The making process
All Kokeshi making starts with the choice of wood. I mainly use sycamore, although I have sometimes used hornbeam and beech in the past. I choose according to the grain and colour. Sycamore has a lovely discreet grain, and is quite lightly coloured, so ideal for painting.
I turn my dolls myself on a small lathe, this process is important for the finish, as the wood needs sanded as smooth as possible for the paint to even itself out fluently in the different scenes.
I always pencil in my shapes before woodburning it, although for some detailed elements, I can woodburn straight on the doll. After engraving the face and kimono, there is no straight order as to how I will paint or draw. Often I work scene by scene on the different kimono panels, sometimes I will wood burn most of the doll before starting the paint. It depends on the various elements and scenes I have to harmonize together, the colour scheme , the details…
I always finish my dolls with an acrylic varnish. Mainly because it is something I can do quite easily in my studio, but also because I have tested the colour resistance to sunlight on a few years, and there was no fading. Thinking long term with art is quite important.
-
The picture in my head
When I start a doll, I always have a picture in my head of what she will become. A field of flowers, a kite, a tree, a magical night scene. Once I see it in my head, I need to create the doll.
-
Drawing
I then draw on my kokeshi what I visualise, it’s like printing a picture that comes from my soul.
-
Day dreaming
I want every piece I make to be an invitation to day dream about where the scene is going. I want people to get lost in it and imagine how it unfolds on the other side, where the story is heading.
Where is that ship travelling to? What is behind that field of flowers?
-
A reminder
I like to think each one of my doll will be a reminder to think and dream of something, someone or somewhere cherished, every time one looks at them.