My Paper Twist Dolls evolved from the Native American Cornhusk Dolls, which historically, have no faces. This legend will explain why....

LEGEND OF THE CORN HUSK DOLL

( This legend was told by Mrs. Snow, a talented Seneca craftswoman.)
Many, many years ago, the corn, one of the Three Sisters, wanted to make something different. She made the moccasin, the mats and the salt boxes. She wanted to do something different so the Great Spirit gave her permission. So she made the little people out of corn husk and they were to roam the earth so that they would bring brotherhood and contentment to the Iroquois tribe. But she made one that was very, very beautiful. This beautiful corn person, you might call her, went into the woods and saw herself in a pool. She saw how beautiful she was and she became very vain and naughty. That began to make the people very unhappy and so the Great Spirit decided that wasn't what she was to do. She didn't pay attention to his warning, so the last time the messenger came and told her that she was going to have her punishment. Her punishment would be that she'd have no face, she would not converse with the Senecas or the birds or the animals. She'd roam the earth forever, looking for something to do to gain her face back again. So that's why we don't put any faces on the husk dolls.
* Paraphrased from: Our Mother Corn- Mather/Fernandes/Brescia- 1981
*I'd like to add this little footnote: I break with this tradition when I make the face with molded and baked clay or buy heads that I find particularly tasteful, using them to create all of my Santas and Missus Claus.

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