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December 3, 2013

 

Marotte Toy 

Special Christmas Edition by miniature artisan Sandra Morris

ChristmasMarotteToy 

Marottes (or poupards) were small carved wooden dolls that were made throughout Europe from the late 17th century.  Simple versions were carved in one piece and usually represented a baby in swaddling clothes.  Later dolls had separately made limbs attached to a turned body and head, and were often found in family, farm, village or Noah’s ark family groups.  Poupards with a musical movement triggered when the doll was twirled were called marottes.

 

You will need:

 

Instructions

 

1. Glue the end of the wooden handle into the neck of the head.  You may need to ‘sharpen’ the end so that it fist neatly into the neck opening.  Set aside till glue is completely dry.  

photo 1

 

2. Unravel a length of hair-coloured bunka so that if forms a curly ‘frizz’.  Apply a thin layer of glue over the head where you want the hair to stick.  The easiest way to apply the hair is to start at the nape of the neck and follow a spiral pattern, around the head, finishing at the top of the crown. 

photo2

3. Cut 4 lengths of 4mm wide silk ribbon in both red and green.  These should be just long enough to fit from under the head to ¾ of the way down the handle.  Cut one end at an angle.  

4. Glue a tiny pinhead crystal onto the angled end of the silk ribbon, green on red, red on green. 

5. Glue these ribbon streamers around the neck of the head in two rows, alternating the colours.

photo3

6. Cut a 3” length of 7mm wide red silk ribbon.  Gather tightly and glue around the neck, over the top raw edges of the ribbon streamers so that it forms a ruff.  

photo 4

7. Now make a simple hat using two small pieces of red silk.  This can be any shape you like so long as it has a front and a back.  My marotte has a ‘crescent moon’ shaped hat, but you can experiment with different styles and shapes.  Glue the front and back of the hat together around the outside edges, leaving the bottom open so that it will fit onto the head.  Glue picot braid or other similar small scale trimming around the raw edges of the hat. 

8. Glue the hat onto the head and allow to dry before proceeding. 

photo5

9. Decorate the hat with silk ribbon rosette bows, feathers etc.  Finish off the hat at the back with a larger silk ribbon rosette bow. 

photo6

 

Finished marotte toy

photo7 

 

Sandra Morris
http://www.towerhousedolls.co.uk
Read my blog - Tales From A Toymaker at http://towerhousedolls.blogspot.com
Member of http://www.artisansinminiature.com

 

Feeling creative now? See also polymer_clay , diy_character_dolls . 

 

Go back to the advent_calendar_2013 .

 

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