Książka Heirloom Rag Dolls for Beginners Cordie Beier

Heirloom Rag Dolls for Beginners

Patterns for Stuffed Fabric Bodies, Embroidered Faces, Yarn Hair, Jointed Limbs, and Complete Miniature Wardrobes

Autor: Cordie Beier
Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Dostępność: Dostępna u dostawcy
Wysyłamy za 14-21 dni
105.68
You have saved a hundred handmade dolls to a board somewhere and never once picked up a needle. The...

Informacje o książce

Autor
Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
142
EAN
9798187266715
Enbook ID
53239456
Waga
348
Wymiary
216 x 280 x 8

Pełny opis

You have saved a hundred handmade dolls to a board somewhere and never once picked up a needle. The fabric is still folded in the drawer, tags on. The polyester stuffing sits unopened on the shelf. Somewhere underneath the hesitation is a real fear that your first doll will end up looking like a lumpy pillow with buttons for eyes.

This book turns that fear into a finished doll: a jointed body, an embroidered face, and a full wardrobe stitched by your own hands.

One Doll, One Whole Wardrobe

  • Sew and stuff a fully jointed body with arms and legs that actually move like hers should
  • Embroider a one-of-a-kind face, choosing her eyes, mouth, and expression yourself
  • Loop and secure a full head of yarn hair built to survive years of brushing and braiding
  • Stitch a dress and matching undergarments sized to fit your finished doll exactly
  • Add pants, outerwear, and cold-weather layers to round out her growing wardrobe
  • Learn five hand stitches once, then reuse every single one of them all book long
  • Set up a full sewing workspace and tool kit that costs less than you think it will

The details that decide whether a doll lasts twenty years or twenty days are covered too, the exact small choices most patterns skip over entirely without a second thought.

The Choices Nobody Explains
  • Choose between button jointing and disc jointing for movement that genuinely lasts
  • Fix a puckered seam, a lumpy stuffing spot, or a joint that has worked loose
  • Match fabric weight and stuffing firmness so every seam holds for decades
  • Refresh a tired face or mend a worn seam years after she is first finished
  • Plan a color palette so her hair, skin fabric, and wardrobe all agree with each other
A doll built this way does not sit quietly on a shelf collecting dust for long. She gets carried through the garden by one arm, dressed and undressed more times than you can count, mended at the seam more than once, and eventually folded into the arms of someone smaller who needed her. Yours starts as a stack of fabric pieces on your table tonight.

Cut your first pattern piece tonight. The rest of her is only sixteen chapters away.