I've been making art dolls for years now and I've really started to find my personal style. I've always loved trousseau dolls, but few of the art doll makers in my area (and I am blessed to be in an area rich with them http://www.cyndysdolls.com/Guilded_Lilies.htm ) have any understanding of them. There seems to be a divide between collectors of mass manufactured dolls (modern or antique) and collectors/ makers of art dolls. I've spent a lot of time learning how to make surface embellished, static dolls. While I needed all that work, what I really enjoy making is movable dolls with removable clothes that make people want to pick them up and play with them. But still they are not children's play dolls, they are adult play dolls. This is an odd concept in the art doll world, as far as I can see. BJD's are starting to change peoples minds though. I can see this "pick me up" aesthetic in Pat Lillich's work and Marina Bychkova's - to name the first two that spring to mind.
Pattern makers are starting to put out BJD patterns, which is good for me, for I am still just learning to make my own doll patterns. I've started making these jointed dolls as an internship on the road to making my own patterns.
Here are the three I've made in the last year:
Cordelia is a cloth ball jointed doll (BJD) made from a Patti Culea pattern. I love the way her nose and feet came out. I'm especially proud of her sandals. Making doll shoes is a lot of fun, but exhausting. I really enjoy making them, but I don't do it a lot.
Acorn and Cora were both made in a class I took with Barbara Schoenoff. They are fully jointed with posable finger and neck, due to pipe cleaners; 12 wooden ball joints and a swiveling head attachment.
Cora was a challenge to dress. Her skin tone matched very little of my stash. I walked her head around the quilt store until I found a batik that looked great with her head. Then I pulled fabric from my stash to match the batik. I used silk charmuese, lace, batiste and embroidered cotton to compliment the batik. I even unravelled the lace to add accents to her jacket.
I love Acorns clothes! I used shot silk for his shirt, batik for his vest, embroidered and sequined crinkle cotton for his jacket, metallic brocade for his arm guards, rayon and silk velvet for his pants and hat and bamboo/linen for his boots.
For more of a retrospective of my work, see here
http://www.flickr.com/photos/7845173@N0 ... 830811576/