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.









Thank you for posting these! My daughter is a huge manga fan and we had fun making these for her dolls.
ReplyDeleteIt is nice to see a fellow Sailor Moon fan. Excited for the next season? :D Thank you for sharing the Rose of Versailles set. ^_^
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