Monday, July 31, 2023

The Doll Book of the Month Club: The Tub Grandfather

   Beware: Ahead there be spoilers!

  The last time we checked in with The Tub People, they were trying to save the Tub Child from the bathtub drain. In The Tub Grandfather, also by Pam Conrad, with illustrations by Richard Egielski...


... the family are playing on the rug. Grandmother pretends it is 'a sunny field from long ago', and pretends to plant seeds. 


When the family, (and the policeman and the doctor, and the dog), decides to play ball. While they are playing, a little wooden man sleeps under the radiator, where 'it's warm and dark and no one had looked there for a long time.'


But when the ball rolls under the radiator, the tub child finds the sleeping man.


The Tub People bring him out from under the radiator. He's missing one eye, and the other is closed. At first no one knows who he is, but Tub Grandmother gently asks, "Walter dear, is that you?" 


The gentleman doesn't answer. But he is, indeed, Walter, the Tub Grandfather. The Tub People try to wake him, by inviting hm to play ball, and by having a loud parade, with no success. That night they all line up as usual, only now there is also the Tub Grandfather.


The next morning they even try taking him to the tub. He still doesn't wake up. Finally they take him back to the rug. When the radiator comes on and begins to whistle, Tub Grandfather begins to rock back and forth on his feet. That's when Tub Grandmother figures out what to do. She begins to hum to him.




    Is that not the sweetest thing? This is such a warm, quiet, old fashioned story just like it's predecessor. This book was a bit wet, and had to have it's pages separated, after being discovered in a wet box in the bottom shelf of what was left of the book case in Fuzzy's room. I had it out today, drying in the sun, when Fuzz arrived and spotted it, and smiled, "Oh! The Tub Grandfather!"

    You can hear The Tub Grandfather read HERE.

  That's the doll book for this month. See you tomorrow for another doll.

Doll-A-Day 2023 #204: Pepper...Again!

   Yes, it's another Pepper! I know you may feel you have been inundated with Peppers in the last few months. And this one looks a lot like the Pepper I showed you back in January. But I swear she's a different one.


  I got her at the doll show where I won the door prize gift certificate that I bought the Coraline doll with.



She has the same strawberry blonde hair as January's Pepper, but her hair is much more full and curly.


She has the usual Ideal markings on her back.


  Let's go over the same old info: Pepper is Tammy's little sister. She was made by Ideal, between 1963 and 1965.   


She has five points of articulation: neck, shoulders, and hips.




Like her sister, Pepper doesn't have a very ladylike sitting position.


She had a $10 tag, but I think I managed to get her for $7.


  Do I need another Pepper? No. But, well....


  It's a little hard to resist that suspicious sideways glance, and the red hair, especially at such a good price.


She makes a good detective too...


I don't think they made any Tammy's with this hair colour. Has anybody ever seen one?


My sister had brown hair and mine was red. It happens. Read my posts on red hair for information on that.


The dress is one I picked up somewhere. I don't even remember any more. It had a hat too I think, or maybe it was bloomers. I know there were two pieces. It was laying in the dollhouse, waiting for a wash. So when I was given the boxes with my dollhouse stuff in them, there it was. So I brought it back and washed it up for Pepper, who was naked and waiting for her day on the blog.



  It required some repairs. I had to reconnect the bodice and the skirt on one side in the back, and resew the snaps. I don't sew well. And the dress was fraying on the edges. of the fabric. I wish I had my Fray Check here, but I don't. Don't judge me!

  For more Pepper you can click on 'Pepper' in the side bar.

  That's it for today. See you tomorrow!

Sunday, July 30, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #203: Tiny Caco Boy

   Today's doll is another Caco kid. I can tell that from looking at him.


But this little guy is really a little guy. He may look like he'd make a good friend for Jeffrey, but Jeffrey towers over him.

Jeffrey: What are you doing here? Kid: I have no idea.

Being smaller than Jeffrey is one thing, but I think of Jeffrey as maybe 7 or 8 years old. So with him being so tiny, he should look more like a toddler. But he just looks like Jeffrey, only smaller.

If Jeffrey is 7 or 8, Kay and Moe are 8 or 9, and the new girl, Amanda, is 9 or 10, the new kid, let's call him Barney, has got to be about 3 or less. He should be chubbier and more babyish looking.

He only stands two inches high. He must have been made for some other, smaller, scale dollhouse. Mustn't he?


Despite his size, he's older than everyone else. I can tell that because Jeffrey, Kay, Moe, and Amanda all have plastic hands and feet, like the later Caco dolls, while Barney has metal, probably lead, hands and feet.



He has the same thread wrapped arms and legs, and I think his head is plastic, like their heads.


 Like Jeffrey, he has lots of molded detail in his hair.




His mouth paint is a little wonky. It gives him an attitude.


  He definitely needs a clean up. I could strip him and make him new clothes, That wouldn't help his dirty arms and legs though. Maybe I could pretend he plays in the mud a lot. He's a grubby little fellow.

  I thought he could be Amanda's baby brother. I got him at the same time, at the miniature show where I got the other dollhouse people you've seen in the last few months. 


What do you think? I think he looks too much like Jeffrey to be her brother.

  And what's in the yellow shoebox? 


There's a variety of stuff brought from the house for clean up and dealing with, from a cat magnet who lost his ear, (and his magnet), from the metal cupboard on the landing, to a Christmas ornament rescued from Fuzz's room and one from the landing, to a keyring one of the kids made for me, to one of my dad's watches, to several rolls of film from Ivy's childhood that have never gotten developed! I was asking about those, since I knew they were in this yellow shoebox, on a shelf on the first landing. Ken couldn't find them, so, typically, they were in plain sight on the stairs on the other side. (We have two flights leading to the first landing, one on either side.) Two rolls of film had already shown up in stuff retrieved from the house. I'm hoping this is all of them now. This time they are getting sent out for development, and I hope they are still viable. They had gone undeveloped because they were at the tail end of the film era and finding places to get them developed were getting harder to find. Even harder were places that gave negatives with the prints, which Ken insisted on. He's so old!

  See you tomorrow!

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Doll-A-Day 2023 #202: HeBee Birthday and Things we Lost (and Didn't Lose) in the Fire Part 2

   You're probably getting tired of hearing about our fire. Ken has just about finished clearing out the burned room, so there shouldn't be many more reports of things buried in the rubble. One of the last things of mine that came creeping out from under the wet, sooty mess in there was this guy. He's a Hebee/Shebee doll.

He's still hanging onto his balloons and his dog!

Specifically, he's HeBee Birthday. 


  HeBee/Shebee dolls were the creation of Charles H. Twelvetrees. (There's a good page HERE with lots of information on Charles.) They were produced in the 1920's as composition dolls. This one is a plastic recreation by Horsman from 1996, but it's copyright 1925. 

Pardon my dirty fingernails. I dug in a lot of soot that week! That stuff gets under short nails and won't wash out!

He has a bunch of birthday balloons.


  I got him a couple of years ago, I guess, at a doll show. He was still brand new in his box, his little hands and feet, and even his head, still wrapped in tissue paper. I was excited that he was only, I think, $10, because I had been wanting one. So I bought him and brought him home. He was laying on top of the old books, outside Fuzzy's room, in preparation for Doll-A-Day starting back up at the beginning of this year. I had forgotten after the fire that he had been there, until one day a few weeks ago. I suddenly remembered him, and thought, well, he's lost now. I figured that if anything, he had surely melted. When he appeared a week or so ago, I was pretty happy. I mean, really, he's not in bad shape considering. His box is shot, of course. And he was pretty dirty. But I brought him back to Emma's to work on. I untwisted the twisties that were holding him in his box, and took him out. He still had the tissue paper on his neck, hands and some on his feet! What was really surprising though, was, the rubber bands that were holding his birthday balloons, and dog to his wrists were fine! One rubber band broke when I removed it, after trying to put his balloons back on his hand for a picture. I removed HeBee's clothes and gave him a bath. He's so smooth and plastic that he washed clean right away.

And no melted spots!

  Side note, the pillow case that he's standing in front of was also recently rescued from the fire room. My mother made it from a feed sack, I slept on it when I was a kid. It had a lot of soot and stuff on it, but I doused it with Spray and Wash and washed it twice without drying it, (which sets stains in.). It may need another wash, and has one spot which seems to be a singe mark, but it's pretty good. To explain about the feed sack, back in the 'olden days' around the depression of the 1930's feed companies used to make their sacks out of pretty cotton fabric. My mom wore dresses, and even underwear, made out of feed sacks when she was young. This was not the burlap feed sacks that people always think of. (My friend Lori was incredulous when I mentioned Mom's feed sack underwear once, because she was thinking of burlap bags!) People bought the feed for their animals, and then used the sacks to make clothes and quilts. They used to try to make sure they got enough of one pattern to make what they wanted to make before the feed makers moved on to another print. 

  He looks a bit confused about the whole ordeal.

(Does he remind anybody else of  'Henry', from the comic strip?)


   He's marked Horsman on the back of his little bald head. 


  His dog was in a little plastic bag. The bag wasn't even melted. Surprisingly, neither was the dog, because he's sort of rubbery. 


The balloons aren't plastic. They're sort of rubbery too. They, and their ribbons were easily washed.


  I washed his clothes by hand, but then I sprayed them with laundry stain remover stuff and threw them in the washing machine, for good measure. I'm not sure they really needed it. But they came out perfect!

He's about 8 inches tall.

His white shirt has an attached bow tie.


His short pants have an embroidered duck applique.


His shirt closes in the back with Velcro, and his shorts have an elastic waist.


His shoes are molded as part of his feet, and painted. HeBee/SheBee dolls always have baby booties with ribbons on them.


  His only problem, and for all I know, he may always have had it, since he was still attached to his box, is that his right arm is a bit stiff and doesn't move as easily as the other one. (I know how he feels, only, for me, it's been the left one lately.)


His legs are okay though.


I'm not sure what his right hand is doing. It looks like he's a heavy metal fan.


And here he is, all back together, even with the original rubber bands back in place! Can you believe it?




  There are a lot of other things that made it through. Here are a few:

  The first thing Ivy asked about surviving was "The Danny Kaye autograph?!" It was displayed on the wooden cupboard by Fuzzy's room. No fear Ivy!

The damage is to the plastic bag. The actual magazine is fine. He signed to the left of his head.




When this was brought to me I discovered another autograph I had bought for Ivy and forgotten about! I had never given it to her, so I passed it along as a late Christmas present.

Also sooty plastic. The autograph is fine.

If you've been around a while you might remember a post I did on my Barbie friend Stacey Nite Lightning reproduction set. It was new in box...and displayed on that wooden cupboard. When Ken and Emma brought it back here, it looked like this.

The plastic coating of the cardboard was melted. That didn't bode well for the doll inside!


The back of the box didn't look quite as bad.


But when I opened the box, everything inside was still mint and perfect! I even peeled the burnt plastic off the box, and it doesn't look too bad either.

These reference books were on my attic stairs. Well, a lot of that stuff got kicked down, and wet too. These books were wet and had the pages stuck together. They were dried out just in time, as I was able to peel the pages apart without too much damage, and dry them. It took days and I had to keep turning the pages as they dried. Still no word on my "Barbie Doll and her Mod, Mod, Mod, Mod World of Fashion" book. 


These were in a Priority Mail box in the Room of Water. They were left longer, as Ken concentrated on the landing and Fuzzy's room. I kept saying, I can tell you exactly where they are, and if they're wet, I need to get them here now. He finally brought them. It was too late for one Barbie reference book, but it wasn't a good one anyway. These were able to be saved.
  


These two weren't so lucky. They were far too burnt and moldy, and stuck together to save.

The tub the lid is from was in Fuzz's room too.

   I collect vintage kids' books, and elementary reading books. The one on the right, "The New Streets and Roads",  might get replaced someday, but I really hope to replace the one on the left, "Wide Horizons". It's the edition we read in fourth grade. I still remember the story about the trees.  

  The last thing in this post is the best story.  Ken's dad made things from wood. He was quite good at it. Sadly, we have few things that Ken's dad made. He gave a little, simple wooden stool he had made to Fuzz years and years ago when Fuzz was little. It had been in our bedroom until not long before the fire. I said to Fuzz, "Do you want to take this in your room? It is yours."  And then there was the fire, and I figured, being wooden, it was gone. And then Ken and Emma found this. 


It was buried under a huge layer of rubble. It's now missing a lot of it's varnish, and has some burnt spots, but it's still sturdy, and it's here. I have  some wood cleaner and bought some tung oil and I'm going to give it a going over. The wood is thin layers, so I can't really sand away the burnt spots. They'll have to stay.

  That's it for today. See you tomorrow!