The Historic Mini-Gown Extravaganza! Matilda,1830s Mode
Hello again folks! Building on my ‘A Girl for All Time’ fanpost from last time, just thought I’d share a few pictures of some of the little dresses and accessories I’ve made over the years!
First off, my very first A Girl for All Time Doll purchase: Matilda.
Matilda was the first doll in the range - and for a long time she was the only one you could get your hands on, as the the later version sold out so fast! These days it tends to be the other way around, and she’s only available through scouring the second-hand dolls on Ebay.
Now, I love Matilda, because she has this lovely, still little “listening” expression on her face! She’s not vacuous-looking or conventionally gorgeous - she’s got a quiet dignity about her that I just adore. Thought I’ve never really thought of her as being Tudor, even though that’s the way she’s marketed. She reminds me of a young Queen Victoria more: or maybe Jane Eyre or Beth from Little Women…
And as there were some lovely 1830s patterns released from PemberleyThreads… well… this happened:
She just looked so 1830s it was almost unreal! So, in a twinkling, Matilda the young Tudor lady-in-waiting time-travelled forward a couple of hundred years to become Miss Matilda, an elegant young lady from the Romantic era…
This was the very first gown I made her, out of some IKEA cotton voile curtain scraps! I wanted to recreate the airy, diaphanous look of the muslin gowns of the period. I accentuated it with some delicate crochet lace at the hem and neckline, and lightly tacked on some little blue paper flowers at the bodice for decoration. I used the PemberleyThreads ‘Victoria’ Pattern’ which was a dream to sew up.
After that, I created a little grey plaid cotton long-sleeved dress for daywear. Here Matilda is definitely channelling the delicate Beth ‘I must keep to the house until spring comes, due to my delicate health!’ look. I added bias binding ‘ribbons’ to her shoulders in the same colour as her sash to make the gown just a little less plain.
Here she’s showing off her Shakespeare collection, which was a great find on EBay , as they were perfectly sized for her! These are just cheap miniature novelty gift-shop items from Stratford-Upon-Avon, but they look great as books for dolls - or even just as props in a scene or background photo.
(The keen-eyed American Girl fan will recognise Rebecca’s shawl and Felicity’s backdrop in the picture here My mother was an avid AG collector for a while and I freely piggybacked her collection for the benefit of my 16 inch dolls, as they fit into it just as well…)
And here we have a little historical dressing gown I made for Matilda out of blue-plaid cotton - scraps left over from an old re-enactment apron. This is actually the Pemberly Threads Clara Nightgown pattern - just worn back-to-front without the back sewn up to form a loose dressing robe - a quick sewing hack, but it turned out well and made a mighty fine dressing gown for Matilda to wear over her nightgown (her own, as well as the little nightcap)
Well, that’s all the pictures Tumblr will let me post this time round! Stay tuned for 1830s mode part 2…