Black-Eyed Suzie

Dolls. Words.

Shop Update Photos (New November Girls)

Ye Olde Shoppe UpdatesYour Name2 Comments

I'm having four people over for dinner in a couple of hours; not ready!  NOT ready! I had hoped to have more photos to post, but for now all I have are the close-ups.  If I have time, I'll post more tomorrow during the day, before the update, but hopefully these will give you an idea of the theme. 

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I wanted something November-y, but all I could think of was "November Rain" (the song still plays in my head far too often, planted there by my very uncool adolescent love for G & R).  But then I found a book called Under November Skies and think that's a little more in line with my current state of mind than an eleven minute hair-band rock-ballad.  These little ladies are somewhat melancholic (surprise!) and are all wrapped up in little sweaters, scarves and yes even legwarmers (I'll never truly reject you, 80s!) 
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All of these dolls are on the smaller side; 10.5 - 11 inches.

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I've always loved old cabinet photos, and keeping with the grey and nostalgic mood of November skies, I've combined some doll images with the  old frame from a daguerreotype to make these prints:

Duchess Bunny Tintype

Ashley tintype etsy  

 November Rain Tintype (I couldn't resist...)

Kelly tintype etsy

Lula's Tintype

Lula tintype etsy 

Ernestine's Tintype

Ernestine tintype etsy 

Thank you for looking; must run off and cook, clean, shower, run around like a chicken with my head cut off, mutter unspeakable things when I can't get it all done on time, be grateful that I have friends who don't care, eat, drink, be merry, sleep, dream.  Until tomorrow dears!

Much Atweet about Nothing?

Dolls (Mine), Ye Olde Shoppe UpdatesYour Name10 Comments

Some of you have written to say that you're happy I'm back posting again.  Other than 2 1/2 weeks in October, however, I haven't really been away.  So if that's the absence some are referring to, I'm touched that it didn't go unnoticed.  But a few others also wrote to say that my blog hasn't been updating in their google readers since August (!!) even though I've been posting fairly regularly since then.  I contacted Typepad about that snag and it was hastily fixed, so thank you Petrina, for alerting me to the problem and my apologies to anyone who's been flummoxed, or wondering why I've been flaking out for all these months.  I'm pretty flaky, but not quite that flaky. No doubt I did something weird to my blog preferences without even noticing;  I'm definitely that flaky.

Picture 6
 

And while we're on the topic of webmastering (or my inability to do so) I finally took the massive (for me) plunge and joined Twitter.  I have to say I've been pretty skeptical about Twitter for a while.  I can definitely sees its potential to be really useful and entertaining (being clever and interesting in 140 characters is no small feat); on the other hand, I see its potential to become a place for any and all mental ephemera...whatever happens to be running through one's mind at the moment recorded for whomever to see.  And when I've browsed through some people's posts, it has sometimes seemed like just that; pretty mundane stuff that, while we all experience it, I'm not sure why anyone would want to read about it.  Or, in other cases, it seemed like reams and reams of pure, unadulterated self-promotion; while it would be disingenuous of me to pretend I have no interest in promoting my work, I guess I hope that's not all I'm doing. (It still amazes me that people read this little ol' blog of mine - I was worried when I started it that I wouldn't be able to think of anything worth writing about.)

But then I found some people on Twitter who truly manage to be both funny and informative, and I've decided to give it a try.  I'm not marrying it just yet; just having a dalliance, hoping to drop a few bon mots its way, catch its eye, see if we have any chemistry.  And I so while I'm a little red-faced even suggesting this, if you want to 'follow me' (come one - it sounds dirty, right?) you can do so by clicking on the little twitter icon on the right hand side under 'My Other Accounts' (just under my Flickr badge).  My Twitter username is Blackeyedsuzi (no 'e') as sadly my preferred spelling has been usurped.

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Finally, I've settled on this Sunday, November 8th at 4:00 pm for my next shop update featuring more of these be-sweatered ladies.  This one will be smaller than my last, with 8 - 10 new dolls and a few new prints; as my thesis deadline approaches, writing takes up more and more time.  But I will do one more before Christmas, sometime in early December.

Harriet sit

I'm off to make to make dinner...Happy November!

But Once a Year...

Film, Hallowe'en GoodnessYour Name7 Comments

I know I'm getting older because I had such a delightful Hallowe'en and it did not involve a string of parties, drenching myself in fake blood, nor even a single fake wound; instead Mr. Lovely and I  gave out candy to the trick-or-treaters and then ordered a pizza, drank some wine and  watched Carrie

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Mr. Lovely carved the pumpkin, and I was very gratified to hear several kids exclaim, "I got an eyeball!" (or the French equivalent: un oeil!) after we gave them their loot.   Oh, veiny delight!

Eyeball 

Thin clouds passing over the nearly-full moon directly above us, big yellow leaves blowing by, packs of children in grotesque masks - a more perfect evening could not be contrived, really.  And all the little Victorian row houses on our street only added to the atmosphere of ghostliness and decay.

Sacho halloween
And if you were to walk out into the leaf-blown road and look up, way up (any Friendly Giant fans out there?) into our window, you might see just the slightest shimmer of a little black cat before he's gone!

And while I'm pretty sure there's almost no one left over the age of twenty who hasn't seen Carrie, I will urge you just in case. Or maybe you haven't seen it since it you were a teenager, or since it came out almost forty years ago.  It is so, so good; you just have to be willing to surrender yourself to some of the campier aspects.  And a film that can squish the themes of female sexuality, religious fanatacism, identity, social ostracism and occult powers into a movie about a senior prom?  How could that go wrong?  Piper Laurie is just about the coolest, creepiest woman ever (she also did a brilliant turn as Lady MacBeth in a super low-budget BBC production. You know the kind -  where a box is meant to represent a banquet table and the curtain is Dinsmore Castle?)  And no one other than Sissy Spacek could so beautifully portray an awkward teenage girl who is endearing, affectless and tormented then transform into a terrifying wreaker of adolescent vengeance the next.  (Some day I'll have to dig up my pictures of the year I dressed as Carrie...)   Anyway, Halloween may be over for another year, but Carrie will chill you to the bone anytime.

Picture 2

Keep Warm

Dolls (Mine)Your Name12 Comments

Snow fell here in Montreal last week; honest-to-goodness big, wet flakes of beautiful snow.  Lovely to  behold, but somewhat horrifying to consider.  If it starts snowing in October, that means winter could last as long as seven months, as opposed to its usual 5-6 month stranglehold. I actually love winter for the first three months or so, but then the love turns to tolerance, which soon sours to frustration , and then finall I start to weep on the inside.  So, as you can see, I have rather complicated feelings about those  pretty little flakes.  It's been quite cold and grey this past week, and I'm preoccupied with keeping warm; double-socks with slippers, scarves on inside the house.  It doesn't seem fair to make the dolls suffer their usual little bare arms, so I've given a few little sleeved capelets to wear.  They look so cute, I'm thinking I need a few for myself...

Tilly mid

Some are still naked and bald, the poor dears, so I'm busily chopping up old, holey sweaters and giving them new life as doll-warmers.

Wips 10.23 

The cats, however, seem to have this whole business of keeping warm all figured out.  Here they are, all three, in a sweet kitten heap. 

Kitten pile

As I write the, the Mr. l'Orange is firmly planted under my chin. He thinks it's time to stop writing!

Currently Experiencing Technical Difficulties...

Dolls (Mine), FilmYour Name5 Comments

I apologize, faithful readers, for such a long absence.  I spent six days in Toronto last week for Canadian Thanksgiving, and am now having very painful computer drama.  Well, it's not all that dramatic really; for many months I had the use of a lovely, shiny practically brand-new Mac powerbook (o glorious object!) thanks to the huge generosity of a friend of mine. But now I'm back to my own ancient and hair-tearingly slow beast of a computer, which makes even the simplest of tasks take forever.  I feel as though I've been flung back into the dinosaur age, or at least the days of dial-up, which were dark days indeed. (And this is where my fascination with the past reveals my utter hypocrisy because I do like certain things - computer things -  to be shiny and new and fast, fast, fast!) 

But I must take a deep breath, accept that until we get a new computer, such things will take six times as long, and soldier on...On the luddite front, I had another assembly-line evening the other night where I hand-tore dozens of the little thank you cards I include with orders and then stamped them all with my sweet little black-eyed susan stamp. 

Cards stamp  Cards row

They are very simple, but quite pretty, especially all in a row.

Cards close 

I'm also working away on new dolls for my next shop update, which will take place sometime in early November.

Doll wips

This weekend, we saw the new Jane Campion film, Bright Star, about the relationship between Keats and his fiancée Fanny Brawn; so, so lovely.  I confess I have a weakness for period film and will watch pretty much anything with big, rustling dresses (though, being set in the early 19th century, Bright Star's dresses are not so very big).  But this is a truly beautiful film, pretty clothes aside; the story is heart-breaking and romantic while still being restrained, and the actors are all excellent (though I did have try to push images of Abbie Cornish snuggled up next to Ryan 'dead-eyes' Phillipe out of mind).  And it is really worth seeing in the theatre because there are some stunning shots of the English countryside and the heaths.  Oh, le sigh!  I snivelled away in the theatre, but managed  - just barely - not to break into the big, slobby dry-heaves. You can watch the trailer here, and if you go, take your tissues...

Picture 3

Dear Maria Bamford: I Heart You

Adornments & Wearables, Artwork (of Others)Your Name6 Comments

Thank you all so much for the kind words about my last update, and for helping make it such fun!  All the dolls sold within two days, which was a huge - but lovely - surprise.  There are some ornaments and pendants remaining, and for those who wondered, I will definitely be making more of the smaller (8-11") dolls for the next update, and will try to make more this time. My next update will be sometime in late October, but I'll announce the exact date in a week or so.

Boxes
While the update involves a few crazy days of photo snapping & editing, listing and then packaging, I much prefer it to listing things here and there.  This month, I finally took the plunge and ordered packaging materials in bulk from Uline, who recently opened a store in Toronto - oh, happy day!  It felt strange to be so ecstatic over massive quantities of boxes and tissue paper, but ecstatic I was.  It made life so much easier when it did come time to pack, and the crush-proof 'indestructo' mailers were true to their moniker; I tested one out by standing on it just like the dude in the catalog photo and by jove, it did not crush. (Yes I am, in fact, the world's biggest geek.)

At the same time that I was whispering tender endearments to my new packing supplies,  my lovely man was in charge of a small assembly line of my handmade business cards in our dining room.  He screenprinted, he clothes-pinned, he worked that little gocco like a modern-day samurai.

Cards long
Thank you, my love; you are too good to me!

Cards close

I've taken a few days off from the dolls, but did finish this little Miss, a pendant who has gone to live in England. (Her mussy hair well-tamed before departure...)

Rachael pendant

So all this talk of packing; who the hell is Maria Bamford??  Possibly the funniest person alive, at very least tied with Dave Chapelle and Ricky Gervais. No - she's funnier. A friend recently sent me a link to one of her webisodes, and I then watched all twenty.  I laughed so hard I actually wept.  People always say that, but how often does it actually happen?  It happened.  A warning: Maria's humour can be pretty dark and contains bad words; viewer discretion and all that.

Shop Update Preview (Part 2)

Ye Olde Shoppe UpdatesYour Name4 Comments

Here are the final photos for today's update.  Thank you, as ever, to my freakishly patient lovee man for all the picture-snapping! You might find the dolls, etc. lean more toward the ghostly than the witchy, but what is Halloween if not amorphous? Without further adieu, shop update preview part 2...

Mme. Butterfly

Mme. b blog

mme. Butterfly is made from paperclay and measures 20" long

Mme b close

Agnes

Agnes close

Agnes is made from paper clay and measures 21" long; she comes with a stand.

Agnes long

Cleo

Cleo close

Cleo is made from paperclay and measures 11.5" long.

Cleo sit



ORNAMENTS

Marie Antoinette

(All the ornaments are made from lightweight paperclay)

Ma3

Marie Antoinette is 5" high x 2.5" wide

Jacinthe

Jacintha

Jacinthe is 3" high x 4" wide

Olivia

Olivi close

Olivia is 3.5" high x 4" wide

Hermione

Hermione


Hermione is 2.5" x 2.5"

PENDANTS

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Claribel 2 pendant

The pendants measure approx. 2"x 2"

You can click here, here and here to see  other dolls that will be included in the update.

Gotta run and list my little fingers off, but happy weekend and thanks for visiting!

Shop Update Preview (Part I)

Ye Olde Shoppe UpdatesYour Name4 Comments

It's been a mad day of photo-snapping and editing and general studio-trashing.  I still have a bunch to do, so I'm going to keep this post short on text but long on pictures.  The ladies are so vain, after all  - they want me to pipe down and get on with showing them off. 

Eliza

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Eliza is forever being forced into too-small dresses by her class-conscious stepmother when all she really wants to do is play lacrosse and listen to Django Reindhart alone in her room.  Eliza is made from paperclay; she has glass eyes, a handmade mohair wig and a wire armature.  She is fully poseable and stands 19.5 inches (48.5 cm) high.

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La belle Abelia

Abelia blog

Cute as a ghostly little button, named for a bee.  Abelia is made from paperclay and stands 11" (28cm) high.

Frizzy chair


Larkin

Larkin blog

Larkin is a good witch, but her powers are great; she changes the direction of the winds and shakes the trees. Larkin is a figurine with a stand instead of legs; she is made from paperclay and stands 18.5" (47cm) high.

Larkin close


Little Katou

Katou bog

Not a yet full-blown forest witch like Larkin, Katou is still a sprite to be reckoned with (and they go to the same hairdresser).  Katou is made from paperclay and measures 10.5" (27cm).  

Katou sit


I'll be back with Part 2 of the preview tomorrow by 1:00 p.m. tomorrow; more dolls,  pendants,  a bust and ornaments still to come!!


Clotilde, Mathilde & Something Furry in a Basket

Dolls (Mine)Your Name9 Comments

I have two new ladies to display, both of the French persuasion.  After my last update in July, a few people wrote to ask if I would be making any more Witchy-Poo dolls, so while I didn't want to make anything too close, I do a love a nice witch.  For this update, I'm making several smaller, witchy-poo style dolls along with a few larger ones; it's nice to work on something that can be finished in a few days (as opposed to a few weeks like the larger ones) and it's also nice to offer something a bit more affordable.  (But if I ever utter the word 'Recessionista' as used in the oh-so-many offensive articles out there about how to be a raging luxury-goods consumer and still save money (??) someone please write me a scathing letter). 

I haven't entirely decided if Mathilde is a witch or a ghost, but I'm leaning toward ghost, hence her name.  I think she met some kind of ghastly end, but that hasn't quite come to me either.

Matilde

I think she and Clotilde were up to no good, and somehow Matilde paid the price, leaving her diminutive friend very distressed, as you can tell from her wide-eyed and alarmed expression:

Clotilde

But they remain friends, perhaps dividing their time between this life and the next, and Clotilde tries not to get upset when Mathilde suddenly wafts up from between the floorboards and makes her poor friend dribble tea all down her front.  (But Clo's eyes say, 'Dammit woman! Stop sneaking up on me!')

Clotilde & matilde

Now, I know it's not good to go on and on about how adorable one's pets are; much as with children, everything thinks their own are the cutest, smartest and most charming.  But I've had cats all my life and every once and a while, one of my cats does something I've never seen another cat do; something so uniquely them it makes my heart swell. Of course, most cats like to wedge themselves into small, dark, cozy places - boxes, drawers, the corners of closets.  But consider my Sir Sweet Baby Boy (no, not his real name - it's weird superstition about posting pet names that I heard somewhere and have absorbed for no other reason than I figure it's better to be safe & superstitious than sorry).  My baby boy will wedge himself into absurdly small spaces.  So small, in fact, that it takes him several minutes of shifting, fidgeting and turning around and around to actually fit.  Recently, I watched him do this with my wastebasket and thought, No way.

Sacho basket

What did I learn?

Sacho basket 2

He's even cuter than I always suspected.


Next Shop Update: Something Witchy This Way Comes

Ye Olde Shoppe UpdatesYour Name1 Comment


Shop update banner 09.09 FINAL

I'm still working away at new creations for my the next shop update, which will be this Saturday, September 26th at 5pm Eastern/ 2pm Pacific.  You can click here if you would like to convert this time to another zone.  This post will stay at the top of my blog until the update, but I'll continue to post new work underneath for the rest of the week, so scroll down to see what will appear in the update.  (I got both the time converter and the 'sticky post' idea from blogger extraordinaire, Emily Martin of The Black Apple.) This month is all about witches (good, bad, ambivalent) and general ghoulishness...frightful!

A little shameless self-promotion

Dolls (Mine)Your Name4 Comments

I had hoped to come up with something witty and original and terribly charming for this post, but, due to a last-minute dinner invitation, I won't have time.  I was recently interviewed by the lovely Jessica of Wayside Violet, so I'm including the Q & A here, and my apologies if some of this is old news.  I promise to try to scrape together at least a smidge of wit and charm for my next post.  I'm also including some photos of two recently finished dolls that will be included in my Sept. 26th shop update, as well as a few work-in-progress shots.  These are my smallest dolls to date - 8 to 10 inches.  I almost feel like they should be called Black-Eyed Suzettes.  Suzettinis?

Olivia

Q. Could you tell us a little about yourself?

I’m a writer and graduate student currently completing a degree in Literature and Creative Writing. I’m trying to finish my first novel, which involves much time alone, self-doubt and staring out into the abyss, hoping not to fall in. I love Virginia Woolf, but hope not to suffer for my art quite as much as her. I live in Montreal with my husband and three loony cats. Sometimes, I truly can’t believe I’m in my thirties, as I feel mostly ill-equipped for adulthood. After almost two decades of waitressing, nannying and teaching, I now do whatever I can to avoid having a ‘real job’. I talk to my cats and, sometimes, my dolls. 

Flossie wip

Q. When did you begin making dolls? 

I started making dolls in 2004. I was living in a trailer in the Maine woods with my husband but, as a Canadian, was unable to work. I stayed home alone for hours each day to work on my novel (yes, the same one I’m working on now!) while my husband went off to work, but soon feared I was going a bit whacky (along the lines of Jack Nicholson in The Shining). My husband had given me a Dame Darcy Doll for my birthday, and I was transfixed by how much character and beauty was contained in this tiny creature. Making dolls saved my sanity that year; I made little friends for myself.

Two wips


Q. Every item in your shop is so beautiful and gloomy! What is your creative process like?

Why, thank you! My process varies. I don’t usually sketch my dolls first, but rather just start sculpting and see how the doll turns out. I sometimes start with a particular colour scheme in mind, but often, once I’ve painted the doll’s face, she looks very different from how I imagined and ends up with completely different hair and clothing than what I initially had in mind. It sounds odd, but it sort of feels a bit like the doll is making itself and I don’t really have that much control.

Ghos wip

Q. What's a normal day in your life like?
This is almost an embarrassing question to answer, because at the moment I’m taking the semester off school to finish my thesis/novel - a normal day in my life is extremely cushy and self-centered. My husband brings me tea in bed and I drink it while I stare out the window or read for a while – it’s often my favourite part of the day. I try to write my fiction first thing when I get up, before I can be distracted by some of the more mundane aspects of my day such as email, bills, cleaning, etc… There is a lovely little library near my house where I like to write, and once I’m done I usually browse through back issues of Paris Vogue (for dolly fashion inspiration) or Martha Stewart (knowing full well I’ll never do more than 3% of the things I read in there, if that, but still enjoying the domestic porn-ness of it all). In the afternoon I work on my dolls, answer emails, blog, tidy up (I’m clean but incorrigibly messy, as my husband always points out). I used to go swimming in the afternoon, but I broke my knee this summer and haven’t yet worked up the enthusiasm to exercise again. In the evening, I either make dinner or work on my dolls some more, depending on whom the domestic duties have fallen upon that day. After dinner, I usually read, craft or watch one my ‘stories’ (I’m addicted to True Blood, Mad Men and Project Runway). If I were in school, there would be a few classes and whole bunch more reading thrown into that day, but still a very pleasant day all around. When I was younger I imagined my future self as some kind of fabulous itinerant bohemian who would never settle down, and it turns out I’m the opposite: a very grateful and contented homebody.

Af wp

Q. What inspires you most of all?
Do I sound like a prat if I say beauty? And maybe also decay… I do have a somewhat dark, Victorian or old-timey aesthetic, so I’m very inspired by old fairy tale books by Arthur Rackham and Dulac. I often get ideas from the novels I read, which tend to be Fin-de-Siecle or Modernist, and I look at a lot of costume books from those periods. I studied anatomy for two years, so I also use my old textbook as a reference. While my dolls’ proportions are very exaggerated, I like them to have aspects that are drawn from accurate anatomical images. But most of all? My man. He writes beautifully, and he’s the kindest, most encouraging person I’ve ever known. He helps me choose the names for my dolls, makes their stands, thinks very seriously about whether this one needs bangs or that one, an upsweep without ever making me feel silly. I have to keep those little dollies in line – they’re always throwing themselves at him!

Fragments of Home

TravelYour Name9 Comments

After our trip to Cape Breton, I'm back in Montreal but far from home.  I was born and raised in Toronto, live in Montreal and go to Cape Breton whenever I can.  I have a complicated relationship with Toronto; there are people there whom I love very much, but going back often makes me sad.  I love Montreal and have no mixed feelings about it; it's beautiful, bilingual, vibrant, affordable. (Okay, some mixed feelings - it's too dang cold in winter.) But Cape Breton is the place.  Even though I've never lived there for more than a year, Cape Breton feels like home for me.  It's the most breathtaking place I've ever been, and the only place where I feel total calm, where I don't have that itchy feeling like I should be doing something else, or remembering to do something else. I'll get maudlin with nostalgia if I start going on about it now, so I thought I'd share some photos.  These are just a smattering from here and there, from the train and my father's house. Some things I love.

Magnolia tree
Dad's new Magnolia tree (which he says has grown three in every direction feet since spring).

Dessert
The crumble a made for a party (I picked all the apples and blackberries for it, then ended up liking that store-bought lemon meringue pie better).

Hollyhocks
Blood-coloured hollyhocks.

Mice
My sister's albino mice. (She rescued them from her neighbour, who was going to feed them to his pet python. Ew.)

Fig tree
The fig tree in my dad's greenhouse.

Tomatoes
 Dad's beautiful tomatoes (alongside some doll limbs. Keepin' it creepy...)


Garden
Dad's garden, in front of which I married my one true love.

 Train bridge
Coming into Montreal after 22 hours on the train. 


Cool montreal building
Cool old building.

Montreal sign
Artsy-fartsy photo of the sign in the Montreal station.

Gare centrale
Encore un autre photo artsy-fartsy.

~*~

Now that I'm back, I'm working away on new dolls and pendants and am planning my next shop update for Saturday, September 26th.  I'll list more specific information as well as photos of the forthcoming work as it gets closer to that date.

p.s.

My apologies to anyone who tried and was unable to leave comments on my last post; Typepad has a fancy, newfangled interface and somehow I accidentally closed them.

Unstuck & Hooked

Dolls (Mine)Your NameComment

My travel schedule was somewhat thwarted this week due to a cat-care snag (you know who you are, bad friend who doesn't read this blog anyway so I can publicly scold you with impunity!) We are still going, but will now be leaving this Friday and staying only a week to ten days instead of two full weeks.  Bad, bad friend.  But it might be okay - two weeks might have been a bit tiring as a convalescent.

As a convalescent, I've been frustratingly unproductive.  People say to take things easy, not push it, etc., and while I'm sure that's good advice, I hate having to lie down and not be able to put in my usual time in my studio.  I don't like naps.  I have nothing against them in theory, but they make me cranky so I don't see the point. (My husband thinks I'm an alien.)  So I've been feeling very slow and stuck these past few weeks, only able to put in an hour here and there and not feeling very inspired.  But finally, yesterday and today felt like normal, healthy, productive days where I could sit for hours in the same position.  Let the unsticking begin...

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The upper left hand photo is of a new pendant design I'm working on; the pendants sold out pretty quickly last time, and I felt bad that I'd only made  four, so this design is a little more practical and hopefully means I can offer more the next time.  I'm also working on new dolls, ornaments and busts and have decided on Halloweeny/ Menagerie theme.  But this will be a more ethereal ghosts-and-wraiths kind of Halloween more than witches and pumpkins.  Lots of white and paleness and general spookiosity (sometimes Georgina, the narrator of Angus, Thongs and Full Frontal Snogging gets trapped in my head.  Yes, I read my teenage sisters books when I'm home for Christmas - I confess!)

The confession of guilty pleasure brings me to the 'hooked' par

Picture 13

t of this post's title. On Thursday I wasn't feeling well, so I took to my bed.  While a sensible person would sleep under these circumstances, I've already mentioned my horror of the nap.  So, cating about for something to amuse me, I remembered that a friend of mine once mentioned being addicted to project runway, and I was feeling in need of some eye candy, hoping it might inspire me a little.  A little??  I watched the entire season 5 of Project Runway in two days. Generally, I don't like reality t.v. watching that much of anything in two days is pretty gross, but the weather was rainy and it was so addictive, I just let myself be sucked in.  AND my favourite designer (Leanne Marshall) won, which made me happy.  She was sort of nerdy and quirky and I assume people like her never fare that well in the big, splashy  world of corporate-sponsored t.v., but she rocked it.  And she even has an Etsy store, just like a normal person, though it's on hiatus at the moment. (The above photo was taken from her shop's sold items). Anyway, I was very inspired by the way she manipulates fabric to give her clothing beautiful details and structure.   I plan to  to try something more unusual with my forthcoming  dolls' clothing as a result.

Finally, I just have to share this hilarious photo of my dear, sweet boy who we finally broke down and had groomed during last week's heat wave.  The poor darling was so miserable that we had him shaved -  most of his lovely, soft fur cut away.  But despite the potentially humiliating nature of this hairdo, I think he still manages to look pretty damned fine!

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I'm Melting!

Custom DollsYour Name11 Comments

Picture 1

Please don't hate me, but the truth is, I'm not a lover of summer.  Or rather, I do love summer when I'm somewhere rural and on the ocean, like my father's house in Cape Breton; there I can walk in the woods and jump in the ocean when it gets to hot, and the heat is a nice, dry heat that makes everything brighter, more intense.  But in Montreal we get humid, melty, smoggy heat that makes me feel tired  and perpetually dirty.  We've had a pretty mild summer so far and I have been so very happy, but we are having our first real heat wave, with temperatures in the 30's (or 90's, depending on your location).  I. am. hot.  But at least I got the go ahead to take my brace off at night for the next two weeks; sleeping in that foamy, fleecy, velcro-y, metal roddy contraption might send me into a homicidal rage...


Speaking of the ocean, I will escape to it soon.  We are leaving for two weeks to visit my family on the 21st and I can't wait to breath in all that salty blue and fresh green, to see wide open space and walk on dirt roads. Realistically I will not have time to finish the dolls I'm working on currently before we go, so the next shop update will have to wait until mid-September.  I now that's quite a long time between updates, and in the future it won't be nearly so long, but I think I underestimated just how tiring it has been to recover fro my accident; I can really only work in a seated position for 1 - 2 hours at a time.  

I did manage to finish one little lady recently, another of the custom orders I've been finishing up over the past month or so.  I asked her her name and she told me Pierette...

Pierette close 2

She is a figurine with poseable arms but static legs, a form I will continue to work on.  It's a bit trickier than making a doll at the moment as it's new, and I'm figuring out how to make a static armature.  But I like the fact that they can be displayed, so I'm determined to keep trying until I get the hang of it.  But I'll still keep making 'real' dolls as well (ie. the kind with bendy legs that start dancing the second you leave the room). 

Karla 2

Bawdy Boy

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A few months back, I was asked to do a commission of John Wilmot, the second Earl of Rochester and his monkey.  Well, I don't know if it was really his monkey, but it is a monkey with whom he was famously painted (apparently to the irritation of his long-suffering who felt a bit miffed at being passed over for a monkey).
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Rocehster was a Restoration courtier and writer, best known for his bawdy poetry (naughty-word warning!) and a rather dissolute lifestyle; he was exiled for a satire he wrote that mocked Charles II for being preoccupied with sex over his duties as Monarch. 
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Oh,how I yearn for the good old days!  Wouldn't it be fun of Queen Liz would exile someone?  Or be even remotely scandal-ridden for something other than just being too...British?  No, they just don't make scandals like they used to... I feel that if, as a Canadian, I have to have a  monarch on my money and pay taxes that go to funding anachronistic ceremonies, she should at least have to entertain me now and then. 
Rochester
I did very much enjoy the film The Queen, but I feel I have the goddess Helen Mirren to thank for that. (She was also brilliant in the BBC series Prime Suspect, but I digress).  Okay, my anti-royalist tirade is over now.  It's just that the royalty of yore were so much more interesting.  They got up to all kinds of intrigue and shenanigans, and today it seems like all they do is live off the fat of the land and cut ribbons at gardens.
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But back to Rochester, there was a film made about him a few years back called The Libertine (based on the Stephen Jeffrey's play of the same name).  Some people complained that it was too slow, but I loved it. Johnny Depp plays Rochester and he is very good but the real star is Samantha Morton, probably my favourite youngish female actor, who plays his lover, the actor Elizabeth Barry.  She rawks.  Here's a scene that still gives me chills (Johnny Depp-in-ravages-of-syphilis-make-up warning!)

Lady Ying

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Though I mentioned taking a break from custom orders in my last post, I do have a few that I'm finishing up as well as one more to come after these, so they will pop up  here as I complete them.  My most recent is of the lovely Stacey, aka. Lady Ying. 
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Stacey just happens to live quite close to me in Montreal, so this doll got to take a moped ride to her new  home instead of the plane, courtesy of my husband. (The moped is courtesy of a friend for whom my love is catsitting and who lives very high on a hill.  My husband loves riding it so much, I think he might weep when he has to go back to the old sweat-powered bicycle).
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Doll-Stacey is a figurine with a wooden base (rather than legs) and static arms, and  I hope to have a few of these in the next update.  They are a nice compromise between a doll and a bust... more affordable  than a doll, but maybe a bit less unnerving to those folks who might find a lone doll head seemingly existing independently from its body a smidge disturbing.
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I'm off to finish another custom: a member of the British aristocracy circa the Restoration.  Two more clues:  Johnny Depp (he's everywhere!) and a monkey...any guesses?

Custom Orders: taking a break

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Thanks so much to everyone who wrote and helped make my first shop update such a success!  It was a lot of work but so much fun, that I think I will keep it up for the time being.  I'm already toying with themes for the next one...'Ménagerie' and 'Alice in Wonderland' keep floating around in my head...While I've loved Alice since I was six, I'm so excited about the Tim Burton movie that I have Alice on the brain (though I do fear Johnny Depp is too pretty  to be the Mad Hatter).

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I plan to do another update in mid/late August before I go on vacation, though it might be a bit smaller than the Shakespeare update (there are still a few dolls and plenty of prints).

I'm entering week two of broken knee-dom, and have already coming a long way in terms of mobility.  I say an orthopedist on Friday and was given the green light to put partial weight on my knee as long as it's straight and partially supported by the use of a crutch.  It makes simple things so much easier, as beforehand I  had to keep my leg straight out in front me, making just going to the bathroom a pretty wearying affair.  I also got my stitches out, but the healing there has not been as positive.  I have a small but raised bump of scar tissue on my chin, and nurse said I might need plastic surgery to remove it, if doesn't go down by itself.  Right now my vanity is feeling much more wounded than my body.  Le sigh.  Here is the offending chin - you can't really see the scar in this picture, but it's there:
Scabby better

In other news, I have decided to take a break from custom orders until further notice.  This does not include anyone who has already ordered a piece - I will of course honour any commitments I've already made.  I've had some wonderful experiences with custom orders, and feel they've really added to my sculpting skills, as well as pushing me to make faces with more character and variation.  On the other hand, I am always very concerned about pleasing the buyer and get quite tied up in knots if I'm not able to make the piece exactly as they hoped it would be. I'll also have less time in the fall when I go back to school and begin another teaching-assistantship in the Theatre History department, so this is one way of ensuring I don't have too many deadlines at any one time.  But I truly appreciate everyone who has trusted me with a custom order - I've learned so much.

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Well, convalescence can be a tad dull, and a bit heartbreaking in these short summer months because I can't walk to park or ride my bike in the sun or go for a swim to escape those humid days.  But I'm so grateful to have a backyard that I can hobble down to and get my outdoor fix - otherwise,  I would have surely lost  my mind by now.  And books  are also very important (though I confess reading a little too much Vanity Fair!)  Right now I'm reading Faulkner's As I Lay Dying, which is just so beautiful.  Next on my list: The Odyssey. I'm ashamed to be a literature student without ever having read it. 

 
I've also been watching a lot of movies, and my favourite has been Coraline

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I saw in the theatre and fell in love, so if you missed it then, it's so worth renting.  It's almost entirely stop-motion animation, which is truly staggering to think about when you see the gorgeous detail and the complexity of some of the scenes.  There are also some great mini-features about its making on Youtube, including  videos about the construction of the puppets, the hand-knitting of the teeny-tiny sweaters and gloves, and the making of eensy-weensy wigs.


Shop Update Tomorrow: Post-Punk Shakespeare Edition

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Mir angle head for blog

Hello again and thank you all so much for your kind words and concern about my accident.  I'm feeling pretty good, all things considered, and am getting much more agile on my crutches, though I still find them very tiring, as I have to keep my leg out in front of my body and never let it touch the ground. I should add that my little joke about my face breaking my fall was an exaggeration; I did get several stitches in my chin and one in my lower lip, but the rest of face is fine and I had no head injuries, thanks to my trusty helmet, which was badly scraped up...it gave me a little shudder to look at the damage and think that that could have been my head. My husband has been an absolute angel, and has done everything from help my put on my underwear (god bless you, baby!) to set up all the pictures below for the shop update, not to mention all the cooking, cleaning and general waiting-on.  I can't imagine how I would manage without him. So, without further adieu, here is my take on the Bard... (all pieces are hand-sculpted without molds).

~You can click on the images to enlarge~

Mir close blog 

Mir long blog

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Miranda's head, torso, hands and feet are sculpted from polymer clay; she has a wire armature and is fully poseable (even her neck joint!) Her clothing is made from vintage lace and dupioni silk; her hair is tussah silk.  Her eyes are handmade and she has lovely, delicately sculpted hands and bare feet.  Miranda stands 17 inches high (43 cm).

Hamlet close blog 

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Hamlet's head, body, hands and feet are made from polymer clay. His limbs are wire covered in polyfil, so he is fully poseable. His clothing is made from silk using both machine and hand-sewing. His eyes are glass, his hair viscose. Hamlet holds  Yorrick's tiny skull, and  stands 18 inches high (46 cm).

Titania blog 

Titania is hand-sculpted from paperclay over a styrofoam and foil armature without the use of molds; each doll or bust is truly one-of-a-kind. The sculpting process involves several layers of paper-clay, which must be dried and sanded between each layer. The busts are lightweight and can stand on their own. Their eyes are handmade from glass or acrylic and paperclay; their wigs are hand-made from mohair. She has been finished with acrylic paints, pencil, archival pens and acrylic varnish. Titania's antlers are tiny branches, and she wears a copper flower crown embellished with solver microbeads.  Titania stands 6.5” high x 4” wide  (16 x 10 cm) without her antlers, 8.5” (21.5 cm) high with antlers.

Juliet mid etsy

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Juliet long etsy


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Juliet stands 22.5 inches high (57cm)holds a tiny, hand-sculpted anatomical heart wrapped in removable gold wire. You can read more about her construction just below Lady MacBeth.

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Lady MacBeth holds a tiny bloodstained key and wears a copper flower in her hair embellished with silver microbeads.  She weeps silver tears and stands 24 inches high (61 cm)

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Lady MacBeth holds a tiny bloodstained key and wears a copper flower in her hair embellished with silver microbeads.  She weeps guilty, silver tears and stands 24 inches high (61 cm).

Both Juliet and Lady MacBeth are figurines are made from paperclay, a very fine and durable form of papier maché that is built up in layers. It is dried and sanded between each layer, resulting in a smooth, porcelain-like finish. They are finished with acrylic paints, pencil and archival pens, then sealed with a matte varnish. Their arms are constructed over a wire armature and can be posed at the elbow and shoulder joints. Their necks, wrists & fingers are reinforced with a wire core and two-part epoxy for added strength during shipping.  Their clothing is made from silk and upcycled vintage clothing.

Witchy-poos 

(Click to enlarge)

At one point, these were going to be the Weird Sisters from MacBeth, but for some reason they came out much cuter than they did menacing, so I've dubbed them the Witchy-Poos. They are sculpted from polymer clay and measure between 14" and 15" long.  They have handmade eyes, tussah silk wigs, and clothing made from silk and vintage lace.  They are jointed very simply can be posed at the shoulders, hips and knees.

Pendants blog 

These pendants are a new addition to the shop this month.  They are individually sculpted from polymer clay and have have handmade eyes.  Their tiny wigs are tussah silk, making the pendants very comfortable to wear.  The pendants measure between 1.5 - 2" wide and are pictured above with a dime for scale.  Their bails are sterling silver; they should not be worn in water or  damp conditions.

That's not all! Scroll down to the next post to see the new prints that will be included in tomorrow's update...

Shop Update Tomorrow: Post-Punk Shakespeare Edition (Part the Second)

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...And now the prints. All prints will be available in the shop as of Monday, July 20 at 7:00 p.m. Eastern/ 4:00 p.m. Pacific; they are available as either 8.5 x 11 or 5 x7.

**Please note that these images have been degraded for the web; the real prints are made high resolution images taken with a Sony DSLR camera**

The Tempest

The Tempest PRINT etsyFINAL

Rosalind

Ros print final etsy

Red Lady MacBeth

Lady macbeth print etsy2

Juliet's Heart

Juliet grey print etsy

Miranda Reads

Miranda reading PRINT etsy thumb 


Finally, it's the "I-broke-my-knee-in-July" Sale!  The following items are now on sale:

Sale items