Tatiana's Doll House: Club diorama



The latest diorama talented Tatiana has created is a place for her dolls to relax and hang out - The Fashion Royalty Club. This display was inspired by a pink plastic piano that she repainted  black last summer. That project was very long and challenging for her as she aimed for a thick glossy finish. One month and two cans of paint later she finally felt happy of how it turned out. She used a high gloss black lacquer by Rust-Oleum and applied it in multiple layers.





The round tables are from a Gloria play set, their bases painted silver. Tablecloths are made from polyester table napkins and curtains are faux silk dupioni napkins  attached with double sided tape. The buffet table is a wooden shadow-box frame that was cut with a miter saw. Cake, pastries, trays and cutlery are re-ment, small white plates came with a no-name play set.





Tatiana made the wall scone lights by splitting a Mattel purple chandelier in quarters and gluing them to wooden pendants from a dollar store. After that she spray-painted everything with black acryllic paint and attached them to the wall using double sided tape.





The chandelier is an accessory from a Barbie playset that she painted black and attached with a polyester thread to a mini square gel tile. Gel tiles come with a sticky back, so it is very easy to attach them without any damage to the surface.





The tabletop candle holders are Gloria minis that Tatiana painted with acrylic paint using a brush. The wonderful black chairs are from the Pivotal Jazz dolls by Mattel. She loves the scale, the style and the quality of them. I must say that they look great - I own some of them! The swan vase on the piano is a wedding favour from a craft store and in it are white roses from buttonier flowers.




Deconstruction Sight Eugenia is dressed in Guaranteed Chic outfit, restyled by Tatiana. Former Face Time Eugenia was re-rooted in raven by the very talented Susan K. She is wearing the Soir De Paris dress. All photos by Tatiana.

Valley Of The Fashion Dolls

A Greek fashion magazine, LOOK (it circulates every three months and is free) had a page dedicated to my doll collecting passion with one of my photos of Dania. You can even see me at the bottom of the page holding lovely Poppy Parker in my hand. The page is below and after that you can read the article in English (written by lovely and patient Vagia Matzaroglou from Thessaloniki).


VALLEY OF FASHION DOLLS

Versace, Givenchy and Alexander McQueen in miniature? They do exist. They made Vogue covers and score a global digital fashion hype. Find out about the culture and history of fashion dolls and enter their world through collector Stratos Bacalis and his blog, fashiondollchronicles.blogspot.com

by Vagia Matzaroglou

He dressed Michelle Obama at her husbands inaugural ball but still plays with dolls! And he is not alone! Apart from the enfante terrible Jason Wu, brands like Versace, Badgley Mischka, Givenchy, Lecoanet Hemant, Manish Arora design clothes for dolls. Italian Vogue joined the club by photographing exclusively Barbie in fashion editorials but also fashion houses that create unique doll outfits that are then auctioned for charities.
For a while now, fashion dolls are a fetish for collectors and not a child's toy. They have class and style, charm and finesse, ideal proportions and guardarobes that moan under evening glam and eponymous signatures. Dressed in the latest fashion trends or in vintage masterpieces from specific style periods (see '50s), they "follow" the catwalks and fashion weeks around the planet. Sometimes they even copy the new outfits (in the past McQueen collections have been copied*)... Hairdos, make up and accessories are in the same brand wavelength. The most important doll catwalks are set up in Paris and London at the respective Doll Festivals there but also at the commercial Toy Fairs of the USA. Apart from regular fashion designers like Jason Wu who designs for FR Monogram and Versace and Badgley Mischka for Barbie, Mel Odom and Robert Tonner are considered big names, who take care of the doll's face (the sculpt) down to the most minute detail. The "Haute Couture" of dolls are Charles & Desmond Superfrock's Sybarite dolls.

Stratos Bacalis is a passionate doll collector and probably the only Greek blogger about fashion dolls. "I started out with the Olivia Newton John as Sandy from Grease Franklin Mint doll in 2000. From then on, it became a passion" he confesses. He already owns 120-150 dolls. "The most eponymous of them are my Versace Barbie, my Badgley Mischka Barbie, all my Jason Wu ones (half of my collection) and I would add the two Audrey Hepburn versions (a small by Mattel and a larger by Mme Alexander) for the Givenchy clothes they wear from "Breakfsast at Tiffany's" and "Sabrina". Oh and of course I should not forget Pincess Diana with her designer outfits and Jackie Onassis with her Oleg Cassini dresses".

From where does he get the dolls? "Always through the internet, either directly from the manufacturers (special editions) or from specialized e-shops. When there is a limited edition, if you are not quick enough to pre-order the dolls you want, you have to look for them on e-bay or the relevant forums, which usually means higher prices". 

What are his criteria for buying them? "Almost always it is the combination of doll and outfit, although the garment definitely plays the most important part. But the doll has to "speak" to me". 

He wants to get all the new releases. But "cost is always prohibitive. The prices depend on the edition size and how eccentric the outfit is. The material that the doll is made of also is a factor. They start from around US$45 and end up costin thousands of dollars for unique pieces auctioned for charity".

Stratos Bacalis' favourite hobby is photographing his collection: "I have a mini studio with a lightbox for the photo shoots. I have even done one for the Indian edition of Grazia magazine, with Indian designer outfits. It was a unique experience with the highlight being that one of the outfits was designed and made by Lecoanet Hemant, whose collections I used to admire in the Haute Couture fashion week in Paris". With studies in fashion design and pattern making, he intends to be a little more creatice with his collection. "There is a friend who is very talented in sewing and making accessories so we tried to start a fashion collection for dolls but stopped due to the financial crisis. I hope we can make it happen some time in the future".

Here is my portrait featured in the article, shot by Sakis Gioumpasis:


* It refers to mentions I did during the interview of many doll outfits being "inspired" by a lot of designers and especially Dior and McQueen designs.   

The First Annual Tonnies! Nominations Begin

Tonner Dolls are presenting the Tonnies, awards for their dolls based on the people nominating them. Here is how it begins, the whole process taking place on their Facebook page:

Good Morning Friends!

Let the nominations begin!  We're accepting nominations for the FIRST TWO CATEGORIES ONLY: 

Best Dressed Male and Best Dressed Female! 

Please submit your nominations below, in the comments section (meaning the Tonner FB page).  You may nominate as many dressed dolls as you like!  Nominations will be accepted through Sunday, March 6th until midnight.  The nominations will be tallied by Team Tonner on Monday, March 7th, and the top three will go on to the next step, and be voted on beginning Tuesday, March 8th.

Note:  Remember, you may nominate dressed dolls from the 2010 ONLY.

Keep it here for more Tonnie Fun!

Integrity 2011 : FR2 main collection

I had the information much earlier in the year but I thought it would be best to post them alongside the complete collections from Integrity. It consists so far of two characters from FR (Elise and Dominique - with new sculpt) and a new one (Dasha, new sculpt) Integrity says about the line: 

FR2™ (pronounced "Fashion Royalty Squared"), is the latest addition to the Fashion Royalty® family of products by Jason Wu and the Integrity Toys design team. Keeping in line with the concept of bringing Fashion Royalty® to the next level of quality and collectability, this luscious and luxurious new spin off series is designed to showcase our designers' absolute dedication to detail and refinement. FR2™ fashion dolls feature a brand new, totally re-sculpted body with refined proportions for even more pose-ability and display/play possibilities than ever before! FR2™ is composed of new characters as well as older fan favourites that are sure to delight everyone by their beauty and sheer force of character (pun intended!). Just so you know, all dolls have rooted hair, eyelashes and removable hands.

Modern Sensibility Dasha™ Dressed Doll
Limited Edition of 300 Dolls
Suggested Retail: $175.00
Estimated Delivery: Early March 2011





Renegade Dasha Dressed Doll
Limited Edition of 300 Dolls
IT Direct Exclusive (Will be offered through a lottery in the W Club, details TBA)
Suggested Retail: $175.00
Estimated Delivery: Details TBA, Spring 2011





Flawless Elise Jolie Dressed Doll
Limited Edition of 300 Dolls
Suggested Retail: $175.00
Estimated Delivery: Early March 2011





Engaging Elise Jolie Dressed Doll
Limited Edition of 300 Dolls
Suggested Retail: $175.00
Estimated Delivery: Spring 2011




Rare Appeal Dominique Makeda Dressed Doll
Limited Edition of 300 Dolls
Suggested Retail: $175.00
Estimated Delivery: Spring 2011




Impossibly Beautiful Dominique Makeda Dressed Doll
Limited Edition of 300 Dolls
Suggested Retail: $175.00
Estimated Delivery: Spring 2011 





Only Natural FR2™ Fashion
Limited Edition of 300 Fashions
Suggested Retail: $100.00
Estimated Delivery: Early March 2011



Sheer Bliss FR2 Fashion
Limited Edition of 300 Fashions
Suggested Retail: $100.00
Estimated Delivery: Early March 2011 





Metropolitan FR2 Fashion
Limited Edition of 300 Fashions
Suggested Retail: $100.00
Estimated Delivery: Spring 2011




My opinion: A gorgeous collection with great variety. amazing accessories and designs. I will try and secure Renegade Dasha in the lottery (hopefully) and maybe try and get Impossibly Beautiful Dominique Makeda later in the year because she is gorgeous but expensive. Their prices are way up and make them that much harder to get, not to mention their popularity. The Caucasian dolls sold out everywhere.


**All photos and information contained herein is copyrighted Integrity Toys, Inc. and Intercap Merchant Partners, LLC 2011**