“Now,”
began Miss Johnson, getting right to the point. “I have yard goods here . . .”
[That’s fabric by the yard, not yard ornaments] “. . . donated by certain
merchants in town, and I wonder if I could prevail upon the two of you [Ina and
Bertha] to make the costumes for the pageant.”
“Oh,
we’d love to,” responded the eager Bertha, but the more reticent Ina shot her
one of her withering glares.
“We
need to hear more about it,” answered Ina.
The
teacher then explained that she had written the pageant herself, based on a
booklet, “The Little Gingerbread Man,” which was published by the Royal Baking
Company some years prior. The teacher envisioned a Gingerbread Princess, the
part won by Shirley Anne, dressed in a dirndl of gingerbread print paired with
a bright red. She showed the sisters the dress pattern and fabric. Other
children would be dressed as gingerbread people made of a soft brown knit. The
teacher was honest. They would need a lot of costumes.
Ina
was skeptical. The costumes weren’t practical for everyday wear -- would be useless after the pageant. She said as
much.
“Oh,
I know what you mean, Aunt Ina,” said Miss Johnson, “but I was thinking that
since the fabric was donated, we might make costumes just this once. So many of our
families are struggling right now. Some of the children won’t have much
Christmas at home this year, so a good program at the school might fill a void
for the whole community.”
And
Ina admitted that yes, it might be fun – and just what the community needed.
That issue settled, they began to discuss the costumes in earnest, and Ina and
Bertha left the schoolhouse with fabric and patterns. KW
[Wherever
did Miss Johnson find that fabric and those patterns? Probably nothing like it in 1933. In real
time, the gingerbread fabric came from Jo-Ann, and the patterns are from Doll
Tag Clothing through Pixie Faire (here).]
3 comments:
Boy, Ina and Bertha are good sports! (Realizing that Ina is being railroaded by Bertha...).
I think they'd be wise to make a plea at church on Sunday and get the whole community involved. Maybe they could create an assembly line of sorts. Sewers, button attachers, accessorizers, etc.
Hmmmm. Interesting idea. I guess I was thinking that in this small community, Ina and Bertha were the most available and capable. Perhaps they thought so, too -- LOL. Well, we'll see . . .
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