Little House on the Prairie and Holly Hobbie – are they related? #HistoricalFiction #LittleHouse

Here we see a close-up image of Simplicity Craft Pattern #6006. This pattern, marked with a copyright from 1973, shows the soft-bodied Holly Hobby dolls in four different outfits: undergarments (including bloomers and a slip), a white floral dress with a white dotted Swiss pinafore and blue bonnet, a rust-colored floral dress with a ribbon that ties around the middle of the doll and a matching bonnet with ribbon, and a brown floral dress with lace trim. If you'd like to learn more about this pattern and its history, please visit ChellyWood.com and click on "Old Patterns from Chelly's Collection" under the "categories" feature.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable sewing patterns for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

When people talk about the 1970’s, they usually reference a time when everyone dressed like hippies, went to Woodstock, and lived at ashrams. I was a little girl in the 1970’s, yet I don’t remember any of that hippie-dippie stuff. Not really. I mean, my cousins grew their hair out long and played guitar, but that was about it.

What I remember is this: every girl came to school with a Holly Hobbie lunchbox, our family faithfully watched Little House on the Prairie (the original Michael Landon/Melissa Gilbert version), and my aunts made Sunbonnet Sue quilts. So clearly social media and Hollywood like to romanticize the hippie culture of the 1970’s, when in fact, there was a whole other pioneer revival going on.

So in today’s blog post, I’m going to address the question of Holly Hobbie and Little House on the Prairie. Was there a connection? And who the heck is Sunbonnet Sue?

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On the front of a 1970’s lunchbox are images of two little girls dressed in Victorian era clothing. The girl on the left wears a white sun bonnet with tan long sleeved dress and light brown pinafore. The girl on the right wears a blue bonnet, white dress, and patchwork apron. The lunchbox is trimmed in blue calico print on a white background. The lunchbox handle is blue. This photo takes up the upper right corner of the graphic. In the lower right corner is the back of the lunchbox, in which the girl in the tan and light brown Victorian dress leans into the flowerbox outside her window. Here, the white sun bonnet exposes just a bit of her face, so we can see that she has very small eyes and a round face. The girl in the blue bonnet is also reaching outside her window into a flower box, but her face is obscured by the bonnet she wears. They both appear to be working in their window box flower gardens with their windows open on the same house, as if they’re each doing the same gardening chore from side-by-side windows. This is the decoration on the back of the metal lunchbox with its calico blue trim. In both the front-facing and back-facing photos of the lunchbox, there’s a matching thermos beside the lunchbox. The window gardeners are featured on one side of the thermos while the other side shows a girl in a wicker bonnet and pink Victorian style dress with a white apron. The girl in the wicker bonnet waters flowers growing outside in a garden. She holds up a watering can high in the air. The thermos has a white background, a tan inner lid, and blue outer cap that forms the thermos’s cup. Holly Hobby lunchbox images courtesy of binkyboo9500 eBay store. Please see links in the article on Holly Hobby vs. Little House on the Prairie at ChellyWood.com.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable sewing patterns for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes. This item is for sale. Please see links in the article.

The Holly Hobbie lunchbox you see in the images above are available for sale in the Binkyboo9500 store on eBay. Click those links to see the lunchbox in real time, and to visit Staci’s store (respectively). And thank you, Staci, for generously sharing your images with me!

That lunchbox is one of my strongest memories from the 1970’s. Every girl wanted one. Most girls owned one, and the thermos too.

But why? Who was Holly Hobbie? And was she somehow connected with the Little House on the Prairie show from the 1970’s?

Denise Holly Hobbie is a real person. Learn more about her on her Amazon page. An elderly lady is shown with her watercolor paints, her pallet, and her tripod, creating watercolor paintings. The chellywood.com logo appears in one corner.
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.

As it says in the image above, Denise Holly Hobbie is a real person. She’s a watercolor painter, illustrator, and author of children’s books. Her maiden name was Ulinskas, but she married her husband, Douglas Hobbie, in 1964, and that’s how she got her surname.

According to Wikipedia, “In the late 1960s, at the encouragement of her brother-in-law, Hobbie sold distinctive artwork of a cat-loving, rag dress-wearing little girl in a giant bonnet to American Greetings in Cleveland, Ohio. The artwork, based on Hobbie’s own children and with [the] rustic New England–style of a bygone era, became popular, and her originally nameless character (identified earlier as ‘blue girl’) became known as Holly Hobbie.”

From there, American Greetings ran with the creation of her fictionalized character, producing and marketing a number of items (including lunchboxes, greeting cards, wrapping paper, and much more), and eventually the rights to Holly Hobbie were sold to Cloudco Entertainment, and they own the rights today.

However Denise Holly Hobbie is also the author of the Toot and Puddle series of children’s books. On her Amazon page, you can see the projects she has created in more recent years. According to Wikipedia, she’s 82 years old today, and she lives in Massachusetts.

This is a photograph of the back of Simplicity Pattern 6006 from the 1970's, which explains the fabrics, notions, and specs for making a Holly Hobby soft (plush) doll and pioneer-style doll clothes, including pioneer dresses, bonnets, shoes, bloomers, and a slip. There's a green circle around the pattern shapes; for example the shape of the doll's leg with foot; the shape of the bonnet's brim piece; etc.... The green circle is meant to draw the viewer's attention to the template designs for patterns that are available on many patterns. If you'd like to read the entire article, written by doll clothing designer and YouTuber Chelly Wood, please visit ChellyWood.com and click on "Old Patterns from Chelly's Collection" in the "categories" section of the website.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable sewing patterns for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

The Holly Hobbie sewing pattern that I own (pictured at the start of today’s blog post and above and below as well) shows the registered trademark for the Holly Hobbie merchandise. Look below and to the left of the green oval in the image above, and you’ll see that famous trademarked font for the words “Holly Hobbie.”

This Holly Hobbie pattern was produced by Simplicity, who I’m guessing had some sort of contract with American Greetings, as this pattern dates back to 1973. If you look closely at the very bottom of the pattern, you’ll see that copyright date.

When I was in high school, I made all the outfits, plus the doll (which is included), using this Simplicity 6006 Holly Hobbie pattern. I gave the doll and her wardrobe to my little sister, Sarah.

It’s a lovely pattern, and the doll is about 18 inches tall, so I think she would probably be able to wear modern American Girl doll clothes.

In this photograph, the Chelly Wood doll (a re-purposed Spin Master Liv doll wearing a dyed-grey wig done up in a bun and an apron advertising the ChellyWood.com website over black pants and a white shirt) holds up Simplicity Craft Pattern #6006. This pattern, marked with a copyright from 1973, shows the soft-bodied Holly Hobby dolls in four different outfits: undergarments (including bloomers and a slip), a white floral dress with a white dotted Swiss pinafore and blue bonnet, a rust-colored floral dress with a ribbon that ties around the middle of the doll and a matching bonnet with ribbon, and a brown floral dress with lace trim. If you'd like to learn more about this pattern and its history, please visit ChellyWood.com and click on "Old Patterns from Chelly's Collection" under the "categories" feature.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable sewing patterns for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

So now comes the big question… Was there a connection between the popularity of Little House on the Prairie and the Holly Hobbie craze?

Well, let’s learn the history behind the show. The original TV series, Little House on the Prairie, was based on a series of books by Laura Ingalls Wilder. According to the Library of Congress, “Laura Ingalls was born in Pepin, Wisconsin, a few years after the end of the Civil War” and she really did a lot of homesteading back in the pioneer days. Then, between 1932 and 1943, she wrote her famous Little House series of books, loosely based on her experiences as a little girl growing up in the homestead era.

The TV series, according to Wikipedia, began when, “with the encouragement of his wife and daughter, television producer and former NBC executive Ed Friendly acquired the film and television rights to Wilder’s novels from Roger Lea MacBride and engaged Blanche Hanalis to write the teleplay for a two-hour motion picture pilot.” It kicked off in March of 1974, with the pilot episode, and remained popular into the early 1980’s.

Young actress Melissa Gilbert starred as the author of the original books, Laura Ingalls. Later in life, the real Laura Ingalls married Almanzo Wilder, and some of the later productions of the Little House on the Prairie series included the stories of their courtship and marriage.

The left section has the heading, “Here’s how I think of fashion from the 1970's.” The image features a nostalgic list of fashion elements from the 1970s, including references to "Little House on the Prairie" with Melissa Gilbert, Holly Hobby-themed items, rainbow suspenders like those worn by Mork (Robin Williams), Clint Eastwood in Spaghetti Westerns, and country-themed variety shows such as "Donny & Marie," "Dolly!,” “Barbara Mandrell & the Mandrell Sisters," and "Hee Haw." Beneath this, there are two images. The first shows two boys dressed in Western shirts and cowboy hats, sitting on a fence gate. The second photo depicts two girls wearing pioneer bonnets and Victorian dresses. The right section begins with the heading, “Here’s how young people today think of fashion from the 1970's.” The image presents a modern perspective on 1970s fashion. It includes a photo of a teenage boy wearing a long-haired wig with a yellow headband, a tie-dyed tee shirt, a long necklace, a brown vest, grey trousers, and sandals. The text at the bottom reads, “How did fashion history get so mixed up?” with a prompt to read the full article at ChellyWood.com. Holly Hobbie.
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.

Most of the families I knew also watched variety shows on television, and some of my personal favorites were Donny & Marie (1976), Dolly! (1976), and Barbara Mandrell & the Mandrell Sisters (1980).

On their show, Donny and Marie Osmond used to sing an intro song called, “A Little Bit Country, A Little Bit Rock and Roll” which, in my humble opinion, really represented the way we lived in the 1970’s. It wasn’t like rock and roll didn’t exist. It absolutely did. Heck, I was a big fan of Queen, Creedence Clearwater Revival, and the band Heart back in the 1970’s.

But I also loved songs by John Denver and Kenny Rogers. But I digress…

Here we see a photo of the Marie Osmond 6664 "Butterick's Personality Doll Wardrobe" envelope and its photo of an actual Marie Osmond doll modeling a red western shirt with white front yokes and a pair of shiny black pants. The pattern options to the doll's right are showing a yellow jumper (in the USA sense of "jumper" -- a sleeveless dress which is sometimes worn over a shirt): a floor length caftan dress with ribbon ties at the sleeve and a waistband; a blue, V-neck long-sleeved shirt with cuffs and a waistband; a long-sleeved white shirt with a collar and cuffs; a purple evening dance dress with a zig-zag-cut skirt and a bodice with straps that tie at the shoulders; a short camel-colored caftan blouse with a waistband and ribbon ties at the sleeves' ends; a green flared ice skater's skirt; a green body suit with long sleeves and a turtle neck.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable sewing patterns for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

In brief, Holly Hobbie was not associated with the 1970’s TV series, Little House on the Prairie. However the popularity of both the fictional character of Holly Hobbie and the famous TV show about the little girl, Laura Ingalls, who later became the author, Laura Ingalls Wilder, speaks volumes about what the real 1970’s was like.

It wasn’t all about beads and bell bottoms. Just like with fashion styles today, many different modes of fashion were in style. The hippie thing was just one of many.

And I haven’t even begun to mention Sunbonnet Sue! I’ve reached 1500 words in today’s blog post, so Sunbonnet Sue will have to wait for another day…

References:

“The Little House Series by Laura Ingalls Wilder.” Library of Congress, New Materials, Book Lists. 2012, https://www.loc.gov/nls/new-materials/book-lists/little-house-series-laura-ingalls-wilder/, Accessed 11 July 2026.

Wikipedia contributors. “Holly Hobbie.” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 9 Jul. 2026. Web. 11 Jul. 2026.

Wikipedia contributors. “Little House on the Prairie (1974 TV series).” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 11 Jul. 2026. Web. 11 Jul. 2026.

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.

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7 thoughts on “Little House on the Prairie and Holly Hobbie – are they related? #HistoricalFiction #LittleHouse

  1. I’m in the UK and an early 70s child. Little House on the Prairie was always one of my favourite programmes. I also bought the set of all of the books by Laura Ingalls Wilder. My daughter also loves the books and bought dvds of the TV series.
    I also remember Holly Hobbie very well, we had soaps, talc, hair brushes and duvet covers with her art work on. I still love a bit of Queen and Heart!

  2. This was like reading my own memories. Holly Hobbie was, and is still, a favorite. I always thought of the Hippie stuff as more of the 60s than 70s.. Probably because I rarely saw it, even though I did own a few pair of bell bottoms myself, and had the long straight hair. I still watch reruns of little house. Thank you for the trip down memory lane. I wish they’d bring the variety shows back. Carol Burnett was always big favorite in our house too, along with the others you mentioned.

  3. I loved so much Holly Hobbie! I did not know what her name was, I had a ruler and few notebooks. It was in the early 80s and brands were not so important as today are.
    She was so lovely and the drawings were su full of peace.
    Maybe somewhere something has survived. I’ll try to find that pattern. I have never done a fabric doll before, only the body for a metal head one and now I am going to make a couple of dolls with only head, hands and legs made in bone china,few sets from 1970s.
    I am certainly crazy 🙂

    I have no special memory of the little house, probably I didn’t like it so much, but at that time here there was not so much on Tv.

    1. You’re going to make a china doll? Oh, that sounds like a wonderful project! I hope it goes well for you. 🤞🏼 (The fingers crossed emoji = good luck!)

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