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Girl's &
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Issue
Issue: # 21June  2013
Greetings!

     This newsletter we have two articles which discuss the bond between girls and their dolls. A connection that goes back centuries.  These articles are also written by Deanna Dahlsad.  Deanna has been a contributor of articles for some time now, and her stories and articles continue to enjoy a great response from our readers.

                                                       Diane & Dave Trumbauer

Visit our Website at http://dollsbydiane.com

Girls and their Dolls 

 



   Doll Prehistory
By Deanna Dahlsad

  

     Dolls have been around nearly as long as humans have been on this earth. Small human-shaped figurines carved of mammoth ivory dating back to 28,000 and 35,000 years ago were found in Germany. And many believe dolls go back even further in our prehistory too; but, as these even older dolls were likely made of wood and fur, they have long since decayed and therefore no longer exist to be found.

 

     Since those very early days of doll-kind, other ancient dolls have been discovered made of wood, clay, ivory, marble, stone, bone, leather, cloth, wax, and even papyrus. Not all early dolls were overly simple pieces either. In fact, jointed dolls of clay existed in ancient Egypt, and a fragment of an alabaster doll with movable arms was found in ancient Babylon. That means articulated dolls date back to thousands of years before the birth of Jesus Christ and the start of our current, Gregorian, calendar system!

 

     While we see dolls with movable limbs as having been created to delight children, many archaeologists say that such jointed dolls were charms, created simply to make noise -- noise designed to keep bad things away. Truth be told, there is a lot of debate among professionals as to whether these early prehistoric and ancient dolls were first and primarily made for religious reasons, or if they were the playthings of children.

 

     In ancient Egypt, for example, there are many dolls found. Dolls were so popular, that there's archaeological evidence of an ancient Egyptian doll factory! 

 

     Among the oldest, dating to 3000-2000 BC, are the flat wooden dolls with strands of hair made of sun-baked clay strung on flax thread. These ancient Egyptian dolls seem to emphasize the female form, especially the hips. The wide hips of these dolls have earned them the name "paddle dolls". The more exaggerated female shape of these "paddle dolls" leads the experts to believe they are fertility dolls, much like the Venus of Willendorf, and not toys.

 

 

 

     While we can thank the Egyptians and their elaborate burial rituals for preserving so many of these ancient dolls, the very fact that dolls were included in burial chambers and tombs has lead many to believe that dolls had more to do with religious ideas of death and afterlife than with the life of a child. However, since a number of dolls have survived simply due to the arid environment deftly preserving them, we have other evidence of dolls in Egypt.

 

     When it comes ancient Egyptian dolls, clay dolls seem to have been the most common. For living along the Nile meant everyone had access to the two basic ingredients in sun-baked clay dolls: clay and the sun. Therefore, as strange as it may seem to us, wooden dolls and rag dolls made of cloth (often stuffed with papyrus as well as textile scraps) were more costly than clay and not so available for everyone. But while those dolls may have been more expensive (and, by today's thinking, more coveted), clay dolls seem to have been very popular among children. No matter what level of society they lived in. That's probably because the children themselves could make and "bake" their very own clay doll designs. Not unlike what many children do today with modeling clay.

 

     When and how dolls truly became the playthings of childhood is very open to debate. In some cultures, old and new, dolls are made for use in religious ceremonies; however, once the ceremony is over, the ceremonial dolls are "retired" and given to children as playthings.

In ancient Greece and Rome, the lines between dolls for religious ritual and childhood pastime appear to have a very different trek -- and an exceptionally poignant connection.

 

     Dating back to at least 200 BC, many dolls in Greece and Rome had jointed limbs that moved, and some even had removeable clothing too. Then, as now, doll clothing was as fashionable and up-to-date as what young ladies and women of the day were wearing. (It's difficult to imagine that such clothing would be purely for religious reasons.) We know this from the number of young girls buried with dolls. Most dolls found in the tombs of children were very simple creations made of terracotta, rags, wood, or bone. However, some of the more unique dolls, designed to look as lifelike as possible, were made of ivory or wax.

 

     There also are the stories and images from ancient Greece which depict little girls playing with dolls. And, in fact, the ancient Greek word "kore", which literally means "little girl", was also applied to dolls. This takes on an even more powerful meaning when a young Greco-Roman girl came of age.

 

     As a Greco-Roman girl approached marital age, she would dedicate her doll to a goddess. This doll dedication was a gift presentation given to the goddess in hopes of receiving the blessing of fertility during marriage. When she became a woman, she would literally put away her childish things!

 

     While the archaeological record may seem confusing in terms of the true origins and purpose of dolls in human history, it is not difficult to imagine that children would be fascinated by miniature versions of people. No matter what the original purpose of dolls, children would want to play with them.


    


    


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 Of Girls & Dolls 
By Deanna Dahlsad

 

     As any doll collector, or holiday gift shopper, can tell you, the majority of dolls are female. There are little boy dolls to be found, to be sure; but they are fewer and farther between than girl dolls. This is no accident. Nor is some gender-stereotyping conspiracy on the part of toy and doll companies. (After all, they are in the business of making money and would likely relish the opportunity to sell more dolls to more boys!) From baby dolls to fashion dolls, female dolls just sell better. And that is due in no small part to the fact that the majority of those buying, playing with, and collecting dolls are female themselves.

 

    Science seems to show that girls play with dolls because they're programmed to, that this biological predilection is likely hardwired into our DNA. Along with studies with chimps, there is a long human history to turn to as well.

 

     In 1929, Marjorie MacDill wrote an article entitled Ancient Dolls and Toys Tell Whole History of Race, in which she consulted with Dr. Karl Groeber of Dresden, Germany, a man who studied the history of toys, specifically as they portray the minds of children throughout the ages. According to Groeber, "[F]rom prehistoric times down to the present, a little girl's play interests always have kept to one orbit. Her mother's round of household duties is the model for her play until the end of childhood. Her doll's dress may reflect the change of time in crinoline, stiff brocade or Scotch kilts. Her doll's house may have four-post beds or old-time cradles, but the idea underlying the little girl's paraphernalia of playthings remains the same.

 

     In other words, the play of little girls readies them for their grown-up roles in the world. And female dolls reflecting their own images, present and future..

 

     Along with building maternal and nurturing skills, dolls have been used as learning aids in other ways. Dollhouses, for example, teach girls about running a household. Anatomically correct dolls have been used for centuries to educate doctors, nurses, and other health professionals, as well as to assist in communication with children and other patients. All of this seems to make sense when it comes to baby dolls, miniatures, and lifelike dolls; but what about fashion dolls?

 

     Fashion dolls do more than just display the fashion trends of the era (or a past era). Years ago, fashion dolls also taught sewing, knitting, and other needlework skills. For even if a young girl couldn't actually design fashions, she could learn how to follow a pattern and learn a skill set that would serve herself and her future family. She might even find she's prepared herself for a career as a seamstress.

 

     In today's world, however, there is less emphasis on the creation of fashions for fashion dolls. At least at the general consumer level. As many doll collectors well know, there is a whole world of self-made, custom, and even one of a kind (OOAK) dolls and fashions that one can get into, either by trying their own hand or by testing their own wallet. But even if fashion design and sewing skills seem to be lacking in today's fashion doll world, there are things girls can learn from fashion dolls.

 

      In the dressing, accessorizing, styling of the hair, and, in some cases, application of makeup, fashion dolls teach styling and grooming skills. These skills matter in women's lives -- no matter how some may wish to deny or diminish it.

 

     At a simple level, it's as important to know what to wear to the beach as it is to know what is appropriate to wear (or not to wear) to the office. On a more complex level, a girl has the opportunity to mentally try on the career once her doll wears the related costume. And of course, there's always room for dreamy fantasy play too.

 

     As for why adults return to dolls, there are many reasons for us to once again pick up our childish things.

 

     Nostalgia, is one of the largest reasons. Whether we are returning to our old friends, or getting the friends we wished we'd had when we were young, we like to revisit our childhood in healthy ways. Some with children grown and gone from our homes find dolls a great place to invest our still-here maternal and nurturing instincts. A few of us return to dolls to tackle skills, like sewing, that we didn't have the chance to master before.

 

     Many of us admire and collect the artistry and craftsmanship of skilled doll makers; dolls are the art we wish to surround ourselves with. And, like art collectors, more than a few doll collectors hope they are investing in pieces that will continue to be valued in the future.

 

     Some of us are drawn to pieces from a past that is nowhere near our own. Others find themselves collecting today's creations to stay connected to younger generations. And some of us do both. For it is through dolls that we feel connected to those who've come and gone before us and those who will be here after us.

  
  
  
  
  

 

Tell us what You Think,,,
 
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        We are located in Homosassa, FL, but we are a mail order doll hospital.  Our shop is located in our home, which is great for commuting to work, but it is hard on the drive up business.  Deed restrictions restrict us to work that comes to us via UPS, FEDEX  and the Post Office.  With the price of gas these days, it is likely less expensive to mail or ship it anyway.  Enclose your phone number and we will contact you just as soon as your doll arrives.  Average turn around time is two to three weeks..

 

Sincerely,

 


David Trumbauer
Dolls by Diane