All dolled up

 

Dolls, some approaching the century mark in age, sit, lay, and stand behind glass at Maple Ridge’s museum.

 
 
 
 
Ceramic dolls on display at the Maple Ridge Museum are from the 1930s.
 

Ceramic dolls on display at the Maple Ridge Museum are from the 1930s.

Photograph by: Troy Landreville , TIMES

For these new residents of the Maple Ridge Museum, their playing days are over.

Since June they’ve sat behind glass display cases at the museum at 22520 116th Ave. Technically, most of them are senior citizens. But they are frozen in time, their expressions, stoic or smiling, permanently etched on their ceramic, vinyl, or paper faces.

For the past month, the museum has had various dolls and doll accessories on display.

Curator Allison White said the doll display has been a hugely popular addition to the museum.

“We’ve had a lot of positive feedback with this exhibit,” she said. “School groups that have come in have really enjoyed it, there’s been lots of questions and when they send us letters, they are always mentioning this.”

The collection includes items and artifacts donated by local resident Daphne Clowes, from ceramic dolls, to toy wicker furniture, to a large collection of paper dolls from the 1930s.

The ceramic dolls are from the 1930s.

The fashion dolls are from the mid-’60, including a Barbie from 1965 and a Happy Family collection from 1973.

The paper dolls, cut from paper or thin card stock, are from the early 20th century.

Paper dolls were first seen in France during the mid-18th century, and were drawn or painted like people with fashions for each doll.

“The paper dolls have really taken off,” White said. “The dolls are still in great conditions and a lot of people who have come in today, have never seen paper dolls.”

Another Maple Ridge resident, Shirley Goetzen, donated two “Wettums,” the name of the some of the more popular dolls from the Reliable Toy Company Ltd., a Canadian company founded in 1920. The two dolls lay together in a toy carriage. They were a Christmas gift to Goetzen in the mid-1930s. One of the dolls, with brown eyes, is named “Marilyn.”

The largest of the ceramic dolls is dressed in toddler clothes.

Visit the museum’s website is www.mapleridgemuseum.org. Call the museum at 604-463-5311.

tlandreville@mrtimes.com

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Ceramic dolls on display at the Maple Ridge Museum are from the 1930s.
 

Ceramic dolls on display at the Maple Ridge Museum are from the 1930s.

Photograph by: Troy Landreville , TIMES

 
Ceramic dolls on display at the Maple Ridge Museum are from the 1930s.
Ceramic dolls on display at the Maple Ridge Museum are from the 1930s.
Curator Allison White invites the public to visit the Maple Ridge Museum from Wednesday to Sunday, 1-4 p.m. each day, and check out the vintage dolls.
Two vinyl dolls, and the carriage they lay in, were donated by Maple Ridge resident Shirley Goetzen. She received them as a Christmas present in the mid-1930s.
Two vinyl dolls, and the carriage they lay in, were donated by Maple Ridge resident Shirley Goetzen. She received them as a Christmas present in the mid-1930s.
These Happy Family dolls are from 1973.
Fashion dolls from the 1960s are on display.
Fashion dolls from the 1960s are on display.
The public can check out assortment of dolls at the Maple Ridge Museum.
The public can check out assortment of dolls at the Maple Ridge Museum.
The public can check out assortment of dolls at the Maple Ridge Museum.
Madame Rita will tell your fortune.
Including footwear, the dolls are dressed in garb from their era.
Paper dolls are a popular feature at the exhibit.
Paper dolls are a popular feature at the exhibit.
 
 
 
 
 
 

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