
Lita (my character from Searching for a Starry Night, A Miniature Art Mystery) always has a lot to say.
Today, she has a good comment at the Women's Wednesday blog. (This is a cool idea by author Diana Black). Be sure to check it out!
** Or how about a tiny pink teapot on a table in a room - in a candy box? See my mini candy box room.
* I hope you enjoyed your visit!
** Keep in the pink by reading- and get your kids (and grandkids!) reading!!
** Searching for A Starry Night, A Miniature Art Mystery is a fun mystery for ages 9 and up. Friends Sam, Lita, and Dachshund Petey search for a missing miniature replica of Van Gogh's "Starry Night."
"During his years with the Mongolian police Inspector Dorj had witnessed crimes in sufficient variety to inspire several Shakespearean tragedies, but until the crowbar-wielding midget sent the locked door of the circus caravan flying open the inspector had never seen a man murdered by a corpse."
Claire, who's been making dolls for 20 years, used Janna Joseph molds to make the "American Gothic" couple. "I didn't have to alter much, it was just a matter of copying the portrait and finding the right sort of hand and feet molds," she says.
"I had to guess what they would look like full length, but took in the time period when they were painted. I had fun trying to find the correct hay fork (pitchfork), but the good people on The Camp miniatures group helped me find one!"
The painting is by Swiss miniaturist artist, Jean-Etiene Liotard, 1702-1789
Claire first began making full-size dolls, but says she had to give it up "when the molds became too heavy (she has MS) and the market was flooded with cheap dolls. I gave up totally for about a year, but was as miserable as sin."
When a friend brought back a collection of fairy molds and said, 'these are impossible, you can have them,' Claire was more than thrilled: "Whoopee, that got me going again."
She found other suppliers and molds, converted a bedroom into a workroom, and then moved into a larger workspace. She's since come back to making dolls after taking a break following her husband's death.
"Nearly two years ago, my husband had a beautiful cabin built for me at the bottom of the garden, complete with double glazing, two rooms and a deck," she says. "Sadly, he died just after last Christmas and I have only just come out of a parallel universe and started making dolls again."
Claire mostly made dolls for her own pleasure, but she is thinking of trying to sell some of her original dolls on eBay under the name Sugar Plum Dolls.
"I can`t do 'production line' dolls," she says. "I take a long time making them, and as such I think they deserve the best armatures and wadding, etc. At the moment, I'm quite happy making them and the ideas are beginning to come back."
So, what's next?
"I rather fancy Manet`s "Bar at the Folies Bergere," she admits. "She`s just sitting in my mind right now."
We can't wait to see her!
I love the handbag! I want to make a ladies shop with all kinds of miniature bags and shoes.
A pair of shoes I made, complete with heels!
* That's all for today. Thanks for stopping by!
* Did you see Shelly's amazing pink peonies? * Keep your kids' reading "in the pink" with a copy of my kid's mystery, Searching For A Starry Night, A Miniature Art Mystery, ages 9+.
**2009 Eppie Award finalist for ebook version in kids/ya category.**
Description:
Sam and her bff, Lita, along with a mischievous Dachshund named Petey, face an angry housekeeper, a dog-hating gardener, and an ancient family curse as they search for a missing miniature replica of Van Gogh's famous painting, "Starry Night."