Custom Order – Clothes

The time leading up to Christmas 2010 had me very busy with a selection of custom orders. The next few posts will document these. 

First up, a clothes order for a customer that purchased 3 Dolls from me in 2009 and wished for extra sets of outfits. There where some additional outfits in addition to the once here that I didn't document. 

Please forgive me for the less than stellar quality of the photographs here. I had my camera stolen and had to resort back to my old Canon Powershot, a great camera for outdoor pictures, but just terrible for indoor shots.. please bear with me.. all my creations this year will be photographed with my lovely Nikon D3100 DSLR.

Clothes-all

Hand-knitted hats, a boys outfit, skirts, dresses, blouses, cardigans for 1 boy doll 45cm, 1 girl doll 45cm and one smaller 31 cm girl doll.

Clothes-boys

Detail of boy's outfit, linen shirt, pocketed trousers and felted vest.

Clothes-Dress-grey-front

Very traditional dress for 45 – 52 cm doll with linen facing at the hem and linen belted waist. 

Clothes-Dress-grey-back

Same dress from behind.

Clothes-taupe

Drop-waist dress with linen trim and felted wool cardigan with ruffled edge and crochet neck band. 

A large portion of the fabrics are from up-cycled clothing, others are from my vast stash of cloth. The client came to my house to choose fabrics she liked and I created to clothes around them. 

All seams are sewn with french seams for a beautiful finish and durability. The felted items are sewn with a zig-zag stitch to allow for stretch when the dolls are being dressed by little hands. 

 

On becoming….

Like so many other doll makers, Juliana from Fröken Skicklig has left a mark in my life. I am writing this post to add to the conversation about becoming a doll artist, crafter, artist, creator in one's own right. I feel prompted to do this after reading Fabiola from Fig and Me's article about copyright (I started by commenting on her blog, then realized that what I have to say would probably over-extend my welcome as a commentator (grin)…) Putting it all down here has made it even more wordy… 

Many years ago I used to keep a massive amount of magazine clippings with visual ideas and craft instructions. I had lugged a stack of 3-ring binder's from my home country of Switzerland all the way over to Canada. They provided me with a safety net of ideas and inspiration. One day a very dear friend of mine said: "Oh, I don't keep anything like that, I have my own ideas." That comment has stayed with me even though I sadly lost touch with the friend. I make the main part of my living as a visual artist, mixed-media fine art. The style that I have is very unique and is born out of taking many snippets of inspiration from many different sources and combining them into a soul language that is all my own. (if you are curious about my art, her is a link to my studio blog and a link to my website.)

Since the Olive Sparrow blog is about my dolls, I would like to share with you on how I became a doll maker. Sharing this journey highlights inspiration, research & development and authenticity in ones work.

Back in Switzerland in the 80's I used to make dolls, based on patterns sold in the craft store and inspired by what many people around me created. These dolls where very "traditional" swiss dolls and not meant to be originals. However, these patterns thought me a lot about making dolls, I learned to work extremely fine handstitches on the doll-jersey (of which the best quality is manufactured in Switzerland (Laib-yala). I must have made upwards of fifty dolls from one pattern. A few of my aunts wanted to have some and payed me for creating them. There were also many of them made and given away as gifts. 

In Switzerland, during my upbringing in the 70's and 80's, individualism and creativity was not an encouraged notion. One did not want to stick out. One was not to be so proud as to think that one could create something that could be called art. I spent eight years attending needlework and handwork classes. But by gosh and golly, not to learn art or express myself, but to be able to mend my future husbands' and children's socks and underwear. It all had to be practical and lead us to becoming good housewives. 

In 1987 I arrived in Canada. I lived in the suburbs of Windsor Ontario for one year as a nanny with two little boys. I sewed and knitted my year away. There was a lack of knitting books that I could understand with my very limited english, so I had to improvise and make up my own patterns. During that year I had met a man that was 20 (grin) years older than me and an artist. In my youthful innocence I thought he was the one for life. Well, he wasn't, but what he did for my life was show me that I had a hand and mind for creating. He introduced me to the world of craft shows and the possibility of making a living creating with my hands.

It was in 1988 w while visiting Switzerland I purchased a book with instructions on making Waldorfdolls. A grand business plan was next that had me conquer the North American toy market with these amazing pedagogical creatures. I was going to teach everyone why these dolls where so much better than plastic ones. I got as far as starting one doll head from the instructions in the book. Lacking sheep's wool, I used polyfill. Actually, it wasn't even a whole head, just the inside ball, because I got stuck with how the head was to be bound off.

Fast forward to 2007/2008 (the time until then had me study and graduate from the Ontario College of Art and Design in 1999, set up my fine art practice and quietly knit away). My son was now attending the local Waldorf School. The first newsletter we received after joining, had an ad for parents wanting to learn to make Waldorf Dolls. Immediately, I knew that I wanted to finally finish that started doll. I arrived at the first lesson with the almost 20 year old head and quietly put it aside when I got a chance to work with real sheep's wool. My teacher April was amazing, like me, she had a superior eye for detail and understood that each doll is a soul entering our world. I purchased materials from her to make two dolls right off, one for my son and one for my niece for Christmas. My son's doll was entirely hand sewn, whereas the other body was sewn with the machine. Creating these two dolls re-opened my desire to add another element to my art practice – working with textiles, making something 3-D, creating not art, but craft, using all my skills, making "babies" (because we don't want to have more children – a conscious, environmental decision), feeding my soul, playing with dolls, putting some other eggs into my basket of earning a living with my hands.

I was going to take a year to make dolls, then open an etsy shop and sell them. I created the Olive Sparrow with that in mind. A dear friend Rima from Undine Jewellery planed on hosting a new craft show with items for mothers and children and I could sell the dolls there in September 2008. However, in March of that year, my niece brought me her doll after playing with her for only a few months and the poor little soul had a hole in the fabric over her nose. I was in shock. There was no way that I could possibly sell dolls that didn't last. I knew that I would have to spend some time with R&D before I would dare to make them for sale.

A whole year went by, a year where I spent countless hours on the internet looking up doll makers, doll suppliers, doll-making books, sheep wool suppliers, costing out supplies to be shipped to me from Europe, but not making dolls. I also contacted a number of doll makers, namely:

Verena from Mein PuppenkindGudrun from Gunikat-WaldorfpuppenSanne from AllerleipuppenIris from Rosenrot-BlumenkinderJuliane from Fröken SkickligJudith from FilzlotteAngela from WichtelpuppeMaria from Mariengold

and asked for some input from them. I was particularly interested in all the mohair wigs that European doll makers seemed to make, yet after purchasing instructions from Maria from Mariengold and some local mohair, I had no success. It was only through the generosity of the above kind souls that I learned about Wollknoll's doll hair mohair. 

I ordered every book that I could find on making dolls to study different techniques and see if I could pick up little hints and tricks that others generously shared. There are many patterns and I know that I did not like the traditional sew-up foot because in a shoe it looked more like a hoof than a foot. Also, I did not like a seam down the middle of my dolls' legs. Other patterns made the dolls very skinny, whereas I like my babies to be of a more substantial nature. There is still half a dozen single legs downstairs in my sewing area, all stemming from the development of my current foot and leg pattern. One doll maker had a photo of a bum on her doll. This intrigued me and I decided to work on a pattern where my dolls had a "seat".

Of course, looking at that much information and images from all the books and blogs and websites make it hard to not pick up elements from here and there. Yet I have my own astethic, a personal vision of what I would like a doll to look like, artistic expression would be another word for it. This is fed by subconcious pictures of what left an impression on me during my research time, it is also fed by working with paints and colours in my paintings, by a life-long love for textiles, sewing, knitting, spinning. 

There are times when I teach workshops about my art practice, but I don't ever teach on how to make "my" art. I teach techniques, creative thinking, the finding of one's personal symbols, because I believe that at the end of the day the only way to be truly successful as an artist one has to create authentic work. Oh, I've been violated by people stealing my work, my ideas, my creations, but I also know, that I will come up with new ideas and that I can do better than I have done in the past. There are choices, choices to share because we don't want to see a skill die, to share for financial gain, or not to share and only to make for ourselves.

Before the prevalence of the Internet, during wholesale showes I used to participate in, there was a clear code of conduct, i.e. if you had an exhibitor's batch, you could only enter the booth of another exhibitor if you where invited in. Ideas still got stolen, we often just wouldn't find out about it because we were not connected. It is hard to imagine, but the internet is still very much in its infancy (main-population usage is what, about 10 years?), and hope that as we mature with it, there will be other acceptable codes of conduct established and hopefully enforced. A blog that can be read and accessed by anybody is a great sales tool, however, it is also an invitation to the world to "common' into our booth and have a look around", without knowing if it is a buyer or an exhibitor.

As a closing note, I find "Creative Authenticity" by Ian Roberts to be a wonderful read for working on our own creative voice.

The Olive Sparrow Child — Meg (short for Megan)

A child has flown the nest, her name is Meg (short for Megan) and she is about 50 cm tall. Her new mom will be Juliana and it is her Birthday today!

Emily-sitting-pretty

 

Emily-portrait

Emily-pants-shoes

Emily-booths

Emily-pirate

Emily-pirate-2

Emily-pirate-3

There are also other children in the works and clothing and goodies, as the Olive Sparrow will be a vendor at the Waldorf Academy Winterfair in Toronto on December 4th. So exciting and loving the rush of creation.

 

Each doll is made up of the following materials.

Skin: 100% cotton (Swiss-made to Öko-Tex-Standard 100)
Stuffing 100% “green-processed” wool batt
Hair: 100% Wool, or a Mohair/Wool Blend
Clothing: 100% natural fibres (linen, cotton, silk)
Shoes: Recycled felted wool sweaters, or pure leather
Face: 100% cotton Embroidery Thread

Workmanship:
Each doll is created individually by artist Monika Aebischer, the proprietor of The Olive Sparrow. She sources and uses only the highest quality materials in her creations – swiss-made skin fabric, north-eastern-Ontario green processed wool stuffing, her own hand-dyed wool/mohair for the dolls hair.

She uses up-cycled vintage and clothing fabrics, in either pure linen, cotton or silk. Up-cycled fabric is wonderful for doll clothes, as the cloth has been washed soft, gentle and free of textile manufacturing products. Monika also felts used woolen sweaters to use for doll shoes and clothing. She knits the doll’s hats out of prime quality knitting wool. Each seam on the doll’s body is sewn twice to allow your child to fiercely love their Olive Sparrow Child. Clothing is sewn with French seams and some are fully reversible. 

All Olive Sparrow Children’s hair is made from a crochet cap that is sewn to the head, allowing for replacement should it ever become necessary (although most children will object to this, as it changes their doll dramatically). The hair of each doll is made from wool or mohair yarns.

 

The Olive Sparrow Children: Custom Clothes Order

A large order for doll clothes had to finally be finished. There was some delay, first due to package with client's fabrics being delayed in delivery, then my life running away with me, a trip to Europe, a sewing-machine with a boo-boo, and now, finally, a completed order. 

Doll-clothes-1 

Doll-clothes-2

 

Doll-clothes-3

 

Doll-clothes-4

Doll-clothes-5

Doll-clothes-6
 

The final count: 

4 skirts, 2 tunics, 2 blouses, 2 jackets, 2 diapers with inserts, 2 pairs of booties, 2 hats, 1 scarf and 1 scarflet, as well as 2 dresses altered from the client's girls own clothes.

Today I went and got a few more wool sweaters in girly colours to make booties for this years children that are currently in the works. I will again participate in the TWS Candlelight Fair (info of last year's fair, 2010 dates to be announced when available). Please note, I am not taking any custom orders of dolls for the rest of the year, however, if you are interested in the children, there will be a chance to preview them on this site.

 
 

Olive Sparrow Child: Odillon

Odillon was the first doll that I made for my son for Christmas a couple of years ago. I dyed the hair to match Huxley's golden-blond hair. Odillon was sewn entirely by hand, following an pattern provided by a parent from the Allan Howard Waldorf School. Huxley didn't immediately take to Odillon, actually, he did not much care for him at all (not even with my interest in babying the doll). I did receive a request however, to sew Odilon a "doggy costume", just like the one Huxley had worn for Halloween that year. Once Odillon had this outfit, Huxley happily trudged him about for a bit, but still, no deep connection. I even tried to whisper to the doll, and then have Huxley listen to what he repeated, but all to no avail. Odillon was placed on a shelf, in clear view and more or less remained there. 

Then a few months ago, as I was busy working on the dolls for the TWS fair, Odilon captured Huxley's heart. I will likely never fully know what triggered it, but Odillon is now part of the games we play. 

Odillon-morley 

How fun is this, wearing a doggy outfit, sitting on a cowboy hat with a ceramic plate, a fabric sunny-side-up egg on a playmobil box, with Morley the cat trying to get in on the action.
 

Sometime in 2009, I decided that if I maybe make another doll for Huxley, he will take to it, maybe there was something "wrong" with Odillon. Also, I just absolutely love Waldorf Dolls and wanted to make more of them for my own self-serving needs of making more "babies"… So I started a doll, but mid-way through it, I decided that if I focus instead of on making Olive Sparrow children for sale, I can express my need for creating them, yet will not need to feel disappointed if Huxley may not take to the other doll. So instead of creating one doll for him, I now create for myself and as an end-result for others.

There was a huge learning curve involved in getting from the first two dolls (the same year as I made one for Huxley, I also made one for my niece L.) to the current Olive Sparrow Children. Many people have been so kind in helping me find supplies and figuring out instructions. This has been some time in coming, but I would like to officially thank (in no particular order):

Verena from Mein Puppenkind

Gudrun from Gunikat-Waldorfpuppen 

Sanne from Allerleipuppen

Iris from Rosenrot-Blumenkinder

Juliane from Fröken Skicklig

Judith from Filzlotte

Angela from Wichtelpuppen

Maria from Mariengold

(Ganz Herzlichen Dank and Euch alle! Wow, so super wie Ihr mir alle geholfen habt!)


Although I know how to operate many a machine, tool or material with my hands, this typepad blog thingy remains a deep mystery. Alas, I do promise that I WILL figure out how to add all my doll-maker connections into a sidebar.