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Mountain Craft
Apple Head, Gourd Head and Handkerchief Dolls
| DRIED APPLE HEAD DOLLS To make dried apple head dolls, start
with a large, firm apple. Peel it and drop it into salt water to sit for about a half
hour. This keeps the apple from turning so dark. Then, with a paring knife, cut away the
apple to make a head shape. (Round in back and sides a little flat.)
Carve out areas under eyes so a portion is left in the middle for the
nose. Cut a slit out for the mouth and chin. Even carve ears if you wish. You can carve
hands out of pieces of apple too.
Press apple onto a stick from the bottom of the apple and sit it somewhere it will not
touch anything and air can circulate around it until it is good and dry. Each apple dries
to have its own personality. The mouth might turn up or down, smile or frown.
When dry, you can make a body for the head out of a wire structure covered with cloth
or a small bleach bottle has a woman's figure and makes a good body. You can fill the
bottle with sand or something to give it weight. Make clothes for it as you would do any
doll.
The apples will dry wrinkled and look "elderly." A good hair is made from the
fluffy stuffing you can buy for pillows and stuffed toys. A small tuff of lamb's wool
makes nice hair, too.
Use your imagination and there is no end to the possibilities for your doll. You might
want to sit it in a tiny chair, put a small cane in its hand, or bend little wire
"spectacles" to place on the doll. The choice is up to you.
Try it. I think you'll find it really isn't very hard and if you make a mistake and cut
away a nose, you can eat your mistake and start on another one!
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GOURD HEAD DOLLS
Start with small gourds that are round and have a one or two inch slender neck. Dry
them until you can scrape off the color coating and get down to the mellow color of the
gourd itself. Then carefully bore a hole through the "neck" to sew it to a rag
doll body. Paint the face. (You can use the face on the rag doll pattern - either painted
on a gourd or embroidered on a rag doll.) Hair may be painted on or something like pillow
stuffing may be used for a wig. I prefer the painted hair, it makes the doll look like the
old wooden ones.
I have included a pattern for a rag doll with this article. You might want to adjust it
a little larger or smaller for the size gourd you are working with. For a rag doll use the
whole pattern. For a gourd head doll, simply eliminate the head part. Draw the pattern off
onto a square piece of material. With another piece of material the same size behind it,
sew around the outline. Then cut out the doll, clipping curves, and turn right side out.
(If making a rag doll, leave a side opening to turn and stuff the doll.) Next, stuff
the doll, pushing the stuffing down into the hard to get places first. Place the gourd
head inside of neck of body and sew securely in place.
A pretty touch is to take a few dried flowers and sew them to the hand of the doll with
six strands of embroidery floss, leaving the ends long enough to tie in a bow. You can
draw up the feet into a natural position and a couple of stitches will hold them there.
The fingertips of an old pair of thin leather gloves make nice little shoes.
The end result is an old fashioned looking doll. What little girl could resist it,
especially if it's holding a bouquet of flowers!
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Pattern for a rag doll.
Enlarge pattern in proportion to size you
wish. Eliminate head for body of gourd head doll. |
HANDKERCHIEF DOLLS
Start with a standard, white man's handkerchief, unfolded. Fold in half and sew the two
sides together, close to the hem, from the bottom edge about two-thirds of the way up the
handkerchief. Turn right side out. Knot each of the two top corners close to the corner.
This makes it look like a "puffed sleeve with the corner sticking out for the
arm." Place a wad of stuffing in the center between the two knots. Gather the
material up around it and wind thread around it tightly several times and knot to form a
head. Sew lace around the bottom of the "gown" and across the top of the head to
look like a bonnet. Embroider a face on the doll and it's finished.
A similar doll can be made of a pillowcase. With a pillowcase, the sides are already
sewn. Just knot the upper corners for arms, and follow head instructions of the
handkerchief doll above. These are especially pretty if you use a pillowcase with a lace
or embroidered trim on the bottom. You can add yarn hair to the pillowcase doll if you
wish, instead of the lace "bonnet."
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