Tuscan sketchbook.

Although bits of the holiday were not that good, especially the journeys and injury, nothing could detract from the incredible scenery.

I had paid for everyone to go to the Uffizi, which would have been better not on the first day when, thanks to redirected flights we had previously had only three hours sleep.  However the splendour of all the Renaissance art was fortifying.

One of the features of art of this era is all that is going on in the background of the scene.  I often wondered about all the little houses perched on hilltops.

Here is  a photographic detail from Leonardo’s Annunciation, of stuff going on in the background, behind the angel –

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are these very sculptural trees imaginary?  What about the buildings over the balcony rail beside Mary?

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look at the pillars and the buildings going up the hillside, are they fictitious?

I took sketchbooks with me to Tuscany.  Little four inch square books with hardbacks.  We were staying in a rescued old house, refurbished beautifully by the owner and surrounded on every side by views.

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This is the view from the pool.  All those pointy trees and the buildings going up the hillsides and perched on the tops of the hills are real, and everywhere you look.

I only had a day and some mornings in the house to draw and only had a propelling pencil and some multicoloured biros, having provided the same for the grandchildren, but the views were unbeatable, and I hope I got better as I practised.  I always thought the Italian Renaissance had been inspired by archaeology, as people began to dig down through the layers of a thousand years of mediaeval mud, to the glory that was Rome below.  Quite  bit of it is down to the geography, unearthing thousand year old marble statues and standing them up again in such landscapes was bound to inspire anyone.

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Here is the dirt track up to the villa, done in biro with a bit of pencil in the background.

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Every view into the distance reveals little buildings, perched on hills, surrounded by sculptural trees, which are Lombardy pines and Italian Cypresses.

Absolutely everything is picturesque.  When talking to Italians in Florence, they want to know what sort of artist you are.  Outside of the Duomo a man in jeans and a tee-shirt was singing opera, by the shops an artist was painting pictures of mediaeval bridges with a palette knife.  I was glad I had learned the Italian to say I make miniature articulated porcelain dolls, because I was asked.

I don’t usually draw, but in the Tuscan countryside, you almost cannot help yourself doing so.

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I do need to go back.  I need less time being driven round and more time, much more time, just looking.

I should be getting on with some moulds, but I’ll not do that until my stitches are out and I feel better but I think I’m going to have to do watercolours of some of my photographs.

After the Uffizi I felt as if art was spilling out of my ears, now I think it may come down my arm and escape through my fingers.

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Thank you to all readers who emailed, concerned.  There goes my possible career as a top model, I’ll just have to tell Chanel, no, I’m sorry, I’m going to be an artist instead.

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Fall over oween.

I went on holiday.

So far so good.

I haven’t had a holiday since 2008, when I went to Australia to meet my new rellies, when my cousin married an Australian.

Good so far.

I came back from Italy, spiritual home, yesterday.  Flight swap in Zurich.

Very nice airport.

Flights in a bit of a rush, a lot of running through airports involved.

Was already tired climbing up Italian mountain villages with the remnants of Covid or something and short of breath.

Not quite as good.

Got home late, had a shower went to bed.

Still OK.

Got up this morning had another shower, put hair in curlers.

OK.

All the holiday laundry was in the utility room piled up in a small black suitcase, with sticking out wheels.

Oh oh.

I tripped over the wheel and headed inexorably for the corner wall.

Oh.

And, with my forehead, made this dent in the wall.

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I put my hand to my head and shouted as the OH came in to see what the noise was: ‘Ambulance!’

Because I thought I could feel a big dent in my head.

Not good.

I had decanted a box of tissues from the holiday on to a table.  I grabbed a handful and held it to my head.  Blood everywhere.

Then the OH got in the car and drove me to A&E.

Last time I was in A&E was when I fell on the drive and cut my chin open.  I had just washed my hair and turned up then in curlers

I must stop going to A&E like this.  It lacks style.

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However over the next hour my hair dried.  I took the curlers out and the OH took a picture of my skull.

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Happy Halloween.

It took about three quarters of an hour to put nine stitches in.

It didn’t half hurt, even with anaesthetic.

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I was going to put sweets out for the local children tonight, it being Halloween but I’ve decided not to.

Don’t want to frighten anyone.

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Not just for Christmas.

Sorry for a bit of radio silence. I was dressing a doll which a collector bought at Miniatura.

The main reason I make porcelain dolls, rather than any other kind, is their durability.

Porcelain as a medium for any kind of art, is so well known for its strength that in past centuries, Lloyds of London, insuring ships and their contents, insisted on the ballast in the hold being plates and cups and tableware of porcelain, china and other glazed ceramics because they knew if the ship went down the porcelain could be recovered from the sea bed and sold to offset the cost of saving the wreck.

I have an eighteenth century drinking bowl, glazed blue and white porcelain, which went down with the Tek Sing, a Vietnamese trader, subsequently being retrieved by divers and sold by a TV shopping channel, as good as the day it went down.  It has very slight marine encrustation but only on the outside, you could still drink your tea out of it and, at the price the shopping channel sold the cups for, a good investment.

Of course, making dolls from porcelain involves numerous skills which are difficult to master, especially  if like me, if you could only afford one afternoon’s class to see what was entailed.  Afterwards I was self-taught, which might be an advantage, no one was there to tell me something was difficult, so I was able to fail at my own pace.

I will in time show you some of the ways in which you can make a doll.  There are many.  At any Miniatura you will find artists producing dolls in all the ways they can be produced, each way having its own advantages and disadvantages, as well as its own particular appearance.

Nothing beats porcelain for difficulty of manufacture, creating potentially hundreds of years of existence.

As each piece of porcelain achieves 1200 degrees in the kiln, the jacket of air round each molecule of porcelain clay is driven off.  The clay body shrinks and will stay that way even if sunk to the bottom of the sea for three hundred years.  The change at molecular level is what makes all fired clay bodies durable.  There is Ancient Egyptian pottery which is 5,000 years old in museums, still looking much the same as the day it was made.

Each piece of porcelain in a doll I have made, could be disassembled, washed and put together again, forever.  All the dolls are capable of being restrung, reassembled, redressed, rewigged and good as new forever.  For a small fee I’ll do any and all of those and when I have gone to the big workshop in the sky any museum that has old porcelain dolls will know how to conserve any of my dolls because they are made in exactly the same way as all the old dolls were.  No shortcuts, no glue guns, no wired armatures, no glued-on clothing, all proper.

Why?  Several reasons, one being that when I began miniaturising there was a lot of talk about a dolls house being an heirloom, which it is.  But it’s only as heirloomy as all the stuff in it will last.  All the miniatures which are true miniature versions of already existing big artefacts made in the same way using the same materials, such as miniature silverware made by silversmiths, miniature furniture made of wood by carpenters, miniature textiles woven, embroidered and sewn by  textile artists of various sorts, will last, because they already have done so.

The other main reason is that it doesn’t take long to realise how very clever miniaturists are.  The hobby attracts very able people.  If they can do something themselves, they will.  When I was writing for Dolls House World editor Lynne and I insisted that as many published items as possible featured the fantastic craftsman version, the kit version and the one you could do for nothing out of cereal boxes.

Therefore, if you are going to make and sell anything to miniaturists it should be something they cannot easily do for themselves.  Thirty five years ago we got our first credit card to buy a kiln, which cost a thousand pounds.  I was terrified of the cost, terrified of the kiln, and horrified by the items that appeared from the first few firings.  The learning curve was almost vertical but you could definitely argue that was not an investment that most miniaturists would be likely to make.  Looking back it was as much an investment in myself as anything else.  Apart from gardening and writing nothing else has proved as interesting for as long.

There are artists producing porcelain dolls from commercially available moulds.  These are all over the world, and, of course, all look the same.  There are artists producing dolls from ‘tweaked’ mouldings.  While the clay is wet you can manipulate it.

There are not that many artists making dolls from their own original sculptures.  It’s difficult.  It’s also not very rewarding financially.  If I made dolls from commercial moulds, of the type that have separate heads, hands and feet with soft bodies and then dressed them in a set of patterns that were either commercially available, from a book, or worked out by me and then endlessly reproduced, I could actually make a very slightly profitable business.  I have interviewed artists who did exactly that.  Some years they were into profit, some not.

I am very definitely on the side of art.  Every single doll has come out of my brain, down my arm and out through my fingers, via the kiln, into the world.  I once worked out that I work for 40p an hour.  I should probably sack myself.

But that last reason I do it this way is that it makes people happy.  I know many happy collectors, I have many happy collectors.

If you spend your working days making people happy, I think that’s a good thing to do with your life.

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Soft shoe shuffle.

Do you remember this?

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It is a vegetable crate pram which I made for a collector.

Many collectors like their dolls to be neat clean, pretty and living well in miniature but Anne had other ideas.

‘I have always been fascinated by the nursery rhyme “There was an old woman who lived in a shoe, she had so many children she didn’t know what to do.”  I had always wanted to create this scene in miniature.  The opportunity arose when the dolls’ house club I belong to decided to do it as a project using an old shoe or wellington boot.  As luck would have it I came across a pair of large boots in a supermarket sale which only cost me £5 and I thought they were ideal.  So, full steam ahead, I decoupaged the inside of the boot to give it some strength, then cut out spaces for the insertion of windows and a door.  1/24th scale worked best.  The roof was covered with tiles made from egg boxes and painted.

I then put  the boot on a base and created a garden around it.  Next I needed some people and asked Jane to make a mother and 5 children and when they came they fitted in so well and had a real mischievous look about them which is just what I wanted.  So I am very pleased with the outcome and everyone is happy in their new home.’

Here are the dolls

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and this is the absolutely fantastic home Anne has made for them.

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Isn’t this absolutely wonderful?  I’m glad the lady is managing to feed them all, and she is keeping up with the washing.

The dolls look very happy to be living in Ireland with Anne who is looking after them so well.

It is such a pleasure to join in with miniaturists who have big ideas.  Anne says she first met me at Miniatura and wishes she could be there.  If you have seen the sort of thing I get up to doll wise, either at the Min or online and would like to make doll suggestions, please do.  Miniaturists have absolutely unlimited imaginations, and, obviously in Anne’s case, all the skills to make their ideas a reality.  The outcome is a real artwork, it is delightful.  It tells the story beautifully and is just begging to be played with and enjoyed.

Well done Anne!  I’m just about to get my winter boots out and I’m hoping they don’t fit.  Anyone else?

If you have any wonderful miniature creations that you think might benefit from an airing here and inspire other miniaturists, just click on leave a comment below to get in touch.

I do wonder what happened to the other shoe.  Is Anne hopping around, has she sawn it in half to do an interior, or has she given it the boot?

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Cornel’s Creations.

Years ago in the noughties, when I was reporting Miniatura for magazines and exhibiting with an assistant, I was able to see the whole show, talk to exhibitors and meet my collectors.  Now, exhibiting alone, with three hours set up time the previous day and a couple of hours in the morning, to set up a thousand items, I’m lucky if I manage to get a look at the exhibitors on either side  of me.

However, some exhibitors are so good, I have to have a quick look as I’m setting up, a slight visit before the show opens on Saturday morning and as long as I can possibly manage having a good gawp on Sunday morning.  Into this ‘cannot miss’ category for the last couple of shows, Cornel’s Creations have cantered, far ahead of the field.

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In the Autumn show Cornel was visiting Venice.  Here is a 48th scale street in Venice, complete with gondolas sailing up the red velvet tablecloth.  How utterly perfect are these houses?  Look at the windows, don’t they just make all other windows look rubbish?  Which house do you want, or do you, like me, just want them all?

These houses are the work of Cornel Gheorgheasa, here he is:

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At Autumn Miniatura I was too busy to talk to Cornel, though I did have time to photograph his fabulous houses.  I had already talked to him at a previous Miniatura about his exceptional windows and had not been too surprised to learn that making windows is what he does in real life and one scale.  One scale is the term used by show organiser Andy Hopwood.  I helpfully informed Andy that Cornel’s windows were so good because he made windows in one scale to which Andy replied that he knew, because he’d read the side of Cornel’s van in the car park.  Tricks of the trade aside, I thought it was time to talk to Cornel himself.  Here’s the story in his own words:

‘My journey into the world of miniatures began three years ago when I purchased my first laser-cutting machine.  At first I experimented with ready-made files from Etsy, but when clients asked me to adapt kits into 1:48th scale, something clicked.  I fell in love with miniature houses – and before long we were creating our own original designs.

I’ve been very fortunate to share this journey with my daughter, Ilinca.  Her brilliant talent for design makes her the true star behind our beautiful kits, while my role is to take her digital creations and ensure they are practical and ready for makers to enjoy.

Miniature making has brought me enormous joy – not only through the creative process but also through the wonderful community of makers, united by a shared passion for miniatures.

My background is in traditional joinery.  I own a small company producing handcrafted timber windows and doors, and everything I know was first learned from my father, a skilled joiner now happily retired.  That heritage of craftsmanship continues to guide every piece we make today.’

Seasoned miniaturists will have noticed that, in common with some of the best miniaturists there have ever been, Cornel knew all about his subject and had practised for years in full size before he became aware of the miniature world, and that he is working in authentic materials to produce the best kind of miniatures, the same in every way as the one scale item, but smaller.

Architecture in particular benefits from a bit of shrinkage, you get a different view when you can see the whole building at once.

The other question miniaturists will have is the one about the insides.  Are they as good as the outsides?

Judge for yourself:

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You don’t need me to tell you this is the inside of a book shop, I know you’re already in there, stacking the shelves.

I did ask Cornel at the show about scales.  48th is not really my favourite, I love 24th, as you know.  Could Cornel make any of his designs in alternative scales, I asked.

Yes he can.  The place to talk to him about it is at his website

www.cornels-creations.com

though I should warn you that you are going to want everything.

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This is the one I fancy, look at the windows, just look at the windows, have you ever seen anything like them, in miniature?

What complicates matters is that this house is not alone, Cornel has created entire streets, and furniture kits.  On his website there are gift vouchers, you could ask for them for Christmas, and get your nearest and dearest to buy a house kit for you.  There is only one massive problem.

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How are you going to choose?

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In chariot and on foot…

I am delighted to say the Ancient Egyptian dolls have arrived in the shop.

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Each doll will come with a scroll, giving basic information and a photograph of a 5,000 year old Ancient Egyptian model house, if you fancy giving them a home, and some pointers to information.

Ordinary Ancient Egyptians did not have much furniture, there was not a lot of wood up and down the Nile.  They were clever at using palm trees  and bundles of various plants to hold up ceilings.  It is these that we still see in the stone columns that support the roofs of the temples, which were carved to look like plants.

What they did have, and which a miniaturist could reproduce easily, was a lot of mats.  Miniature hat straw would be good here.  The houses were made of mud bricks.  These, although they were only made of mud and straw and baked in the sun, have proved very durable.  We don’t just have house models from tombs, the village that the workers in the valley of the Kings built for themselves out of mud bricks is still, mostly, there.

They were great potters and had vases, jugs and bowls for every purpose you can imagine.  They had discovered the potter’s wheel and were skilled decorators of pottery, walls, textiles by embroidery and papyri.

What is more, as I told everyone who looked at the dolls at Miniatura, this was a civilization in which you could have been paid by the government to be a miniaturist and do all the miniature stuff you do now, with a pension at the end of it.

That really is my kind of civilization – one that values artists of all kinds and is on record as advising children to work hard and be a scribe because it is a nice clean job indoors, sitting down.

I am so pleased with the way the dolls turned out.  They are very delicate with their turning hands and feet.  I have even given them separate big toes so they can wear sandals.

If you made a miniature Ancient Egyptian house and filled it with dolls, you could be in Ancient Egypt five thousand years ago and doing exactly the same thing.  The only difference would be that you would be a high status individual and people would say, as you walked past  – there they go, the miniaturist, all hail the miniaturist!  May Ptah the father of creativity bring his blessings upon the revered miniaturist!

Yes, they even had a god of creativity.

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Hordle Castle.

As you walked into the recent Autumn Miniatura at Stoneleigh this is what you would have seen:

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Isn’t this absolutely fantastic?

This is Hordle Castle, a work in progress, possibly for a lifetime, by Jon Trenchard.  Autumn Miniatura was the second appearance of the castle at Miniatura.

Before we hear about the creation of this dolls’ house to end all doll’s houses, from Jon himself, let’s take a closer look, copying a couple of thousand astounded and delighted visitors in September.

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Isn’t it fabulous?

Let’s hear from Jon.

‘I started building Hordle Castle when I was 12 years old.  Dad was into model railways, Mum was into dollhouses.  They took me to fairs like Miniatura but also around National Trust houses and historic castles.  I wanted a castle of my own to live in, but I knew that could never happen so I decided to make an imaginary National Trust Castle in 1/12th scale.  Back then, in the eighties, you could buy Georgian, Victorian or Tudor houses, but not a castle.  So I asked Dad to help me build the walls of a great hall.  And the Castle has been growing ever since.

Then one day I got an email to Miniatura visitors from organiser Andy Hopwood asking for unusual miniature houses for a journalist writing a newspaper article, and, thanks to that, Hordle Castle gained attention in the press, and Andy asked me to exhibit the castle at Miniatura in 2021.  Apart from one time at the Kensington Dollshouse Festival, the castle has only been exhibited to the public at Miniatura, although I would love the National Trust to display it at a real historic house someday.  If anybody has contacts in the NT who could help, please get in touch.

(If you can help, please scroll down, click on ‘leave a comment’, I will forward any messages to Jon.)

This year for the first time at the autumn Miniatura, I exhibited Hordle’s new drawing room, kitchen and scullery.  I’ve been working on them for the last couple of years (in spare moments alongside a commission of a 1:87 scale gothic castle and my other jobs as an actor, musical director, dog walker and music teacher) so it’s exciting for me to share them at last.  I bought the kitchen range at a miniatures fair when I was a teenager, so they have been a long time in the planning.

(If you feel a commission coming on, scroll down, click on ‘leave a comment’.)

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I have no training in visual arts, I just pick up techniques from books, the Internet and other model makers.  People often ask me how I make stone walls:  I have experimented with various techniques from cereal packets and egg cartons to XPS insulation foam and air drying clay, but hopefully by using the same painting techniques, all the different materials blend together.

Quite a few visitors at Miniatura suggested I write a book about Hordle Castle: how it is made, the inspiration behind the rooms and the National Trust Guide Book fake history of the castle, rooms and family who lived there.  So perhaps when that is done, and a few more mini rooms are complete, the castle might go on public display again.  In the meantime you can check out my progress on Instagram : @hordlecastle

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How wonderful this house is and how keen we all are to see the rest as Jon magicks it into reality.  This is one of the many great facets of Miniatura; because it evolved to exhibit the work of original artists working in miniature and is still doing so, there is art and inspiration everywhere you look.

Hordle Castle is quite exceptional, I look forward to Jon’s next visit to the Min, if you do too, keep an eye on the website a couple of weeks before the show when the exhibitor listings appear.

www.miniatura.co.uk

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Autumn Miniatura.

A little Miniatura report is on the way, I am waiting for some words from an exhibitor.

Meanwhile this

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Yes the Egyptian dolls were there in time, two boxes full.  Five thousand years ago, if you had lived in Ancient Egypt, you could have been paid by the government to be a miniaturist and make dolls’ houses for the Pharoah’s tomb.

Imagine that, lifetime miniaturist, paid by the state.

Now that’s what I call a civilisation.

More from this civilisation coming up.

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Nude wrestling.

I have given the Ancient Egyptian dolls anatomy because I am bringing to life the little people in the wall paintings, who are often shown in the nude, with anatomy.

There have been debates in the doll world for some time about dolls with anatomy.  Sometimes anatomy is one of the things doll people are trying to get away from, we like the dolls to be small and pretty and as unlike people as possible, while looking like people but not too much.

Years ago I did an article on how to make dolls for DHW magazine.  If you use polymer clay it is possible to get very wrinkly realistic looking dolls.  After Miniatura I’ll show you some of the ways here. If, additionally, you make clothes of very thin material, such as tissue paper, glued on, you can get thinness in scale. You cannot play with such dolls, they are effectively sculpture, but if realism is your goal and you want to glue them into a scene and then distress them, they are a good choice and even a beginner can have success.

I like miniature dolls that are like real dolls.  I like them to move and be played with and have clothes that can be renewed  by successive owners, over time.  They don’t look like people, they look like dolls.

For these reasons I do not usually give my dolls anatomy, but this time I did.  Along with the anatomy I appear to have given them hormones.  I was getting on well with giving the men their Ancient Egyptian kilts.  The real ones were made of linen and were almost the same for everyone except that the Pharoah had the ties of his kilt and the bit at the front, which I am now convinced is a loin cloth under the kilt, draped over the front and tied in place, bigger than anyone else.  In fact the dangling bit at the front of the Pharaoh’s kilt is enormous, triangular, permanently sticking out and stiff.  He is the head of the nation, beloved of the gods, best endowed etc.  A variety of ways of tying the kilt and dealing with the dangling loin cloth bit are visible in the picture of craftsmen working at various occupations.

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It took me a while to work out how to do this in miniature.  As I was dressing men, the ones waiting in the box for their turn, seem to have been affected by hormones.  A fight broke out.

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Who are you calling puny?

I’m just saying you look more modest to me. 

Modest!  You git!

You are, look at the bloke whose arm I’m trampling beneath my knee as the Pharoah smote the Hittite!

I’m going to swipe you one in less than a water clock hour.  I’ve got articulated wrists!

Me too, and I’ve got your leg trapped and I’m sitting on your hand.

I will smite you good and proper and it will all go black for you as if Nut has spread her wings across your sky.

See? Hormones.

Our hang-ups with nudity can be traced back most recently to the Victorians.  Queen Victoria liked to have her table legs covered up because they were legs.  In previous centuries lack of clothing is strongly associated with poverty.  In Tudor times a shiftless woman is so useless she is unable to make a shift, her undergarment.  By the time we get back to the twelfth and thirteenth centuries actually having clothing is a mark of status, the more elaborate the garment, the swankier the wearer.

Back with the Anglo Saxons, we find the ubiquitous garment is the cloak.  Throughout history the cloak has been the easiest item to produce, whether an animal skin or woven cloth, a rectangular covering that can be draped round the wearer is easy to put on and off, becomes bed coverings at night, warmth in the cold and shade in the sun.

The Ancient Egyptians had cloaks, for all the same reasons they were popular in the rest of history, because they’re just very handy, but for most other occasions clothing is optional.  The climate and proximity to the river and all the waterborne woes are the most likely reason for some of the preference.  The difficulty of producing the linen must also be accounted for.  The vertical loom was unknown until late in the history.  Flat floor looms require large flat, clean surfaces to produce a reasonable size of cloth.

This may be why children, who cheerfully gather dirt all day, go mostly without clothing until they are old enough to look after it.  Certain low status jobs do not offer clothing as part of the package.  These include dancing girls and some farmers and fishermen.

Clothing of the best kind, embroidered in metal thread, woven with patterns and beaded, belongs to the Pharoah and the Gods.  The Gods lived in the temples.  The priests, who shaved every body hair every day and swam in pools to get squeaky clean, had the job of dressing the God, embodied in his statue, every day.  They also gave the God offerings of food.  If the God wasn’t very peckish, the priests helped out by polishing off the grub. I have looked at an awful lot of Ancient pictures and have yet to find a depiction of a thin priest.  They always look extremely substantial.  If they are relaying the thoughts and orders of the God, well, you wouldn’t argue.

Tomorrow, if Bastet smiles upon me, I will get started on dressing Lady Two Heads.  The women’s dresses were tight tubes, which may very well be one loom full of cloth, sewn into a tube.  There are shoulder straps, which sometimes cover the nipples, and sometimes, in a carefree sort of way, miss completely.  Most ladies had moved to the Elysian Fields by the time they were forty.  They never got the chance to experience the effects of gravity as we, who frequently live two Egyptian Lifetimes do.

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Walk like an Egyptian to the Min

www.miniatura.co.uk

or walk like a miniaturist, shuffling sideways, occasionally straightening up to see if you can see the friend you came with.

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The lock of youth.

Might very well be the most difficult wig I have attempted on a doll.  The head of the Ancient Egyptian child is 10mm.  That’s the size of a small bead or a large garden pea.  The difficulty is that Ancient Egyptian children had their heads shaved with one long lock of hair, usually plaited on their left side.

I have made porcelain dolls with heads that size, inside of which are: the elastic strings which hold the doll together, a bead and a lot of knots.  The hole in the top of the head, now covered with a pate, has to be big enough to get the bead and the elastic inside and to work inside of.  Have a look at your fingers and a garden pea, could you do it?

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I am wigging these dolls with thread, sewn on to a wig cap which I have made from leather,  There it is in the middle.  Beside it Lady Two Heads, above her the threaded needle and the incredibly fine and wonderful silk thread made by Langley Threads and sold at Miniatura, many years ago by John, who had made real threads for the big world.  Sadly John is no longer with us but I continue to enjoy his legacy.  This is one of the great things about Miniatura; it attracts specialist craftsmen you can’t find elsewhere.

Beside Lady Two Heads is a bundle of normal-sized embroidery thread, which I intend to use for wigging.  I want the wigs for the ladies to look like the typical wigs that Egyptian ladies with shorn hair wore.  I don’t want them to look like hair, I want them to look like wigs.

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Lady Two Heads was keen to help.

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Having practised on the grown up ladies, I turned my attention to the children.  Had I just wasted weeks of time?

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He seems keen.  That’s a lot of enthusiasm for someone smaller than the reel of thread.

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Now just sit still while Mummy plaits your lock.

Oh dear, I’ve started calling myself Mummy to the doll.  That’s going to make it hard to sell her, dear little thing.

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Fortunately there are nine children, waiting to be rehomed.

If you are going to the Min and you do like the look of these porcelain 24th scale dolls and you’ve found a possible cardboard box and you’ve started shopping online for Egyptian scrapbook papers and you know there were lots of pots in Ancient Egypt and you know there are quite a few good potters at the Min…

Nine, just nine is all I’m saying.

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www.miniatura.co.uk

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