January 1, 2008

Here you will find Izannah Walker doll pictures, writings about original antique Izannah Walker dolls,
and links to museums and shops and other sites which refer to Izannah Walker dolls. This Izannah site is a labor of love for Izannah Walker doll lovers everywhere. Be sure to look in the backposts as there are lots of information and picturs in them. Brew a cup of tea and enjoy!

Dixie Redmond
Go to my Northdixie Designs blog!

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Izannah and Jane Walker



In one of Monica Bessette's articles she suggests that some of the dolls that we know as Izannah Walker dolls were actually made by Jane Walker. I find this an interesting nugget, and of course, it would be lovely to know more. Today I received an e-mail from Diane Goodwin with a link to a Youtube clip of a walking tour of Somerset, Massachusetts. If you watch the clip and fast foward to the point of 6:20, you can see the early Walker house located at 373 Main Street. Diane pointed out there were a couple of errors - one being that Izannah and Jane lived in the house in the early twentieth century - that should be nineteenth century. And the narration ends with "the product is still known today as the Jane Walker doll." Hmmm. The plot thickens?

Courtesy of the Somerset Historical Society
373 Main Street
where Izannah and Jane Walker
are believed to have lived.


Friday, November 14, 2008

Izannah's Molds?

Recently I was reading German Papier Mache Dolls 1760-1860. In it they show some pictures of wax models used to make Voit molds. The wax models are so beautiful! And it's amazing that they've survived so long. This got me to wondering:

"What happened to
Izannah Walker's doll molds?"


Did they get left to a family member? A friend? Did they get broken upon her death? Are they moldering at some roadside antique shop somewhere in America? And would anyone know what they are if they saw them there?

There are a few dollmakers that I respect who have made a doll in the way that Izannah originally did - with a hard core, covered with layers of fabric that had been impregnated with something that stiffened the fabric and set in a mold. This was then covered with batting, which was covered with stockinette which was covered with paste which was painted. Phew! A lot of steps. And yet we see the longevity that the process gave her works
.

Inquiring minds want to know a lot about Izannah.
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