doll, Zarni San, Thet Khin, Trudi and Russell

Susie, Anna Betsy and Zarni San with the Teddy bears in the dresser and Dorisanne's Keuka College pennant (the 1991 week long Sasha Doll Festival was hosted at Keuka College)

Thet Khin, Trudi and Russell with the other end of the Keuka College pennant and Trudi's quilt from JoAnn

Bibliography

From Childhood to Sasha profile Number 4 - Dorisanne Osborn (2015), published by TwizelTheresa on The Sasha Emporium, 27 October 2015, available at https://thesashaemporium.org/2015/10/27/from-childhood-to-sasha-profile-number-4/ (accessed 20 April 2023)

Osborn, Dorisanne (1999) Sasha Dolls through the years, Gold Horse Publishing. ISBN 0-9112823-86-0

The Sasha Doll Festival website http://sashafestival.com/Home.html 

Information about Sasha Morgenthaler is available at the following websites:

http://sashamorgenthaler.org/

http://www.sashadoll.com

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sasha_Morgenthaler