
I have three silkstones, two in lingerie, a redhead and a blonde, and one African American one who came to me nude. She's been wearing a little green skirt and jersey top for some time and when I set her up to pose for my drawings, the shape of her skirt was perfect.
Silkstone dolls have a lovely skin quality, gorgeous legs and the tiniest little waists and uplifted bustlines carried on fairly broad shoulders and ribcages, and were all elements I wanted to put into play, to emphasize, in the design, starting with the legs and waist, which the little green cotton skirt emphasized. That was where I began.
The bodice, now. Well the only excuse for a neckline is to emphasize the jewellery one wears, so I figured in a minimal bodice, like a one-piece swimsuit. Something on tv triggered it, though I don't recall what. I wanted the back to be open and to run up the sides of the body to just cover the sides of the bust -- that side line is what I wanted.



* muted red violet tint: great minds think alike, Durelle!
The shoes grew before any of the other elements after the skirt -- just a simple strap across the ball of the foot, exposing 3-4 toes and covering joint of toe to foot, with an ankle-strap and covered heel.
The necklace would be silver, a flat circle chain, three (or four) strands from mid-shoulder to shoulder, draped to hang just below the hollow of the throat and clavicle, across the sternum, and just above the bodice line -- as low as possible into the neckline without being in close proximity to the highest part of the bust fabric. These draped chains would join larger circles meant to sit on the shoulders, tacked to blouse if need be. A chain and clasp goes across the back, from which drops the counterweight in the window/frame element of the blouse back.
In the second stage of the drawing, I thought to put halter straps into the bodice and a very thin buttoned join across the back of the neck, attached as bias tape to the blouse neckline. In the final revision, which I had to do on the computer, I took them out again (and they are still seen in the reproduction of the full drawing -- at top of page).

Now a funny thing happened on the way to the . . . . It was so relaxing, just drawing and thinking on the white paper that, in darkening up the lines to trace over, finalizing shapes, my pencil started tracing the motion and hemlines of the sleeves and each made a circle, from the models just where they were: two adjacent circles. What wonderful structure underlay the whole thing!
From there, it was a short step to seeing a Yin-Yang circle behind the two figures, one of which had not had her hair colored in yet, so that the hair colors provided the seed parts of the opposite within the larger ground of the comma-shaped halves,.

Since I had opted to do a drawing, I let it turn into a drawing -- not an illustration -- from which I got an immense sense of satisfaction. On the final presentation, compilation (is is compiliation or compilation???) of representative elements, the Yin-Yang drawing element takes center stage with the cropped section of the two dolls in front of the black and white, with the full-length examples receding in importance.
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