Sunday, July 31, 2022

Vinyl doll arm reattaching


 This is 'Boston'. A beloved baby doll whose arms are coming off.
















One arm had been sewn back on using a colourful ribbon. That works but this style of arm should get secured to the body from inside.







So, off with her head.

This reveals that she is filled with chipped foam stuffing. This should get replaced by new polyester stuffing as foam does nasty stuff as it ages.





Emptied of foam, she is ready for a bath.
This foam was starting to degenerate and had become quite powdery.

Her body fabric is very sturdy and has no rips so it will get used again once it has had a cleaning.










Here is one way of installing the arms. 
A cable tie inside the body secures the body fabric into the groove of the upper arm. The cable tie end will get trimmed.












Both arms are installed with cable ties, she gets stuffed and then her head is secured by another cable tie.

She is ready to go home.










Sunday, July 17, 2022

Glass sleep eyes

 

This very large doll is in pieces but her main issue is her lack of eyes.









These are her original eyes. 

Unfortunately the iris part of the broken eye is missing. If it was still present the eyeball could be pieced back together.

She will look her best with new glass eyeballs.




Her owner has sourced out blown glass eyeballs of the right size.
Hopefully I can get them mounted on the original eye rocker.













First, the remains of the old eyes get removed from the rocker.














Then I try a dry run with the new eyeballs and old rocker inside the head.
So far, so good.











The eyes have been glued into the rocker and some eyelashes have been applied.
Next the missing plaster eyelids need to be recreated.












Some things just do not go well!
The plaster eyelids got applied by dipping the whole eye rocker in freshly mixed plaster. That made the eyelashes fall off.
To add to that, as I was contemplating how to reinstall the eyelashes, I heard a 'pop'. The left eyeball just cracked!!!
Plaster of Paris as it cures and sets into a solid gives off a wee bit of heat. Could that have cracked the vintage glass? There was no obvious trauma to the glass.
Now what?


The glass pieces stayed together after cracking so I consolidated them and coated them with a water thin cyanoacrylate adhesive. That seemed to work so I reapplied the eyelashes and waxed the eyelids. The cracked eyeball survived all that so now we have this. An intact eye rocker!







The old eye plasters did not fit the new eyes' contours so new plaster mounts were made.
















Once I pull her body out of the box I find another issue. Her neck socket is cracked and needs to be reinforced before she gets restrung. There will be a large anount of pressure on this socket from the stringing elastic. If it gets strung as is the neck socket will finish caving in.





After lots of glue is applied around the outside and inside of the neck socket, the missing areas can be rebuilt with epoxy putty.













Then the repaired area gets disguised with paint.














The rest of her body is fine so she can get put back together.
At 36" tall, she is an impressive doll!






Saturday, July 16, 2022

New hair for a vintage Inuit doll


 This is 'Shelley'. She has arrived to get new hair.

She was originally sold in 1967 as a souvenir doll for Canada's centennial. The dolls came either dressed as an "Eskimo" or an "Indian Boy".






She had had her original hair replaced by a wig. Unfortunately the wig style does not suit her heritage. She should have black straight hair.













Once the wig comes off you can see that this doll started life with rooted hair.













Here she is with the rooted hair replaced.


Saturday, July 9, 2022

The beheaded tiger

 

This is 'JT'. He has arrived to get his head sewn back on.

Actually his head has already been sewn back on by his owner, but her stitching work is starting to give way.

JT has a history of getting beheaded with a pair of scissors!





Here you can see the grievous injury.







A better view.

Poor JT needs to get the white stitches removed in order to have a more permanent repair done.
He will get beheaded yet again.










Here is JT after his owner's stitches were removed.
He has had most of his stuffing removed and has had a bath.













Working from his inside surface and using threads that are the same colours as his fur allows the repairs to become almost invisible.

Here the yellow fur pieces that make up his belly have been stitched together.
As JT will likely go back home to some rough and tumble play, this new seam should get strengthened.






This is one way of strengthening.
A length of twill tape has been sewn over the repair.












Here is the outside of the repaired yellow fur.

Now to continue the same repair methods around his neck to piece together his orange fur.......











JT is back together!














His wounds are hard to see now.


Thursday, July 7, 2022

Another boudoir doll.

 

This boudoir doll arrived with her sister. She is equally soot stained and her silk face is shredding.

She has also lost her hair.








She gets a bit of freshening up by removing the shredded silk and repairing her right eye.

Looks like she still need some extra blush!







A wig helps.








Her clothes are original and needed no work.