dollshow

dollshow

AUSTIN DOLL COLLECTORS SOCIETY

The Austin Doll Collectors Society is an organization of antique, vintage, and modern doll collectors, dealers, and artisans. We meet on the second Sunday of each month and our meetings are fun and educational. We begin with refreshments and socializing, and, following our brief business meeting, there is a special doll-related program and "show and tell." The Austin Doll Collectors Society is a nonprofit organization and is a member of the United Federation of Doll Clubs.

Friday, September 11, 2020

Labor Day Dolls; Buy Braw Troggin

Buy braw troggin 
Frae the banks o' Dee!
Wha wants troggin 
Let him come to me!
(Buy fine wares
From the banks of Dee!
Who wants fine ware
Let him come to me!)
Robert Burns, 1795


Although street venders hawking their wares were long familiar to the streets of London, the rebuilding following the Great Fire displaced many small shop owners and stall holders. Some turned to peddling and street vending. By the Victorian period, peddlers and street vendors carrying an array of inexpensive goods and notions in a basket or displayed on a tray in the city streets were a common sight. Many labored long hours in every sort of weather trying to earn enough to keep themselves and their families fed and sheltered. It became a popular pastime for well-off ladies and girls to dress a doll as a peddler or "notion nanny" and fill her little basket or tray with all sorts of tiny treasures, some homemade and others purchased. The dolls were made from a wide variety of materials, such as wood, papier mache, china, or bisque. When completed, the notion nanny was typically displayed in a glass dome.

This pretty peddler stands in a stall offering a wide variety of goods.  Her dome is handblown.


Removing the dome allows a closer look at the doll and her wee wares.  The doll has a papier mache shoulder head and cloth body.  All her offerings are antique.



She offers several tiny toys for sale, including these delightful diminutive dolls.  







1 comment:

  1. I enjoyed this doll lesson and this history lesson.

    Thanks for continuing to post during these challenging times.

    ReplyDelete