
Nicole Johnson invites you to join the Mini Monthly Challenge with
Recycled Materials Dolls
Come join the challenge - Go green for December!
Use any recycled materials you can find to make a one of a kind art doll. Mix recycled materials with your favorite medium, use all recycled materials or just add some to your doll. Let's see what you can come up with!
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Brigitte B. Doerner invites you to join us in Who doesn't know them - Ophelia, Romeo and Juliette, Tristan and Isolde, Cleopatra, just to mention a few? |

My name is Bari Read and I live with my husband, my dog and a pack of formerly stray cats in Mesa, AZ.
When did you start making dolls? Why did you start making dolls?
Probably 10 years ago I started exploring polymer materials - I currently use Cernit. I would say that the dolls I make now are an extension of the figurative sculpture I had been doing in clay. I'm not sure that I consider myself a true doll maker -- I think I'm probably just a sculptor that likes to work in polymer...
Who or what influences you? Inspires you?
I normally work with an aluminum wire armature, reinforced with skewers so it only bends at the joints. Most of my dolls have polymer head, hands/arms, feet and legs with soft, stuffed fabric bodies. I like the flexibility of having a soft body so that they can be re-posed (one of the big advantages of dolls over clay sculpture).
I never do sketches, and have no idea what will inspire me from one moment to the next. I usually have an idea about something that made me feel a certain way, and eventually I'll come up with something that will allow me to recreate that feeling.
I did do a ball jointed doll in Ladoll paperclay, but I can't say that I love the material as much as I do polymer. I may try another ball jointed doll in polymer if I can figure out how to do it a way that makes sense.
Do you have a favorite doll? It can be handmade by you, handmade by someone else, or even (gasp) mass production.
I'm not really a doll collector or even a doll lover although I have seen some dolls that I love. I just like to create them.
Besides making dolls, what do you do? Job, other creative pursuits, hobbies, etc.
In addition to doll making, I try to work with clay from time to time - I've got some hand building for functional ware scheduled for next month, which should be a nice change of pace from tiny detailed faces and hands.

What are some of your favorite: movies, books, websites, magazines, foods, TV shows, music? (Any or all!)
I'm an avid reader -- Larry McMurtry, Ann Beattie, Laurie Colwin, E.L. Doctorow, John Irving, Kaye Gibbons, Barbara Kingsolver are a few of my favorites and I try to re-read all the Jane Austin novels as often as possible because you just don't get dialogue better than hers, although Larry McMurtry is also awesome.... I'd be hard pressed to name movies, because I can rarely remember titles. We love to watch foreign films though -- I think it's because they tend to be more 'slice of life' focused and not 'slice of exceptionally rich and amazingly gorgeous people's life' focused, as so many American films are. I also love pretty much anything with Will Ferrell. Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, anyone?
Where do you see yourself in one year? Five years? Ten years?
I don't know what the next few years will bring -- I imagine I'll still be sculpting, still making dolls and still playing in clay every chance I get. In 10 years I will hopefully be retired and living somewhere with a bigger studio so I can work spend all the time that I spend now making a living, making art.

Our MMC challenge for the month of August was tarot cards. While you may be at least vaguely familiar with tarot cards, you might wonder why we would use that as a challenge topic. Some people collect tarot cards simply for the beautiful artwork, while others delve further into research, study and use of the tarot.
The first known tarot cards were created in the mid-fifteenth century and used for playing various card games. Approximately one century later, written evidence is found for using tarot cards in divination practices, although specific meanings for the different tarot images are not found until the mid-1700's. Tarot cards are currently used for problem-solving, creative visualization, meditation, self-improvement, as a tool of understanding, for divination, fortune-telling and, even today, for card games.
Different artists interpret the tarot symbols in differing ways, each adding their own perspective. There are so many themes that can correspond with the tarot system with thousands of decks available, catering to many diverse interests from baseball to voodoo. There's a tarot deck to match just about every interest or belief. With such a rich history and so many diverse interpretations of the tarot, our team thought it would be an exciting subject to explore.
So this month our artists have put their spin on tarot cards.

Today's spotlight is on Haley Monster, the owner of the shop Girls and Monsters. Haley creates some pretty interesting dolls that are both fun and a tiny bit dark at the same time. I particularly like her two-headed girls with their sweet yet spooky expressions. Haley is still working on her Etsy shop, but you can see some of her other work in her previously sold section ( she does take custom orders), and in her blog. Welcome to the ADO team Haley!
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An Interview with Cynthia Toy of The Fairies' Nest by Sy (Youngish)
(originally appeared on the ADO blog)
Please tell us about yourself. What is your name? Where do you live? What makes you tick?
My name is Cynthia Toy (Yes.. really. My parents named me after Cinderella but that's another story) and I live in Greensboro, North Carolina..right now a very hot and sticky spot. I'm mother to 3 young men, wife to an amazing and patient man, an avid gardener, devourer of books, believer in fairies, knitting enthusiast; and owner of 3 cats, 2 fish, and an ancient corgi...or maybe they own me. I'm not sure what makes me tick but I do talk to trees and crows so it must be something odd.

When did you start making dolls? Why did you start making dolls?
I grew up in a family where sewing was second nature. My maternal grandmother was a professional seamstress and my mom was always making or altering clothes for us...with 4 kids that sort of frugality was a necessity. So I learned to sew at my mother's side and made my first doll when I was 6, a simple cookie cutter shape with yarn hair that my sister and I started playing with before she was even finished. The poor thing never did get more of a face then one button eye.
Many years later when my sons were small I started making little dolls for them to play with; knights, kings, princesses...fairies. It was so much fun that I just couldn't quit. Later, I tried a few patterns by other doll makers, but I couldn't find a style that fit the dolls I saw in my head. It was after reading Suzanna Oroyan's wonderful book, Anatomy of a Doll, that I was inspired to develop my own designs. Making dolls lets all those characters that have been living in my head find their way into the world...good thing 'cause it gets crowded in there! It's been very much a process of trial and error, but it's certainly been fun along the way...and there's still so much to try and learn that I don't think it will ever become routine.

Who or what influences you? Inspires you?
I have always loved all things Fairy. As a child I spent hours reading the Andrew Lang fairy tale books and in the world around me I believed I saw the work of fairies everywhere. Dandelions in the spring grass were put there by fairies, the twisted roots of trees were fairy houses, and the frost patterns on the winter windows were obviously fairy work. To this day I find Nature to be one of the greatest inspirations for my art, there is nothing like a walk in the woods to bring out visions of fairies... and the occasional two headed rat. There are also many wonderful artists out there now whose works are very inspiring; Brian Froud and his wife, the amazing doll artist Amy Froud, are two of my all time favorites.

Tell us a little about your dolls and your process for making them. Materials, preliminary sketches, inspiration, etc.
Well I can't draw worth a hoot so my preliminary sketches are pretty much stick figures with lots of arrows, instructions, and squiggly lines that would be completely meaningless to most people. My materials are as natural as I can possibly find. I use cotton knit extensively as well as silk, wool, and other cotton fabrics and I mostly stuff my dolls with wool. Both my small and the larger dolls have a steel wire armature inside but the smaller ones are made from the inside out with no patterns so they are a bit different. I do use a small amount of poly fiberfill for difficult areas like hands, ankles, and knees and also use polymer clay in small amounts...though I've been switching to paper clay recently. Natural fibers like silk, cotton, and wool are not only better for our environment because they are renewable resources, but they are also lovely to look at and wonderful to touch!

Do you have a favorite doll? It can be handmade by you, handmade by someone else, or even (gasp) mass production.
Now this may be a seem silly, but remember I am a bookworm extrordinare, so I'd have to say that my favorite doll is probably Miss Hickory from the book of the same name. I adored this book as a child and I still love the thought of the tiny hickory nut doll living in a forest nest. I think she may be the inspiration for all my tiny dolls.

Besides making dolls, what do you do? Job, other creative pursuits, hobbies, etc.
I've been a stay at home mom raising my sons for the past 25 years, the youngest will graduate from High school next year and I will be out of a job! I am very big into gardening and spend most of the time that I'm not making dolls playing in the dirt.

What are some of your favorite: movies, books, websites, magazines, foods, tv shows? (Any or all!)
I love wine, roast duck, and chocolate, don't watch much TV or read many magazines, can listen to Alan Stivell's "Ys" over & over, and I LOVE to read. I devour books of all types but particularly history and fantasy. My favorite authors are too numerous to name but Guy Gavriel Kay, Patricia McKillip, Michelle Sagura West, Elizabeth Bear, Alice Hoffman, and JoAnne Harris are a few I always enjoy.
If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be and why?
I live in the hot and sticky Southeastern US, in the middle of a city and I dream of living in the mountains where I could walk out my door and be quickly in the wild. I lived in a place like that as a child and I still miss it.
Where do you see yourself in one year? Five years? Ten years?
It's kind of hard to know what I'll do next, I have a tendency to go where my inspiration takes me and try to figure out the techniques I'll need along the way. I've wanted to do some fantasy beasts lately and I'm always trying to achieve a greater level of detail in my dolls. I'll probably end up combining the two in more mixed media type dolls.

Where can we find you on the internet? (blog, website, Etsy shop, eBay, et al.)
Etsy ~ Blog ~ Deviant Art Gallery (the best place for a comprehensive look at my work)