Monday, October 29, 2018

X like Xikanx Doll (3)

No new pictures since the last time.


I’ve been thinking about making clothes for this little person.

I was originally planning on a skirt and then decided halfway to make it overalls*

This is because Napa’s friend was wearing a really hot look with little overall shorts and and a blusa cut off at midriff.

And because of the gender queer aspect.

And, prob’ly most important, because of the little boy who wanted it.

I didn’t want to ‘cause trouble with a girl doll in a skirt.

(you see how deep these things are buried?)

Anyway, I’d already made the skirt so tried to turn it into overall-skirt, and then tried to change the drape so that it looked like very full trousers.

And now I’m ready to bag all that and start from scratch.

So I’ve ordered some yarn in a a red and white twist, so that I can make the red and white overalls* called for in the X children’s story.

Sunday, October 28, 2018

The problem with designing from real life.


I first started working on this doll last year, when I heard that my high school classmate Yvette Monroe had died suddenly.

I prob’ly hadn’t seen Yvette in thirty years: I remember when I met her husband Yusef, and their beautiful baby girl Monique.

Yvette had turned out braver than I ever expected, falling in love with a man her small-town family didn’t approved of, and snapping her fingers at them and building her new life together with him.

Yvette Monroe and Lila May Roybal were the first two people I met on my first day of school at West Las Vegas Junior High in 1978. Yvette played the clarinet in the band, Lila played the flute, Alicia played the piccolo, and I was a drummer.

That first day of school, Lila asked me if the school was very different from my old one in California, and Yvette asked me if the boys were cuter in California. (given they my prior experience was limited to boys at my very small Catholic schools, I was quick to acknowledge that the WLV boys were way cuter. Not to mention taller.)

We spent one summer learning baton twirling for marching band. Alicia and Lila and Yvette went on to become baton twirlers.

Our high school mascot (in a repetition of Conquest and erasure) was the Dons, and our marching band outfits were white shirts with a ruffle and black tie, a forest green bolero vest with a gold button panel in the front, and flared green trousers with a gold stripe down the leg that flared into a gold triangle. With a black felt hat, with black pompoms all around the brim.

The twirler outfit was a modified version of this, with a long-sleeved gold blouse, a green and gold skirt with bootie shorts (then described as “spanky pants”), green bolero vest, black boots, and the hat.

So that’s what I’m trying to recreate with this doll: shapely body, bronzed skin, dark brown curls.
I’m sure Yvette’s (and Lila’s and Alicia’s) daughters and granddaughters never imagine she wore booty shorts.

The difficulty lies in the fact that I prob’ly don’t have enough sunshine gold yarn. I’m at the top of the sleeves.

I thought I had a whole skein of gold yarn. but it’s a different brand and more of an “antique gold” than sunflower.

As a doll designer, I could switch to green at this point and make the top look more like a rugby shirt, which would be hella cute.

But that’s not what the twirler uniform looked like.

I did find a tiny little ball of the right color yarn, and i’m playing “yarn-chicken” trying to finish the project before the color runs out.

I could prob’ly manage to make the top a scoop neck, like a leotard.

But that’s not what the twirler uniform looked like.

There’s a pretty good chance I’m going to end up unravelling the gold blouse I made for butterfly boi earlier this weekend. <>


[Later]

I finished the blouse and the head without running out of either yarn! Up next: wig, face, bolero, and skirt.

[Later still]



Person’s wig is pinned on now. The pinheads make it look like they have pink pearls in their hair.

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Huipil and Skirt for Butterfly Boi



Patterns used:
Weebee Nelly Doll - Pirate Outfits by Laura Tegg
Weebee Nelly Doll - Halloween MCAL 2018
Hooks
3.75 mm (F)
4.0 mm (G)
Yarn
Loops & Threads Impeccable Solids
Colorway:1613 Gold

Red Heart Super Saver Solids
Colorway: Denim


Eventually, all your dolls start complaining of having nothing to wear, The doll I call Butterfly Boi really wanted clothes today Last night, i fell asleep imagining the huipil and blue skirt I would make for them. I was rolling around the colors in my head: a sort of denim blue for the skirt, and either a gold or red huipil. Today the red looks too bright, but the gold looks absolutely perfect. Also, the gold yarn is slightly lighter weight, so should work up the right weight for the huipil without being too stiff.
Note: the skirt is too stiff.
For the skirt, i followed the pattern for the Pirate Nelly skirt, but then skipped the front V section and added another increase row. Oh, and went up a hook size halfway through
For the huipil, I’m following the blouse or dress-top from the Nelly Halloween doll. Around row six, I stopped increasing and instead just alternated rows of sc and hdc. Going to have to continue this for a while, because the top needs to be plenty long. (I think I made this doll a bit long in the torso).
It’s not 100% finished: I just hid all the ends in the back.
Person now wants pants or shorts, to have variety.

Sunday, October 21, 2018

X Like Xikanx Doll (2)

Doll Update:







Yesterday, this doll starting giving me THE LOOK.  They have been six weeks with no clothes and person was tired of standing around nekkid.

Person started trying to find clothes to wear out of the rag bag, but that first dress was too tight! Person would have been grouchy all day if they were squeezed up in that dress.

Then person squeezed into a little yellow top and ran off to pose among the cempasuchil. With no pants!

Then person jumped into my project bag as Luz and I headed out to the Abuelita Medicine workshop at Galería de la Raza.

Once we got there, I decided person needed some clothes and started making them a skirt. And then a little boy came up and totally wanted this doll, and I was all like, I would give them to you, but they're not finished yet! Their dad--an artist--tugged the child away, while also imparting a lesson about how crafting with your hands calms your spirit so you could sit still.

By the end of the workshop, the person was clothed and had hair, but the child had gone home, their little sister was just too tired to make it through the second workshop!

Lesson learned: when munequerxing in public, always have a ready-made doll to share if the appropriate child comes up!

PS: Luz says person has the best hair yet!

Medicine Maker Doll






Project info
Name: Medicine Maker Doll
Pattern: Afro Puffs Ballerina Doll by [Yolonda Jordan] Don't Get it Twisted Crochet
Hook: 3.75 mm (F)
Yarn: Lion Brand Vanna's Choice Solids, Heathers & Twists
Colorway: 124 Toffee

Notes

9/24/2018

I started this doll at the Medicine Maker’s Brunch, by Sandra Pacheco, Curanderas Sin Fronteras, and a lot of other WOC and QOC. That is, I showed up with a skein of yarn and left with a head, two arms, and one leg.
It was Autumn Equinox, the Full Moon, and folks were making scullcap tincture and elderberry cordial.
I didn’t actually engage in the medicine making but we all agreed that this doll contributed to the atmosphere and also absorbed it.
Okay, the first time I tried this project it seemed SO HARD to get the legs to join to the torso correctly. I mean, I literally wrote to the designer and asked her for help! (and she calmly told me to chill) Today it was easy peasy!!

[later]

Oh, NOW I remember what the problem was! The alignment of the body decreases. Yolonda told me to just move them to sides of the hips if that was easier for me, and it SO IS!
Note: since I don’t use a dowel for support, it’s best to sew up the crotch before doing the hip increases and stuffing the lower body.

10-20-2018

This doll was mostly finished a month ago, but then things got busy at work and then things got busy with familia, and I haven’t had a weekend free. Today I took yarn to the abuelita medicine workshops at Galería de la Raza. I made clothes and hair for the Mina doll I’d made, and then, when i just couldn’t “people” any more, I sat in the car and started the neck decreases for this medicine maker doll. They’d gone into the workshop with me, in my bag, but, although there’s less work to be done on this doll, it requires more peace and quiet than I could find at the galeria.

Dorrie: Little Dorian Corey







Project info
Name: Dorrie: Little Dorian Corey
Pattern: My Little Buddy Doll by Ornicka Owens
Hook: 3.75 mm (F)
Yarn: Red Heart Super Saver Solids
336 Warm brown

09-08-2018
I’m putting the start date as September 8, but the truth is that I made the head some months ago. The head languished with no eyes and only one ear. But this evening I felt the need to cast on for a different doll, and thus this kid was pulled into action.
Note: some dollmakers that I admire greatly refer to the “doll graveyard” as that space in which dolls languish in a state of limbo. unfinished, awry, perhaps never to be finished.
I prefer to think of them as in doll rehab. They disappear from view for a while but will return with a renewed determination and a stronger sense of self.

09-09-2018
From my recent experience with the Stylin’ green dress, I’ve decided to incorporate nether garments when the pattern does not do so.
I used two full rows to get to the starting stitch count (this is a deviation from the pattern that has the full stitch count on the first row) so I’m making the legs 1 round longer than called for by the pattern.
To achieve nethergarments, I’m subtracting two from the adjusted leg count, changing yarn color to white, doing 1 color change row and 2 regular rows before finishing off.
Starting the body (from bottom up), I’m using color: white for rows 1-4 and then a color change row.

09-28-2018
At the eleventh hour, I decided to attach the legs with button joints. I didn’t do a perfect job (to say the least).
In part, I was hampered because I’d made underpants instead of a singlet/leotard/unitard. Any of those three choices would have looked better, I think.

But I really wanted her legs to be able to move, and wasn’t comfortable sewing them on in either standing or sitting position if they couldn’t move.

So I’m happy with the way they came out.

The face is more “soft sculpture” than any I’ve done so far.
The pattern is very clear and very easy. A few more photographs on sewing on the legs would’ve been helpful, but then I didn’t end up doing them the way the designer did.

I haven’t yet decided what to do with their hair…

09-30-2018
I’ve named this doll Dorrie, as they remind me more and more of Dorian Corey (ca. 1937-1983), of Paris is Burning fame.

I’m sure this is because I did the button jointed legs, so this person is my first doll who sits down. And Dorian Corey was seated at a vanity table, applying makeup and telling truths, in PIB.
Once I decided to embrace Dorian Corey, I felt more inspired and took more risks.
I embraced the wig cap--because for most of their interview in PIB, Dorian Corey was wearing a wig cap.

So I didn’t have to try to make the wig cap look like hair, or NOT look like a ski cap. Instead, I made it of crocheted mesh (i.e. sc1 ch1) and did the decreases the easiest way (skip one stitch) so it would be comfortable and not make their scalp sweat. Then I latched on the hair strands one at a time to the wig cap. I used cherry cola yarn, because it’s always made me think of fabulous hair, and I cut out any colors I didnt’ like (there’s this one weird brownish green…)

I embroidered their mouth with metallic thread.
I mastered eyeliner for the first time. I drew bold eyebrows.
I even dressed this doll in a bralette from a dress that hadn’t worked out, because I didn’t want to have them all naked.
What they really need is a kimono, though…
She looks fabulous.

Friday, September 14, 2018

I’ve decided to extract all my doll-making adventures, notes, and dolls from Ravelry and resurrect Queermaculture as muñequerx blog. I have all those notes on the Ravelry database, photos, dates, etc. And here I can share them in that silly blog way that’s just about what I’m thinking and trying to figure out. Sharing the research bits that I’m having the best time with.

The fact that I read Lisa Guerrero’s article on Bratz yesterday and then almost without a pause, I saw her mentioned on Lalo’s facebook.

“Can the Subaltern Shop? The Commodification of Difference in the Bratz Dolls” in Critical Studies <=> Critical Methodologies, Special Issue on Race and Kids’ Pop Culture, 2008.

The midwife dolls that Julieta Kusnir sent me a foto ofand and the way they’re sold by a AngloAmerican midwife living in Oaxaca but likely crafted by Oaxacan women, which has some parallels with the “invention” of the “Maria” dolls.

The different birth dolls I’ve seen. The anatomically correct dolls.

The African American women dollmakers, like Aniqua Wilkerson (My Kinda Thing) and Yolonda Jordan (My Pretty Brown Doll), who clearly articulate how the crafting of African American dolls is derives from African American culture. And how before they started doing it (and teaching it), there were few folks selling handmade African American dolls and some of those were just white dolls made with brown yarn.

White dolls/Brown Yarn

Yeah, I think maybe I’ll do this, even though it’s prob’ly only for my own pleasure!

Note: blog posts older than 9/14/2018 were actually journal entries, and were all imported to the blog today.

Here's an example of research:

10 diferentes tipos de muñecas artesanales y de dónde vienen

Sunday, September 9, 2018

Chicanx Punk

When I was learning Aniqua Wilkerson’s curly hair method, I practiced with one of the blank dollheads I made a while back. I made like four of them with warm brown yarn. Then used the yarn for a bigger project, then ran out. I’ve been thinking about cannibalizing these heads, until the opportunity came to practice this hair.

I used bright pink yarn to make it highly visible.

Yesterday I put on eyes.


This evening after dinner at La Suegra’s, I started the body for it. I decided to work chonies on to the body. So after finishing the first leg, I did a color change row. And the same on the second leg, and then joining them, continued with white. I have to wait till after the increases before I switch back to skin tone, otherwise the chonies will be too low cut.


Saturday, September 8, 2018

Buddy Person

Name: Buddy person
Pattern: My Little Buddy Doll by Ornicka Owens
Craft: Crochet
Hook
3.75 mm (F)
Yarn
Red Heart Super Saver Solids
Colorway
336 Warm brown

I’m putting the start date as September 8, but the truth is that I made the head some months ago. The head languished with no eyes and only one ear. But this evening I felt the need to cast on for a different doll, and thus this kid was pulled into action.
Note: some dollmakers that I admire greatly refer to the “doll graveyard” as that space in which dolls languish in a state of limbo. unfinished, awry, perhaps never to be finished.
I prefer to think of them as in doll rehab. They disappear from view for a while but will return with a renewed determination and a stronger sense of self.
(Next day)
From my recent experience with the Stylin’ green dress, I’ve decided to incorporate nether garments when the pattern does not do so.
I used two full rows to get to the starting stitch count (this is a deviation from the pattern that has the full stitch count on the first row) so I’m making the legs 1 round longer than called for by the pattern.
To achieve nethergarments, I’m subtracting two from the adjusted leg count, changing yarn color to white, doing 1 color change row and 2 regular rows before finishing off.
Starting the body (from bottom up), I’m using color: white for rows 1-4 and then a color change row.

Saturday, August 25, 2018

X Like Xikanx Doll (1)

Project Name: X like Xikanx Doll
Pattern: Mina basic doll by Nelly M Lopez
Hook: 3.75 mm (F)
Yarn: Lion Brand Wool-Ease Solids, Heathers & Twists
Colorway: 129 Cocoa

What I like about this pattern. It starts with the sole of the foot.

I started this doll at my College's faculty retreat. Which means I had an audience which had a lot to say about the process. And, in fact, this project invited a lot of comment because, 

The first foot looked a little wonky but I persevered.

The second foot came out better but was only 3/4 as large. Thus it suggested that the first foot was wonky by accident, as opposed to by design.



Made a third foot which came out the right side to match the second foot.Here's the second and third feet



The next day, I worked on this person during our fall convocation. A very good use of time. Made good progress.



I'm digging this body. I like the shape of it. The feet look pretty big in the photo. Actually the feet are pretty big. But my feet are pretty big, so I see that as a plus!



Person has a face now, so I expect they'll be making demands of me.




Worked on person while at a dog agility trial in Santa Rosa. Not a great trial, in general, but good doll progress.

Final shot!
Person wanted a cowboy hat for this photo!


Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Working on the “belt” or corset or chest binder for butterfly boi.


The stitching is unusual, not because it’s blo, but because it’s sl st blo.
I had to rip it out at least four times, because I was working so tightly that each successive row would be shorter, making the whole thing curl in the wrong direction. I think I’m beyond that now. I’m prob’ly about 2/3rds of the way through.

The stitching looks good though, because it gives a kind of mock-knitting effect. And because its sl st instead of sc, it’s very dense, almost really like boning in a corset.

It seems very thick though—I mean, when I put it on butterfly boi, it’s stiff like a heavy sweater or jacket. But I think it’s supposed to be that way to give structure to the wings.

I forgot how much I dislike working with this white yarn. It should be RHSS, but it feels more like Caron Pound of Love: that is, cottony and "grippy" instead of smooth.

I should have prob’ly gone with my instinct and made it in grey, except that most of my gray yarn is in the basement. And right now—because the carpenters have removed our deck and stairs and are in the process of framing a new one—the back door, back yard, side yard, and basement are off limits. I also thought about trying the heathered blue (denim) or purple yarn, but was afraid they would compete with the wings, ultimately.

And the white matched the dolls underpants.


Friday, March 23, 2018

Inspiring Dolls from Yolanda Jordan

Bedtime Bella lovey
        Big Twist Premium Gingerbread
        Carons simply soft wig cap
        Afro puffs: Hobby lobby’s fleece light.
Miss Maddie:
        Doll: RHSS Warm Brown
        Hair: RHSS Redwood
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Yolonda Jordan (@myprettybrowndoll) on


Thursday, March 22, 2018

I’ve been having some trouble with my dolls. That is, with my jointed dolls.

Remember, I’m moving forward from making teddy bears, which are not made jointed but all in one.

I’ve been trying to use the safety-eye ball-joint method.

The result makes all my dolls look really tense.

Shoulders hunched up.

Also, the shoulders are king of poofy, like quinceañera dresses from the 80s.

And I just realized, after reading about Ramona Garcia’s doll workshop, Stringing Ourselves Back Together, that the technology is not traditional for me!

I need to string my dolls back together. Remember Coyolxauhqui, even when she’s not.
I think I’m going to try this with my next doll.

I wonder if I should do buttons, as well as string?

Other ideas: Dora Milaje doll.

Red sleeveless top. dangling bit in the front. bare legs. bare arms. bald head.
something akin to a black harness/bra on top.
wrist cuffs? collar?



Sunday, March 11, 2018

Finished my first Mermaid!.

I have a big-haired brown mermaid with pointy eyebrows and purple lipstick!

She already has a fan club and folks want to purchase/order her.

Quote from Margo: maybe the one I was thinking of. Maybe just close to it:

I really wanted to improve my drawing skills so I had a lot of motivation. I took a few private drawing lessons and committed to drawing (or making art) daily about 3.5 years ago. I think I've missed a couple of days but really have made that a priority through everything, even the hardest days.

The more I do it the better I feel about my drawing skills and the more I enjoy it. And it is often my meditative time during the day.

I've done it alone, in classes (as student or teacher), in sketching meet ups, with friends, with my wife.

The main thing is to do it. And to enjoy doing it (sketch things that are meaningful to you, play good music or an audio book or talk with a friend while sketching) will keep you coming back.

I like working just outside my comfort zone for maximum skill building with minimal frustration. This push has helped me get closer to where I want to be.

I also like experimenting with subject matter and mediums to keep it interesting and exciting.

Hope you give yourself this gift.

Monday, February 26, 2018

I finally learned how to use google translate so I can try again to join Santinhos e Santinhas group on facebook: a portuguese language crochet group which is the only place where a certain designer shares/sells her patterns for crocheted saints!!!!

 

Let’s just say: I saw Santa Rita de Cascia, so that’s gotta be a good sign!

Too sleepy to more.

time for another cup of coffee or a mug of yerba mate or something.

Saturday, February 24, 2018

New idea. Okay, for now, I’m done with motherbears.

I’m done with missionary work and gender norms and

Any unfinished bears are going to be made into dolls. Enby Dolls. GenderNonConforming Dolls. They will have skirts and superhero cloaks and overalls. They will have tunics and boots.

Inspired by Kále and his kid.

Inspired by the feminist children’s story X

Other ideas: Graduation dolls.

 

Dora Milaje dolls!!!!

(wont even have to make them wig caps. Will have to make them shapely heads!)

 

 

OMG I’m so excited.

Saturday, January 27, 2018

The Good Things Together ladies who make Mother Bears, tagged me today because I didn’t post any bears in the first January showcase. I have a full box of bears to send and two or three bears in various stages of completion. I should get on with those.

But I just had a brilliant idea—

because, you know, I am struggling in the doll world. I had to turn down friend requests from doll ladies, because they aren’t really my people.

And like on one doll list someone is making these really fabulous dolls. But…ballerinas for girls and ninjas for boys. What about the girls who want to be ninjas? what about the boys who want a ballerina/bailerinx?

And then I realized I can name all of my 2018 bears after the murdered trans & qoc folks! Like a testament, a bearing witness, in another setting.

I already got one post banned for being political: saying I didn’t buy at hobby lobby for political reasons and then someone posted back that it’s not that they don’t allow employees birth control but only don’t allow abortion pill. (Medication abortion, “Abortion pill” is the popular name for using two different medicines to end a pregnancy: mifepristone and misoprostol, formerly known as RU-486.

The mods shut that discussion down. In fact, I had gone back to delete my post and they had already deleted it.

Oh, I remember seeing stores that sold dolls of color. I can’t remember if it was near Joanie’s place in the excelsior, or in Denver. It appears (in both of these places) in my dreams. I never got to go in because it was always closed.

So, as a a little girl, I was absolutely obsessed with dolls. It was a joke that if my dad gave me a dollar at the swap meet, I’d spend it on a doll immediately. And at one time, I was sewing clothes for barbies (mostly these wrap-around jumper numbers that were super short and showed a lot of side-boob), until I sewed through my thumbnail, which put me of machine sewing for a long, long time.

And one time in the seventies “corn husk dolls” became a popular kitchen decoration. And that’s when I was making them out of kleenex and cotton balls and thread, and Aunt Alice told my mom I needed to learn to knit so I could do something with all of that.

Monday, January 15, 2018

My goal this year is to complete a person doll.

2017 was the year of learning Amigurumi and learning to make bears. I made a Peppa Pig lovey. I learned I can follow a pattern and also make it my own.

I started but did not finish several “people” dolls. I have a lot of books on knitting & crocheting dolls (AmigurMe, Knit your own Boyfriend, The Complete Idiots Guide to Amigurumi, Edward’s Crochet Doll Emporium, Arne & Carlos’s Knitted Dolls)

So this year is about pushing through. I feel driven to make these dolls but also afraid.

I’m kind of funny, choosing as my goal something I can actually accomplish this week!

——later————

Oka so I’ve also posted my mermaid doll fantasies and Kale asked me how much to buy? So sweet (and inspiring) but I explained I’m mot there yet.

I’m showing a decided disinclination to do anything at all today!

But I think the solution is to take the dogs to Alameda, walk them there, and then go get my sudafed and kombucha & yogurt. Tht’as all I need to get by.

No structure + no luz = very sad catriona

much later: Crystal asked if anyone broke off contact with blood family:

I did, about 25 years ago (wow, time flies). It was after I came out and my sister wrote me a letter saying she felt I was being selfish and disrespectful of the family and that I was the cause of all of the family problems. I shared the letter with my mom, and she didn't respond the way I wanted her to, so I got really upset and cut off all communication with them. This went on for several months, maybe as many as six months. Then my mom told me she was coming to see me (an eight hour drive) and wanted to talk with me. She made the journey because she loved me and cared about me and wanted me to know that my family was the place for me: they would stretch and grow to accommodate who I am and might be.

I know not everyone' stories have a happy ending and I'm not saying everything was always perfect afterward, or that my sister and I are all Elsa and Anna now. At the time, I felt like it was important for me. But I also felt like the white queer community I was in didn't really value family connections. I don't know if this makes sense.

This isn't the same as the just toxic members of my family, some of whom I just avoided forever and some I had to work around.

(I decided that posting this was kind of self-serving, since she’s got toxic people to deal with and has already moved on from her question.

 

Sunday, January 14, 2018

Okay, I started this “Naked Ned” doll, supposedly as an experiment, but really and truly because he’s going to be my alfonsito doll. I think it’s important to make an Alfonsito doll because I can forgive the little boy. I can let go of resentments, once I take a look at his life. The grown man is a lot harder.

This really also fits with how my dad cherished the “school days” foto of himself. He started telling the story about when he visited the seminary, and he saw how everyone was clean and warm and had a bed and food. And they asked if anyone wanted to stay there. And inside, his hand went up right away. But then he realized that he would have to give up his mama and his brothers and he just couldn’t do it.

Sometimes he tells this story like the angel and the devil are on his shoulders telling him what to do. The Angel says raise your hand! Be a priest! Be holy and comfortable and good. And the Devil says no, you don’t want to give up your family. You can’t live by their rules.

And so sometimes he looks at that little boy and says he’s “almost a saint” (a narrative I particularly liked to disrupt, saying, he doesn’t look saintly: he looks like a little boy who will prob’ly get into trouble soon) and that if he had made different choices then, none of us would even exist. If the angel had won out.

Anyway, right now he has feet and chonies and a torso but no arms or head yet.

I hope I finish him soon, instead of having his headless torso standing there looking at me…

I’ve been obsessively reading project notes for all the nelly/ned dolls. It’s interesting to me that other people feel afraid too, when they’re making dolls. I mean, they put it down to advanced craft anxiety—do I know enough/have enough practice to do this.

They don’t necessarily have my witch/poupee anxiety.

But I think it’s important, hear? I think I need to confront this fear and that making Alfonsito is part of my healing.

I can see already that I didn’t make him skinny enough. He doesn’t look like the New Mexico farm boy, whose bones stand out too much. He looks plump and happy. Good to remember for future projects.

So maybe I’ll work on him today and maybe I’ll work on the Xiomara doll and she might turn into Altagracia or Grace, who knows. minime. I mean, not really: I never looked that clean and stylish in my life! But more like Gracie and Shirley and Eleanor, in contrast to Lucia and

Alice. More like the sly girl in the jumper but instead in dungarees. That’s why I think Shirley, you know?

Making this naked ned doll with chonies seemed pretty important to me, though I couldn’t figure out why. The directions say the underwear is only necessary for the girl doll (presumably because she will be wearing a dress and so her undies might show, while he’ll be wearing trousers so his never will).

But it fits with my dollmaking magic: the doll is not a boy doll or a girl doll to start off with. You can give the doll short hair and call them a boy. Or you can give that short haired doll some bright colored clothing and call them a girl. Or they can be a trans mermaid.

And really, for a while I was stuck on the transmermaid, because they have to have the fish tail, so you’re deciding from the first stitch what they’re going to be, but then I’ve discovered the “removable mermaid tail” pattern, which is just a brilliant idea. So Alfonsito can be a merman if I want.

Oh, another reason I’ve really been thinking about making an Alfonsito doll: originally I was just thinking of making im like in the photo: big hair, hand-me down shirt and jeans (belted tight) and maybe boots. But the last night I was thinking about the story Maria Littlebear. And how Elisa tries to remember ever having a toy, and she can’t. She remembers mothering her baby siblings, but never having a baby doll. And that’s like Alfonsito. So making Alfonsito a pirate, for example, that’s something that he could never have done and so also important for him to do. He did the schoolboy. He did (at least in his mind) the acolyte, the altar boy, the almost-saint. He did the shoe-shine boy, the travieso, the hustler, the con-man. Cowboy wasn’t play: it was staying with the cows all day.

Quote from Jo Carrillo’s short story “Maria Littlebear:

That was the year that Elisa Antonia Alvarado was born in Mountain View, New Mexico. She was the oldest out of twelve and the only girl too. Can you imagine that? Well, all she could remember was feeding and changing, yelling and crying, you know, all those things that mothers usually do alone. She would try to remember dolls or some other kinds of toys too, so it wasn’t like she was faking it. Right up until a few years ago, she’d sit right there in that chair that you’re in now, she’d wrinkle her face up—sort of like a baby will do one second before she starts wailing—and you could tell that she was really trying hard. Still, no toys. The fact was that she had too many responsibilities to be wasting time like a normal kid would do if its papa was rich. (Jo Carrillo, “Maria Littebear,” 1981)

But he didn’t get to do the pirate, the world explorer, the indigenous boy secure in his own culture, the lion tamer, raggedy andy. All the things that Chip gets to be, Alfonsito never got to be. So yeah, there was some resentment there. With Steven and Chip, he had enough of a say that he was able to influence them, make them want to be cowboys or to learn that a grandpa won’t carry you but a grandpa will hold your hand and walk alongside you. But they faced limitations themselves about what they could and couldn’t be.

Expressed some opinions: Stevie wouldnt’ wear the crop top until his mom showed him that Winnie the Pooh is wearing a cropped top, and so he called it his Pooh shirt and happily wore it.

Cisco would not put on his suit for Christine’s wedding—categorically refused, until Grandpo put his matching suit on and then Cisco was okay with matching Grandpo.

But Chip ran—ran as far as you could see. Had no fear, even though me and Christine would be having a heart attack that he wouldn’t stop when he reached the curb and would be hit by a car. He was never afraid. he was fearless. And now he’s headed to the Peace Corps, to Columbia this summer!

I'm really glad I made him with chonies on.

For some reason I decided to go with gray instead of white. White is too new and crisp and clean. And also, in the little house Farmer Boy book, there’s a whole thing about his mom weaving all the fabric for all their clothes. and I think that the underwear is undyed or maybe even gray. The gray she made by mixing the natural wool with the natural black wool. But that might have only been for school uniforms.

I watched Star Wars: Rogue One, Moana last night (loved it) and am watching Frozen today.

Fathers in the fairy tales always put their hope for their children first.

Fathers in real life never do. They don’t have grand logic behind what they do and they don’t notice who they hurt.

Fantasy gave me the benign father figures: sober, safe, sexless, absolutely safe. Wise and sensible both.

As I’ve mentioned before, an important metaphor comes to me from Octavia Butler’s Patternmaster series. We are “Doro’s People.” The chosen ones. Bred to be tasty prey for the soul-killing vampire who has made himself our God. We are drawn to our own people, even while living with them is unhealthy for us. We can’t raise our own children. We don’t know how to parent. We don’t know how to do anything but react to the chaos our brains absorb from the noise around us.

In the world of Doro’s people, fathers are never trustworthy. Not girl children. Not to anyone.

Saturday, January 13, 2018

Notes for “Naked Ned” doll

Yarn: warm brown

I’m not sure if I have the right color identified. It’s lighter and warmer than caffe latte, that’s all I can say for sure.

I’m just finishing the first foot. I just love how it looks like a hoof. I’m weird that way. I had the same reaction with june’s boy/girl doll.

I’m surprised that there aren’t more forum posts about this pattern--compared to the weebee baby doll--but maybe because it’s newer? Maybe there will be more posts about it after this MCAL.

Oh, so after finishing the foot (round 9) it looks to me like my stitch marker moves over one. that is, I was marking the last stitch of the round and now it looks like I’m marking the first stitch of the round. how did that happen?

She says to make the dolls bald for the MCAL, but I’m not clear if we have to (i.e. if there’s a hat or hair treatment as part of the MCAL patterns.

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I made a second foot this morning, cut the soles for the feet, then compared the two feet. Then undid the first foot a couple of times.

Now I’m ready to go forward, come what may. I think I might stuff the feet with the weighted stuffing (have to go see if I have a stocking I can sacrifice to the amigurumi gods!

Okay, well making the little nylon bag for the weighted stuffing was a messier undertaking than I anticipated. I’m now up the legs and worked the first color change for the underwear. (decided to go with gray, for a nice boy shorts look).

FYI: after studying both the first weebee tutorial and the video on color changes, it looks like the slip stitch round does NOT count as a round, and the subsequent round is supposed to be in blo.

I didn’t do blo for the round of sc, with the result that the gray area is noticeably thicker than the fleshtone round, but that’s okay, because underwear are thicker than just your clothes, right? yeah, that’s what I thought.

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Okay I’ve just joined the legs together. Round 23 The stitch count (7 stitches leg one, join to first stitch of second leg, 13 stitches to leg two, finish with 7 stitches on leg one) didn’t quite work out because my stitch counter for both legs was on the center back. So I did 12 stitches before joining the second leg, worked all 14 of second leg stitches and then only two stitches left to leg one.

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OMG, I just looked at the other clothing patterns available for Nelly/Ned. As if the pirate costumes aren’t fabulous enough, there’s mermaid tails! And if I get the graduation outfit, that has a white t-shirt, so with Ned + tshirt+ mermaid tail I have a Sirenito! OMG I am so coveting the patterns right now! Now I wish I hadn’t spent my money on the Valentines MCAL so I could buy the others instead. The Pirates were last summers MCAL and they are so fabulous! Someone has Purple Hair on their Pirate! OMG PRINCE!!!!

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Yesterday’s saints of the Day:

Santiago, San Bartolomeo, San Cristobal

Did you know San Bartolomeo is the patron saint of panic attacks? That’s telling me something. Not something I knew, that’s for sure. He was flayed alive, so there’s a lot of Xipe Totec in there too.

Cristobal, Christ bearer. Traveller. Journey. Apocyrphal. Defrocked? Desanctified? dropped from the Roman Catholic Calendar of Saints in response to Vatican II “as mandated by the motu proprio, Mysterii Paschalis.

Santiago. de Compostela. Matamoros. Pilgrimages, Reconquista, Racial purity. So the Spanish version of this saint is not one to identify with. (Big suprise: Conquistador is unlikeable)

The Secret Book of James apparently put a lot of emphasis on suffering as inevitable.

Also, if John is the beloved disciple, than Santiago is the Santo Cuñado.

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

So last night I had the idea that I should use “Today’s card”to get my writing started. Yesterday’s card was The Mountain.

The mountain casts its shadow over the valley. In the winter, darkness can fall before four pm. The shadow is psychic as well as physical. The mountain is grounding: you always know where you are. The mountain, like the land, is testament to the generations of people who have lived here, their stories forgotten or erased. The mountain is more than a benign figure: it is steeped in the history, the blood, the tears.

In the cartomancy system, the mountain represents obstacles, barriers, blockages, and also pride, hubris, wanting to be the mountain that everyone else looks at. It’s like the quest novels where the entire team looks up at the mountain and knows that they need to cross it to move forward, and that it will be hard and full of hidden difficulties.

Which is funny that I give that example, because there was an rocky outcropping there and I tried to plot out my fantasy novel there; all the different kingdom a significant distance apart. that assembling the quest means going to each of the kingdoms for representatives. I drew them on the red rock using a green marker.

That rocky outcropping was my imaginary world, my escape from the closed up space and emotional confusion of home. Yet it was also the place where I imagined jumping to my death, to get away from everything. To escape this world.