With all the work we've done on Kaia's faerie garden, it seemed time to give it some inhabitants. I've been working on making little odds and ends out of clay to fill it with as well, I will probably post about those next. I've been interested in making her some bendy dolls for awhile, the blanks I have found to buy seem a bit to expensive for what you get, and look blocky and clumsy to me anyway. I've seen dolls like these around, they didn't look too hard. They weren't! This is how to make bendy dolls like ours.
The supplies I used to make two bendy doll bodies were:
This is just for the doll bodies, you will find clothes, wings, and baby further on.
2 pipe cleaners
4 skeins of embroidery floss
embroidery needle
scissors
2 wooden beads
hot glue gun (you could use other glue if you have more patience)
paint and paint brush (optional)
Kaia picked out the floss with me, and specifically wanted one doll brown and one cream. I painted one bead brown to match his skin, (the bead makes the head.) She picked purple and blue floss for their hair, you could certainly get away with 2, or even 1, colour of floss, and no paint, depending on the colours you choose to make.
Start by bending you pipe cleaner gently in half, and thread the bead over both stems, leaving a loop at the top. Cut lengths of floss for hair, making sure you cut it twice as long as you would like the hair end up. This goes faster if you loop it around your fingers, (or something,) and cut it off at the top and bottom.
Pull your hair halfway through the loop on your pipe cleaner, and pull the pipe cleaner the rest of the way through the bead until it holds the hair snugly on top.
On the boy doll, I pulled the pipe cleaner clear into the bead, making the hair stick up.
Now we'll form the body. Take your two loose pipe cleaner ends and give them a few twists to form the neck, then bend them out and double them back to form arms. Twist them a few more times to make the torso, and the remaining lengths are the legs. Loop the ends back to make feet. Now select the floss you chose for skin, and tie it onto your dolls waist.
Begin wrapping, not too tightly, but securely, and overlapping slightly to cover the pipe cleaner fuzz. This takes a little patience, but I found that turning the floss as I wrapped so that it lay flat, (instead of the floss being twisted,) helped a great deal. On a side note, I did also experiment with using floral wire instead of pipe cleaners and avoiding the entire fuzz problem, but found that the fuzz really works to add necessary padding, fills them out a bit, and better holds the floss in place.
Wrap from the waist up the chest, crossing over the shoulders in both directions, and wrap up the neck and back down to the first arm. Wrap down an arm, passing the floss around both wires. You do not need to cover it completely, as you will be wrapping back up the arm after completing the hand. (I did wrap it completely on my way to the hand the first time, and ended up going back and doing it the way I have pictured below. You otherwise end up wrapping the arm twice and having very stout arms.) When you get to loop at the end of the arm that forms the hand, stop, and thread your embroidery needle on.
Wrap from the waist up the chest, crossing over the shoulders in both directions, and wrap up the neck and back down to the first arm. Wrap down an arm, passing the floss around both wires. You do not need to cover it completely, as you will be wrapping back up the arm after completing the hand. (I did wrap it completely on my way to the hand the first time, and ended up going back and doing it the way I have pictured below. You otherwise end up wrapping the arm twice and having very stout arms.) When you get to loop at the end of the arm that forms the hand, stop, and thread your embroidery needle on.
You will need to wrap around the individual wire, inserting the needle inside the loop, instead of wrapping it together as you have been doing. Do this all the way around the end of the loop, and then begin wrapping both wires together again all the way back up the arm, covering all the pipe cleaner fuzz.
That's really the only part of the process that needs much explaining. Go from the first arm to the second, then down to the legs, doing the feet in the same way as the hands. After wrapping up from the last leg, I wrapped extra around the torsos until they were filled out and a little more shapely, then tied off the floss in back.
Using just a small amount of hot glue, tack the hair down around the sides and backs of their heads. Then give them each a haircut. You are done with your doll bodies!
I've seen people cloth tiny dolls in a variety of ways, but I opted to make very simple clothes out of felt. It reminded me of the clothes I used to make for troll dolls when I was little, except I didn't use any puffy paint. :) Anyway, I use recycled plastic eco-felt, as we do not use wool. I selected colours to match their hair and added some earth tones in brown and green. Other than felt, I used a needle and thread, and a few spots of hot glue to make the clothing and wings.
We'll start with our boy. I folded a small, rectangular piece of felt in half, and cut a notch at the top just big enough to squeeze over his head, then cut the rest into the shape of a t-shirt. Across the top of the shoulders is the only place connecting the layers, I took a picture of what it looks like open, as well, so you will see what I mean.
Pull it on over his head, then sew it shut up the sides, and underneath the sleeves. I just used a small straight stitch.
For trousers, I stacked two pieces of felt and cut them both out into the basic shape of trousers, the two pieces are not connected. I couldn't resist adding a little patch to the front of one leg before sewing them on. Slap a layer on his front, a layer on his back, then sew them up the outsides, up the inseams, and across the crotch.
I gathered the waist with a little piece of embroidery floss as a belt.
The neckline on his shirt was pretty loose, I cut it a bit too big, so I cut a small felt "C" shape to make a collar, and stuck it on with a little hot glue.
To make wings, I folded a piece of felt in half so that I could cut out the opposite sides of wings at the same time and have them symmetrical, then had fun with the shape as I cut. I cut several spots out of a different shade and hot glued them on the front and back sides of the wings, then put a drop of hot glue in the middle of his back and secured them in place. I also cut out a little leaf, with a few stitches through it, for the front of his shirt, and hot glued that on.
All done with him. See? I told you they were simple clothes. Now for our lady friend. The dress is cut and sewn up in the same way as the t-shirt, just a slightly different shape. I didn't want to put a collar on her, so I went around her neckline with a long basting stitch and gathered it tight before knotting it off.
I then cut out a handful of dark purple petals and tacked those on with a few stitches each around her waist.
I cut some smaller, cream coloured petals, and tacked those on in the same way, a little higher, and staggered between the larger, purple petals.
I cut a tiny apron out of felt, "strings" and all, and tied it in back, you can see the ties sticking out a bit from behind her. I also cut a small flower to decorate it with and hot glued it on the front.
To cover the little tuft of pipe cleaner on top of her head, I cut another flower and hot glued it on as a hat. Then cut and embellished wings in the same way as our boy, shaped a little differently, and hot glued those on as well.
All clothed! Now for baby. Kaia asked for them to have a baby the moment I presented the dolls to her, so I put together a very quick, simple, little wrapped baby. I may try something a little different later, however this took but a moment and satisfied Kaia just fine. Cut one large leaf shape, one thin, rectangular strip, (I rounded the edges on the side that will show,) and add one small bead. Roll the white rectangle up, and add a dab of hot glued to hold it that way.
Glue the little bead on the top, and place it on the leaf. Hot glue the sides of the leaf up onto the roll...
...then tuck the bottom up and hot glue that down as well. Now Mama, (or Papa, of course,) can hold her wee baby. (I know I couldn't get through this post without using the word "wee" at least once.) I suppose I will be needing to add a little basket of sorts to the furniture I made for the garden!
Our family is complete! At least... it is for now. Until Kaia asks for more. :)
I would love to see your dolls, please leave me a link in the comments if you make and post some!