katherinescollections, 10 years ago There were some other Japanese dolls posted on S&T yesterday, am curious to know what information will be provided.
fhrjr2, 10 years ago Try posting it up side down for a better view.
Manikin, 10 years ago Hi your photo is not a close up but she appears to made of GOFUN which is a paste made from oyster shell and glue. These Japan Geisha dolls are very hard to date as they have not changed from the 40's till today . They were popular during WWII when soldiers sent them home while in Japan , They were made for export . That is all I can tell you about your doll hope that helps a bit . The Gofun face is often older and more desirable although some collectors like the silk face ones . I can not tell if her fingers bend , the poseable doll hand would date more modern .
Each dress symbolizes a area in Japan or has a meaning .
katherinescollections, 10 years ago What does the Japanese writing say, is it about the doll, do you know?
Lovely doll, by the way, I didn't say that before.
Sarspoo, 10 years ago Thanks for the info. the fingers don't bend and my aunty thinks it was given about 30 years ago. I will find out what the writing says and let you know!
Manikin, 10 years ago We have a person on CW that knows these dolls and I just can't remember his or her name but hopefully will pop on and see your doll also reads Japanese .
Sarspoo, 10 years ago I got the writin translated-
Its Kyo-ningyo - meaning its traditional doll of Kyoto.
The artist's name is ?????Shosui Nijyo? (born 1927), works for Sankyu.
katherinescollections, 10 years ago Wow, right down to the artist's name. Fab, well done. :)
There were some other Japanese dolls posted on S&T yesterday, am curious to know what information will be provided.
Try posting it up side down for a better view.
Hi your photo is not a close up but she appears to made of GOFUN which is a paste made from oyster shell and glue. These Japan Geisha dolls are very hard to date as they have not changed from the 40's till today . They were popular during WWII when soldiers sent them home while in Japan , They were made for export . That is all I can tell you about your doll hope that helps a bit . The Gofun face is often older and more desirable although some collectors like the silk face ones . I can not tell if her fingers bend , the poseable doll hand would date more modern .
Each dress symbolizes a area in Japan or has a meaning .
What does the Japanese writing say, is it about the doll, do you know?
Lovely doll, by the way, I didn't say that before.
Thanks for the info. the fingers don't bend and my aunty thinks it was given about 30 years ago. I will find out what the writing says and let you know!
We have a person on CW that knows these dolls and I just can't remember his or her name but hopefully will pop on and see your doll also reads Japanese .
It looks like a Nisha doll and the writing would tell who made her .
https://www.google.com/search?q=nishi+dolls+made+in+japan&espv=2&biw=1414&bih=751&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=lJGyVJauKqe_sQSPr4LACQ&ved=0CEUQsAQ#imgdii=_&imgrc=u1GNeGbyR0UWnM%253A%3BPPfMVNWtUf518M%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.jillkolsrud.com%252Fphotos%252Fdoll01.jpg%3Bhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.immortalgeisha.com%252Fig_bb%252Fviewtopic.php%253Ft%253D4608%3B960%3B1280
I got the writin translated-
Its Kyo-ningyo - meaning its traditional doll of Kyoto.
The artist's name is ?????Shosui Nijyo? (born 1927), works for Sankyu.
Wow, right down to the artist's name. Fab, well done. :)