Sunday, August 15, 2010

This is a fun site. I voted for four different fabric designs, but it was difficult to choose, they're all so creative.

Spoonflower.com is a print on demand fabric site. You can upload your own designs and have them printed onto a variety of fabrics. My sister and I have been playing with designs for the last few mo...

Thursday, August 5, 2010

This is my work in progress for Art Dolls Only quarterly challenge. The challenge is any character (s) from Grimms' Fairy Tales. This is going to be "The Princess Meets the Golden Goose."

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Penelope

Penelope is another of the wooden spool series. Her torso is a vintage wooden sewing spool. She is sculpted from polymer clay and stands 11 1/2 inches tall.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

I just love these images from Karen at Graphics Fairy. Here's what she said about this one:
Swoon! I am so in love with this! This is the title page of an early (circa 1851) rare book, called "The Poetry of Flowers". I just can't get over how gorgeous this is! I was so happy to acquire it so that we can all use it! I love the classic lines of the urn with the profusion of flowers trailing around it, and then of the course the wonderful typography, is the icing on the cake. This image is in it's original form with charming torn edges and all. I hope you all like it as much as I do!

Savannah


This is Savannah, another of my spool doll series. Her torso is an antique wooden spool; the rest of the body is hand sculpted polymer clay. Her yellow and cream sunsuit and bonnet were made from a vintage doll dress that I cut up and remade. I guess you could say that she is a genuine recycled, repurposed doll. She is six inches tall on a 4" square base.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Irish Annie


This is Irish Annie, the third doll in the Industrial Emergence Series. The three dolls are supposed to represent different aspects of the fashion of the industrial revolution period of the 1850s in America. Annie came here to escape the Potato Famine in Ireland that began in 1847. She got a job working as a maid in a posh N.Y. hotel and is a little bewildered by the big city.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

I received a wonderful gift today from doll artist friend, Jessica Acosta Hamilton. She emailed me and asked if I would send her one of the original photos of Arabella. About an hour later, back comes this gorgeous new banner for my blog and Etsy shop. She is an incredibly gifted and creative doll artist, not to mention just plain nice. Please check out her site (dollproject.com) and Etsy shop (dollproject.etsy.com). Thank you, Jessica.


This is Arabella, the second doll in the Industrial Emergence (1850's) series I'm working on. She's making her statement as a little bit of refined Godey Lady and a little bit of rebel. She has the required bustle of her day and the the ornate hair style, but she refused to wear the heavy, cumbersome crinolins that the refined ladies wear and instead has one of the more modern, wired underskirts and some spunky Steampunk jewelry. She also refused to carry a fan.

Thursday, February 11, 2010



Here's a lovely image for Valentine's Day. I got it from The Graphics Fairy at http://www.graphicsfairy.blogspot.com/. You can download all kinds of wonderful graphics from her site for free. I think I'll be visiting her regularly.

Monday, February 8, 2010





























I finally finished painting the pictures/alphabet letters I've been working on for the last two months. They are for my daughter and son-in-law's soon-to-be-adopted baby. She asked me if I would paint a large picture for one wall of the nursery. Through a friend I got the idea to do these alphabet letters. She had a set of them that she got for her grandchildren. They were published by Houghton Mifflin, and I have to confess - I copied them! I bought a couple tablets of primed 9x12 canvas, some tube acrylics and got to work. I just thought it would be so eye-catching to plaster them all over the wall in staggered sets on little shelves (think Martha Stewart here).

Friday, February 5, 2010

Temple, Rich and Pancho

This was taken at Christmas, 2009, with their new puppy they got from a rescue site. He came from Mexico and was treated in this country for an unattended broken leg and then placed for adoption. He's a sweetie. They lost their Australian Shepherd/American husky dog, Siska, a year ago July (2007) to cancer, and it took Temple awhile to be ready to get another pooch.

Uploaded by honeysuckledolls on 4 Feb 10, 11.45AM PST.

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