cut along a side seam to tug out the stuffing and used the nail clippers and scissors to shred some of it small. THEN MADE...A GLORIOUS MESS...mixing together some of the stuffing with glitter glue, plastic pellets, a little liquid from each bottle (some fear, rather more kindness, a little grudge, a touch of betrayal) in the bin. modeled a crude incest skeleton out of the mess; used all the needles but one as central supports in the spine and limbs.
clipped and glued together the blotted-out parts of his instruction sheet until he had three mildly sparkly black strips, then writes 'feels fear often but works through it,' 'is as kind to others as it knows how to be,' and 'driven.' tucked them into the ribcage.
carefully worked the skeleton back inside the doll once it was reasonably dry! filled in the rest of the space with rice and beans until the doll was plump again. then sewed the seam back up with red thread and the remaining steel needle because when the scary TV throws you a bone you take it.
braided some red yarn and the excess red thread into a collar with a black button closure! Strung a construction-paper tag onto it with . . . '❚❚❚❚❚❚' written on it and clasped it around the doll's neck; snug but not strangling. tucked the doll in the box.
Mithos | Sterling
cut along a side seam to tug out the stuffing and used the nail clippers and scissors to shred some of it small. THEN MADE...A GLORIOUS MESS...mixing together some of the stuffing with glitter glue, plastic pellets, a little liquid from each bottle (some fear, rather more kindness, a little grudge, a touch of betrayal) in the bin. modeled a crude incest skeleton out of the mess; used all the needles but one as central supports in the spine and limbs.
clipped and glued together the blotted-out parts of his instruction sheet until he had three mildly sparkly black strips, then writes 'feels fear often but works through it,' 'is as kind to others as it knows how to be,' and 'driven.' tucked them into the ribcage.
carefully worked the skeleton back inside the doll once it was reasonably dry! filled in the rest of the space with rice and beans until the doll was plump again. then sewed the seam back up with red thread and the remaining steel needle because when the scary TV throws you a bone you take it.
braided some red yarn and the excess red thread into a collar with a black button closure! Strung a construction-paper tag onto it with . . . '❚❚❚❚❚❚' written on it and clasped it around the doll's neck; snug but not strangling. tucked the doll in the box.
. . . ART?!*