A 1920s 2-inch snow baby piece. |
Although
classical snow babies stand under 2 inches high and were often used in
England as cake decorations, there are many variations. Some of the
oldest types, made in Germany during the decade beginning about 1905,
ranged from 4 to 13 inches tall and were carefully painted by master
artisans. Other babies created during this early period were crafted
with similar attention to detail. With the onset of World War I,
production stopped; when it resumed sometime around 1922, the snow
babies were more hastily made, less finely detailed in their porcelain
and finish. Yet these newer pieces show children, Santas, and elves in
remarkably imaginative poses: a child feeds a seal from a baby bottle;
Santa drops toys from an airplane; two dwarves dance atop a psychedelic
mushroom. The variations are nearly endless: one estimate puts their
number at well over 2000.
Their is also a charming book called, "The Snow Baby: The Arctic Childhood of Admiral Robert E. Peary's Daring Daughter" |
- Mary Morrison, Mary Morrison’s Big Book of Snow Babies (Tualatin Press, 2003)
- About.com: Antiques - Real "Snow Baby" Started Collecting Trend
- MarryMorrison.com - Mary Morrison's German Snow Babies
- Kovels.com - Snow Babies
- Antique Snow Baby Doll
- Craft a snow baby from cotton batting
- Story and photographs of the original Snow Baby by Josephine Diebitsch Peary, 1863-1955
- Print and color snow baby gift tags for gifts here.
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