Sunday, December 27, 2015

1960s Dresses and other projects


Wren*Feathers has been offering free 1960s dress patterns for AG dolls based on old Chatty Cathy outfits for the last few weeks, and if you make one or more outfits from those patterns before January 1, you can get two more free patterns.  So of course the human had to do this.  And so Sam and I are suffering through the latest bout of sewing.  Because you see, when the human tries out new patterns, she uses random remnants from the stash instead of the nice fabric that we know she has.


I'm wearing the Chatty Cathy smock dress (free pattern here) made in a lightweight turquoise corduroy.  The pattern came together really easily.  For the sleeve cuff, the human used the sleeve cuff from Samantha's Pleasant Company patterns.


 And Sam is wearing a pink cotton blouse (vintage Japanese cottons) and a floral stripe corduroy jumper (free pattern here).   think I got the better deal, honestly.


The human was busy doing other things instead of throwing us a Christmas party, but we got our fair share of loot.  Those are all the new books we got in the last week. 
From left to right:
  • Jane Eyre
  • Pride and Prejudice
  • Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, Return of the King, The Hobbit
  • A Little Princess, The Secret Garden
  • A Girl of the Limberlost
  • The Wizard of Oz, The Marvelous Land of Oz, Ozma of Oz, Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz, The Road to Oz, the Emerald City of Oz
  • Peter and Wendy
  • Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm
  • Robin Hood
  • The Boxcar Children
  • Little Women
  • The Baby's Opera, The Baby's Own Aesop, The Baby's Bouquet (we got them for the wonderful illustrations by Walter Crane)
  • A Floral Fantasy (another volume of Walter Crane illustrations that doubles as an herbal)
At this point I can safely say that we have every book that Pleasant Company/Mattel ever made for us historical girls.  And then some.  A good number of these books will show up on Etsy come the new year.



And R2-D2 is holding onto my new lunchbox for me.  I think he'll give it back.  Maybe.  Droids don't need food.

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Shoujo Manga Extravaganza


The human may have gone overboard when I told her about the extreme lack of manga in our bookshelves.  After all, she has a manga collection, so why shouldn't we?



So I got to pick some, and my first choice was a set of Sailor Moon manga, all ten volumes, the latest 2014 edition.  The first volume is in English, but the rest are in Japanese.  It matters less for us than for humans, I think.  (Besides, the human reads Japanese anyways, and her good manga are all in Japanese, so it's only fair we get the same.)

And yes, it has actual images and text.  Each volume has about a chapter of manga.


But while I like the more modern (yes, yes, I know Sailor Moon is 90s manga.  But they're putting out the new anime still so it counts.) manga, I also wanted a few shoujo classics.  So I had the human track down some old Ikeda Ryoko manga from the 70s.  AND I'll be sharing those with everyone.  (The Sailor Moon manga are my personal property and no, I'm not sharing those.)


And these are the real classics that practically founded the shoujo genre.  We have 'The Rose of Versailles', which spawned at least 10 musicals, various translations, and one English movie 'Lady Oscar'.  It's the human's favorite.  Then we have 'Brother, Dear Brother'.  If 'Rose of Versailles' inspired the setting for Revolutionary Girl Utena (another 90s favorite), then 'Brother, Dear Brother' was responsible for the *ahem* drama *ahem* of the cast.  And finally, 'Claudine', which was super dramatic and super sad.

(Random interjection:  Did you know that Shirogane Naoto's persona designs (Persona4 and spinoffs) were heavily influenced by 'Rose of Versailles'?  That's how much of a cultural touchstone this is in Japan.)



As always, the human was kind enough to include real text and images in my manga.

So.  This is the one and only content warning I will give.  All of Ikeda-sensei's manga that I'm showing off here contain LGBT characters.  (In fact, all of the manga I have now contain LGBT characters.)  I hear some people don't like to be surprised by that or something.  So I'm telling you BEFORE you download it.  Oh right, additional content warnings include suicide (all of the above), and transphobia (Claudine only).  So, maybe not the right manga for someone under the age of 13.

We're dolls.  We're allowed to read anything we want.

And now, the manga you've been waiting for:
Instructions Addendum:  The binding is going to be different for these.  There is no cover to cut out.  Instead you'll be using duct tape to bind these.  Follow the instructions until the part where you attach the cover.
1.  Cut out two small pieces of cardstock the same size as the pages.
2.  Glue the cardstock to the first and last pages.
3.  Spread white glue down the spine.
4.  Cut a piece of duct tape the same length as the book is tall and 1" wide (half the normal width of duct tape is fine)
5.  Place the book down the center of the duct tape (so treat the duct tape like the A/B piece in the instructions) and fold the duct tape to cover the spine.
6.  Fold the dust jacket over the book.

If you liked these, please visit our etsy shop at JinjiaMixedGoods for more printable books for dolls.

Also, we're holding a book pattern giveaway until 12/31/2015.  Leave a comment here with what book published before 1923 (aka 'in the public domain') you'd like to see made in doll size to enter.  The winner will get a full 18 patterns for a complete Hogwarts textbook collection.

Paper Puppet Stages


We've been lax about showing off mostly because the human has been insanely busy trying to graduate on time.  She should be done any day now (certainly before Christmas), so we'll have more time to do stuff.  She still owes us a gingerbread house and a holiday party.

But first, some of the new toys we got this fall:  paper puppet boxes!


Each little puppet stage has a handful of characters (they have different expressions and costumes on the back) and a handful of background scenes that you can swap out to tell the whole story.  The human sized versions were found here but the human shrinked these for us.  These were printed out on cardstock and glued with plain white glue and glue sticks.

We have 'Little Red Riding Hood', 'Cinderella', and 'Hansel and Gretel' boxes.  The real fun will come the week between Christmas and New Year's.



Get these boxes here:  (be warned, you'll want a pair of super sharp and super tiny scissors for some of the cuts)

If you liked these, please visit our etsy shop at JinjiaMixedGoods for more printable books for dolls.

Also, we're holding a book pattern giveaway until 12/31/2015.  Leave a comment here with what book published before 1923 (aka 'in the public domain') you'd like to see made in doll size to enter.  The winner will get a full 18 patterns for a complete Hogwarts textbook collection.

Sunday, December 6, 2015

1950s Space Magazines for Dolls


This is Shepard, and welcome to your sporadic dose of space exploration history.  At some point, AG put that that Maryellen short video about AstroGirl, and astronomy and all that good stuff.  And during the video, Maryellen mentions something "I read that in Collier's." when talking about space travel with her friends.



Most people probably went 'Oh, that's just some random background thing AG put in there.'  It's not.  In 1952, Collier's Magazine put out a series of 8 articles (6 of which had cover art) on how "Man Will Conquer Space Soon".  It covered everything from basic space travel to astronaut selection to lunar bases and getting to Mars.  The articles were written by people like Fred Lawrence Whipple, Dr. Joseph Kaplan, Dr. Heinz Haber, and Wernher von Braun.  The concept art is absolutely stunning.

Obligatory Wikipedia link: Man Will Conquer Space Soon!


In 2012, for the 60th anniversary, the Houston Section of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics did a complete reprint of the series in their newletter.  You can read the original articles at http://www.aiaahouston.org/newsletter/.  Scroll down until you hit the 2012 newsletters.

Since there were only 6 covers but 8 articles, I've combined some of the issues.  For once, the print is really too small to read, but you and your local space cadet can still enjoy the gorgeous artwork


If you liked these, please visit our etsy shop at JinjiaMixedGoods for more printable books for dolls.


Also, we're holding a book pattern giveaway until 12/31/2015.  Leave a comment here with what book published before 1923 (aka 'in the public domain') you'd like to see made in doll size to enter.  The winner will get a full 18 patterns for a complete Hogwarts textbook collection.