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New Ideas for Work and Play: What a Girl Can Make and Do

Chapter 2: PREFACE
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About This Book

A practical, illustrated handbook that encourages girls to develop manual skill and resourcefulness through a variety of do-it-yourself projects. It begins with basic workshop guidance and simple carpentry for small furniture and fittings, then moves to decorative and seasonal crafts using eggs, paper, and natural materials. Sections cover collecting and mounting pictures, making valentines, vegetable animals and lanterns, pasteboard models, ink sketches, moving toys, homemade pyrotechnics, monotype printing, and Priscilla rugs with dyeing techniques. Each project emphasizes step-by-step instruction, accessible tools and materials, and opportunities for creative play and useful household work.

PREFACE

This new century, bringing with it the strong, healthy, independent, athletic American girl, makes a demand for new opportunities for the exercise of both mind and body. Resourcefulness and a wish to do things for one’s self are American traits strongly developed in the girls as well as in the boys; and, keeping step with their brothers, our girls are walking steadily onward, with new hopes and new ambitions in work and play, and are reaping new rewards.

This book is the result of the authors’ earnest desire to be of some assistance to their young friends by encouraging them in their wish to do things for themselves, and by pointing out some directions in which they may gratify this ambition. Within its covers are suggestions for a wide variety of things, useful, instructive, and entertaining, which a girl may make and do, with wholesome and genuine pleasure. The ideas that are worked out are essentially those of the authors, and are not, as is often the case, derived from other books. The drawings, too, are all original, as in “The American Girl’s Handy Book,” to which this is a companion volume.

In conclusion the authors wish to express their sincere thanks to the Delineator and the Woman’s Home Companion, whose prompt and generous courtesy, in returning such original drawings and material as were used in their respective magazines, has greatly facilitated the preparation of this work and added to its interest.

Flushing, June 16, 1902.