. What shall we do now? A book of suggestions for children's games and employments;. becoloured on both sides, partly flesh colour and partly underclothes. The dresses are made of sheets of notepaper, the fold of which The the shoulder pieces. The doll is laid on the paper, withhead and neck lapping over the fold, and the line of the dress isthen drawn a little larger than the doll. A small round nick toform the collar is cut between the shoulders of the dress, and aslit is made down the back through which the dolls head can bepassed. After the head is through it is turned round.


. What shall we do now? A book of suggestions for children's games and employments;. becoloured on both sides, partly flesh colour and partly underclothes. The dresses are made of sheets of notepaper, the fold of which The the shoulder pieces. The doll is laid on the paper, withhead and neck lapping over the fold, and the line of the dress isthen drawn a little larger than the doll. A small round nick toform the collar is cut between the shoulders of the dress, and aslit is made down the back through which the dolls head can bepassed. After the head is through it is turned round. (Of course,if the dress is for evening the place which you cut for the neckmust be larger, and in this case no slit will be needed.) All thedetails of the dresses, which can be of original design, or copiedfrom advertisements and fashion plates, must be drawn in inpencil and afterwards painted. Hats, trimmed with tissue-paperfeathers or ribbons, are made of round pieces of notepaper witha slit in them just big enough for the tip of the dolls head to go 214 What Shall We Do Now?. PAPER MOTHER AND CHILD, WITH CLOTHES FOR EACH. (Designed and made by Miss S. M. Clayton.) What Shall We Do Now? 21


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectamu, booksubjectgames