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Blythe On Your Budget?

Written on July 20, 2011 at 12:00 pm by Michelle
Filed under: Musings with tags:

Budgeting can be a very personal thing. We’re taught early on that it’s rude to ask people about money or wages and to only discuss such things amongst close family members. With Blythe, it’s kind of an open secret. Secret only to those not familiar with the costs of pocketed dresses, embroidered hats and that special custom doll by a certain designer. After all, we know how much a Goldie usually goes for, especially with uncut stock hair. We know that a NRFB Kenner goes for well over a thousand dollars. There’s no hiding how much we spend on dolls. If you’d just bought a Princess a la Mode, you’re not going to fool anyone in the dolly community into thinking that you got for her a low hundred dollars (even if you can get your non-Blythe friends and family to believe you!).

When I don’t get a new doll, my spending for this dolly hobby of mine is typically $25 (Canadian) or less. During the school year, the most spending I do is usually just for fabrics and trims at the crafts store because even though I spend a lot of time looking at dolls and sundries – I hardly ever buy anything (sad, but true). I go through long dry spells of no dolly mail and then I’ll do a little bit of spending get a lot of mail and that’ll tide me over for a few months again.

Heather (of Claribari Blythe) asked on last week’s Blythe On A Budget:

If it isn’t too personal, I would be curious how much the typical Blyther spends in a month (the ones where they don’t buy a Kenner…that would blow the budget!)

So… What’s your typical dolly budget look like when you’re not making extravagant purchases? Unless, of course, you do buy a Kenner every month, in which case that’s part of your regular budgeting!

Blythe On A Budget: On actually budgeting

Written on July 13, 2011 at 12:00 pm by Michelle
Filed under: Article with tags:

I’ve been asked multiple times before why I never really talk about budgeting when it comes to the Blythe On A Budget series. There’s a really simple answer for this: I’m not an accountant (or a debt collector) and nor do I play one on television. My way of budgeting is a lot different than most other people. For starters, I only work 4 months out of the year (full time studies plus the commuting aspect of being a full time student does not lend itself well to a part-time job in my area).

How I justify my doll purchases is I look at my total savings account amount, minus the amounts needed for all tuition money needed still (up to May), minus an appropriate amount for textbooks (I budget $100 textbook money per class – I usually do not use all of this but have gone over once or twice, unfortunately), minus an appropriate amount of money for entertainment, food, miscellaneous purchases (I look at the number of birthdays that I’m likely to buy/craft gifts for; if it’s November/December I budget more for the holiday shopping). And then at the end of all my minusing, I see how much I have left over.

I always try to shop smart when it comes to Blythe. I look for good deals on dolls and also on good deals on the shipping. A lot of the time, most people are fairly sensible about what they charge for shipping (and handling!) fees, but sometimes people are slightly outrageous (for instance, if it costs them ~$20 to ship a doll to me in Canada and then tack on an excessive $30 on top of that, I’d be more than a little choked over that). I also have my boyfriend screen potential doll candidates for me. I’ll send him photos, talk to him about it. Sometimes he’ll gently remind me that I already have other dolls that look exactly like the one I’m wanting to buy (they’re never actually identical, different molds and all, but he does point out huge similarities, especially in hair colour). But he knows me well enough that I won’t ask him if he likes a doll unless I’ve already figured out if I can afford to get her, I just need to figure out if I want her badly enough to buy her. Sometimes I do, sometimes I’ll buy her. Sometimes I realize, after thinking about her and talking about her that I don’t really  need to get her.

What you should do is look at your total take-home pay in a month (or a year, or whatever length of time you want to look at). And start minusing from that the amounts of money that you need to spend every week/month/year. So you minus things like rent, an average amount for food, (necessary) entertainment, transportation, clothes, gifts, etc. You take away all of that and then see how much money you have left over. But since you’re all so much more responsible than I am (right…?!), you’ll also remember to minus an amount to go into a retirement fund (I’ll get to that, once I’m ‘really’ working). Once you take away from your take-home pay all the amounts of money that you need to spend, you’ll figure out the amount of money that you have to spend on more fun things.

If you have $50 left over for fun things, you don’t need to spend all of it every month. Say you really want to get a new doll, but $50 isn’t going to get you that Goldie of your dreams. But saving $50 for a few months will. It’s all about what you do with the money that you can spend.

Start a separate (as long as it’s free) savings account and have that $50 (or whatever amount) of money deposited into that fun account every month. When you’ve got that special purchase in mind, you’ll have the money there without needing to do some mental math of how much leftover fun money you have from the previous months.

Blythe is meant to be a fun hobby. It’s not fun to completely blow your monthly budget out of proportion because you decided to buy 5 Kenners in one month and now your electricity’s going to be shut off and you have nothing in your pantry except for a jar of peanut butter which may or may not be expired (ew). It is not the end of the world if you do not get that doll right now. There will always be another doll. There will always be another cute dolly-designer dress. And it’s okay to say no to buying a doll just because you cannot cut into the amount of money that you need for food. Having a new doll is nice, but being able to eat is just as nice and far more important.

Just remember to have fun. It’s a lot easier to be happy about the dolls and dolly things that you have if you can afford them without taking away money from something that’s more important in your life.

Blythe On A Budget: DIY Knit Empire Dress

Written on June 15, 2011 at 12:00 pm by Michelle
Filed under: Article with tags: , ,

Supplies Needed

  • 3mm knitting needles
  • Sock/fingering weight yarn (under 10g required [under 42m or 45.9yd])
  • Yarn/darning needle
  • Snaps
  • Sewing needle and thread (matching colour to yarn)
  • Ruler
  • Decorations (buttons, ribbons, appliques) – optional

Gauge:
3 st per 1 cm

Notes
The yarn used in the dress shown is Regia Jacquard Color 4-ply by Schachenmayr nomotta in colour #5176 (50g per 210m or 230 yards)
Total number of stitches per row mentioned in brackets [#] at end of the row.
Casting off is also known as binding off.

Directions
Cast on 54 (leave a long enough tail at beginning for sewing up the back of the dress; I use the long-tail cast-on)
Knit 3 rows (garter) [54]
Alternate knit and purl rows (stockinette) until total length is 7cm [54]
(On knit side, decrease row): *k1, k2tog* [34]
Knit 6 rows even [34]
Knit 7, cast-off 3, knit 14, cast-off 3, knit 7 [28]
Knit 7, cast-on 4, knit 14, cast-on 4, knit 7 [36]
Knit 2 rows even [36]
Cast-off

Use yarn needle to sew up the back (up to the decrease row).

Sew a snap at the top of the back of the dress, add decorations as desired.

Notes on Pattern Use
This pattern may be used for personal or commercial use provided that full credit is given to BlytheLife.com/Michelle for the pattern (please include a link to the website or pattern page in your sales description). This pattern is not for mass-production manufacturing. You may not sell or claim the pattern as your own. If you have any questions regarding these terms, please email Michelle at michelle@blythelife.com.

Blythe On A Budget: DIY Sock-Sweater Dress

Written on May 25, 2011 at 12:00 pm by Michelle
Filed under: Article with tags: , , , ,

When I was younger, my parents refused to go out and buy clothes for my Barbie dolls beyond what came with the doll herself. But I still wanted new clothes for my dolls so my dad used to sew some for me, just to placate me long enough for me to stop from whining more. One of the things he used to make for me was little sweaters and dresses from socks, so with his help I wrote this tutorial.

Pretty much all of the directions are his, minus the use of stabilizer (I have no clue how he was patient enough to sew doll clothes for me with socks without stabilizer, I had a hard enough time with it!).

You will need:

  • 1 sock (I bought mine from a local dollar store, kids sizes at 3 pairs for $2 CAD)
  • scissors
  • stabilizer (makes your life so much easier)
  • thread (either the same colour as your sock or similar)
  • pencil (or something else to mark fabric with)
  • pins
  • sewing machine

Click to read more of this entry.

Blythe On A Budget: DIY Trimmed Skirt

Written on May 18, 2011 at 12:00 pm by Michelle
Filed under: Article with tags: , , , ,

My wardrobe is the opposite of my dolls’. I have a lot of separates (shirts, pants, skirts, sweaters) while they have a lot more dresses than I will probably ever have (if only for lack of closet space). In my need for more separates to go with the small amounts of tops that I have for my dolls, I decided to sew a simple skirt that is very much modelled after a skirt that I have.

You will need:

  • fabric – 8cm x 23cm
  • trim (optional) – 23cm
  • elastic – 3mm width, 9cm length (I got mine for $1.70 for 3.7m)
  • scissors
  • pins
  • stabilizer
  • safety pin (for threading elastic)
  • thread
  • iron
  • sewing machine

Click to read more of this entry.

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