Every girl in the room agreed with this opinion.
"The rag dolls are the ones I believe the children will like best," said Helen; "that is, if they are at all like American children."
"Isn"t it funny--I always liked that terrible looking old rag object of mine better than the prettiest one Father ever sent me," agreed Ethel Blue.
"Every child does," said Margaret.
"Dorothy made some fine ones," complimented Helen.
"Did you draw them or did you get the ones that are already printed on cloth?" asked Della.
"Both. The printed ones are a great deal prettier than mine, but Aunt Marion had a stout piece of cotton cloth--"
A shout arose.
"Cotton cloth! That"s enough to interest Dorothy in making anything,"
laughed Tom.
"Almost," agreed Dorothy good-naturedly. "Any way, I used up the piece of cloth making dolls and cats and dogs. I drew them on the cloth and then st.i.tched them on the machine and, I tell you, I remembered the time when d.i.c.ky"s stuffed cat had an awful accident and lost almost all his inner thoughts, and I sewed every one of the little beasties twice around."
"What did you stuff them with?"
"Some with cotton."
"Ha, ha!"
"Ha!" retorted Dorothy, "and some with rags, and one with sawdust, but I didn"t care for him; he was lumpy."
"I didn"t know you could paint well enough to color them," said Roger.
"I can"t. I did a few but Ethel Blue did the best one. There was a cat that was so fierce that Aunt Marion"s cat growled at it. He was a winner!"
"All the rag dolls were dressed in cotton dresses," explained Ethel Brown.
"Of course."
"But the real dolls were positively scrumptious. There was a bride, and a girl in a khaki sport suit, and a boy in a sailor suit, and a baby.
They were regular beauties."
All the time that these descriptions had been given Dorothy and the Mortons had been opening packages of rattan and raffia and laying them out on the dining table. James sat in state at one end, his convalescent leg raised on a chair, and his right hand to the table so that he could handle his materials easily.
"I"m simply perishing to hear about Fraulein," he acknowledged. "Do start me on this basket business, Dorothy, so I can hear about her."
"We don"t know such an awful lot," said Dorothy slowly as she counted out the spokes for a small basket. "In fact, we don"t know anything at all."
"Misery! And my curiosity has been actually on the boil! How many of those sticks do I need?"
"Let"s all do the same basket," suggested Ethel Brown. "Then one lecture by Miss Dorothy Smith will do for all of us."
"Doesn"t anybody else know how to make them?"
"Della and I do," replied Ethel Blue. "We"re going to work on raffia, but you people might just as well all do one kind of basket. We can use any number of them, you know, so it doesn"t make any difference if they are all alike."
"We"ll start with a basket that measures three inches across the bottom and is two and a half inches deep," announced Dorothy, who was an expert basket maker. "You"ll need eight spokes sixteen inches long and one nine inches long."
There was a general cutting and counting of rattan spokes.
"Are you ready? Take your knife and in four rattans make slits long enough to poke the other four rattans through."
"They"re rather fat to get through," complained James.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "Make slits long enough to poke the other rattans through. Sharpen them to a point"]
[Ill.u.s.tration: "You"ll need eight spokes sixteen inches long and one nine inches long"]
"Sharpen them to a point. Have you put them through so they make a cross with the arms of even length? Then put the single short piece through on one arm--no, not way through, James; just far enough to catch it."
"That"s pretty solid just as it is," commented Tom with his head on one side.
"Nevertheless, you must wrap it with a piece of raffia. Watch me; lay your raffia at the left side of the upright arm and bring it across from left to right. Now pa.s.s it under the right hand arm and over the bottom arm and under the left hand arm. Instead of covering the wrapping you"ve just done you turn back and let your bit of raffia go _over_ the left hand arm."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "This weaving process makes the spokes stand out like wheel spokes"]
"That binds down the beginning end of the raffia," cried Helen.
"Exactly. That"s why you do it. Go under the bottom arm and over the right hand arm behind the top arm."
"Back at the station the train started from," announced Margaret.
"So far you"ve used your weaver--"
"What"s that? The raffia?"
"Yes. So far you"ve used it merely to fasten the centre firmly. Now you really begin to weave under and over the spokes, round and round."
"I could shoot beans through mine," announced James.
"You haven"t pulled your weaver tight as you wove. Push it down hard toward the centre. That"s it. See how firm that is? You could hardly get water through that--much less beans or hound puppies, as they say in some parts of North Carolina."
"This weaving process makes the spokes stand out like wheel spokes, doesn"t it?"
"That"s why they"re called spokes. By the time you"ve been round three times they ought all to be standing apart evenly."
"Please, ma"am, my raffia is giving out," grumbled Tom.
"It"s time to use a rattan weaver, then. You used raffia at first because the spokes were so near together. Now you use a fine rattan, finer than your spokes. Wet it first. Then catch it behind a spoke and hold on to it carefully until you come to the second time round or it will slip away from you. You"re all right as soon as the second row holds the first row in place."
"My rattan weaver is giving out," said Ethel Brown.