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!
Monday, March 4, 2024
Schoenhut before and after pictures
Thursday, February 22, 2024
Mohair monkey repairs
This handsome dude is a 'yes-no' monkey made by the German company Schuco. He dates to the 1920's or 30's.
When you manoever his tail his head will nod 'yes' or shake 'no'.
But, his tail has lost its mohair covering and there is a rip in the mohair above the tail.
He has a tear in his mohair behind his ear.
The tears are no problem to repair.
I want to get some new mohair to cover the bare wire of his tail and finding this colour of mohair will be tricky. It is a lovely cinnamon colour.
In a local thrift shop I find some mohair fabric ends. At $1.50 for each, this sure beats ordering mohair online! Now I have to try to dye this mohair a cinnamon colour.
This is the first attempt. I dyed a piece of each mohair plus a bit of muslin for repairing those tears. Not bad....but the mohair needs to have a bit more red in it to match.
This second dye attempt looks better.
To fix that big mohair tear, I insert a piece of the dyed muslin under the tear. That will get tacked to the mohair to strengthen the repair before I start darning the tear.
The tear has been secured. Now he needs a replacement tail made from the dyed mohair.
Tuesday, February 13, 2024
A Schoenhut girl's makeover
This is Schoenhut's model 203. She was bought like this hoping to find something good under all that too-shiny repaint.
Her new owner stripped off the repaint and found this.
Not too much goodness was found under that paint so she was sent to me.
After the usual makeover processes, I sent her home looking like this.
Thursday, January 4, 2024
A Schoenhut boy's repaint
This is model #201.
He has had an interesting life.
He has very dark hair that is not original.
There is evidence all over his face and body that indicates he was once painted in a dark brown skin tone. That skin colour had long been removed (mostly).
The plan is to improve his appearance somehow.
Seeing as the dark hair is not original, it gets removed.
Pretty well zero original hair paint underneath! And an interesting crack.
He will need more than a few touchups. Repaint looks best when it is done after any unoriginal layers are removed. The vestiges of previous fillers and repaint obscure carved details and also make it harder for the new paint to adhere.
So, I start gently scraping off and digging out all that old dark brown paint and any other paint that had been added over the years.
He actually has a few scraps of original facial paint left. And, he has his original blue eyes under the brown.
After he is down to original paint and/or bare wood he gets sealed. Then starts the repainting process. He will need multiple thin layers of flesh paint.
This is his final look.