Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Happy Halloween 2018!

Some haunting bytes for this year:


Secrets of the Dead talked of vampires and their history. They did not mention Erzebet, but did talk of other strange and unorthodox burials and histories of Vlad Tepes.


Below are images of Halloween Dolls from my own collection, as well as dolls and animatronics from the Terror at Skellington Manor Collection; enjoy!








Dolls at Skellington Manor; the two china heads on the left are like one in my collection.  This model
was also used in Little House on the Prairie.
Bathed in Halloween twilight, Sally Rags was a Halloween 2018 gift.

Halloween Landscape

A dapper felt Skelly from my collectio

Calavera Catrina from my collection. Her eyes light up.

Kulak's Witch's Revels

Marge Simpson; behind her is a small De Grazia painting.  My collection.

Spooky animation; Skellington Manor, home of Wapsi Willie

Victim; nicely modeled, reminiscent of the Wax Venus, e.g, the blog Morbid Anatomy

Skellington Manor; an Erzebet look a like

Dolls, Skellington Manor

Skellington Manor

Doll Collection, Skellington Manor

Dolls, Skellington Manor

More Skellington

Skellington Haunted Doll House



Skellington; note German Bisque head, left center

,
Corn Dollie; Elizabeth, IL

Statue, Elizabeth, IL

Dolly Wreathe I did

My largest doll; over 8' tall!!

Haunted Fairy Garden

Pumpkin for the teacher

My collection

Harvest Angel

Inspired by Bethany Lowe

My collection

Vintage Halloween



"Living on the Edge"

These dolls traveled to Antarctica, Planetary Studies Foundation, Elizabeth, IL



















Friday, October 26, 2018

Sunday, October 21, 2018

Yesterday's Children


This weekend, Theriault’s will be hosting two amazing auctions.  Sunday is a very unusual and complete collection of Barbies and friends.  Saturday involves the sale of the contents of Yesterday’s Child Doll Museum, formerly Vicksburg, MS. Both will be in Chicago ,and Theriault’s.com has all the details.
 
During the late 80s, when I was just out of school, my family and I took a terrific trip down South, which included Vicksburg.  We walked the battlefield, and while I personally do not believe I ghosts, I did sense a presence there.  It was moving and sad to see the Civil War monuments put up by northern and southern states, and to realize how closely camped both sides were on that field.
 
We also saw Yesterday’s Child, just my mom and dad and me.  I’m the only one left.  I think it was the last of our great road trips, though we took a lot of smaller ones in later years.  It was charming, and a very pleasant day.  I still regret we didn’t buy a small composition doll wearing a white faux fur coat, hat, and muff in the gift shop  They did not have much for sale, but the museum was a feast for the eyes.
 
My dad, ever loyal to me exclaimed as we walked in, “she has more than this!” That was Dad; he also built doll houses, hauled us all over to buy dolls while he sat in the car, he brought dolls for me from all over the world, carved little dolls from sticks, carried two very large Italian dolls for me when we were coming back from a trip to Europe.  He often drove back out of his way so I could get a doll I forgot to buy, and he learned what a Jumeau was.  My mom was my partner in crime when it came to finding dolls; she also dressed them repaired them. After a while, it wasn’t “Ellen’s” doll collection; it was “our” doll collection.
 
I hate to see any doll museum close, especially when I am busy creating mine, but this one’s closing is particularly painful for me.  The silver lining is that the dolls will go to good homes, to people who will care for them and carry on the museum’s legacy.  For me, doll collecting has become a lonely hobby, full of lovely memories.