Maud Humphrey

Maud Humphrey
Showing posts with label Baby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baby. Show all posts

Thursday, July 9, 2020

Restringing a Vintage Gotz All-Vinyl Baby

I've had this 14 1/2" vintage Gotz baby in my collection for a few years.  She is all vinyl, but also twists at the waist!  I bought her from eBay knowing her joints were loose, but they weren't too bad, so I just left her alone.  As I was straightening up in my doll room today, I came across her and decided that today was the day.  (I was supposed to be cleaning, so I suppose this was my way of procrastinating!)  After I determined I had the right elastic to complete the project, I pulled out an arm and snipped the elastic cord.  Here she is after I removed her arms from her body.  As you can see, they are attached using plastic "cups" that are shoved into the arm holes.  I did use my trusty blow drier to first soften the vinyl before using pliers to pull out the cups.


Next to be cut off were the legs.  The cord actually runs from one leg, up through the torso, into the head, back down he torso, and ends in the other leg.


All the body parts


I simply shoved the elastic through the cup and knotted the end.  This is how it was assembled originally.


I shoved the cup with the knotted cord back into the leg hole.  Then, the cord was threaded up through both torso pieces.  I decided to cut the cord at the top and then repeat the process with the other leg.  The originally assembly had the cord doubled over at the top and then knotted, but I thought this would be a little more difficult to shove the tightened cup up into the head cavity.  


I decided to replace the original, plastic cup in the head with this trusty button, instead.

The back side of the shank button.  I have used these buttons for many, many doll restringing projects.  I got them at JoAnn's.  Last time I was there, they still had them.


I threaded the elastic from one leg through the shank button.  The button was then shoved up into the head.  Then I tied both ends of the elastic cord together and pulled them as tightly as I could.  Once I knotted them, I clipped off the ends and the head was now nice and secure!


The last thing to string was the arms.  Again, I knotted the elastic after threading it through one cup, and then shoved the cup into the arm cavity.  The elastic was then threaded through the body and into the remaining cup.  I pulled it tight and then knotted it.  This last part is the probably the most awkward...now I had to shove the tightened cup into the other arm cavity.  But with a little bit of brute force and a trusty pair of pliers, I got it done!



All done!  Baby can hold a pose again!


I redressed her in her original outfit, which consists of a knitted sweater, a matching hat, and a sleeveless, long-legged bodysuit underneath.  I wasn't completely in love with it, so I decided to add a sweet, pink taffeta dress and bloomer panties which I pulled off a thrift store doll long ago.  How cute is she now?!?


She's such a little pumpkin now!  I love her.  I have another one just like her, but with blonde hair.  That one came to me nude, so I will have find/make her some clothes and then I can share "the twins" with you.  It's amazing what a little rehab and some cute clothes can do!


And speaking of cute...here are my two English Budgies, Pippin and Bobbin.  They like to hang out on my lap top while I peruse the internet.  Here, Bobbin is preening Pippin.  They are such sweet birds, and great company in my sewing/doll room!








Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Whopping Huge 23" Madame Alexander Baby PUDDIN' Doll!

So, this little (or should I say HUGE!) cutie joined our family yesterday.  I think she is just about the sweetest baby I've ever seen, next to my own kids, of course!

She is a vintage Madame Alexander Puddin' doll from 1965 and measures a whopping 23" long!

I found her at the thrift store for $4.  I couldn't believe my good fortune!  I've always loved Madame Alexander baby dolls--they just have the sweetest faces.  And this Puddin' is no exception. 

She didn't have any clothes when I found her, so I promptly dug through my suitcase of vintage clothing and found a real baby dress, slip and bonnet to fit her.  The bonnet just barely fits...I will be looking for a bigger one for her the next time I'm at an antique mall or doll show.

Her soft, strawberry blond hair looks like it has never been played with.

I have never seen a Puddin' this big.  She measures a whopping 23" from head to toe.  All the research I've done on these dolls says that they only went up to 21".  Obviously, the Alexander doll company made bigger ones, but maybe not many?  Perhaps mine is a rather rare example of this large size?

I found a little dolly for her to hold.  I love all the soft pinks and whites together.

All the Puddin' dolls I've seen have had a little braid on one side of their head.  This one did not.  I suppose one could have been there at one point, but the hair looks too perfect for that to be so.  Another mystery?

I am absolutely thrilled with this baby.  I've been gravitating to smaller dolls lately for space issues (you can fit more dolls into a space if they are smaller, you know!), but sometimes a "life-sized" doll has such a presence that you just can't obtain from a smaller doll.  My daughter carried this doll all through the Goodwill, and bounced her on her hip as we walked out to the car.  All the cashiers and customers smiled. 

I would be curious to know if anybody else has seen a Puddin' doll this large before?