An American Girl

Dressing up at Kirsten American Girl

EDIT: This post was original written in 2016 but I’m reposting it now to correspond with the #FallforCostume challenge I have been participating in on Instagram. Also! A lot of you have mentioned to me that your dolls’ hair was all frizzed out and these are proof mine was too! She was sent to the doll hospital for a new mane towards the end of the time I played with her!

As a little girl, I went through what I can best describe as my “pioneer” phase. I was absolutely, completely obsessed with the nineteenth century. I wore bonnets and bloomers (to school!) and relied on the American Girl and Little House on the Prairie books for guidance into my “old fashioned” life. 

It all started when I received an American Girl catalogue in the mail. My best guess was that it came in the mid-90s and it was pretty much the only way I spent my allowance for a good five years.  My neighborhood friends had their own American Girl dolls and I wanted one so badly, but my parents thought they were too expensive for an all out gift, so compromised with me. If I saved for half of the price, they’d match it and order the doll. I can’t remember how long it took me to save, but on a chilly day in October, I went into my parents bedroom and told my mom I was ready to order my Kirsten. She had me count out the dollars and coins to make sure I had the right amount.  She picked up the receiver of the telephone, paused, and hung it up. Then she reached under the bed and pulled out the burgundy box with Kirsten inside. Just recounting this memory makes me want to cry! It’s hard to put into words what that doll meant to me and how her story shaped my childhood. That October afternoon was easily one of the best memories of my young life! 

It wasn’t just the doll, but the history that went with her. For birthdays and Christmas my mom would sew me and Kirsten matching dresses. Sometimes they would be new designs and color patterns, but mostly the dresses sewn for me were made to match something from Kirsten’s series. Underneath I wore petticoats and pantaloons, thick black tights and lace up boots. Around that time my grandma gave me a box full of handmade undergarments that her neighbors had brought over from Germany in the late 1800s. Even though they were made for adult women, they were tiny and fit my tween size perfectly. I now see how learning about the fashions of the 1850s influenced my love for costume history! 

In addition to the clothing, a lot of my childhood pastimes directly corresponded with the era. At this age I took up hand sewing and quilting – mainly pillows but I also made a full sized quilt when I was ten! I wish I had photos of those pieces here, but they’re all safely stored at my parents house – I’ll grab some snaps next time I’m visiting!

Happy Birthday Kirsten

I didn’t stop with quilting – I also dyed my own fabric using locally (hyper local – mulberry trees from our backyard) berries. I crushed them into muslin fabric to create a pinkish tone and from that, I cut out and appliquéd a little heart onto a pillow – the perfect size for my pint sized doll.

In the kitchen, my dad helped me make apple raisin porridge out of the Kirsten cookbook and I churned my own butter (using a pint of cream, a marble, a Ball jar and tons of shaking!) 

I loved going to antique stores and visiting historical sites and especially my aunt and uncle’s 1885 farm house (we took our wedding photos there!) We even took a family trip to Colonial Williamsburg when I was in fifth grade. I still have dreams of working on a historical farm, even if it’s only for a week or a month. Adam and I have been very into a BBC collection of shows based on that concept – Victorian Farm, Edwardian Farm, Tudor Monastery Farm… we love them all! 

Homemade Kirsten Outfits

In researching for this post, I did some googling of Kirsten books and images and the nostalgia that crept in was so heartwarming. Opening the window into this world of history has such a special place in my heart. I really really loved that doll and her story and pretending that I was a little girl in pioneer times. I loved getting dressed up in historical costumes and doing old timey things. 

Now I see how much my parents encouraged me and supported my interests – reading, sewing and cooking alongside me! I hope I can do the same for my own kids someday… maybe my little girl will play with my Kirsten doll too. 

Kirsten Saves the Day


Comments

2 responses to “An American Girl”

  1. Tricia Mulder Avatar
    Tricia Mulder

    I raised 4 daughters on American Girl Dolls. My oldest step daughter’s name is Kirsten! I loved those books and those dolls so much. The magazine was always looked forward to in our house, mostly by me. I went to the American Doll Store in Chicago (without my daughters) when it was in the old brownstone and it was wonderful to see the girls having lunch with their dolls in the restaurant and the dolls at the salon getting their hair done. It was hard when my daughters outgrew Hello Kitty and it was even more painful when they outgrew the American Girl dolls. (My oldest daughter got her picture in Sunset Magazine wearing her American Girl shirt.)

    I hadn’t checked in our your blog in awhile and I’m so glad that I started looking again. You are so talented and beautiful and your daughter is gorgeous.

  2. Pooh Bear Avatar
    Pooh Bear

    We’re like soul sisters! If we were the same age at the same time, we would have been twins. Kirsten is my best girl too! I was deep into my Little House pioneer phase. I wanted to be Laura Ingalls and when I saw Kirsten in the first catalog, it was like my dreams had come true. I didn’t even like dolls so my parents said no when I asked if I could have her. I was saving my own money for her when Santa came through and brought her for Christmas the next year. We started celebrating St. Lucia’s Day the year before and now I make St. Lucia buns ever year for Christmas morning. I have so many special memories with my Kirsten. I just made her long cabin room of the dollhouse I’m working on (in an IKEA wardrobe) and bought her a rag rug (trivet) to stand on so her feet don’t get cold. She’s my most special and spoiled girl! Yes her hair is frizzy but it makes me think of the fun times we had. I love your photos and always wished someone would do that for me. I ceased to be cute around the time I got Kirsten and the neighbor boys teased me relentlessly so I probably would never have agreed to it if it had been suggested. I like photographing my Kirsten though. She’s still cute over 30 years later.

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