The Kirsten Project | Happy Birthday, Kirsten!

Kirsten Birthday 3.jpg

It’s a new year and it’s time for another edition of The Kirsten Project! I’ve already recreated her looks from Meet Kirsten, Kirsten’s Surprise and Changes for Kirsten and for this version, I’m taking inspiration from Happy Birthday, Kirsten!


LITTLE JESS around age 10, wearing a mom-made birthday dress and apron, a gift I received for my own tenth birthday, just like kirsten!

LITTLE JESS around age 10, wearing a mom-made birthday dress and apron, a gift I received for my own tenth birthday, just like kirsten!

The mission of The Kirsten Project is to study and recreate each cover illustration and corresponding outfit through a cultural and historical lens. I’m not doing a carbon copy – rather using the Pleasant Company books and material culture together with research such as fashion plates, extant dresses and daguerrotypes to inspire my costumes.

In my first three outfits I stayed pretty close to the Pleasant Company source material, making allowances for style differences between girls and women (primarily making the skirt hems longer) and my fabric choices (for example, for my Meet costume I used the color story in a print I designed to scale better for an adult dress).


ORIGINAL COVER OF HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KIRSTEN! by Janet Shaw, ILLUSTRATED by RENÉe Graef

ORIGINAL COVER OF HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KIRSTEN! by Janet Shaw, ILLUSTRATED by RENÉe Graef

This time, I’m planning on taking a slightly new approach to Kirsten’s springtime dress. As you can see in the gorgeous cover art illustrated by Renée Graef, she wears a puffed sleeve pink gingham dress with a white pinafore, red boots and flower crown.

If you look at each of the first four historical characters’ birthday dresses, a common thread is the feminine and fluffy style. For example, Felicity, Kirsten and Samantha all wear pink dresses with aprons or pinafores layered on top and flowers in their hair. The original American Girls, Kirsten, Samantha and Molly all have some sort of gathering or ruffles on their dresses. And yet, of all of those four characters, because of her circumstances (penniless immigrant pioneer farm daughter), Kirsten would have probably been least likely to get a special dress just for her birthday, or even just for the spring season. I know I know. Part of the fun of the American GIrl books and dolls are new occasions and the special new outfits but if history is speaking, it’s unlikely Kirsten would have enjoy such an ensemble. And yet, the costume still reflects to the era and I’m so excited to show you how I plan to interpret this into my costume.

Birthday.jpg

So here’s how this edition is going to be different…

I’ve spent a lot of research time on the everyday practical dresses of the mid 19th century, so I’d like to change lanes and use the cover look of Happy Birthday, Kirsten! to explore the fashion trends of the 1850s. I’ll stay true to the pink and white color scheme but interpret Kirsten’s childlike silhouette into something that a stylish adult woman could have worn.

In the next few weeks I hope to source and order the 8-12 (!!!) yards of fabric I need for the dress I’ll be creating, plus flowers, boots, accessories, and baby kittens (jk). My previous costumes were made thanks to the very generous financial support of my friends and readers and if you’ve enjoyed my work, I’d really love your backing on this edition too. It means so much to me to have your words of encouragement and patronage on this project!

You can chip in any amount via venmo.com/jessicajquirk or paypal.me/whatiwore

Between now and the final costume reveal, I’ll be posting my research here on my blog, which will aim to give background context to the choices I’ve made in the end look. Thanks for joining me with The Kirsten Project! I’ve loved every second of planning, creating and sharing it with you!

My original copy of happy Birthday, kirsten! with my original pleasant company doll’s dress. the flower crown is homemade.

My original copy of happy Birthday, kirsten! with my original pleasant company doll’s dress. the flower crown is homemade.


Comments

One response to “The Kirsten Project | Happy Birthday, Kirsten!”

  1. (I just discovered this project. This is incredibly cool–thanks so much for sharing this!)

    Since the "birthday" dresses are fancy spring dresses, I’ve always thought that for most characters they’d represent her Easter dress, which she would then wear as her nicest "comfortable for the season" dress on her birthday as well. That’s how I’m treating it with the historical characters I’ve created for myself, anyway.

    A couple years back I started trying to save money and be kind to the environment by using less heating and cooling. A side effect has been learning (or re-learning: my parents were the same way) the importance of seasonal changes to comfort. When you live this way you need a lot more clothes–well–more than I (not very fashionable) was used to having! Because unless you want to live in slimy sweat clothes every summer or else be miserably cold most of the time…you need a different outfit for each season. (Not necesarily all different clothes…but a different "kit," if you know what I mean!)

    (TBH, as a child, I was just miserably cold most of the time. My parents overlooked that popular "wash and wear" children’s clothes of the 1980s simply were not as warm as the adult woolens that their appearance imitated. Then I got Kirsten’s winter outfit for Christmas. They got it just as an extremely extravagant "dress like your doll" gift since I enjoyed those–but it was the first wool seater I’d ever had. It was so warm! I was so warm! I lived in that sweater for the next two years, as long as I could get into it. You couldn’t find another children’s wool sweater.)

    Anyway, I thought your "open neck over shirtwaist" find was fascinating! That would definitely be a way to make the same dress work for both spring and summer. (Plus warmer petticoats in spring, of course!)

    Did you happen to find out if puff sleeves would’ve ever been correct for a child in the 1850s?

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