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Dollmaking Tips


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To make curly yarn hair, knit up a ball of yarn in stockinette stitch. Place the knitted piece in boiling water for an hour. Allow to dry; unravel yarn.

Before painting a doll face on cloth, lightly starch the material first.

Marketing tip - Baby dolls wearing bunny suits attract a lot of attention. People tend to associate baby bunnies with springtime - the season of renewal - maybe this is why.

When sculpting with clay, learn the properties of the porcelain clay you are using. This knowledge will determine the cones to use for greenware firings. Read the label on the slip container and abide by the directions.

When making composition dolls, bake the doll parts in the oven at 225 degrees for 2 hours. After the seams are removed and the openings cut, and before attempting to detail the fingers and other small parts or before using water putty, plaster, etc, the doll parts can be softened again by soaking them briefly in water or wetting with a sponge. Only the top surface will be affected.

When creating tight fitting doll clothes, make a paper towel or muslin test pattern to fit the doll you choose first.

Turn a doll into an angel for Christmas by using removable wires attached to the wings that are slipped through a very small buttonhole made in the doll coat's back seam line.

When modeling or sculpting a baby's head, remember that a baby has a very large skull when compared to the placement of its nose, mouth or chin. Babies' eyes appear to be quite large, with the irises and pupils being visible and only a tiny area of white showing. On an adult, there is normally one eye width between the eyes. With a baby, the distance is 1 and 1/2 eyes between the inner corners of the eyes.

To make crocheted socks for small dolls, cut off the fingertips of a crocheted glove on a slant from the base of the thumb up to base of little finger. Discard finger parts. Seam the edge of the remaining 4 sided figure to make one sock.

To replicate French buttons, cut off the very tip of the crocheted glove finger, slip in a button and sew to shank at the bottom.

Coffee filters are absolutely lint-free, inexpensive and absorbent for use when painting dolls.

The resins used in dollmaking are man-made materials that emulate the strength, durability and physical integrity of certain organic substances derived from plants and trees. The solid, fossilized form of one tree resin, amber, constitutes one of nature's most lasting byproducts.

Like natural resins, the man-made materials begin in liquid form to which a filler and catalyst are added. After being poured into a mold, it solidifies into a product with marked qualities of resistance to stress, temperature and shock.

Two of the most popular man-made resins are urethane and polyster. Resin typically sets in a matter of minutes, gives virtually no shrinkage, and requires no elaborate equipment for use or cleanup.

Although all resins are somewhat sensitive to ultraviolet light, some polyurethanes in particular are more prone to yellowing than others if left unpainted and exposed to sunlight for prolonged periods.

What makes resin so attractive to the one-of-a-kind artist is its ability to simulate the look and effect of the polymer clays. It allows the artist to stay true to his style of work without having to compromise the dimensional detail and realism that can be achieved in polymer clays.

Resin has the ability to imitate almost any medium by the addition of fillers that alter the opacity, weight and colour inherent in the substance.


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