The winning designer will receive their design made for their American Girl Doll plus the 2012 Girl of the Year American Girl Doll McKenna Brooks (for free)! 2nd and 3rd Place winners can redeem their prizes at www.libertyjaneclothing.com and libertyjanepatterns.com Guest Judge: Ali of GOTYS!! Want to see a picture of McKenna? Check out this post on the Doll Diaries Blog: dolldiaries.com Entries can be posted december 19th through January 15th at Midnight Pacific. No purchase necessary. Void Where Prohibited. CLick the comment box below and then click "create a video response" to post your video entry. Read all of the official rules and detail at out blog: blog.libertyjaneclothing.com Thanks everyone, Cinnamon & Libby Ps. Do us a favor, if you are on Pinterest, then comment & like this video. Here is the link: pinterest.com
Win McKenna Brooks – LJC 2012 New Years Design Contest
May 21st, 2012Posted in Videos | No Comments »
Essence fest adds 4th day to spotlight new talent
May 21st, 2012NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The next generation moves to the forefront at this year’s Essence Music Festival, which expands to four days of concerts and sets aside a day of activities geared toward emerging talent.
The up-and-comers will perform on the festival’s opening day, July 5. Rising stars Diggy Simmons, the OMG Girlz and New Orleans‘ own Roots of Music will play on the New & Next Stage next to the Superdome.
Simmons is the son of Run DMC star Joseph Simmons. His uncle is record producer Russell Simmons.
The festival, which ends July 8, has been held every Independence Day weekend since its inception in 1995, when it marked the 25th anniversary of Essence magazine.
Essence Communications President Michelle Ebanks told The Associated Press the addition of a young-people-focused fourth day underscores the festival’s goal of giving new talent a springboard.
“The youth empowerment experience was part of the festival’s original design,” she said.
Focusing on pushing up youth had before now been the “unofficial” start of the festival’s free daily “empowerment experience,” which seeks to tackle issues affecting minority communities and underscored its goal of moving the community and its people forward, she said.
“We felt it was important now to formally expand the festival to four days and formally move that youth experience into the spotlight,” Ebanks said.
“Diggy Simmons, the OMG Girlz and the Roots of Music are of the moment and speak to the new and next generation,” she said. “The Essence Music Festival is all about featuring performances from artists who are very experienced and beloved who have long track records. This stage allows us to look at who might be the next Mary J. Blige or D’Angelo and we want to celebrate that.”
Simmons and members of the OMG Girlz said they hadn’t attended the festival but were in awe of the opportunity to entertain in a venue that’s seen acts such as Beyonce, Usher, Kanye West, Alicia Keys, Prince and Janet Jackson.
“It’s definitely a big deal,” Simmons said. “I’m excited about playing at such a big event.”
Simmons and the OMG Girlz have shared the same stage before — during 2011′s Scream Tour.
Bahja “Miss Beauty” Rodriguez, 15, said performing on the Essence festival’s “brand new stage” set up to showcase them was huge.
“We’re just so honored,” she said. “It gives us a chance to appeal to a bigger audience and to perform before people who haven’t heard of us.”
Zonnique “Miss Star” Pullins, 16, agreed, adding that the event “will give people a chance to see what we’re about.”
“Hopefully, we can build our fan base,” she said.
The Atlanta-based girl group, which also includes 17-year-old Breaunna “Miss Baby Doll” Womak, was created in 2009 by Kiesha Miles and Tameka “Tiny” Harris, who is also Star’s mother and whose stint with the 1990s group Xscape helped guide the trio to a deal with Interscope Records.
The girls also are scheduled to perform July 6 at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.
Simmons, 17, of Queens, N.Y., recently dropped his debut album, “Unexpected Arrival,” which features rapper Jadakiss, and R&B singers Jeremih and Tank. Simmons said he purposely kept the collaborations on this project at a minimum.
“I loved working with them,” he said of the guest artists, “but I just wanted to showcase myself and showcase what I do.”
The Girlz and Simmons each push a positive energy that Essence felt was conducive for the “New & Next” stage, Ebanks said.
“We sought groups who we could look to move youth forward as examples through their own experiences that might help point them in a better direction,” she said.
“We try to bring a lot of positivity through our group,” said Baby Doll. “We love what we’re doing and we get along. We try to leave the drama on TV. It’s an honor and a blessing to be in this kind of spotlight and we want to use (the fame) wisely.”
“It’s just how our parents raised us to be,” Beauty said. “We like being a role model.”
“A lot of girls look up to us,” added Star. “We’re able to talk to them about things we’ve been through or are going through.”
Simmons said he’s thankful for being able to positively inspire his fans.
“My message is always that it doesn’t matter where you come from, go for whatever it is you want to do,” he said. “Don’t let life or distractions get in your way. Don’t fall for peer pressure. Be yourself, be the person you want to be. The best thing you can ever do is bring what you want to the table.”
Ebanks said young people from throughout the New Orleans area and beyond will participate in a program that will include presentations from community leaders including Mayor Mitch Landrieu and his wife, Cheryl.
Landrieu has started a mentoring project called “Saving Our Sons,” to help curb crime and violence in the city while Cheryl Landrieu’s “Girl Up NOLA” seeks to inspire and motivate young girls.
“The mayor and first lady are calling upon the community to invest in the lives of our young men and woman and these projects are the centerpiece of the program,” she said.
The Roots Crusader Marching Band, which will appear in the 2013 Tournament of Roses Parade, also will be featured at Essence.
The band is an offshoot of the Roots of Music, a non-profit group that provides free music education, tutoring and mentorship for children ages 9-14. The group was founded in 2007 by Derrick Tabb, drummer for the Grammy-winning Rebirth Brass Band, and has notable supporters such as Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews, Raphael Saddiq, Ani DiFranco, actor Tim Robbins and producer David Simon.
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Art students spend senior year at St. Albert painting mural
May 21st, 2012
It took seven art-class students at St. Albert Catholic High School the better part of their senior year to design and create a mural for the high school’s entryway, painting their artistic visions on 21 acoustical tiles of varying sizes and shapes.
The finished product surrounds three sides of the school’s statue of St. Albert. The student artwork draws the eye as it conveys a sense of the building’s purpose.
The largest piece is a single “Welcome” design on three separate tiles. Josh Cochran did that.
“One of the janitors gave us the idea for the mural. It took about three-fourths of the year,” Josh said.
Josh was one of the student artists driven to create the tribute to the school. So was George Doll, who liked the suggestion by retired maintenance man Harold Russell.
“I thought it was a great idea. We could leave our mark on the school,” George said.
With official approval and under the supervision of their teacher, Josh and George took on the project along with Sam Rooker, Nicole Bighia, Sydney Archer, Haley Scanlan and Ben Kurz.
“They’re all good. They’re all talented,” art teacher Sheila Downey said. She’s the one who asked for volunteers last spring after the discussion with Russell.
“When they started out, they all had ideas. Nicole drew up a whole plan and they divided the work,” Downey said, and the young artists all signed the smaller tile at the left side of the mural.
The St. Albert mural themes range from math and music to art and athletics.
“I came up with the plan in one class period after the discussions. I thought it would be challenging. The biggest challenge was writing and drawing on the tiles,” Nicole said. The students used the backs of the porous tiles as their canvas, and they all signed their individual works.
“I thought it would be less work,” Haley admitted, “but I’d say it’s pretty awesome.”
The students said the art project could be compared to creating a mural or a mosaic, with tiles of differing sizes. In addition, the design was directional, “There were a few tiles in which we painted in the wrong direction,” Ben said.
“We had to cut some pieces to make them smaller,” Sam added.
In addition, some of the acoustical tiles had been in place for years, and the backs of those tiles had not seen the light of day for years. When they were removed to be redone for their new life as a work art, “They were pretty dirty,” Downey said.
The students estimated they put in about four hours a week for most of the school year, and they were adding the final touches this week.
“We made sure everything flowed,” Sydney said. She came into the project at the mid-point, which she admitted made it “a little harder, but I’ve got the final piece going now.”
“Toward the end, they were ready to be finished,” Downey said.
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Essence Music Festival in New Orleans adds 4th day of concerts to spotlight rising stars
May 18th, 2012NEW ORLEANS – The next generation moves to the forefront at this year’s Essence Music Festival, which expands to four days of concerts and sets aside a day of activities geared toward emerging talent.
The up-and-comers will perform on the festival’s opening day, July 5. Rising stars Diggy Simmons, the OMG Girlz and New Orleans’ own Roots of Music will play on the New & Next Stage next to the Superdome.
Simmons is the son of Run DMC star Joseph Simmons. His uncle is record producer Russell Simmons.
The festival, which ends July 8, has been held every Independence Day weekend since its inception in 1995, when it marked the 25th anniversary of Essence magazine.
Essence Communications President Michelle Ebanks told The Associated Press the addition of a young-people-focused fourth day underscores the festival’s goal of giving new talent a springboard.
“The youth empowerment experience was part of the festival’s original design,” she said.
Focusing on pushing up youth had before now been the “unofficial” start of the festival’s free daily “empowerment experience,” which seeks to tackle issues affecting minority communities and underscored its goal of moving the community and its people forward, she said.
“We felt it was important now to formally expand the festival to four days and formally move that youth experience into the spotlight,” Ebanks said.
“Diggy Simmons, the OMG Girlz and the Roots of Music are of the moment and speak to the new and next generation,” she said. “The Essence Music Festival is all about featuring performances from artists who are very experienced and beloved who have long track records. This stage allows us to look at who might be the next Mary J. Blige or D’Angelo and we want to celebrate that.”
Simmons and members of the OMG Girlz said they hadn’t attended the festival but were in awe of the opportunity to entertain in a venue that’s seen acts such as Beyonce, Usher, Kanye West, Alicia Keys, Prince and Janet Jackson.
“It’s definitely a big deal,” Simmons said. “I’m excited about playing at such a big event.”
Simmons and the OMG Girlz have shared the same stage before — during 2011′s Scream Tour.
Bahja “Miss Beauty” Rodriguez, 15, said performing on the Essence festival’s “brand new stage” set up to showcase them was huge.
“We’re just so honoured,” she said. “It gives us a chance to appeal to a bigger audience and to perform before people who haven’t heard of us.”
Zonnique “Miss Star” Pullins, 16, agreed, adding that the event “will give people a chance to see what we’re about.”
“Hopefully, we can build our fan base,” she said.
The Atlanta-based girl group, which also includes 17-year-old Breaunna “Miss Baby Doll” Womak, was created in 2009 by Kiesha Miles and Tameka “Tiny” Harris, who is also Star’s mother and whose stint with the 1990s group Xscape helped guide the trio to a deal with Interscope Records.
The girls also are scheduled to perform July 6 at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.
Simmons, 17, of Queens, N.Y., recently dropped his debut album, “Unexpected Arrival,” which features rapper Jadakiss, and R&B singers Jeremih and Tank. Simmons said he purposely kept the collaborations on this project at a minimum.
“I loved working with them,” he said of the guest artists, “but I just wanted to showcase myself and showcase what I do.”
The Girlz and Simmons each push a positive energy that Essence felt was conducive for the “New & Next” stage, Ebanks said.
“We sought groups who we could look to move youth forward as examples through their own experiences that might help point them in a better direction,” she said.
“We try to bring a lot of positivity through our group,” said Baby Doll. “We love what we’re doing and we get along. We try to leave the drama on TV. It’s an honour and a blessing to be in this kind of spotlight and we want to use (the fame) wisely.”
“It’s just how our parents raised us to be,” Beauty said. “We like being a role model.”
“A lot of girls look up to us,” added Star. “We’re able to talk to them about things we’ve been through or are going through.”
Simmons said he’s thankful for being able to positively inspire his fans.
“My message is always that it doesn’t matter where you come from, go for whatever it is you want to do,” he said. “Don’t let life or distractions get in your way. Don’t fall for peer pressure. Be yourself, be the person you want to be. The best thing you can ever do is bring what you want to the table.”
Ebanks said young people from throughout the New Orleans area and beyond will participate in a program that will include presentations from community leaders including Mayor Mitch Landrieu and his wife, Cheryl.
Landrieu has started a mentoring project called “Saving Our Sons,” to help curb crime and violence in the city while Cheryl Landrieu’s “Girl Up NOLA” seeks to inspire and motivate young girls.
“The mayor and first lady are calling upon the community to invest in the lives of our young men and woman and these projects are the centerpiece of the program,” she said.
The Roots Crusader Marching Band, which will appear in the 2013 Tournament of Roses Parade, also will be featured at Essence.
The band is an offshoot of the Roots of Music, a non-profit group that provides free music education, tutoring and mentorship for children ages 9-14. The group was founded in 2007 by Derrick Tabb, drummer for the Grammy-winning Rebirth Brass Band, and has notable supporters such as Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews, Raphael Saddiq, Ani DiFranco, actor Tim Robbins and producer David Simon.
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Essence fest adds 4th day to spotlight new talent
May 18th, 2012NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The next generation moves to the forefront at this year’s Essence Music Festival, which expands to four days of concerts and sets aside a day of activities geared toward emerging talent.
The up-and-comers will perform on the festival’s opening day, July 5. Rising stars Diggy Simmons, the OMG Girlz and New Orleans’ own Roots of Music will play on the New & Next Stage next to the Superdome.
Simmons is the son of Run DMC star Joseph Simmons. His uncle is record producer Russell Simmons.
The festival, which ends July 8, has been held every Independence Day weekend since its inception in 1995, when it marked the 25th anniversary of Essence magazine.
Essence Communications President Michelle Ebanks told The Associated Press the addition of a young-people-focused fourth day underscores the festival’s goal of giving new talent a springboard.
“The youth empowerment experience was part of the festival’s original design,” she said.
Focusing on pushing up youth had before now been the “unofficial” start of the festival’s free daily “empowerment experience,” which seeks to tackle issues affecting minority communities and underscored its goal of moving the community and its people forward, she said.
“We felt it was important now to formally expand the festival to four days and formally move that youth experience into the spotlight,” Ebanks said.
“Diggy Simmons, the OMG Girlz and the Roots of Music are of the moment and speak to the new and next generation,” she said. “The Essence Music Festival is all about featuring performances from artists who are very experienced and beloved who have long track records. This stage allows us to look at who might be the next Mary J. Blige or D’Angelo and we want to celebrate that.”
Simmons and members of the OMG Girlz said they hadn’t attended the festival but were in awe of the opportunity to entertain in a venue that’s seen acts such as Beyonce, Usher, Kanye West, Alicia Keys, Prince and Janet Jackson.
“It’s definitely a big deal,” Simmons said. “I’m excited about playing at such a big event.”
Simmons and the OMG Girlz have shared the same stage before — during 2011′s Scream Tour.
Bahja “Miss Beauty” Rodriguez, 15, said performing on the Essence festival’s “brand new stage” set up to showcase them was huge.
“We’re just so honored,” she said. “It gives us a chance to appeal to a bigger audience and to perform before people who haven’t heard of us.”
Zonnique “Miss Star” Pullins, 16, agreed, adding that the event “will give people a chance to see what we’re about.”
“Hopefully, we can build our fan base,” she said.
The Atlanta-based girl group, which also includes 17-year-old Breaunna “Miss Baby Doll” Womak, was created in 2009 by Kiesha Miles and Tameka “Tiny” Harris, who is also Star’s mother and whose stint with the 1990s group Xscape helped guide the trio to a deal with Interscope Records.
The girls also are scheduled to perform July 6 at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.
Simmons, 17, of Queens, N.Y., recently dropped his debut album, “Unexpected Arrival,” which features rapper Jadakiss, and R&B singers Jeremih and Tank. Simmons said he purposely kept the collaborations on this project at a minimum.
“I loved working with them,” he said of the guest artists, “but I just wanted to showcase myself and showcase what I do.”
The Girlz and Simmons each push a positive energy that Essence felt was conducive for the “New & Next” stage, Ebanks said.
“We sought groups who we could look to move youth forward as examples through their own experiences that might help point them in a better direction,” she said.
“We try to bring a lot of positivity through our group,” said Baby Doll. “We love what we’re doing and we get along. We try to leave the drama on TV. It’s an honor and a blessing to be in this kind of spotlight and we want to use (the fame) wisely.”
“It’s just how our parents raised us to be,” Beauty said. “We like being a role model.”
“A lot of girls look up to us,” added Star. “We’re able to talk to them about things we’ve been through or are going through.”
Simmons said he’s thankful for being able to positively inspire his fans.
“My message is always that it doesn’t matter where you come from, go for whatever it is you want to do,” he said. “Don’t let life or distractions get in your way. Don’t fall for peer pressure. Be yourself, be the person you want to be. The best thing you can ever do is bring what you want to the table.”
Ebanks said young people from throughout the New Orleans area and beyond will participate in a program that will include presentations from community leaders including Mayor Mitch Landrieu and his wife, Cheryl.
Landrieu has started a mentoring project called “Saving Our Sons,” to help curb crime and violence in the city while Cheryl Landrieu’s “Girl Up NOLA” seeks to inspire and motivate young girls.
“The mayor and first lady are calling upon the community to invest in the lives of our young men and woman and these projects are the centerpiece of the program,” she said.
The Roots Crusader Marching Band, which will appear in the 2013 Tournament of Roses Parade, also will be featured at Essence.
The band is an offshoot of the Roots of Music, a non-profit group that provides free music education, tutoring and mentorship for children ages 9-14. The group was founded in 2007 by Derrick Tabb, drummer for the Grammy-winning Rebirth Brass Band, and has notable supporters such as Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews, Raphael Saddiq, Ani DiFranco, actor Tim Robbins and producer David Simon.
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Depp and Burton lurk amid the 'Dark Shadows'
May 15th, 2012Ed Wood. Sweeney Todd. Ichabod Crane. The Mad Hatter. The partnership between Tim Burton and his go-to actor is getting stale. Spin the wheel to pick a pop culture oddball, put “Johnny Depp is …” in front of it, and start building sets. Just as the Adam McKay-Will Ferrell collaborations ran dry of wacky professions, the point of diminishing returns must arrive. And so it has with the drab “Dark Shadows.” Never before have they attacked such uncertain material with so little gusto or levity. The film has a terminal case of the blahs.
“Dark Shadows” opens promisingly, downshifts after 30 minutes, and sputters into a meandering, momentum-free mess. Depp plays Barnabas Collins, the brooding bloodsucker who debuted in Dan Curtis’ horror-tinged TV soap opera in 1966. An atmospheric prologue sets up his tragic dilemma. The heir of an 18th-century Maine fishing fortune, he rejects the advances of serving girl Angelique (Eva Green). The beauty reveals herself as a witch, kills Barnabas’ true love, Josette (Bella Heathcote), transforms him into a vampire and buries him in a padlocked casket.
Unearthed by a backhoe crew in 1972, he finds himself sharing the family mansion with his distant descendants. Here the movie is at its most assured, mining outsider humor from his reactions to an odd new world of paved roadways, electric lights and soft rock. The laughs here come from the way Barnabas putters around the Collins mansion, encountering a troll doll here, a lava lamp there, an Eggo on his breakfast plate, and stifles his startled dismay like a gentleman. He’s also funny at rest, hanging upside-down bat-style here and there around the house. Luckily, this is enough to keep us amused.
Regrettably, the film starts flirting with a plot. Reverting to its soap-opera roots, it unreels miles of tedious story line about modern-day Collinsport, where the undead Angelique now heads a rival canning company. The Collins clan’s newly arrived nanny is a dead ringer for Barnabas’ lost Josette, and the romantic triangle repeats itself. Michelle Pfeiffer channels steely Joan Collins chic as the matriarch of the Collins brood. Jonny Lee Miller, so electric in “Trainspotting,” is a chalk outline of a character as her wastrel brother. Helena Bonham Carter takes an honest swing at the part of the family’s boozy, pill-popping live-in psychologist, and Chloe Grace Moretz is a sly delight as the family’s teen, who has two settings: Surly and stoned.
The script, by “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies” novelist Seth Grahame-Smith, is not exactly a triumph of functional design. It feels as if he took all the moving-the-plot-along drudgery of TV soaps as his template. Every scene spent belaboring character conflicts and advancing the story is a scene wasted. The film needs comedic anarchy.
Instead we get production-design bloat and hectic misplaced action. Yes, the Collins manor is magnificently ugly. Sure, the cannery blows up real good when it’s time to toss in some ‘splosions. Sure, the furniture-smashing love tryst wrestling match between Barnabas and Angelique demolishes a lot of interior decoration.
But all that ingenuity should have gone into devising better scenes for Depp. He successfully walks a tightrope here in scene after scene: as terrible as it is that he fangs a couple dozen innocent victims, he’s not unsympathetic. How can you hate someone with such elegant spitcurls?
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Operation Hug-A-Hero comforts military children in Bridgeton, Upper Deerfield
May 15th, 2012The nonprofit organization provides military children a personalized doll to console them while their mother or father is away on active duty, and Operation Hug-A-Hero recently spread awareness of its efforts at Upper Deerfield Community Day and the Cohanzick Zoo KidsFest.
The Hug-A-Hero doll’s design features a head-to-toe photograph of the recipient’s parent or loved one and a personalized message.
“Try to imagine the emotion of a parent about to see their child for the first time. Try and imagine the emotions of a daddy or mommy who has been deployed for months and months — an eternity in the life of a child,” wrote the Tussey family on the Operation Hug-A-Hero website. “…Now imagine the flood of emotion when daddy returns and that child reaches up, arms outstretched and says, ‘Daddy!’ That child knew their parent in part, because of our incredible program which creates lifelike dolls of the child’s deployed parent.”
In addition to children with parents on deployment, the organization also provides Hug-A-Hero dolls to the children of fallen law enforcement officers, firefighters and other first responders who have lost their lives while on duty.
The organization explained the doll serves the purpose of providing comfort in the times of distress or sadness that separation can cause, and also provides a vehicle for children to share their feelings and tell their stories about their heroes’ service.
“Alamae is 7 years old and she’s a real daddy’s girl,” wrote Amanda Beltran on the Operation Hug-A-Hero website. “She loves to keep her doll close. She brings her daddy to school and shows him off to everyone. She gets to talk about him to her friends, and I know that makes her so proud!”
“…The dolls mean so much to my twins because they are able to hug and kiss their ‘daddy’ every night,” wrote Courtney Wilson, the wife of a Marine. “It helps them keep daddy in their lives so that hopefully, when he returns, they will be somewhat familiar with him.”
Hug-A-Hero dolls were originally created by Daddy Dolls, Inc., a company started by two Marine wives, Tricia Dyal and Nikki Darnell. They were able to donate dolls to hundreds of children in need of comfort, but after receiving an overwhelming number of requests, the founders were moved to establish a not-for-profit organization to better serve families with hardship circumstances.
Since becoming incorporated in 2008 and granted 501(c)3 nonprofit designation in July 2009, Operation Hug-A-Hero has become registered in 13 states.
For more information on the Operation Hug-A-Hero organization, visit www.operationhugahero.org.
Contact Lauren T. Taniguchi at 856-451-1000, ext. 419 or ltaniguchi@southjerseymedia.com.
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A Doll Story: Demand Creates A Business
May 12th, 2012Jennifer Vallez is an Ellington graphic designer who transformed her childhood love of dolls into a profitable enterprise making Sophie & Lili, a line of soft, handmade soft dolls with smiling faces and colorful clothes.
Now the question is whether and how to turn a part-time crafts pursuit into a full-time business.
Through blogs, her own website and Etsy, a communal crafts website, Vallez has sold over 2,000 dolls in the past three years. Working nights and weekends, she grossed over $23,000 last year — but had to turn down a massive order from Nordstrom when she realized she couldn’t guarantee delivery of 1,500 dolls by the store’s deadline.
Land of Nod, a catalog store, wanted to order 100 dolls – and Vallez, who has two young daughters, a husband and a full-time job at an advertising agency, felt obliged to turn down that order, too.
The combination of a popular product and limited time has produced growing pains as Vallez contemplates her next step. Right now, she is getting up early to sew, and stuffing the dolls at night in front of the television. The recent weekend quota was 16 dolls. She can’t produce them any faster — but demand is increasing.
She has thought about finding a local seamstress, but the cost of local labor would reduce her profit substantially. She has searched for a U.S. factory that could meet her exacting standards, and tried sending her patterns to a factory in Arizona.
The results weren’t satisfactory. Now she’s looking for a middleman who can help her link up with a factory in China or somewhere where quality is high and prices are reasonable.
The dolls have to be perfect. “It’s my passion. When I make a doll it’s 99 percent me. My person and my voice.”
Vallez has already had the experience of turning a homemade project into a commercial success. When her older daughter Sophie was a toddler, Vallez made her tiny wraparound skirts from a vintage Simplicity pattern.
Friends admired the simple skirts. Over the Moon, a children’s boutique in Avon, took a few on consignment and quickly sold them. Vallez decided to try to expand her market. She named her company after two beloved great-grandmothers, and created a web page. She sent information about the skirts to some bloggers. Starting with just one design in four sizes in bright and contemporary fabrics, the skirts sold well, and she added blouses and a few other clothing items to her line.
“That generated some buzz,” she said. Then she got the attention of “Daily Candy,” a highly popular web site that features fashion, children’s clothes and travel. She was featured in an article, and got hundreds of responses. “From there it snowballed,”Vallez recalled.
Without a business plan, or much prior planning at all, she found a sales representative and started going to trade shows, and turned to a factory in Hartord (now closed) to produce the clothes. It was hard to keep up with demand, and she got overwhelmed. At one trade show, Saks Fifth Avenue showed some interest, and promised to buy something the following year – if she managed to survive.
The next year, Saks kept its word and placed an order for $54,000. Vallez was also selling to 200 boutiques, but she had to take out a loan to pay the upfront costs. She found a factory in India that would print the fabric and sew and stuff the dolls, and could meet her exacting standards.
Packing and shipping was done in her basement as family and friends helped her fill orders. She made $150,000 in sales and paid off the loan, but the effort was exhausting — and not especially remunerative.
“I was happy that I walked away whole,” she recalled.
Then she became pregnant, and realized she couldn’t keep up the pace she had maintained. She kept on sketching – a passion since childhood, but by the time Lola, her second daughter, was born two years ago, her focus had changed.
For Sophie & Lili, Vallez fell back on her year studying fashion design at Fashion Institute of Technology and created a line of 12-inch, soft, polyester-filled dolls of cotton printed with different style clothes and hairstyles. The backs are made of different fabric – some very contemporary, some vintage.
She has designed 30 styles; some are boys, some have dark faces, some look more grown-up than others. A baby version is 8 inches tall.
“They are just so modern and cute,” said Jessica Jenkins, owner of Daytrip Society, a boutique in Kennebunk, Maine, where custom Vallez dolls sport yellow slickers, nautical dresses or lumberjack prints. “She’s so creative. People love that they are local to our town.”
Vallez reconnected with some of her former customers, revived her contacts with bloggers, and became an active presence on Facebook. The dolls sell for $25, or $35 if they are custom ordered. Last year, she sold 1,000 dolls over the Internet and through several dozen boutiques, and grossed $23,000.
This year, she wants to expand and is exploring how best to do that.
“I want to make it a big thing,” she said. “I need help.”
Her husband, Kevin Vallez, keeps pressing her to develop a business plan, but she is progressing slowly her own way, with suggestions from the network of craftspeople she has met since Sophie & Lili got off the ground. She’s continuing to look for a factory that meets her standards.
Lia Davis, of Alexandria, Va., is one of her best customers. Her daughter, Eleni, has four Sophie & Lili dolls, and Davis has ordered another dozen to give away at birthday parties.
“I think they are so adorable,” Davis said.” There is something unique about them. They are very classic and sweet.” Her daughter has several dolls — a blonde, a redhead and one with darker skin. “They each have their own DNA, which is what we are trying to teach our daughter.”
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The ultimate real-life Barbies: Photographer transforms models into plastic dolls for Mattel-inspired shoot
May 12th, 2012
08:02 EST, 9 May 2012
|
08:04 EST, 9 May 2012
With stiff limbs and gormless expressions they could be mistaken for Barbie dolls.
But the female and male in these pictures aren’t plastic Mattel figures but real-life models.
Vancouver-based photographer Hayden Wood used some Photoshop wizardry to transform the duo into versions of Barbie and Ken.
Eerie: Meagan Therese Squire and James Webb strike a pose as Barbie and Ken
Both Meagan Therese Squire and James Webb have had their eyes enlarged and limbs slimmed down, to give them seemingly inhuman proportions.
The ‘Barbie and Ken’ shoot was the brainchild of creative Ms Squire who specialises in fashion and design.
She was initially inspired by the cover art of Nicki Minaj’s latest album ‘Pink Friday’,
which features the 29-year-old singer dressed head-to-toe in candyfloss hues.
In a bid to get the desired effect she contacted Mr Wood, who is an experienced photographer and retoucher.
He told the The Huffington Post: ‘Meagan contacted me to ask if I’d be
interested in shooting this creative piece with her. [Her] idea was
inspired by the cover art of Nicki Minaj’s album ‘Pink Friday.’
The photoshoot was inspired by the cover art of Nicki Minaj’s album ‘Pink Friday’
Not real: Photographer Hayden Wood used Photoshop to give both models doll-like proportions
Before launching his own company Wood spent six years working as a creative retoucher and graphic artist for advertising company Ogilvy in New Zealand.
He says: ‘I began playing with photography as a young fella after my parent gave me my first point and shoot.’
After spending two years in the New Zealand army Wood describes that he rediscovered his passion for photography and started making use of the new technology available.
‘By 2002 I was enhancing my images with Photoshop, which today still amazes me the endless creative freedom it allows the artist.’
The images follow on from the ‘living-doll’ trend which is swept the internet in recent months, whereby women alter their appearance to emulate plastic dolls.
‘By 2002 I was enhancing my images with Photoshop, which today still amazes me the endless creative freedom it allows the artist,’ says photographer Wood
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You can also use photoshop to make a photo look like Shrek even if they start out as a poodle so I’m not really understanding the fuss.
Why?
Do people actually buy these pictures?
“Dusgusting; reducing women to a plastic sex object – we have really made progress in 50 years of feminism haven’t we. – spectatpr, edinburgh, 10/5/2012 09:08 ——————————Firstly, noone mentioned sex. Secondly, the male model has also been transformed into a plastic doll. So I don’t really see how this is sexist. And there’s no such word as dusgusting.”
Yes, what a horrible fate, I would HATE to be reduced to a sex object………..perhaps……..actually I might like it……shame it will never happen…..
Creepy. Yuck.
This is quite stupid, it’s not special if it’s all photoshopped, what is the point. They have nothing on Dakota Rose or Venus Angelic! I suppose some people may find it creepy but they really are talented, clever girls! And so beautiful!
Will someone at least straighten Ken’s right leg!
The “looking like a doll trend” is plain WEIRD and CREEPY. There is nothing sexy about looking plastic like a doll or Barbie or Ken. Humans are attracted to other humans… I think any real, normal person would be attracted to other real people who look real and not like they’re made of plastic and ready to melt out in the sun. I dont want to be offensive, but there’s no other way to put it, I just do not find the doll-look-alike trend attractive or appealing. To me it looks weird, creepy, scary, and sometimes disgusting. I only find REAL, NATURAL people who look human appealing. Dolls look dead, cold, plastic and frozen, there’s nothing warm or alive about them, so why would people want to look like one? Its stupid. Barbie only looks good when she’s an actual plastic doll, not a human wanna-be doll. This trend is stupid and childish. And as for the photoshoot, it looks silly, “Ken” looks even skinnier than “Barbie” lol, but they both look equally creepy and odd.
Yet they still look far more human than Thunderbird puppet Bieber don’t they?
What is this current trend about – why would you want to look like a doll???
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Lalaloopsy Doll Nail Art
May 9th, 2012I had a few requests to do this design so I hope you enjoy.
) Items Used: Pink by Pure Ice in the color Jack Pot Light Beige by Sally Hansen in the color Beige Blast Dark Beige is Revlon Hot Chocolate and Beige Blast mixed Brushes can be found here: www.bornprettystore.com Dotting tools can be found on Ebay All other colors are mixed acrylic paint Top Coat by NYC ——————————————————- Facebook: www.facebook.com Music: audionautix.com FTC: The brushes I use were sent to me a long time ago and I use them in every video because they are great!!! ^_^
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That’s just mega scary!
- shocked UK, in a place called England I wish I knew, 10/5/2012 18:48
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