Showing posts with label Skookum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Skookum. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Little things...mean a lot...


Good things come in small packages and I have always had an affinity for tiny things. Little things that have come my way recently:



Wee Patsy dolls I won at auction...
5 inches tall!



Remember the swap
I showed you a while back
with the gnome?
This what my friend Carol
made for me!



Sweet Shelley, a reader & blogger,

sent me these little dolls recently,

including a baby Skookum!


Little things really do mean a lot to me...


Thank you Carol and Shelley!


As always,


enjoy the day!

Thursday, May 05, 2011

What I found in my travels...

The lilacs are blooming. It is cool and rainy and so lovely outside as leaves unfurl and our little world is a sea of chartreuse and emerald green.

A few weeks ago I mentioned finding "treasures."

Actually I have found quite a few...at flea markets, antique stores and online. They were all very inexpensive and some were ridiculously low priced. (The Brazilian couple was $1 and has its original tag on the bottom.)


Beautiful Skookum mother



Skookum papoose with
mailing tag attached, 1952.
Notice the three cent stamp!


Cloth doll
4 1/2 inches
,
signed,
1982,
Katherine Samarin

Beautifully made
clothes pin doll


Glamourous cloth doll,
Charmaine Talbott
signed, 1993


Brazilian couple in felt
5 inches tall with labels



Some of these will be staying with me...one is a gift, some are going to be donated to an auction. The Skookums will be staying, of course.

What treasures do you collect? Have you found any lately? Have you noticed that it is a buyer's market? All of the dolls above were just under $90...far less than the price of a single Skookum papoose I saw in an antiques store not long ago. It was fun searching for and finding these dolls...

As always,

enjoy the day!




Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Skookum dolls visit...




Our doll club was treated to a wonderful program on Skookum dolls presented by Renee Silvester owner of Calling All Dolls in Cobalt, CT. Renee brought her fabulous collection and wealth of information to the White Oaks Doll Club in Wethersfield CT.






Regulars readers will guess that I fell instantly in love with the Skookum dolls. Made of wood, fiber, straw, and other natural materials... they are captivating! It is easy to understand why Renee has been collecting them so long.

SKOOKUM DOLLS were designed by Mary McAboy of Montana, in the early 1900's. Her earliest dolls were made with air-dried apple faces. later being made of composition and plastic.


McAboy applied for a patent for three styles--a female doll, a female doll with a baby, and a male doll. They became a cottage industry when their popularity grew and they were made by housewives who put them together from kits.

Working from their homes, women could obtain kits and were paid to put the dolls together. Although the pay was not very much, I am sure that many households enjoyed the extra income when women did not work outside the home like today. They were free to add their own touches from the materials they received. Here are two in need of repair that show some of the aspects of how they were made.


At first glance, they seem very similar but when you look at them carefully, you become aware of their many differences and their individual integrity. (Sort of like people, don't you think? We are all different!)



Although this is not a true Skookum doll, it similar and quite amazing as well. Made by Mary Frances Wood, the faces were made from crepe paper over plaster.


Since Skookums were souvenir dolls, they turn up all over the country and probably all over the world. They ranged from two and a half inches to three feet tall.


Renee's collection is extensive
and so is her knowledge!



It is only a matter of time before a Skookum will become part of my collection. I was truly captivated by them and love the fact they are "user friendly." Unlike dainty porcelain & china dolls, these have survived in amazing condition. The little ones were mailed through the postal system without even being wrapped! They had a address card attached to them!
This is my kind of doll and why I collect predominantly cloth and wooden dolls. For all the tiny things I make, I am an awful klutz!

As my mind swirls with images of these dolls, I wish to thank Renee for all that she shared with us!

As always,

enjoy the day!