Parker's rag doll is done ...
And while the experience is still fresh in my mind, I'm writing a post in order to avoid reinventing the wheel the next time around.
Me being me, I'll start at the end with the clothing ...
made from one of P's newborn rompers, which I didn't photograph before cutting it up, but it looked much like this ...
As mentioned in the previous post the doll itself ...
was patterned after an image I found on Google that led to a blog in Italian. I printed the accompanying pattern and whipped together a one-armed, one-legged sample on which I also tried some Inktense. Pretty scary looking ...
but informative. This was how I determined the foot was too big (so I trimmed off half the pattern), the arm too low (so I cut it off and tried pinning it higher), the body shape questionable (so I made it less triangular) and the Inktense a non-starter (since everything goes into P's mouth).
Yarn for hair was my biggest concern (see above about everything going into P's mouth), so I decided to use a variegated floss to do the hair in a discontinuous back stitch ...
in hopes of replicating P's own wild hair ...
The face was lined with harem cloth to better anchor the thread bead eyes, along with split back stitch rosy cheeks and mouth (thanks Jude) ...
But even with the lining, I soon discovered that the very first filling I tried (unbleached cotton batting), discolored the pale peach linen face. That pretty much put the kibosh on dryer lint and cloth scraps, so I hit Google again and found a new product ...
It's available from other brands, one of which calls it Cluster Stuff. My brain being what it is, I morphed that into Cluster Fluff, which it turns out is actually a thing ...
Anyway, I stitched the head (down to the neck), the shortened arms and smaller-footed legs inside-out, clipped the seams and turned them right-side out (as seen in the last post). Then I stuffed them and that's when I got into serious trouble.
Do you remember the Iowa Test of Basic Skills? I remember taking it in 6th grade because one of the questions had diagrams of hand silhouettes in various orientations from which the test taker was to discern which hand was the "left" hand. I can still envision my 11 year old self twisting and turning my hands, trying to figure out the answer.
This uncomfortable memory came to me as I tried to figure out how to turn the body inside out and stitch the side seams with a pre-stuffed head and arms. Not happening, was my conclusion. So I turned it right-side out again, turned under the edges, safety pinned them together and used an overcast stitch to hold everything together. Fine, except ...
one of the safety pins embedded its coiled end in the linen and had to be cut out, resulting in the mended hole pictured above. Sigh.
Fortunately, it all worked out and I had enough fun that I've decided to watch how this doll weathers the next year, then make a new doll for P when she turns two. By then I'll have re-accumulated a stash of cloth shreds and thread ends along with a gathering of grandkid dryer lint (fortunately my girls use Norwex wool dryer balls, so there will be no dryer sheet residue to worry about). Oh, and dollmakers' needles (thanks Dee).
That being said, I've long thought about the possibility of making realistic roadrunner "dolls" (not the cartoon version, although the Wile E. Coyote and Roadrunner cartoons of yesteryear are my all-time favorites). So who knows, you may see some more dollmaking here sooner rather than later.