Have I finished Romeo and Juliet with Dolls, Act V (the stop-motion video) in 2025? #Goals #FreeSpeech

A stitched bookmark shaped pennant from Chelly Wood's "Sewing Goals Planner Page" states the following goal for Chelly in 2025: Finish Romeo and Juliet Act Five! Work on this project for 30 minutes per week.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

The first goal I set on my sewing and craft planner in January of 2025 was “Finish Romeo and Juliet, Act V! Work on this project for 30 minutes per week.”

But did I achieve my goal? That’s what today’s blog post is all about.

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In this list, titled, "My Sewing Goals," purple checkmarks appear beside goals that were achieved, and a yellow highlighted X appears through the text of those sewing goals that didn't get achieved during the past year. The bottom of the graphic organizer says, "2024 sewing goals" to remind us of the year. The blog post that accompanies this image describes each of the 10 flag-shaped boxes, and offers details about what sewing goals were achieved and which ones missed the boat.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

Some of you may use my sewing planner, which is available for sale in my Etsy store. I use my own planner to set goals each January, and the list above shows the goals I achieved and didn’t achieve in 2024.

Some of the things I marked with a yellow X (meaning I didn’t achieve them) got transferred onto my 2025 sewing planner.

Here’s a look at what I tried to achieve in 2025:

This is a visual image of Chelly Wood's 2025 sewing planner. It includes two goals that have been scribbled out and re-written in pen over the top. Otherwise, all goals are typed, and they include such goals as "Finish Romeo and Juliet with dolls," "revise memoir," "maintain a budget," "sell a wardrobe" (for various dolls), "design a doll box," "don't add too many dolls to my collection," and "organize the closet in the sewing room."
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

This year I want to try a new approach by involving you, my faithful readers, followers, and commenters in the goals I set for 2026. I want to start today with Romeo and Juliet with Dolls, Act V.

If you don’t know what I’m referring to, scroll down a little bit or click on the links I’ve provided here. When my kids were 12 and 14, the three of us crated a stop-motion video of Romeo and Juliet with Dolls. It’s pretty amazing, if I do say so myself.

And to be perfectly honest, it was Romeo and Juliet with Dolls that launched this website.

However Act V shows Romeo and Juliet committing suicide. That’s a big no-no on YouTube. You can’t even use the word “suicide” in your videos without getting flagged.

 

So far, I haven’t quite finished Romeo and Juliet with Dolls because Act V has been in limbo for about 7 years. I’m scared that if I post it on YouTube, my whole channel will be demonetized, and I count on the money from my YouTube ads to help pay for all the storage I’m using for this website’s free patterns.

My goal for 2025 was to work on the project for 30 minutes each week. That didn’t happen. Whenever I’d think about going back to work on it, I’d realize that uploading Act V — just that one, single video — could drop my whole channel into non-ranking, demonetized status. I’d lose viewers, lose money, and lose my good standing with YouTube.

So progress on Act V has stagnated. The stop-motion is done and all the photos have been taken… but I can’t seem to put it all together as a final cut. It’s just too frustrating to think about.

As a means to fulfill my goal of finishing Romeo and Juliet with Dolls, Act V, I emailed the Suicide Prevention Resource Center online. They gave me a PowerPoint that’s used by schools and businesses, and I designed it to be inserted into my video with the following warning:

Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

However, the folks at the Suicide Prevention Resource Center online could not guarantee that this would prevent me from having my YouTube channel demonetized.

So I’m considering one of two solutions to this conundrum:

  • I can upload just Act V to Patreon, where people can pay a fee to watch it OR
  • I can upload just Act V to Teachers Pay Teachers, where people can pay to view it.

I can’t think of a better solution than those two options. I would rather offer it for free, on my YouTube channel. Education should be free, in my humble opinion, and Shakespeare should be easy for teachers and home schoolers to view without the video creator being punished for depicting suicide — which is simply part of the classic play by William Shakespeare.

A yellow X has been marked through the stitched bookmark shaped pennant from Chelly Wood's "Sewing Goals Planner Page" which states the following goal for Chelly in 2025: Finish Romeo and Juliet Act Five! Work on this project for 30 minutes per week.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

So unfortunately, I have not achieved this goal, but I may be able to pivot and finish the project on a different platform, rather than using my YouTube channel.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this. Please consider leaving a comment. If I uploaded it to either Patreon or Teachers Pay Teachers, would any of you be willing to pay to view it? And if so, what should I charge? Which platform would be easiest for you to participate in?

Can any of you think of a different platform where I can legally and legitimately make Romeo and Juliet with Dolls Act V free for everyone to view?

I’ll leave you with one of the images from Act V. This comes from Act V, Scene I, when Balthasar brings news to Romeo of Juliet’s death. This is what AI thinks Mantua looked like during the Renaissance, I guess (because I asked AI to create the setting, and then I plopped my photos of Romeo and — it’s actually Benvolio — into the AI generated background):

A courtyard with a checkerboard stone floor leads to a medieval wall that looks about two feet tall. Beyond the wall are trees, with mountains in the distance and a blue sky above. In the lower right corner of this image stands Romeo (a Ken doll dressed as Romeo) and Benvolio (a World of Love doll dressed as Benvolio) from Romeo and Juliet with dolls, a stop-motion video produced by Chelly Wood.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

Romeo’s line here is, “Is it e’en so? Then I defy you, stars!”

Most of Act V is a lot like Acts I through IV, where I used solid, real-world dioramas that my daughters and I created. But playing around with AI gave me some incentive to start working on Act V yesterday, for the first time in a LONG time.

I guess I’m pleased with the way the photo turned out. But again, I’d love to hear your opinion. Please take the time to leave a comment, okay?

This image of a turquoise blue sewing needle pulling purple thread away from a line of cross-stitching is used as a divider between sections of a blog post.

If you enjoyed this blog post, and you’d like to see my videos, you might want to navigate over to my YouTube channel, ChellyWood1 to look through my playlists.

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For anyone who would like to expand their dolls’ wardrobes, you should really check out my “How to Alter Doll Clothes Patterns” course and my “Design Your Own Doll Pants Patterns from Scratch” classes on the C&T Publishing online learning platform. Here’s my bio page on their website, where you can learn more.

This image shows four rows of artist's renderings of doll clothing items. The top row shows four different styles of pants. The second row shows four different styles of shirts. The third row shows four different styles of skirts. The fourth row shows four different styles of dresses, with skirts in long, short, and mid-length styles. The text reads at the top, "Classes in Doll Clothing Design" followed by this paragraph: "Have you ever wished you could create patterns of your own? Click on the links to Chelly's online courses below, to learn more about her paid courses in doll clothing pattern design techniques."

For any class on the C&T Publishing website, you don’t have to follow a schedule. Just sign up when you’re ready.

It’s a one-time fee for the course, and there’s no specific time limit to finish your course. You can just take your time and learn at the pace that suits you. So go check out my paid courses on the C&T Pub site, using this link.

As always, feel free to share my patterns and tutorials on social media. I only ask that you please let people know about my free doll clothes sewing pattern website, to help spread the word.

To read more about my free sewing patterns and tutorials, please visit the “Helpful Tips” page.

Disclaimer/Credit/Affiliate Marketing Link:

*Please note: when you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include Amazon, Etsy, and the eBay Partner Network. As an Amazon affiliate, I earn from qualifying purchases. To learn more about how my website uses affiliate marketing, please visit the website’s Privacy Policy page.

Chelly Wood and the ChellyWood.com website are not affiliated with any of the doll or toy companies mentioned in this blog post, but Chelly enjoys designing her doll clothes to fit a variety of dolls. To learn more about the doll companies mentioned in today’s post, please visit the doll or toy company’s website.

6 thoughts on “Have I finished Romeo and Juliet with Dolls, Act V (the stop-motion video) in 2025? #Goals #FreeSpeech

  1. Chelly, don’t do anything that jeopardizes your YouTube income. Goals are made to be changed. Finish the video and upload to the two websites where they pay to watch. That way you can make your disclaimer up front and people choose to watch. There are many people who know that Romeo and Juliet died since it was mandatory reading in many high schools back when I attended school but nowadays kids are just too delicate for real life (lol). Now for another subject. I saw nowhere I could post this on the specified page but I see you are working on a Little Mismatched doll page. While I don’t have a doll I have been collecting 15.5″ Maudlynne Maude and these two dolls are usually shown together. I don’t have a Maudlynne either but dozens of 15″ Ruby Red Fashion Friends and that is where the patterns come in. Looking forward to your Little Mismatched page sometime next year.

    1. Thank you for mentioning that, Judy. I’ll definitely add Little Mismatched sewing patterns to the goals I set for myself in 2026.

      I appreciate your frequent comments on my website, so you deserve a little special attention! Is there anything — in terms of clothing items — that you’d like for me to focus on? Skirts and tops? Dresses? Play clothes? Feel free to offer suggestions for outfit ideas.

  2. Dear Chelly, thanks for today’s blog post about finishing Act V of Romeo and Juliet with Dolls. YouTube isn’t the only social media outlet that punishes its users. I was put in Facebook Jail once for unkind remarks I made to another person’s comments in a Barbie doll group that I’m a member of. Neither me nor anyone else want you to face a penalty for the scene where Romeo and Juliet commit suicide.

    Thanks again and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season.
    Trisha

    1. Thank you, Trishadee. I’m feeling the support of my friends and followers. I appreciate that. ❤️

      I also understand WHY YouTube is cautious about this topic. I want whatever brings peace to everyone, so I will seek another platform on which to publish this important final act of R&J.

      1. You can’t jeopardise the future of your channel because of YouTube rules. It is a shame not to be able to post the video there but a pay to use platform would avoid the problem. Obviously YouTube doesn’t make exceptions for Shakespeare.

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