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Sunday, 23 October 2016

Chat n Snap 2016 - part 2


The Scouting and Guiding Jamboree wasn't the only display of Sasha and Gregor dolls at the Chat 'n Snap.  Plenty of dolls had come along to enjoy the fun and were put on tables around the sides of the hall.  I went round a couple of times to take photos as the displays grew, they were fluid through the day as people showed off their dolls to their friends and rearranged them a bit in the process.
Two blond toddlers and red haired girls
A pretty little Iona Gotz toddler girl wearing a ra ra skirt outfit
Toddler twins - one pair of only two Trendon prototype toddlers
Red haired girls in hand made white dresses, and friends
Jocelyn's two dolls (left in Emma Flood outfits) with a Red haired Gotz and a course doll
Two beautifully dressed Trendon girls
A Trendon boy in a wonderful Christmas sweater and a Trendon girl with her attractive beret and cardigan
Some gorgeous red haired girls
Dawn's lovely pram she restored this year
Reuben, Trendon Elliott, Melanie and Edmund brought some of the Summer Music Festival to the Chat 'n Snap
Three of our babies Nina, Daisy and Amy babble to each other while Florence (wearing the lovely Emma Flood outfit I bought at the Sasha Celebration) dreams as she listens to the music from the Summer Festival.  Beside our babies is the soft bodied baby made by Janet for Tricia
Caleb and Cora playing it cool on their motorbike!
A well behaved group of toddlers and babies with the older Sasha and Gregor dolls
A baby with a glove puppet entertains the other babies and toddlers
This collection of Muller Wichtel dolls was brought together for the day by those who collect them as well as Sasha
A doll made by Theresa using a course doll pattern and baby rerooted by Theresa with soft body by Janet joined the display
The Trendon toddler twins were joined by the only other pair of Trendon toddlers, a baby and a puppy
This was the dolls for sale table where anyone could put their doll for sale if they made a small donation to the charity pot
Three lovely Trendon dolls pose in the window, I managed to capture them on camera with the light behind them
Gayle's beautiful re-rooted Cora
Close up of Gayle's re-rooted Cora
Teddy had brought his lovely jointed wooden doll
Close up of the face of Teddy's wooden doll.  She is a bit bigger than Sasha serie dolls and wears Magic Attic and American Girl doll clothes.
Some Sasha children stood behind the motorcycle
This Gotz girl wears a lovely coat and hat set
This Trendon girl likes elephants
Three gorgeous early Trendons
The three gorgeous early Trendons are joined by another lovely early Trendon and a Gotz Claudius toddler
It is impossible to stop the toddlers and babies crawling and playing around and a Mexican copy of Sasha has crept into the lineup
A wonderful Studio girl
close up of the wonderful Studio girl
When eating our lunch and during the afternoon we sat at a table near our dolls and chatted with various people.  I brought out my Heather Maciak dolls - Jenny and Lexie wearing their knitted sweaters and my new Heather Maciak UFDC 2016 Convention souvenir doll Emily and journal which I bought recently via ebay.  Heather had told me all about the making of this doll and her companion doll when we met last year in Vancouver.  Teddy and I had an animated discussion about our Jenny and Lexie dolls and Dee showed me the two she had very recently purchased, inspired partly by my blog posts on them.  My daughter and I also made friends with Joanne who was crocheting a dress for her Sasha baby.  My girl sat stitching her first Cross Stitch kit (and finished it during the afternoon) and I knitted a few rows of a sweater for Emily my newest doll so it became a bit of a working crafts table for the afternoon.  I later saw Diane D knitting at another table as well.

Saturday, 22 October 2016

Chat n Snap 2016 - part 1

The Guide, Scout, Brownie, Cub, Rainbow and Beaver Jamboree at this year's  Chat 'n Snap  was a great success.  The following are all the photos I took of this great Sasha and Gregor gathering of the movement founded by Baden Powell in 1907 (Scouting) and 1910 (Guiding).

Dee's Hattie and my girl's Laura wearing the uniform I made, with Clemence the bear wearing his Scout necktie
A Rainbow, Brownies and Guides including Hattie and Laura
Some Brownies and a Guide doing 'Guess the Name of Teddy bear'
It looks like one Girl Guide has fainted trying to guess the name of the bear
Brownies and Brown Owl
Some Scouts, Rainbows and Brownies
Cub Scouts and a Girl Guide
A Girl Guide and a Boy Scout
Some larger Brownies (Sasha Course dolls) with the Cub Scouts
Laura with my Guide blanket, badges and hat
This Cub Scout had a rucksack of goodies
He also had some lovely detailed badges
Another view of the Cub Scout and his badges
Another Cub Scout with some detailed badges
Janet's lovely Brownie with felt badges
Three Brownies sitting in a row
A Brownie with embroidered badges
My girl and I wore our Guide and Trefoil Guild uniforms to the Jamboree.  Fiona's husband very kindly took these photos of us with Laura wearing the South African Girl Guide uniform I made and Clemence wearing the Scout necktie I sewed on Friday night when my girl decided he was attending.
DollMum and Daughter with Laura and Clemence bear in front of the Jamboree
DollMum and Daughter with Laura and Clemence
The next posts in this series will concentrate on the other doll displays, the sales tables, the raffles and the all important chatting!

Thursday, 20 October 2016

Girl Guide uniform for Laura

This year's Chat 'n Snap has a theme of Brownies, Guides, Cubs, Scouts, Rainbows and Beavers Jamboree.  We've been asked to dress our Sasha and Gregor dolls in uniforms for the Guiding and Scouting movement.

I haven't had enough time to make uniforms for each of these branches - only Laura has benefited from a uniform.  My younger daughter and I decided that the uniform featured should be a vintage South African Girl Guide uniform from the 1980s when I was a Brownie then a Guide.  I still have my Guide hat and belt as well as my Basuto blanket which has my badges from Brownies, Guides and Ice skating stitched onto it.  I also have photos of me and my sister wearing our uniforms.  In the Brownies I was in the Hare six and in Guides I was in the Arum Lily patrol.

I was fortunate enough to attend a very enjoyable 75th anniversary of Girl Guiding in South Africa camp at Easter time in 1985 with about 100 other Guides from the Cape West district - making friends, singing around the Camp Fire, tying knots, craft and sporting activities being the highlights. I adored all the Guide camps I attended.  The best thing about those camps was that Guides of all colours attended in mixed patrols despite it being the height of the apartheid era - somehow the movement was able to defy the Government of the day and it provided a wonderful opportunity to make friends with other children who lived in segregation from each other in our daily lives.

Me wearing my Girl Guide uniform in the 1980s
The miniature uniform is made from blue polyester cotton, the tie is made from yellow bias binding, the woggle from embroidery thread, the lanyard made from cotton cord and tied with a proper slipknot.  The hat is made from dark navy needle-cord lined with black felt to stiffen it.  The belt is borrowed from Gregor blue jeans (the only item along with the shoes and socks I didn't make). The Trefoil badge pinned on her collar is actually an earring from Girl Guiding UK (I don't think they make them anymore unfortunately).  On the left shoulder are the patrol colours which I made from scraps of bias binding cut to size.  I hand embroidered the hat badge on the navy needlecord (a separate piece which I stitched onto the hat) and the Arum Lily patrol badge I hand embroidered on some black fabric.

My girl plaited Laura's hair in two French plaits - she did a brilliant job even though they took ages to do.

Laura in her uniform with my belt, blanket, hat and my daughter's modern Guide blanket with her Brownie sash stitch onto it
Close up of Laura wearing the South African 1980s Girl Guide uniform
My Arum Lily patrol badge surrounded by the 75th anniversary of Guiding in South Africa badges
Close up of my Guide hat and my Camper badge along with a badge from an international badge swap
My Girl Guide belt and whistle
Some of the badges on my blanket along with the shoulder colours for patrols (I was later in another patrol for a short while)
Close up of the hand embroidered badges
Laura and my 75th anniversary camp badge from 1985
Laura is looking forward to joining in the Jamboree at the Chat 'n Snap.

Sunday, 2 October 2016

Miniature knitting for Jenny and Lexie

It didn't take long to sew on the buttons and sewing in the ends wasn't so bad for Jenny's new blue sweater, it was better than sewing pieces of a knitted garment together (this one is seamless).

Jenny's miniature fair-isle sweater
The back view of Jenny's sweater
On Saturday morning I pressed Jenny's new sweater and put it on her.

It rained quite a lot but there was a break in the weather during the afternoon so I ventured outside to take a photo of Lexie and Jenny wearing their sweaters, with the rosehips in the garden.
Lexie and Jenny show off their knitwear in the autumnal garden
I also spent time sorting out the pattern instructions for this piece of miniature knitting, I had already written it up but needed to check everything carefully and get it into a form which can be printed out for reference when knitting.  The fair-isle part of the pattern is shown as a colourful grid (using an excel spreadsheet).
"Look Jenny, this is the pattern for our sweaters"
Lexie and Jenny pose with their sweaters and the pattern instructions
I'm sharing this pattern openly using a Creative Commons Attribution Sharealike Non-commercial licence - in other words you are welcome to knit this for your 8 inch dolls but may not sell the pattern or sell your knitting from the pattern unless you contact me for permission.  I reserve the right to make the sweater to sell (when I have the time to make it - I'm currently knitting the plain version in pale blue).

If you would like the knitting pattern please email me on dollmum @ yahoo.co.uk or download now from Ravelry (see Sweater Jenny and Lexie dolls for the listing on Ravelry).


Miniature knitting for Jenny and Lexie

It didn't take long to sew on the buttons and sewing in the ends wasn't so bad for Jenny's new blue sweater, it was better than sewing pieces of a knitted garment together (this one is seamless).

Jenny's miniature fair-isle sweater
The back view of Jenny's sweater
On Saturday morning I pressed Jenny's new sweater and put it on her.

It rained quite a lot but there was a break in the weather during the afternoon so I ventured outside to take a photo of Lexie and Jenny wearing their sweaters, with the rosehips in the garden.
Lexie and Jenny show off their knitwear in the autumnal garden
I also spent time sorting out the pattern instructions for this piece of miniature knitting, I had already written it up but needed to check everything carefully and get it into a form which can be printed out for reference when knitting.  The fair-isle part of the pattern is shown as a colourful grid (using an excel spreadsheet).
"Look Jenny, this is the pattern for our sweaters"
Lexie and Jenny pose with their sweaters and the pattern instructions
I'm sharing this pattern openly using a Creative Commons Attribution Sharealike Non-commercial licence - in other words you are welcome to knit this for your 8 inch dolls but may not sell the pattern or sell your knitting from the pattern unless you contact me for permission.  I reserve the right to make the sweater to sell (when I have the time to make it - I'm currently knitting the plain version in pale blue).

If you would like the knitting pattern please email me on dollmum @ yahoo.co.uk or download now from Ravelry (see Sweater Jenny and Lexie dolls for the listing on Ravelry).