Friday, July 26, 2019

Veronika Sews

On a warm, sunny Saturday, Veronika took a trip with The Writer to an outdoor quilt show. There were quilts hanging all over town. They were hanging outdoors and inside many of the buildings.


Veronika asked to have her picture taken with some of the quilts.


She looked at each one. She was interested in the fabrics the quiltmaker had chosen and the design that person had used.


She especially enjoyed seeing some quilts that were made for children.


At lunchtime, Veronika and The Writer sat in a shady spot in the grass and ate lunch. Well, The Writer ate and Veronika pretended to eat, because she's a doll.


When they had seen all the quilts, they went into the quilt shop. It's a big store that sells fabric and everything else you need to make quilts. The fabric is also good for dresses, and Veronika wanted to pick out some fabric for a new dress.
"I would like this one, please," she said, when she found a pretty blue fabric with scissors all over it. "It looks like something that a quilter would wear."


Veronika picked out a red plaid to go with it, because she wanted to use two fabrics for the dress. (Quilters like to put lots of different fabrics together when they sew.)
She went to the cutting table and told the lady who was cutting fabric how much she wanted. She told the lady she already had thread and hook-and-loop tape for the dress. All she needed was the fabric.
While Veronika watched, the lady cut and folded the fabric neatly. 


Then she handed them to Veronika.  


Another person was taking money and credit cards. The Writer let Veronika use her credit card for the fabric. The lady who took the money had to speak to Veronika several times when she was done with the card. Veronika couldn't stop looking at all the quilts hanging in the shop and all the fabrics everywhere.


A few days later, Veronika was ready to sew. Charlotte found her trying to decide which shoes to wear with her new dress. They talked about the colors, and Charlotte helped Veronika decide.


Charlotte asked if she could watch Veronika sew. She was very interested in how a dress is made. Veronika was happy to have company while she worked, so she offered to teach Charlotte about sewing.
Veronika washed the newbfabric first and put it into the dryer. While the fabric was in the dryer, Veronika showed Charlotte the tools she used for sewing. She showed her the little scissors she uses and her special pincushion.


The pincushion is made from a bottle cap. It's just the right size for a doll. "Pins are very sharp," Veronika said. "You have to be very careful with them."



"We use regular sewing needles when we sew by hand," Veronika explained, "but these are special needles that we use in the machine." 


She took out one of the needles and showed Charlotte the difference between the sewing-machine needle and a hand-sewing needle.


"The machine-sewing needle has a hole right above the point. That hole is called the eye of the needle. You put the thread through the eye. The other end, the thicker part, is where it attaches to the machine. When we sew by hand, we use the other kind of needle. The eye of that needle is at the other end, away from the point." 


"I will be using a special cutter for cutting out the skirt," Veronika said. "The skirt for this dress is a long rectangle, so all the edges are straight. It's faster to cut straight lines with a rotary cutter. It's called a rotary cutter, because the little blade is round, and it cuts as it goes around, as it rotates." Veronika showed Charlotte two tools.


"They look like pizza cutters," Charlotte said.
"They work the same way," Veronika agreed.
Veronika explained that she likes to use the yellow one, because she's left-handedThe handle of the yellow cutter is the same on both sides, so you don't have to move the blade to the other side for left-handed dolls. You just turn it over. 


Most people and dolls are right-handed, which means they write and use scissors with their right hand, but some some people and dolls use their left hand. Veronika uses her left hand, so she is left-handed.

To use a rotary cutter, you need a special mat to cut on. Veronika has one just her size.


You also need a special ruler to guide the rotary cutter as you cut. Veronika has two. They have lines on them that help you know where to cut.


When the fabric was dry, Veronika pressed it on the pressing mat with her little craft iron. She was careful not to get her fingers close to the part of the iron that does the pressing, because it's very hot, and she didn't want to melt her fingers.


Then Veronika showed Charlotte how to cut fabric with the rotary cutter, ruler and mat, being very careful to keep her fingers out of the way of the blade and keeping her weight on the ruler, so it wouldn't slip. She used the rotary cutting tools to cut out the skirt.


She pinned the other pattern pieces onto the fabric and showed Charlotte how to cut them out. Then she let Charlotte cut out some of the pieces, so she could practice cutting fabric.



Veronika threw the tiny scraps into the trash, but she saved any pieces that were as big as the one-inch marks on the pressing mat. "I have plans for these," she said.

Soon they were ready to sew.
"Billy will help," Veronika said. "My feet don't reach the floor, and you will need to be up here with me, if you want to watch."
Billy is always happy to help Veronika sew with the sewing machine. He thinks machines are fun.


Veronika will tell Billy "Go," and "Stop."
Billy knows it's important to pay attention, because the machine has to stop when Veronika wants it to. It makes him feel important to help Veronika with something she can't do for herself, and he feels good that he can do this job well.
Veronika turned on the machine, and Billy helped her run the machine to wind a bobbin. The bobbin holds the thread that comes up from underneath. Billy held down the foot pedal until Veronika said, "Stop." They filled one bobbin with red thread and one with blue, because they would need them both.


Then Veronika took the bobbin with blue thread and put it into the little space for it underneath. "You see," she explained, "the machine takes the thread from the spool on top and the thread from the bobbin underneath."


"The machine wraps the threads around each other where the needle goes into the cloth to make a stitch," Veronika explained. "That makes the seam that holds the fabric together." She showed Charlotte on two pieces of scrap cloth she had sewn together. She folded it so they could see both sides.


"It's very different from hand-sewing," Veronika went on. "Hand-sewing uses only one thread. It goes over the top, then underneath and back up again." She showed Charlotte what she meant.


When the machine was ready to sew, Veronika picked up two pieces they had cut out. "This is for the top of the dress. We call this the bodice (baw-diss), and this is the bodice lining," she explained. She matched up the edges of the front and back at one shoulder of the bodice. Then she sewed while Charlotte watched, and Billy worked the foot pedal. 


Then Veronika let Charlotte have a turn. Charlotte sewed the shoulders of the pieces that were supposed to line the bodice. Charlotte told Billy, "Go," and "stop."


The front of the sash was a folded strip of the red fabric. Veronika used basting (BAY-sting) stitches to attach it to the front of the bodice at the waist. She told Charlotte that basting stitches are big stitches she will take out later. Veronika let Charlotte take the blue bobbin and the blue thread out of the sewing machine. She watched while Charlotte put in the red bobbin and threaded the needle.


Veronika took the two long strips of red fabric she had cut for the sash and finished the edges. After that, she sewed the two pieces of the collar together. She trimmed the edges, turned the collar to the right side and pressed it with her craft iron. Then Charlotte took out the red thread and put the blue bobbin and thread back into the machine. She could do it by herself now.

When the thread was changed, Veronika sewed the neck and back of the bodice with the collar between the two pieces. Then she sewed the red border onto the skirt. "Now we will use a zigzag stitch," Veronika said. "It's one of the special stitches the machine can make. The zigzag stitches look like this." She showed Charlotte some fabric she had sewn together with red thread using the zigzag stitch.


Veronika finished the edges of the seam with the zigzag stitch. "This is so we don't have a lot of loose threads along the cut edges of the fabric on the inside of the dress," she explained. "It keeps the inside tidy."


Then she made two lines of the big basting stitches along the top, where she wanted the skirt to be gathered. "We use basting stitches," she explained, "because they are loose and easy to pull on to gather the fabric, and because we're going to take them out later."


When she finished making the basting stitches, she took the two bottom threads that came from the bobbin and pulled on both of them together. This made the fabric gather. She did this at each end, instead of just one end, so the gathers would meet in the middle of the skirt, and the thread wouldn't come out at one end.


Veronika did the same thing to gather the sleeves at the top and the bottom. Then she used a lot of pins to hold the top of the sleeve to the sleeve opening on the bodice. She sewed carefully, pulling out the pins as she came to them. Next, Veronika pinned the cuff onto the bottom of the sleeves and sewed it on carefully. She pinned the sash pieces in place and sewed up the sides of the bodice and the sleeve. 
Veronika used a lot of pins to fasten the bodice to the skirt, and then she sewed them together. She was very careful as she sewed over the pins. Charlotte only watched all of this, because this part is harder to do. This is what it looked like when she was done.


Veronika finished all the edges inside the dress with the special zigzag stitch. She showed Charlotte the inside of the dress, so she could see what the finished edges looked like.


Then she used some red thread to sew the inside of the cuff to the inside of the sleeve. She used a regular hand-sewing needle for this, and Charlotte watched how she made the stitches. Veronika made each one so it didn't show.


After she sewed the hook-and-loop tape onto the back of the dress, Veronika pressed it, and it was ready to wear. The girls thanked Billy for his help, and he went off to play. Charlotte helped Veronika put the dress on in front of the mirror.


"I think this dress is very flattering, Veronika," Charlotte said as they looked in the mirror.


"I think it would look good on you, too," Veronika said.


"Let's make mine in pink!" Charlotte exclaimed.


"I think you should get to pick out your own fabric for your dress, Charlotte," Veronika agreed. "We should go to the fabric store. Billy wants me to show him how to make some pants for hot weather. He can go, too." 
Veronika changed back into her play clothes and hung up the dress.
"You only used half of the fabric," Charlotte said. "It looks as if you might have enough for another dress."


"I have other plans for it," Veronika said, nodding. "I'm saving fabric for a quilt. I can even use the little pieces we didn't throw away. The quilt show gave me lots of ideas!"
"That sounds like fun," Charlotte sighed.
"Let's do it together!" Veronika exclaimed.

Cast--
Veronika: Götz Classic Kidz Vroni
Charlotte: Götz Happy Kidz Anna in Paris
Billy: Götz Happy Kidz Lily at London

Here's how to make a pincushion like Veronika's. You can make it so it fits on your finger with a piece of elastic, or you can leave off the elastic, and the dolls can use it. Remember to be careful with the pins!

A special thanks to The Stitchin' Post in Sisters, Oregon, for cooperating with our photo shoot.

You can follow The Doll's Storybook here.
Do you have questions or comments for us? Would you like to order an autographed copy of one of our books? You can email us at thedollsstorybook@icloud.com.

Note: No dolls were harmed during production of this blog. All dolls shown are Götz Happy Kidz, Classic Kidz or Little Kidz. If you like these stories and are willing, please make a donation of any amount to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital or any organization that supports pediatric cancer research and treatment. We are not affiliated with St. Jude in any way other than these donations.

"The Doll's Storybook" is not affiliated with Gotz Dolls USA Inc. or Götz Puppenmanufaktur International GmbH.
Watch for the next story each Friday afternoon at 1:00 PM Pacific Time.

Mariah: Stories from The Doll's Storybook, Emil: Stories from The Doll's StorybookClassic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook and Our Favorite Verses: Poems from The Doll's Storybook are available from BookBaby and other booksellers worldwide, such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble
Royalties (net proceeds) go to support pediatric cancer research and treatment. If you don't get free shipping elsewhere, buy from Book Baby. Half of the price goes to charity (specific information available upon request). Autographed copies of all three books are available from the author. (Multiple books to the same address have a discount on shipping.) To inquire, email thedollsstorybook@icloud.com.



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Copyright © 2019, 2024 by Peggy Stuart

Friday, July 19, 2019

Heat Wave

It was very hot. The dolls were sitting on the workroom table with the fan running. Veronika was helping Mandy put up her hair, because she was pretending her long hair felt hot on her neck. 


"Nothing fancy," Mandy told her. "I just want it up off my neck."
"Why is it so hot," Charlotte asked.


"It's hot because it's summer," Billy observed.


Charlotte tried to roll her eyes, but it's hard to do, because her eyes don't move. "I know that, silly," she said. "I mean, why is it hot in the summer?"


The dolls all looked at Mandy, because it was a Mandy kind of question.


"Remember," Mandy began, "when we talked about the seasons? We pretended the old tether ball was the sun, and my ball of yarn with a needle through it was the earth."


The dolls all thought back.


"Yes," said Mariah, enjoying the breeze from the fan on her neck. "The needle was the earth's axis, except you can't see the real one."


"You can't knit with it, either," Billy added, which caused Jolena to poke him with her elbow.
"You said the axis in the part of the world we live in comes out at the North Pole," Mariah explained. "It's tipped more toward the sun in the summer. I remember, because I got to be summer when we were taking turns being the seasons."


"That's right," Mandy said. "Now, think about what happens if the axis at the North Pole is tipped toward the sun. Remember that the air surrounds the earth. It's as if the earth is a ball inside a ball of air."


"I think there is less of the air for the sun to go through in the summer," suggested Jolena.


"Very good, Jolena!" exclaimed Mandy. 
"I have to use the air when I do my tricks on skis," Jolena said. "The air helps me, so I have to know about it." She could feel the moving air from the fan blowing her hair across her face.


"I can tell that you have been thinking about it," Mandy told her. "Now," she went on, "the air that covers the earth is called the atmosphere (AT-mus-feer). When our part of the earth is tipped toward the sun, there is less atmosphere for the sun to have to shine through."


"But why is that?" asked Billy.


Mandy though for a moment. "OK," she said, "just imagine you are standing on the diving board over the center of a pool. Suppose you dive straight down through the water to the bottom."


"At the same time," Mandy went on, "Jolena is standing on the side of the pool. She dives toward the same spot on the bottom of the pool, but from the side. Who will get there first?"


"I will get there first," Billy said. "Boy dolls are faster than girl dolls."


Jolena gave Billy a playful swat. "No they aren't," she cried.


Mandy laughed. "You're right about who gets there first, but not about why."


Mariah had been looking thoughtful. "I think Billy had less water to go through than Jolena," she said.


"That's right," Mandy agreed. "When you dive at an angle, you have to go through more water before you get there. That's how it is with the sun's rays. In the summer the sun's rays are like Billy diving into the pool. They don't have to go through as much atmosphere."


"I thought," Charlotte said, "that maybe it's hotter in the summer because the days are longer."


"Having longer days in the summer does add to how hot it gets," agreed Mandy, "because the sun heats up the earth during the day. We have to add that to how the sun has much less atmosphere to get through."


"So how can we cool off," Charlotte wanted to know. "I'm tired of pretending to be too hot."


"I feel cooler when I go for a bike ride," Billy said.


"That's because you're moving through the air. The air moving across your vinyl cools it off and makes you feel cooler, the way this fan cools us," Mandy explained, "so that's a good way."


"We could play in the sprinkler," Veronika suggested, "but we will have to wear swim goggles if we're going to get our faces wet. We don't want water to get into our heads and make the inside moldy."


"Yes," agreed Jolena. "They will have to take your head off to clean out the mold!"



"That's right," Veronika said. "I'd like to keep my head on!"


"How does playing in the sprinkler keep you cool," Billy asked.


"There are two things," Mandy said. "First, the water coming out of the pipes in the ground is cool, because not so much heat from the sun can reach it. The water makes you feel cooler right away." 


"Second," Mandy continued, "when your vinyl is wet, the water evaporates (ee-VAP-er-ates). It uses the heat from your vinyl to do that, so that cools you off."


"I remember," Charlotte said, "when we did the experiment where we took the salt out of the salt water. We made the water evaporate."


"Yes," Billy agreed. "We used the sun's light to do it." They thought about that fun experiment.


"That's right," Mandy agreed. "It's the same thing that happened in our pan of water. The sun warmed the air under the plastic wrap. That made the water in the pan evaporate."
"If we get tired of playing in the sprinkler," Mariah said, "we could go to a movie. They have air conditioning, so it's cool inside."


The dolls talked for a bit about what movie they would like to see. Then Charlotte had an idea. "We could make popsicles," she said. "We could sit in the shade and pretend to eat them. That would make us cool inside, because the popsicles are frozen."


"I have a good recipe for popsicles," Jolena said. "I pour the mixture into plastic cups and put a plastic spoon in it after it starts to freeze." Then Jolena smiled and continued, "but I don't have to worry about the heat for a while."


All the dolls looked at Jolena. She could tell they wanted to know why, so she told them.
"I'm going to fly to Argentina (are-jen-TEEN-uh) tomorrow," Jolena said, "with my skis and the other dolls on the Doll Ski Team. It's winter there, because that part of the earth is tipped away from the sun. We're going to practice skiing in real snow for a week."


"I had better finish packing," Jolena added. 
"We'll help," Mariah suggested.
The dolls all helped Jolena pack her clothes and her ski equipment.


"Keep cool, everyone," Jolena said. "I'll see you in a week."
"We'll keep cool," said Billy. "Now we know lots of ways we can cool off when it's hot."

Cast--
Veronika: Götz Classic Kidz Vroni
Mandy: Götz Happy Kidz Katie 2015
Jolena: Götz Happy Kidz Lena in Aspen
Charlotte: Götz Happy Kidz Anna in Paris
Mariah: Götz Happy Kidz Mariah, "Chosen" from My Doll Best Friend
Billy: Götz Happy Kidz Lily at London

You can follow The Doll's Storybook here.
Do you have questions or comments for us? Would you like to order an autographed copy of one of our books? You can email us at thedollsstorybook@icloud.com.

Note: No dolls were harmed during production of this blog. All dolls shown are Götz Happy Kidz, Classic Kidz or Little Kidz. If you like these stories and are willing, please make a donation of any amount to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital or any organization that supports pediatric cancer research and treatment. We are not affiliated with St. Jude in any way other than these donations.

"The Doll's Storybook" is not affiliated with Gotz Dolls USA Inc. or Götz Puppenmanufaktur International GmbH.
Watch for the next story each Friday afternoon at 1:00 PM Pacific Time.

Mariah: Stories from The Doll's Storybook, Emil: Stories from The Doll's StorybookClassic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook and Our Favorite Verses: Poems from The Doll's Storybook are available from BookBaby and other booksellers worldwide, such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble
Royalties (net proceeds) go to support pediatric cancer research and treatment. If you don't get free shipping elsewhere, buy from Book Baby. Half of the price goes to charity (specific information available upon request). Autographed copies of all three books are available from the author. (Multiple books to the same address have a discount on shipping.) To inquire, email thedollsstorybook@icloud.com.



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Copyright © 2029, 2024 by Peggy Stuart

Water, Water

Mandy was knitting peacefully in the workroom, when she heard the door open. It was Emil, Billy and Mariah. "What's up?" Mandy...