Doll ornaments were just a part of the creative work that the Dazzling Dames shared at the holiday party last Sunday. Members also brought dolls and other projects to the Red Hen Fabrics shop in Marietta, GA for show and tell. Kenya came along with me to show off the threaded locks wig I made for her.
Unfortunately this Victorian Barbie dream house was not for sale.
It serves to keep children entertained while their caregivers shop or take classes with accomplished artists like Martha Dudley. Miss Martha was proud to have finally completed this “Twelve Days of Christmas” quilt after working on it on and off for several years.
The panels are all intricate applique work depicting the verses of the famous Christmas carol.
10 lords a leaping,
9 ladies dancing,
5 golden rings,
and a partridge in a pear tree.
Miss Martha also made these three pretty maids all in a row.
They are designed to sit atop a mantel. The one with the tie-dye motif is for her daughter who loves everything sixties-related.
Miss Lorraine brought a gingerbread doll that looks sweet enough to eat.
She made it for a friend who has decorated her kitchen with a gingerbread theme.
Miss Margaret created two very interesting dolls with baskets to hold her favorite Scentsy flameless candles. The candles come in a variety of fragrances. This lady in red was inspired by the “romance” scent.
Another line of these fragrances evokes the seven seas so Miss Margaret created a doll from a map print fabric.
With her fiery red curls she looks powerful enough to cup the whole 'round world in her hands.
For many years Miss Joy traveled the country selling her dolls at craft fairs. One of her specialties was needle-sculpted dolls made from pantyhose.
Amazingly enough, the fabric doesn’t run. “Gretel” has held up for over twenty years!
Angela Ferguson’s piece was a very interesting commission. A lady had asked her to create a mermaid doll for her sister-in-law who had won a prestigious poetry award.
The honoree was Nikky Finney who received the National Book Award for Poetry in 2011. As Miss Angela researched and brainstormed ideas for the piece, she watched interviews with the poet and learned that for years Finney had used a special brand of pencils crafted by the Black Feet Indians. Unfortunately they have now stopped producing these pencils and Finney has been jealously hoarding her last box. Writing with these pencils makes every word precious so Miss Angela created a box of pencils for the mermaid, Pohetta to use.
In her acceptance speech, Finney also noted that since the slave codes made it a crime to teach enslaved people to read, African Americans are the only people in the United States who had been forbidden to attain literacy. Finney’s speech reflected on the ways such laws had silenced African Americans and expressed gratitude to all the mentors who encouraged her to break that silence in her poetry. Miss Angela was struck by the fact that Finney ended her speech saying “I am now officially speechless” so she incorporated this phrase into the design of the doll.
I am now officially speechless at the creativity and skill of the Dazzling Dames!
Here is Nikky Finney's 2011 National Book Award in Poetry acceptance speech:
"Can the camera smell?" she asks as she talks about her favorite Black Feet pencils:
À Bientôt
The panels are all intricate applique work depicting the verses of the famous Christmas carol.
10 lords a leaping,
Miss Martha also made these three pretty maids all in a row.
Miss Margaret created two very interesting dolls with baskets to hold her favorite Scentsy flameless candles. The candles come in a variety of fragrances. This lady in red was inspired by the “romance” scent.
With her fiery red curls she looks powerful enough to cup the whole 'round world in her hands.
Angela Ferguson’s piece was a very interesting commission. A lady had asked her to create a mermaid doll for her sister-in-law who had won a prestigious poetry award.
Here is Nikky Finney's 2011 National Book Award in Poetry acceptance speech:
"Can the camera smell?" she asks as she talks about her favorite Black Feet pencils:
À Bientôt