2.25.2008

Still playing with lighting

Ziggy needed an accessory and so I painted a little car for him. He seems to like it. I think it sets off his onesie nicely anyway.

I experimented with a white background for photographing him today, and I am still struggling to get it right. I think I will go with tan when I set up the tripod and photograph him for real. I need to raise him up on a stand first too. If I can muster some patience, perhaps I will try to learn to use manual light metering. I'm always trying to fix things in Elements instead. I'm sure the camera can do all kinds of wonderful things if only I would learn to press the right buttons and turn the correct dials.

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2.22.2008

"Ziggy" the Tuxedo Kitten

Granted, I wish I had taken these in better light, but I wanted to show you Ziggy as I just finished painting him. He still needs to be varnished, and then we'll get some better photos of him...I hope!

I don't know why he makes me think of Little Bear. That's Little Bear by Else Holmelund Minarik, with pictures by Maurice Sendak in the background. Maybe it's the slope of his nose, or his amusing, but charming, overbite. I don't know, but I think at the very least, Ziggy and Little Bear could be good friends.

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2.21.2008

Painting my kitten doll

I'm pokey, but I am making progress. Little Ziggy (I've decided he's a boy now) has been coming right along. He's got a pastel yellow onesie with a periwinkle blue collar and buttons down the front. I'm having quite a time keeping his whiskers white. I've had to repaint them a couple of times and I'm sure I will again. Painting thread is not as easy as I might have thought. I think what takes the most time, aside from painting his multitude of kitten hairs, is deciding how I want him to look. He is a stylized version of a kitten after all, and there are plenty of choices to make about how I want to do that. All in all, he's a cute fellow.

Just an aside...Those are my African violets in the background. They are getting what looks like white mildew on them. I was so glad to be able to get them to survive, and I am not happy about this new turn of events. Does anyone have any experience with this? I read keeping a fan going helps, but it is cold for that! I've been trying to get rid of the infected parts, but I seem to be losing the battle :(

Another aside...We're on "vacation" from our eBay store this week, in sympathy for the current eBay boycott. We'll be posting our new dolls over on our main website. I'm working on expanding our art doll pages over there so people can visit, take a look at available and already adopted dolls, and read their stories. I don't know if a boycott will have any effect, as I imagine eBay will continue to cost sellers more and more, but I do think the changes to the feedback system are insulting. In the coming months, sellers will no longer be able to leave negative feedback, but buyers will continue to be able to. Personally, we have never left any or received any negative feedback, but whether buyer, seller, or both, we should all be subject to the same policies. To do otherwise is to invite abuse. If eBay wants to reform its feedback system, I believe it would be more fair to do away with the positive, negative, and neutral signs, and just have plain, honest feedback. I believe if eBay users don't feel threatened by potential punishment for saying what they think, that they will leave more accurate accounts of their transactions. I think that would be much more valid and much more fair to everyone.

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2.14.2008

Valentine Bird

I made this little Valentine Bird using the side, underbelly, and wing templates from this Martha Stewart bird pattern. I added a quilted tail and heart using my own pattern which you may use if you like. Seam allowances are not included...the lines are your sewing lines. I used the lines on Martha's pattern as my sewing lines as well.

I constructed mine differently from Martha's site's directions. I didn't enlarge any of the pieces. I just printed them on heavy paper, cut them out, and traced around them with a mechanical pencil onto the back/wrong side of my fabrics. I cut the shapes out of the fabric, leaving a little less than a 1/4 inch seam allowance around the outside of my pencil lines.

I took a small piece of yellow fabric for my beak, flipped it right sides together with my bird's head and sewed along the line where the beak meets the head. Then I just flipped it back the right way, like paper piecing in quilting. Next I sewed the seamline along the back of the bird from the point where the underside of the beak meets the body to the tip of the back end, just sewing along the sewing lines, not past them. I turned it right side out, and then pressed under the seam allowance where the body meets the tail.


The tail, the heart, and the wings where all sewn with cotton quilt batting underneath. I left an opening for turning them right side out, trimmed the batting out of the seam allowances, turned the shapes right side out, and then slip stitched the openings closed. I added a little extra stuffing in the heart first. I hand quilted the wings and tail in lines about a 1/4 inch apart.

I took the quilted tail and slip stitched it to the bird's body where I turned under the seam allowance. I let the back overlap the tail by about an inch.

I flipped the body right sides together again, loosely (I didn't turn the beak back inside out). I hand stiched the underbelly to the sides of the bird, right sides together, leaving the area near the tail open by about an inch on either side. From this opening, I turned the bird right side out. I added a small handmade sack of Poly-pellets for weight, and stuffed him with Poly-fil. Then I slip stitched the opening closed, folding the tail in half to get the seam to come together.

The wings were attached with quilting thread run through the openings of heart-shaped buttons on either side, and the eyes are black buttons attached with white thread, also sewn right through, button to button. I hand embroidered my intitials on one side of the heart, with a "+" below them, and my Valentine's intials on the back, also with a "+" below, using a simple back stitch and yellow embroidery floss. Lastly, I used some pearl cotton to make a loop through my bird's beak to hold the heart, knotted it, and slipped the end inside the heart by pulling it through with my needle.

Happy Valentine's Day!

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2.13.2008

Monster Chiller Horror Mouse Toy

We went food shopping today, and I stuck this in the cart, thinking it was cute. It's really called "The Cat Fancier's Association Active Cat Solo Play Cat Toy". I guess it looks kind of real. Kind of. Sort of.

That's what I thought anyway, until I heard the cashier shrieking uncontrollably. Mind you, it was sewn to a card at the time.
"Oh, I can't touch it! I CAN'T touch it! It's the tail! IT'S THE TAIL! AHHH!!"
Then she got a paper towel and tried to pick it up, still shrieking.
"AHHH!! I CAN'T!!! Oh, I can't touch it!"
The man behind us picked it up. I tried to get around her from the other side to scan it myself, but she was holding onto my arm. We were all laughing at this point, even the poor cashier, but she just couldn't get it together. She was actually shaking. I finally grabbed it, scanned it, and she held out a bag for me to drop it into, while trying not to look. I said, "It's all gone now," and apologized for traumatizing her. I hope she has recovered by now!
Back at home the Monster Chiller Horror Mouse Toy wasn't nearly as scaaary.

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2.12.2008

Kitten in Black and White

Here is my little kitten, with his/her (still haven't made up my mind) face sculpted and dry, and some basic lines marked with pen. I'm going to use that adorable tuxedo kitten to the left as a model when I paint.

It was bound to happen some day...I've been tagged. I may be the last person who hasn't been tagged yet, ever. I think I just passed my first year blogging anniversary too, roughly. I erased my first post that said something like, "Just testing." So, no accurate date there. I digress...I've been tagged by Annie Oakleaves (I like saying that. It makes me smile.) Here goes... five random facts about myself:
  1. I am an only child. People have always asked me, "Did you miss not having brothers and sisters?" I never understand this question, but I try to answer it politely. The truth is that I never had them, and so I have no idea what it is like to miss having them.
  2. I like to watch campy TV. My dad says that my mom and I will watch anything that "sparkles". Dancing with the Stars, American Gladiators, Passions, Dr Who...if it has some element of the ridiculous, I'm in.
  3. I hate to buy new sneakers. I will wear them until they die. I've been known to strap them back together with duct tape. I really need a new pair right now.
  4. I am a pack rat. I had to reduce the number of my possessions when we moved several years ago, and it still pains me to think about it. I must have saved everything I had ever had, including piles of junk mail.
  5. I usually remember to take the laundry out of the washing machine, but I usually forget to take it out of the dryer.

Okay. Since I can't believe I am not the last person to have been tagged ever, I will leave it up to anyone who hasn't been tagged and who would like to be tagged, to volunteer five random facts about themselves. Or even one random fact. I'm not fussy about rules. Even if you don't blog, you can just leave one or more in the comment section :)

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2.06.2008

Brownies

They may not be fancy, but they are good. These are the made-from-scratch kind of brownies. I got the recipe right off the box of my Baker's unsweetened baking chocolate squares, Baker's One Bowl Brownies. I never have pecans around, and so I always go for the chopped walnuts instead. Quick and easy.

I had my first sculpting lesson from Max today. I was told that I behaved myself and didn't yell, although I did get a little frustrated at points. All in all, we both thought I did pretty well, better than I expected. Hence the need for a brownie reward. I was going to take a picture of my first kitten, but I was afraid to touch him/her because he/she wasn't dry enough. At some point I will have to decide on a gender. It is always hard to tell with kittens, isn't it ;) So far my kitten makes me think of what a Maurice Sendak version of a kitten might look like, which is good, I think. Quirky, cute, a little odd.

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2.05.2008

Kitten, Bunny, Kitten

I have a mean headache today, but I managed to finish stuffing and assembling my bunny doll. So, now there are three dolls ready and I think I am about to start my sculpting "apprenticeship":) Max has agreed to give me lessons, and has high hopes that I have the sculpting gene in me. I hope so. The first requirement was that I make my own doll patterns up and the second is that I don't share any of Max's sculpting secrets. I guess that means the next time you see these dolls, they will have sculpted faces. That, or they will have clothes, depending on which I take on first.

To answer Annie Oakleaves question in my comments section about which dollmaking book I would recommend to start with, it depends on what you are most interested in learning, but my personal favorite so far is Antonette Cely's book, Cloth Dollmaking. Her instructions are great and she starts with a very simple doll. Then, in the following chapters, she explains how to make increasingly difficult dolls. There is a doll pattern for each section of the book, and so you really get hands-on experience of what she is teaching. I love Antonnette Cely's book because you can keep progressing right up to her very advanced designs, and it's loaded with clever, helpful tips.
P.S. Don't my dolls look like they are at the drive-in or something in that second photo? :)

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2.01.2008

The kitty community is growing...

Now there are two kittens assembled. The first one has more of a baby body and this second one has more of a toddler body.

I'm going to give the toddler one some Mary Janes, and so she doesn't have the toes sewn in. She also has bigger ears.

They both have metal button joints, and are of my own design. Since everyone's own pattern designs are copyrighted, it's important to learn about designing your own dolls, if you want to sell them. I thought I'd share some of the books that I've found helpful.

On the far right is Antonette (Noni) Cely's Cloth Dollmaking. Not only is Antonette Cely an amazing doll artist, she is a wonderful instructor. I've learned so much from this book, and it includes patterns for a few of Noni's dolls. She also has videos. There are a couple of clips from her dollmaking videos on YouTube too: Customizing Doll Patterns and Making Faces. Just see if you don't learn something just from watching the exerpts!

In the center are some of Susanna Oroyan's books, Fantasic Figures, Designing the Doll, and Anatomy of a Doll. Susanna's books include lots of examples from a host of doll artists, along with how-to drawings that are really helpful. Both her and Antonette Cely's books include some information on both designing cloth dolls and on sculpting doll faces. They are full of inspiration.
On the far left are two of Patti Medaris Culea's books, Creative Cloth Doll Making, and Creative Cloth Doll Faces. They both explore various techniques for making cloth dolls and include other artists' interpretations of the patterns included in the books. They both have very good basic instruction for sewing and assembling cloth dolls, and all kinds of ideas for embellishing them.

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