Sunday, January 19, 2020

And the Winner is...

Thank you to everyone who was interested in Serafina!  I really love giveaways and hope to do them more often this year.  There were 18 entries to win Serafina, and I used a random name selector from Teach Starter to pick the winner.

Next time I'll probably have to limit the giveaway to registered accounts--just to avoid multiple entries from one person.  I have no reason to think that happened this time, but it just occurred to me that it was possible.  I hate to exclude people, though, so if anyone has a good idea for how to fairly include anonymous accounts, I'm all ears!

Here we go...


Congratulations Emma W!! 
Yay!

Please send me a message through Etsy and we'll figure out the next steps.

Here's a screen shot of the outcome:


Please feel free to post feedback in the comments.  I'd love to find a fun, fair, inclusive, and regular way to run these giveaways!

6 comments:

  1. Congratulations to the winner!!! Emma got such a cutie coming home.

    Sunny_harper1994

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  2. Following the creative process here and on your other blog is very interesting. As a long time Twinns collector I share the frustration with the mismatched bods and what we call “China era” heads. One way to avoid those heads is to check for a neck date. The China heads have none as none were put on those molds. It’s not foolproof as Catherine’s original mold has no date either, but most do. (TheLogansladies website has a chart listing faces and their dates/ no dates, Pate markings etc. also these copy molds were cast from the outside of heads. The inside of a dolls head has very poor definition the new molds were smaller because vinyl shrinks as it cools so the heads used were smaller than the sculpted masters used for the original dated molds. Thankfully those unmarked molds were soon retired and the originals found or whatever

    The eyes that melted were the “new” cheaper “China”eyes used on nearly all the post Denver company dolls. The Denver used Glastic or Realistic brand which hold up much better to heat

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    Replies
    1. Wow--thank you for this history, Frankie! I've read Logan's Ladies fairly extensively, but I'm still figuring a lot of things out. It's a ton of information! This is part of why I love the dolls so much, though--their rich history.
      Sadly, per your comment below, I'm not on Facebook so I can't join. :(

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  3. If u would like to check out more My Twinn stuff there’s a fb page called My Twinn Collectors and we have photos and files on various topics. Love to have you if you have the time.

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