No, this is not a Teddy Bear.
It is another of my mother's antiques she wants me to repair. This is a carved wooden inkwell in the shape of a bear. The head is hinged to open and reveal an ink bottle. But this bear has broken where the head hinge was and a piece of his head is missing.
Here is a glimpse of one of my favorite products. It is a 2 part epoxy modelling compound. The bear had had his missing area filled in with it and tooled to match the surrounding area.
The repaired area gets painted to blend in with the rest of the bear.
And the head gets re-attached with 2 tiny screws.
He is completed and ready to go home.
Your favorite childhood doll or toy has just been found stuffed away in a box in the basement? It is cracked and dirty and your family urges you to throw it out. But it is full of memories and despite its many flaws, you just cannot discard it. Doll doctors and restoration artists can help. Many of the saddest dolls and toys can be restored. I restore dolls from my home base in Ontario. Wintertime however, finds me packing up a few projects and fleeing to Florida to work in the sunshine!
Friday, August 31, 2018
Friday, August 24, 2018
A well-loved vintage baby doll
This is a vinyl and cloth doll made by Horsman who needs a new body, a few new eyelashes, a bath and something done with her hair.
Under the tape on the arms is torn fabric. Her arms are almost off.
Inside her body are the remnants of her voicebox. This style of voicebox, when new, looked much like a whooopie cushion. When the doll was squeezed, the red rubber bladder forced air through the little reed you can see in the picture. The sound was an indignant squawk.
The rubber bladder has stiffened with time and has broken into many pieces.
All dismantled, bathed and ready to get a new body sewn.
Ok.....now we have a new body.
But what about that squawker.....it would be nice to bring back her voice.
The old squawker gets dismantled more and analysed. It's reed that makes the actual sound is intact. The red rubber bulb that pushed air through the reed is disintegrated.
What can the bulb be replaced with?
Dog owners might know....how about doggie chew toys that squeak? Many of them contain a similar apparatus.
So, off to the local pet store to peruse the clearance section. Lo and behold is a doggie chew toy that contains 10 squeakers. It gets dragged home and one of it's squeakers gets harvested.
The doggie squeaker gets removed from it's bulb and the doll's squawker gets inserted in it's place so we get this....
One original doll squawking reed with a new functional bulb.
Sure enough, it produces an indignant squawk.
Here she is.
New body, a bath, repaired eyelashes, a new 'do and a functioning squawker.
Under the tape on the arms is torn fabric. Her arms are almost off.
Inside her body are the remnants of her voicebox. This style of voicebox, when new, looked much like a whooopie cushion. When the doll was squeezed, the red rubber bladder forced air through the little reed you can see in the picture. The sound was an indignant squawk.
The rubber bladder has stiffened with time and has broken into many pieces.
All dismantled, bathed and ready to get a new body sewn.
Ok.....now we have a new body.
But what about that squawker.....it would be nice to bring back her voice.
The old squawker gets dismantled more and analysed. It's reed that makes the actual sound is intact. The red rubber bulb that pushed air through the reed is disintegrated.
What can the bulb be replaced with?
Dog owners might know....how about doggie chew toys that squeak? Many of them contain a similar apparatus.
So, off to the local pet store to peruse the clearance section. Lo and behold is a doggie chew toy that contains 10 squeakers. It gets dragged home and one of it's squeakers gets harvested.
The doggie squeaker gets removed from it's bulb and the doll's squawker gets inserted in it's place so we get this....
One original doll squawking reed with a new functional bulb.
Sure enough, it produces an indignant squawk.
Here she is.
New body, a bath, repaired eyelashes, a new 'do and a functioning squawker.
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
An antique Schoenhut animal now....
Schoenhut is an American company who started making wooden musical instruments in the 1870's. They expanded to make wooden toys like circus animals and dolls. A bankruptcy stopped their doll and toy production in 1935.
The animals they produced were jointed with elastic unlike their dolls which were spring jointed.
This is a Schoenhut giraffe.
He looks like had had too much Jack Daniels?
But no....his elastic is shot and needs replacing.
He gets taken apart.
The elastic is held into each leg with tiny nails which need to be removed gently to preserve the original paint and to try to keep the nails re-usable.
He gets new elastic and now can stand upright and even pose in different positions.
The animals they produced were jointed with elastic unlike their dolls which were spring jointed.
This is a Schoenhut giraffe.
He looks like had had too much Jack Daniels?
But no....his elastic is shot and needs replacing.
He gets taken apart.
The elastic is held into each leg with tiny nails which need to be removed gently to preserve the original paint and to try to keep the nails re-usable.
He gets new elastic and now can stand upright and even pose in different positions.
Monday, August 13, 2018
Old squawk boxes can squawk again...
This is an antique Gebruder Heubach doll with an oddly elongated torso.
There are mesh covered holes on each side of the torso....what is inside?
Inside is a long silent bellows-type squawker.
No, wait....there are two squawkers in there!
They are both silent now but were set up in opposite directions to make the doll squawk no matter which way it was tilted.
Out comes the first squawker to show the source of it's silence. The bellows fabric is torn.
Various patches are tried but the squawker stays silent.
So....the next thing is to replace the bellows cloth....but what with?
Cuckoo clock bellows are almost identical construction.
So the old torn fabric is replaced with new cuckoo clock bellows fabric.
The old stiffened tape that held the reed (the piece that actually makes the sound) is replaced with bellows fabric too.
It works!!!
His clothes hide his odd torso......but any little movement sets those squawkers off now!
There are mesh covered holes on each side of the torso....what is inside?
Inside is a long silent bellows-type squawker.
No, wait....there are two squawkers in there!
They are both silent now but were set up in opposite directions to make the doll squawk no matter which way it was tilted.
Out comes the first squawker to show the source of it's silence. The bellows fabric is torn.
Various patches are tried but the squawker stays silent.
So....the next thing is to replace the bellows cloth....but what with?
Cuckoo clock bellows are almost identical construction.
So the old torn fabric is replaced with new cuckoo clock bellows fabric.
The old stiffened tape that held the reed (the piece that actually makes the sound) is replaced with bellows fabric too.
It works!!!
Both squawkers get repaired and re-installed and this is the result:
His clothes hide his odd torso......but any little movement sets those squawkers off now!
Wednesday, August 1, 2018
Hip repair for a Maplelea doll
This is a Maplelea doll who has come in to get her dislocated hip fixed.
Her left leg is dangling because the stitching that held her hip socket into her body has disintegrated or come undone.
To resew the hip socket, I need to detach her leg from the hip socket, remove her head and unstuff her body.
She is now in pieces and ready to be reconstructed.
First her hip socket gets sewn back into the cloth of her body.
And then her leg gets reattached. This doll's limbs were attached to the joint sockets with knotted elastic. She needed new elastic for the one leg as the old elastic did not survive the unknotting.....that was one tough and stiff knot!!!
But, finally, she is back together.
Her left leg is dangling because the stitching that held her hip socket into her body has disintegrated or come undone.
To resew the hip socket, I need to detach her leg from the hip socket, remove her head and unstuff her body.
She is now in pieces and ready to be reconstructed.
First her hip socket gets sewn back into the cloth of her body.
And then her leg gets reattached. This doll's limbs were attached to the joint sockets with knotted elastic. She needed new elastic for the one leg as the old elastic did not survive the unknotting.....that was one tough and stiff knot!!!
But, finally, she is back together.
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