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Nick Cave
Lisa Lichtenfels dolls
 I’m so inlove with her work. Her dolls are breathtaking beautiful, strong statements and an inspiration.
http://www.lisalichtenfels.net/index.html
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Lisa Lichtenfels studied traditional oil painting at an early age, attended the Governor’s School while a teenager and continued her education at the Philadelphia College of Art. There she met Judy Jampell, who was becoming well known for her three dimensional soft-sculpted facades. Inspired, Lisa was going to be an illustrator until the prospect of independent animation and filmmaking fascinated her. Graduating with majors in Illustration and Film, she was immediately hired by the Disney Studios as an apprentice animator.
While working at Disney she developed three-dimensional figurines with posable skeletons for stop-motion animation. Like Judy Jampell’s constructions, they had nylon stocking skins. Lisa left Disney to explore the potential of these techniques, expecting to return to animation in a year or so; but it has now been over twenty-five years, and she is still working in nylon and feels she has only barely begun to realize what is possible in the medium.
Lisa works in her studio of her Victorian home in Springfield, Massachusetts. There she creates startlingly realistic sculptures with a wide variety of subject matter, including fantasy, myth, humor, and portraiture. The individual figures range from less than 5 inches to life-sized figures of over 5 feet tall. She also does large environmental installations with many characters. In this she is helped by her husband, the poet Jeremy Ward Wilson, who does her carpentry.Â
These sculptures and installations have been sold directly, or through agents and galleries, to collectors from all over the world.
Snow!!!
Thank you everybody for the beautiful snow!
I’m trying to send them too, but LJ is having fun ,making me feel like an idiot! Meh!
So Juno, Mw, Mis_t, Kyria
Thank you!
And i’m still working on Regency girl
I love Regency…well, if you are a lady of good breading…hmmm
…being a servant in those days does not appeal to me in the least!
I’ve been working all day on my new regency doll!
Well at least on the dress.
I love making regency dolls.And i am in love with this dress.
And i found a very interesting blog, where someone expresses much better than i ever could, my thoughts and feelings about the most recent adaptations of the classic novels.
The way a woman wears her hair says a lot about the woman and her times, never more so than in the past. Needless departures from such truths serve no purpose other than to hopelessly muddle a story and needlessly distort our view of women in history.
http://www.democraticwings.com/democraticwings/archives/womens_rights/003772.php
…Or any novel adaptation as a matter of fact!
Harry Potter does come to mind! *sigh*
Fun and easy
A little something i made for a Christmas gift!
The pattern is from Collen Babcock and really easy and fun to make!
It’s a great gift, and if you make some changes and make it baby friendly, you can even make a baby funky doll!
http://themagicbean.typepad.com/the_magic_bean/2007/06/free_pattern.html
OMG!
Go check this amazing site where Lisa Lichtenfels shows her breathtaking work.
http://www.lisalichtenfels.net/index.html
Oh..and yes…these are dolls!
Flapper almost finished.
Miss Marple, ditto.
Ballerina ,ditto.
Still to make:
A witch
An Elf called Iz
Jane Austen.
And some small Christmas gifts.
*sigh*
Oh and, Christmas tree! 😀
I like living. I have sometimes been wildly, despairingly, acutely miserable, racked with sorrow, but through it all I still know quite certainly that just to be alive is a grand thing.
Agatha Christie