Thursday, February 11, 2016

Where Are My Red-Headed Princesses?

















Do we have any little red-headed Muslimahs out there?  I have a doll made just for her.  Meet the Lil' Husna Doll.


She is fair in complexion, dressed in a black abaya and hijab lined with white trim.  Lil' Husna comes with red yarn for hair in two cute ponytails and adorned with white ribbon bows.  She's a precious, huggable doll that would make a nice companion for another red-headed little girl, in sha'Allah.

Why did I choose to do a doll like her?  Why not?  Our ummah is diverse with people from ALL walks of life.  I'm telling you, it's a beautiful thing.

So.  Where are my red-headed princesses at?



Lil' Muslimah Dolls Boutique




Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Lil' Muslimah Dolls World Hijab Day Video

I did a little commercial like video on YouTube featuring my handmade dolls with a 10% off coupon offer on customer orders for World Hijab Day.  Whether you have a little Muslimah who wears hijab or not, the dolls make an excellent gift and I believe may even encourage the little princess to don her crown as these dolls do.  It's been up over a week and I'm quite proud of this small, modest video I put together, alhamdulillah.  


Lil' Muslimah Dolls Boutique

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

A Doll For Every Girl


This world is filled with so many people of many different beautiful skin tones ranging from fair to dark brown coming from all walks of life.  Allah, who is truly an artist, could have made us all one color, with the same hair color, eye color.  He could have made us all exactly the same, but He didn't.  He, Most Great and Merciful, has made each and every one of us different so that we may appreciate each other's differences.  See the beauty that surrounds us that is His Creation.  His work of art.  

When I look around at the sea of people, all I see is beauty.  Absolute beauty.  I see no race. That's something an idiot came up with and it should be abolished.  I don't see one color being better than the other. Why would I see such things?  It's pointless.  It achieves nothing great, so why subject our young, impressionable children to such things.  For me to think one is better than the other because of the color of their skin would be like me saying, "Allah! Um...You made a mistake!"  He NEVER makes a mistake.  He made us perfect. He made us beautiful.

As I gather the fabrics to make these dolls, I take into consideration the colors that closely resembles our beautiful skin colors: caramel brown or coffee with just a bit of cream, deep chocolate brown, fair with just a hint of peach.  I try to pick out the best color yarn that best captures, as close as I can get it, the color hair the little girl may have such as black, brown or blonde.  I even added a red head to the Lil' Muslimah Doll collection to represent our beautiful red heads out there.


In putting all of these things together, in looking at the sea of different shades of skin, in looking at the beauty that is Allah's creation, I make a doll for every girl.  Why?  Because THEY...ARE...BEAUTIFUL.  If you don't think so, then you need to get your eyes and heart checked.  

We are all beautiful in the eyes of Allah.  Who can color better than Him?  He is after all, the Artist.


Lil' Muslimah Dolls Boutique

Monday, January 4, 2016

Diversity is a Beautiful Thing


Diversity is a beautiful thing. Each doll I make, I think about the sister  with fair skin and red hair, or the sister who has dark brown skin and black hair, light brown skin with brown hair,  and so forth.  I make my dolls diverse in color because this ummah, the whole of mankind, is diverse.  We come from different backgrounds and with different shades of color.  That’s how Allah made it and it’s the most beautiful thing ever.  

Alhamdulillah.

Friday, October 16, 2015

My Journey to Lil' Muslimah Dolls


I have been making Lil' Muslimah Dolls for about 7 or 8 years.  It all started when I was looking online to see if I can find a doll for my daughter that looked like her.  She wears modest, loose fitting clothes and hijāb she's been wearing since she was about 4 or 5 years old.  I tried just about every search engine word I could think of, but I couldn't find anything.  Well...except for one Muslim girl doll, but it's facial features creeped me out!


Anyways, after searching high and low, left and right, I realized that there really wasn't any place here in the US that sells them.  So then began my mission.  My mission was to make my daughter a doll that was age appropriate, dressed in a long modest dress and hijāb, and had the same skin tone as she.  I set out to my nearest fabric store and bought stuffing and three different kinds of fabric.  When I returned home, I started make my very first doll.  It was SO ugly, subhānAllah!  I tried again and again, until I finally made a doll I was please with.  After all was said and done, I had 8 doll prototypes and lots of fabric scraps.  I had achieved, what I believed was, success.  I gave the doll to my daughter and she loved it.  I also gave her the prototypes!  More for her tea parties, right?

The dolls all had facial features drawn on them at the time and they were so cute.  Perfect for little girls.  Then I started to get this feeling that, if it was hard for me to find Muslim dolls for my daughter, what about other Muslim parents? Did they have difficulty finding one for their little girl?  So now I was on another mission!  My mission was to start making dolls for Muslim girls and sell them online.  I perfected the art of making the dolls, started a website, and began selling dolls online. I didn't create an inventory of dolls because I didn't have any storage space for them, so I made them per order and shipped them out.  The business was slow, but I managed to get a handful (literally, about 4 to 6) customers.  One of them was a repeat!  I loved it!  After a while, I didn't get any more customers.  I turned down requests for bulk orders because, in my business, it was only me making the dolls.  Heck!  It's still only me, but I'm not complaining.  I know my limits.

After a couple of years and no orders, I felt I should take down the website and regroup.  Figure things out.  I still tried to sell the dolls offline at my local masjid, but I was only able to sell one and that was it.  I received some concerns from other sisters about making dolls with faces and it started to bother me.  They were worried about me and my incurring sin from it.  I didn't take it as an insult, I took it as a gentle warning, because on the Day of Judgement, I don't want to be told to bring a doll I made with a face to life.  Can you imagine?  I would probably be shaking in my boots!  I stopped trying to sell them altogether.  

Time went by and I really wanted to make more dolls, so I decided that this time, the dolls will have no faces AND I would create a pattern that would make it easy for me to make the dolls.  Not only that, the dolls would have yarn for hair. Something my old dolls didn't have.  I still made sure I had 3 different skin tones: brown, light brown, and fair. The hair color are brown, black, and blonde and each doll is named. I made my first doll and it turned out okay.  Made my second which was better than the first.  I made my third doll and it was perfect! Alhamdulillah!  I modified my pattern and I was back in business.

With the new look of the dolls, I decided to create a Facebook page for them called Lil' Muslimah Dolls and post them there.  I also decided to try and sell them from that page by having people send me direct messages of their interest in a doll where I would in turn send them a PayPal invoice to complete their payment for the order.  I had about 4 orders and the page received to-date 280 likes.  Now that's awesome.  I restarted my website within a month of the page being up, www.lilmuslimah.com, and have until today, changed the look of the website with the hopes of driving in more customers.  The website has not received any orders yet and it's been up for almost 7 months.  Huh (heavy sigh).



In shaa'Allah, with the new change to the look of the website and the new dolls, orders will start coming in.  This is my little business.  If I could do this full-time and orders were coming in steadily everyday, I'd be a happy camper.  I love what I do.  I only want to please Allah by providing families and friends here in the West a place to go and purchase something special and halāl for our little girls to play with and use their overly active and beautiful imagination.  Not only that, but earn an income that's halāl for me.  I want to go to Allah pleased with the my earnings and Him pleased with me.

I look at it as this.  Allah has blessed me with a gift of sewing and an imagination.  I didn't want that to go to waste.  So I put it to use to do something that benefits me and the Ummah at large.  The dolls are special, I believe and so are our little girls.  Why not give them something that has been lovingly made just for them 100%.  I literally smile after each doll is completed.  I love it.  It brings me joy.  Just knowing that my next doll will go home to a little Muslim girl makes my heart soar above the clouds.