We will be adding photos, beginning with ancient dolls, as an annexe to the museum; visit us on Facebook, Dr. E's Doll Museum, and on Twitter @Dr. E's Doll Museum. We also have Facebook pages Doll Universe, Antique Doll, and Dr. R. We are on Flickr under Ellen Tsagaris, and ISSUU as Old Dolls. Our other Twitter account is Old Dolls. On Instagram, we are ellen_tsagaris. In keeping with our new non profit name, we've changed the name of this blog. All we need now is the building!!
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Sunday, May 26, 2024
Six years ago we Began
Museum timeline
over twenty years sgo, I started writing s business plan for my future doll museum. I also drafted articles of incorporation and bylaws. I have axsketch books with display designs and ideas, hand drawn.
After some stops and starts, we got tax numbers for not for profits and filed all the paperwork. That will be six years ago this July. Almost five years ago, we opened in a small rented space. we stayed one year. during that time, we won the bid on our ild branch library building
I started working on moving things immediately after a derecbo where we lost power. I was hot, but light enough. still our parking lot was littered with doll shoes and toy parts. It took a year to get it all up, and we still are a work in progress.
We keep at it with help from the rest of our awesome board. Thanks to all our supporters and to the memory of my famuly, who made all this possible.
Sunday, May 19, 2024
Skyward from our guest blogger, Dr. David Levy on the Northern Lights
Skyward for June 2024.
By
David H. Levy
Aurora Borealis over Arctic Circle 2020
is
The Aurora Boreali, East Jordan MI, photo by David Levy
For the last few nights I have been looking in one particular direction of the sky: the northeast. Over a period of four nights, I have noticed a faint glow in that direction. It wasn’t bright, certainly nothing about which to write home, but it was the aurora borealis. It is a direct message from the Sun to us, a cosmic hello to we the people here on Earth. I also was aware that this aurora was a direct result of a gigantic group of at least 60 sunspots that had been rowing across the surface of the Sun.
The Northern lights and I have been good friends since my first view of a small display, back in 1961 when I was just beginning my teenage years. I duly informed Louis Duchow, the person in charge of aurora reports at the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada’s Montreal Centre. “Did you write up a report on it?” he asked. When I answered in the negative, he said, “Then you really haven’t seen it.” It was a silly answer but there was a morsel of truth in it. I began filling out Aurora reports pretty religiously after that.
The night of July 8, 1966, was the night without a dusk. The Sun set, and as I watched the darkening sky, the sky just didn’t get dark. Instead, the post-sunset glow slowly shifted from the northwest to the north, and then just stayed there. The sky also gradually turned a bright green as the auroral glow grew brighter. Then the first bright ray appeared, and within an hour, rays were growing all over the sky. Two months later, a even better display lit up the whole sky from Montreal. I was waiting for a bus to go to the Observatory for their typical Saturday night meeting when I saw a giant coronal arc at the zenith of the sky. I just turned around and walked home to watch this mighty show.
Over the years I have seen other displays of the northern lights, some from the northeast, and several from my current home in southern Arizona. Possibly the nicest one took place from the great auroral arc around the Arctic circle. Our airplane took off from Whitehorse, in Canada’s Yukon territory, and the instant pur plane rose above the clouds the sky was covered with aurora.
The Northern Lights are best seen without any optical aid at all, without binoculars, without a telescope. When the display appears, just open your eyes and relish the sight. Next to a total eclipse of the Sun, about which I wrote last month, the aurora is one of Nature’s grandest spectacles.
Thursday, April 18, 2024
"The really avid collector feels that she should buy as many dolls as possible so as to preserve them . . . " Kay Desmond, The All Color Book of Dolls.
When I get really discouraged, I turn to my books, especially books about dolls. I love those by my friends, the late R. Lane Herron, and the late Mary Hillier, and also the introductory pages of Carl Fox's The Doll. Desmond's book is a recent reread, and the above quote just struck me.
They remind me of why I started collecting, and why I started the museum.
Do you have an inspiration quote or author that keeps you going? We'd love to know at the museum.
Sunday, March 31, 2024
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: The Mad Collector in the Basement; Established Dol...
Dr. E's Doll Museum Blog: The Mad Collector in the Basement; Established Dol...: Recently, I learned of a program to be given at a future doll convention. It purports to tell us all how to start a doll museum. Key point
Paper Dolls a brief a Brief History by Request
Recent visitors to American Doll and Toy Museum asked to see paper dolls. We have thousands, maybe tens of thousands in our collection. Some are in a map case in my private museum office. Others are still boxed or filed away. I've taken some out and have started doing a photo study.
As early as 3000 B.C., Ancient Egyptians were making papyrus paper. In around 2450 B.C., animal skins began to be used for paper, a practice still used during the Middle Ages and after with vellum, made from calf skin, and other paper made from sheepskin, hence why academic diplomas are nicknamed "Sheepskins." Originas were just that.
2000 years ago or so, paper made from cloth was first develped in Ancient Asia, especially China. Paper figures are associated with the Milky Way Festival in Ancient Japan, and similar funerary paper dolls are still sold in Malaysia. These are burned in various ceremonies. In the Crazy Rich Asians novels, a paper doll hoPapuse version of a mansion is burned as part of a funeral service.
Before I start, let me note that this is the best site I've found for paper dolls and their history, plus it has lavish illustrations; The Paper Collector. http://thepapercollector.blogspot.com/
It is a blog, but I like beginning research with blogs; I find most are written by people who are passionate and who care. This one is no exception.
Paper has existed for centuries, and was probably invented by the Chinese. Though, the Ancient Egyptians had papyrus, and others wrote on vellum. Rare medieval manuscripts and illuminations were painted by hand in monasteries by talented monks; the famous tome of these is The Book of Kells, represented in artwork done for Colleen Moore's Fairy Castle.
Books and paper were rare and prized in Europe. Wealthy people posed with their libraries, showing that the more books they owned, the wealthier they were. The book A Gentle Madness describes famous book collectors, all wealthy, who had "rock star" status. Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, a 17th century Mexican scholar, mathematician, poet and writer who was also a child prodigy and a nun, kept a library of 2500 books and manuscripts in her cell. She is often painted with them. For her talent and genius, she was famous in both Spain and Mexico, and was the granddaughter of the viceroy of Mexico. Early manuscripts that have survived by Cervantes, Byron, Keats, Wordsworth, and other 15th-19th century writers show that they conserved paper, saved old manuscripts, wrote on scratch paper, and wrote all over the page, turning it upside down, writing on margins, etc. Paper was collected and sold at rag and bone shops, and would not be thrown out. Our modern day recycling hearkens back to this era.
In Japan, origami has long been a treasured art. Figures of paper have often represented the souls of the departed and were used in ceremonies where they were thrown into water at the end. Paper figures are burned in similar rites in Malaysia. Paper scrolls play a role in the Japanese Milky Way festival, as described by Rumer Godden in her story of two Japanese dolls, Miss Happiness and Miss Flower. There is a paper doll in love with a lead soldier in Hans Christian Andersen's
"The Steadfast Tin Soldier."
As we know them, paper dolls were created in the 18th century, more as amusements for adults than children. Indeed, Mary Hillier and Helen Young have written that 19th century jointed pantins originated in France. Supposedly, a law was written prohibiting them, lest pregnant women give birth to deformed children because they played too much with the paper dolls themselves. These jumping jacks still exist. Shackman reproduced the original Polichinelle varieties, but they are also made in wood. Often, they come from German or Italy. I have a rare, X-raged one done in metal involving a couple with 1920s style hairdos. This is a family blog; I'll leave the rest to your imagination.
Paper dolls were often hand tinted, and represented fashions of the day. There are fashion plates made of ivory, very thin, where images of hats and wigs are laid over a head to try out the latest styles. There are examples of these in the Cincinnati Museum of Art.
The books of foremost authority R. Lane Herron also feature great articles on paper dolls, as do the books of Janet Pagter John and Clara Hallard Fawcett. Mr. Herron was the first authority to write on and publish about, paper dolls.
By the time The History of Little Fanny and The History of Little Henry came around, lithography was being used in books and paper, and paper dolls could now be lithographed and mass produced. Fine examples exist from the 1820s to 1890s. Paper dolls, often printed on both sides, where used to advertised products, so that Lion Coffee and other companies used them as others did trade cards. There is also as set featuring Queen Isabella and other European queens that dates from the 1892 Columbian Exhibition.
There will be more on the handmade varieties that abound, some in 3-D, as well as a word on paper toys and printables, as well as paper doll houses. For those who crave more, I recommend Marilyn Waters The Toy Maker site, Jim's Mini Printables and Marilee's Paper Doll Page.
Several years ago, I saw an exhibit at the Chicago Historical Society of manuscripts by the Romantic poets including Byron and Wordsworth. Both wrote all over their manuscript, in the side margins, across the tops and bottom, and on the back. Paper was precious. I can imagine Byron sitting in the house of Lords, bored, and writing poems, scribbling frantically, half listening to what was happening around him.a
Below are images from our paper doll and pape related collections:

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