Showing posts with label Linnea doll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linnea doll. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Doll-A-Day 2017 #4 Colonial Williamsburg Betsey Doll,Plus Sarah, Junie B., and a Pottery Barn Princess

  It seems that I have accidentally done a Soft Dolls Week. We're on Day #4 and they have all been soft dolls so far. I guess I'll finish the week with soft dolls and get down to some serious fashion dolls next week.
   First of all I talked yesterday about the tiny Pottery Barn dolls, so I thought I would show you this one.

She's only 5" tall from the soles of her shoes to the tip of her crown. She doesn't have  a tag, but she's obviously made by the same company, as she has virtually the same face as the, much larger, Caroline  we saw yesterday.

I suspect this girl may also be, but, like the princess, she has no tag.
She comes in at just a bit over 5", but she seems much bigger.

 The princess is such a sweet little thing. I have something of a small collection of tiny cloth dolls, and she's one of them. Another is this girl,today's doll,Betsey.


She's 6" tall, and tagged 'Betsey 1997 Colonial Williamsburg Foundation',so obviously she's one of those historic dolls sold at Colonial Williamsburg, in Virginia. I got this one at a yard sale or thrift store,so who knows. I've tried to research it online, and they do sell dolls like this in stores at Colonial Williamsburg,(As well as 12" ones.),but as for them being sold other places, I couldn't say.


She's designed and manufactured by a company called Merrymakers Inc.,who also made these personality filled pigs...

They are finger puppets and are apparently the 'this little' piggies from the book "Piggies" by Audrey and Don Wood.There are supposed to be 5 in all, and the sunglasses guy on the right should also be wearing a straw hat and have a book in his hand.
...and this cute and tiny 5" Junie B. Jones doll from several years ago.(As well as the bigger ones.)Yes, I have one of these too.


Both our girls loved the Junie B. Jones books when they were small,so she reminds me of those times. (This one is missing her purple skirt.)
...but not these very similar looking 6" Linnea dolls, who are made by Determined Products.

Sorry about the nudity, but she loaned her green and white striped bibbed overalls to a Tutti body with a Peter Paniddle Kiddle head on it, and they fit PERECTLY! By the way, you can see my post on 12" Linnea HERE.
  Betsey has a slip, dress, and 'built in' shoes/boots/stockings.(I'm not quite sure what they are! They look like shoes and socks, but the sock part is painted and feels sort of leathery. Is it meant to be socks, or boot tops?Or maybe really tall spats...)

She has thread hair, and a sweetly drawn face.

Her dress won't stay velcroed though.


Her head and body are cotton, but her ears are felt!

 I love the faces on these dolls.They are so small, and yet so delicate. I like them so much, that when I found this girl...


...at a thrift store, I had to buy her, even though she's wearing only her slip.(Which is just like Betsey's.)


Maybe someday I'll find some clothes for her, or even make her some.
 She has the same painted...socks? and built in shoes as Betsey.

 
She's tagged Sarah Doll,Colonial Williamsburg Foundation,1996,MerryMakers Inc.,


 ...and she's the same size as Betsey. I think now I need a boy from Colonial Williamsburg...
   Tomorrow we'll look at another soft doll. See you then!

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Doll-A-Day 272: Soft Dolls Week: Linnea

  Today's soft doll is Linnea.

Linnea is a doll based on the character from the 1987 book "Linnea in Monet's Garden", illustrated by Lena Anderson...



...about a little Swedish girl and her elderly friend, Mr. Bloom, who take a trip to Paris to see the paintings of Monet, and to Giverny, to see Monet's real garden that was the subject of so many of his paintings.(I'll say! How many paintings did this guy do of his lily pond? Did he not get out much or what?)

Monet, on the right, in his garden, 1922. Wow. Other than the guys, this photograph looks like a painting. Monet's son left the property to The French Academy of Fine Arts in 1966. After being restored, the property was opened to the public in 1980, and became a popular tourist attraction.

This version of Linnea is 11" tall, but there was also a 17" version.

 The book introduces children to Monet, and impressionist art.

She should also have a straw hat. Mine is missing hers.

There are also smaller Linnea dolls.These are 6" tall.

I love little cloth dolls. I actually have these, but my version of the first one is missing her apron/smock, and the third one has loaned her pants to a Tutti and Todd friend I made from a Peter Paniddle head and a Tutti body.The clothes are a perfect fit. You can see my post on small cloth character dolls,including my tiny Linneas, HERE.
In fact, there are almost as many different Linnea dolls as there are Monet paintings of that pond.







Nahh...maybe not.



Holy cow! Monet really liked his garden.In fact, he once said, "My most beautiful work of art is my garden." He certainly worked hard on it. He had gardeners working on it for years, and he constantly gave them detailed orders of what he wanted done.
Monet began painting the water lillies in 1899. He painted 250 paintings of the water lily pond.



Oscar-Claude Monet was born in Paris France in 1840, and died in 1926. He was part of the impressionist movement. In fact, Impressionism gets it's name from the Claude Monet painting Impression, soleil levant,(Impression, Sunrise).



Impressionism is  described by Wikipedia thus: "Impressionist painting characteristics include relatively small, thin, yet visible brush strokes, open composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities (often accentuating the effects of the passage of time), ordinary subject matter, inclusion of movement as a crucial element of human perception and experience, and unusual visual angles."


It's described by me as: paintings made up of tiny strokes of the brush,with tiny bits of colour, making rough looking images that look better from a distance, where the tiny specks of colour merge into a solid object and look realistic.
Linnea was so popular that several products bearing her likeness were produced, including the dolls, doll clothes,puzzles, and the book "Linnea's Almanac".

More than once the theme of the flower show at Chicago's Marshall Fields store, (Now Macy's), was Linnea in Monet's Garden. Scenes from the book were recreated as amazing window displays.
I wonder whatever happened to the wonderful figures created for these displays. They probably ended up in some dumpster. They should have donated them to a library or children's art museum.

All the flowers and other plants in the window displays were real.



Tomorrow we'll conclude soft dolls week.