Maud Humphrey

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

Sunday, July 7, 2019

Madame Alexander Victoria Baby Doll...How to Fix a Mama Cry Box!


Here's the video I promised of Victoria baby crying!  I'm so proud of myself for fixing her.

This is what the cry box (it's actually a cylinder!) looked like after I sawed off the lid.  All of the cry boxes I've repaired before this one had a lid that could easily be pried off.  But not this one.  I ended up resorting to using this little saw to carefully cut it off.  It worked!

In case you've never taken one of these boxes apart, this is what the inside component looks like.  It's basically another cylinder, heavy, with a hole going up the middle, leading to weird little metal tabs on the other end.  These tabs are what make the noise.  Be very careful that you do not disturb them, because those tabs can easily break off, and then your cry box will no longer be able to make noise.

These cry boxes initially worked because they had some sort of rubber gasket around the rim, which allowed the inner cylinder to slide down slowly in the outer cannister, forcing the air up through the hole and through the metal tabs, making the sound.  Kind of like when you were a kid, and you held a blade of grass tightly between your two thumbs and blew on it...does that make sense?  The reason why these cry boxes quit working is because the rubber gaskets disintegrate over time, letting the inner cylinder "clunk" back in forth in the plastic outer cylinder, not allowing enough time for the air to be forced through the hole.  So what we have to do to repair this is to create a new gasket.

Here is a closer picture of the inner cylinder with a part of the rubber gasket still around the rim (it's the white strip)

I scoured the internet, looking for ways to repair these cry boxes.  I could only find one youtube tutorial, but it was for repairing older cry boxes from the 30's mama dolls, which had different components then these newer cry boxes.  By the way, you can go online and order replacement cry boxes for your dolls if you'd rather not repair them, but I think they cost like $20 a piece...no thank you!  So this is what I came up with...TAPE!  I figured I needed to build up the inside cylinder just enough so that it would slide down slower inside the outer cylinder, and not just "clunk".  So I took masking tape and carefully wrapped it around the inner cylinder.  This is the kind of tricky part.  I can't tell you how many times to wrap it around...it'll just depend on your particular cry box.  Each one is different.  So wrap it around once or twice, smoothing it down well so there are no wrinkles.  My tape was wider than the cylinder, so I had to cut off the unused portion from the bottom once I was finished.  

Anyway, wrap the tape around once or twice, and then put it into the plastic cannister and try it.  If it falls with a "clunk", it's still too loose and you'll need to add more tape.  If you have too much tape, it won't slide at all.  It's a fine line, figuring out how much tape is enough.  I ended up using masking tape until it was almost perfect, and then I added one, thin strip of Scotch tape.  This did the trick.  Voila!  Now my inner cylinder slid down at just the right speed in the plastic cannister to allow the air to be forced up the hole and through the metal tabs to make the noise.  

When I was satisfied that it was working the way I wanted it to, I glued the lid of the cannister back into place with some E6000 glue.

I picked up another Madame Alexander baby doll at Goodwill today with a --you guessed it--broken cry box!  I am going to try to do a video tutorial soon, so that I can actually show you.  But in the meanwhile, I hope this helps!








Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Vintage Madame Alexander Victoria Baby Doll Rehab...part 1

I have SO many dolls I need to fix up and sell.  Seriously.  I think they multiply when I'm not looking!  I have been ignoring them, because it just gets too overwhelming sometimes to think about all I have to do to get them ready to sell.  There's just never enough time!  But I recently decided to try and rehab one doll per day...that should be do-able, right?  Yesterday, I cleaned up Toodles and sewed her an outfit.  Today, this Madame Alexander "Victoria" baby doll became the recipient of my clean up efforts:

I didn't think to take a picture until I had yanked out all of her stuffing.  The reason for removing all the stuffing was so that I could soak her extremely filthy cloth body in a hot water/Oxy Clean bath.  This has worked well for me in the past, so I'm hoping it does it's magic again.  I had to use the hemostat to pull the stuffing from the narrow cloth arms.

Here you can see her filthy body a little better.  I will "fluff" the cotton stuffing by pulling it apart before re-stuffing the doll.

This baby has such a sweet face.  I hope I don't fall in love with her and want to keep her.  I seem to have that problem with all of these little waifs that I rehab!

She also had a cry box that no longer works.  If I can figure out how to get it open (it is completely glued shut), then I will try to fix it.  I have recently figured out a way to make these cry boxes work again, and I would love to fix this one as well!  But like I said, it is completely sealed shut.  The others I've fixed were easy to pry open.  This one...not so much.  So we'll see.  If I can't fix it, I won't put it back in the body.

Okay, so this part one to the story.  Victoria's body is soaking overnight, and I hope to see it all clean (or at least extremely improved) by tomorrow morning.  Then I will hang her body out to dry on the laundry line, where hopefully the sun will brighten it even more.  I probably won't get around to re-stuffing it until tomorrow evening, since we will be hanging out with the kids and grandkids most of the day for the 4th of July celebrations.  So part two might not come until Friday.  But bear with me...I'll do my best to finish this story!