Monday, March 10, 2014

I Don't Know Her Artist-Given Name

11-inch BJD by Bo Bergemann

Purchased from the estate of Michelle Fontenot, this 11-inch, all-resin ball-jointed doll was created by Hawaiian artist and sculptor, Bo Bergemann.  I was introduced to Bergemann's BJDs approximately four years ago through my late friend, Ruth Manning.  Ruth met Bergemann during one of her many doll convention trips.  After that convention, during a phone conversation with me, Ruth shared her experience of riding the shuttle van from the hotel to the airport with the free-spirited Bergemann.  She described Bergemann as a delightful person and thereafter purchased one of her BJDs.

Several years before the above mentioned convention, Ruth and Michelle met in person at another doll convention.  Both women were members of my WeLoveBlackDolls (WLBD) Yahoo! group (now closed).

In a WLBD group message to another member who needed cheering up about something, Michelle wrote:

Keep a positive spirit about you and you will keep, keeping on.
God Bless
I miss you.
~Michelle~





BJDs are generally priced outside my doll-buying comfort zone, but when I saw this spunky little girl with the multicolored dread locks being offered for sale, I asked the cost, which was affordable.  Having been part of Michelle's collection, I am delighted to now have her in mine.



I have not yet discovered her artist-given name.  Until then and perhaps even afterward, I will call her Michelle in honor of her previous owner, who is probably now still playing dolls with our shared doll-friend, Ruth Manning.

Michelle has been welcomed by several other members of the doll family.  I love her!

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Friday, March 7, 2014

Going Green No-Sew Doll Dresses


With the exception of a Singing Holiday Sisters (Barbie, Stacey, and Kelly) and a couple of May birthday/birthstone themed dolls, very few of my playscale dolls wear green.  I needed at least two additional green dresses for a photo-sharing event.  I checked eBay but did not find anything suitable or economically priced.

Next, I watched a few Youtube videos on making simple no-sew playscale dresses and found instructions for one that looked pretty simple.

What can be any simpler than making a dress from toilet paper? I thought.  Yes, you read it correctly, a toilet paper dress.   Photos of what I did to make it are shared below.

Kara's body is Saran wrapped and two sets of  10 continuous sheets of toilet paper will be wrapped around her body.

Kara's body is wrapped with toilet paper with the paper moistened with water between layers and molded to the shape of her body.

Kara's legs are inside a paperclip holder on my desk where she is allowed to stand overnight until the toilet paper dries.
After the paper dries, painting begins.  I used green acrylic craft paint, leaving the top and hemline unpainted because these areas will be trimmed.

I used white acrylic paint to color block the dress because areas on the sides were a darker green after the green paint dried.

The paint has dried; ready for Mod Podge.  "How are you going to get it off?" asked my husband.  "Cut it." I replied.  

A generous layer of Mod Podge is applied and allowed to dry overnight.

The tricky part was cutting the dress off.  I used the smallest pair of on-hand scissors, but could not maneuver the scissors where the dress covered her buttocks.  I don't trust myself with an X-Acto knife; so I used a pocketknife to score that area.  Then I gently poked the tip of the knife in the scored section to create an opening.

In the video, duct tape was placed along both sides of the opening to create a closure in back held with Velcro dots.  I used white sports tape instead of unsightly duct tape.  The plan was to paint the tape, but after it was applied, that plan changed.  Kara models the dress from front and back later.
***

Because painting was required, which also extended the length of this project, I decided to make a second dress using green wrapping tissue.  Except for painting, the steps to make this dress were very similar to those described for the first.

Kara's body is wrapped with wrapping tissue.

The paper is moistened liberally and gently molded to the shape of her body by squeezing out the excess water.  A strip is placed at the waist to create a belt.

The paper has dried and is ready for Mod Podge.

A generous layer of Mod Podge is applied and allowed to dry overnight.

The dress is cut off using the same technique used for the toilet paper dress.

As noted for the first dress, sports tape was used on one side in back to create a flap-over closure.  It extends far enough onto the other side that I did not have to use Velcro to keep the flap in place.  For the wrapping tissue dress, I used Curad adhesive tape and tiny strips of Velcro to secure the closure.  I initially planned to Mod Podge and glue a strip of wrapping tissue on top of the back flap of dress 2 for a monochromatic look, but decided to leave it as is.

Kara and Marisa model their new paper dresses.  Marisa models hers initially without the white "belt" that I added later (seen below).
Kara is now wearing color coordinated earrings and bracelets.  Marisa's "belt" is made using the adhesive  tape that was used for the back closure.
The ladies have officially gone green without saving the environment being the initial plan.

***

Two other paper ideas for doll dressmaking include using colored Kleenex facial tissues (if you can find), colored or print toilet paper (again, if you can find it), and white toilet paper or Kleenex colored with food color-tinged water.  There are loads of possibilities.

Click here to view the Youtube video that inspired this project.



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Monday, March 3, 2014

Keur Domu Sagar by Guest Blogger, Paulette Richards



As promised, in The Doll Griot post, Paulette Richards has written a guest post for the readers of this blog. 
 
Keur Domu Sagar
by Paulette Richards

If a little Senegalese girl is lucky enough to own a doll, it will most likely be white.  Consequently girls often name their dolls “Bébé Toubab.”  Since toubab means “foreigner,” it applies to black Americans like me as well as to Europeans and Asians but outside of the display dolls made for the tourist trade, there are almost no dolls that look like people of African descent available here in Senegal.  The black dolls that I brought from the States therefore made a big hit when I used them to show people how to make digital “books” at the International Book Fair in Dakar last December.   

Digital book making at the International Book Fair in Dakar

Madame Fabinta Lo observed one of my workshops and was especially interested in my dolls.   
Madame Fabinta Lo
She subsequently met with me in Saint Louis to show me some of the dolls she creates.  Originally a Spanish professor, Mme. Lo began working with children of Senegalese immigrants when she moved to Italy in 1999.  Recognizing that these children needed more positive reinforcement of their identity, she set out to make dolls that would represent traditional aspects of Senegalese culture and history. 

Always an elegant dresser, Madame Lo had never learned to sew because men do the tailoring and dressmaking in Senegal.  Making dolls was therefore a challenge but she rose to the occasion by asking a neighbor for tips and studying one of the dolls typically sold to tourists.
 
Tourist doll

Before long she was modifying the design to represent a broader range of characters.  Madame Lo named her doll-making enterprise Keur Domu Sanar which literally means “the house of cloth children in Wolof.”  Here then is a selection of her dolls representing  the past, present, and future of Senegal:

Fatou Ndiaye is dressed in the style that was typical in the 1950s. 

Her parasol protects her from the sun but also adds an elegant accent to her ensemble.
 
The layers of underskirts show that she is a person of means.



She has dressed her hair in the Ngouka style and decorated it with gold jewels that also show her wealth.
 
Fashionable women of this period tattooed their lips very dark to make their teeth seem more brilliantly white in contrast.


Senegalese women like Fatou Ndiaye have always used folktales to teach their children and grandchildren moral values.  Mme. Lo has written a book of folktales and hopes to use her dolls to illustrate future stories.

Aminata Diop represents a modern-day “driyanquée.”
 
The driynquées used dramatic eye make-up and other feminine wiles to drive American G.I.s (Yankees) to distraction during WWII:

As an educated professional, Aminata does not need a man to pay her bills but she still enjoys wearing seductive lingerie such as this embroidered underskirt



and a string of binbin beads around her waist.



Her beaded purse
 
and matching sandals

add just the right sparkle and dash while Aminata herself rounds out the ensemble with the kind of curves Senegalese people most admire.



Mme. Lo topped it all off with a handsome, handcrafted hat.



Issa Pouye is from the Peul ethnic group.  The Peul are traditionally nomadic herders, but Issa has left his rural village to attend school in the city.  He lives with his uncle and shares a room with five cousins. 


 
Although life in such cramped quarters is often difficult, Issa is determined to become an agronomist so he can go home and help his family. 




Mme. Lo hopes to make her creations available in an Etsy Store soon.  For more news about her store you can follow her at:


***
Thank you, Paulette, for sharing Madame Fabinta Lo's dolls with us.  I enjoyed learning about them and wish her much success with doll-making and sales.  

***

Until Paulette returns to the States and resumes her Limbe Dolls blog, where the serious business of doll play is so eloquently shared, she plans to document her sojourn in Senegal in her newly created blog, Sipping from the Source.

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