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Your storiesYou are in: North Yorkshire > People > Your stories > "I'm always busy making babies!" The process starts with shading... "I'm always busy making babies!"By Kath Cryer, Reborn artist Reborning is the process of making dolls, put together from kits, look as life-like as possible. Originally from the US, it's now arrived in North Yorkshire. Meet Kath Cryer from Haxby, whose creations regularly fetch hundreds of pounds. I first heard about reborning when I was researching dolls on the internet for my existing miniatures hobby and I saw these dolls. They looked so much like real babies. I did some research and found there was a whole world based around them a community that I hadn鈥檛 known was there. That was about five years ago now.
I鈥檝e always been a crafty person. I鈥檝e always enjoyed making things. I was involved in miniatures and doll houses before I started reborning. I even work in a dollshouse shop! Still life: Kath's crates of baby bits I think I鈥檝e always loved babies, too. I used to dress my cats up and push them around in a pram when I was a little girl.听 I have three lovely grown up children of my own now and three grandchildren. I鈥檝e always had a soft spot for children though, so when I saw these dolls I thought "Oh, how lovely!" The idea of reborning is to make a vinyl kit into as realistic a doll as possible. Some people might find that weird, but I see it as a work of art. They鈥檙e painted, and then they鈥檙e stuffed and weighted to feel like a baby. They鈥檙e not light like an ordinary doll. They鈥檙e heavy. Artists buy a kit of 'baby parts' They come as a kit and you choose what you want. You can get everything from really small preemie (premature) sized kits to toddlers鈥 open eyes, sleeping or crying. I much prefer the sleeping babies. I think they鈥檙e much more realistic. They鈥檙e not toys. I have made a doll for a child in the past, though. I made it lighter and put a wig on it instead of rooting the hair so it would be more suitable. Individual strands of hair are attached When I started I realised it was quite an expensive hobby to have. To buy the kit can cost upwards of 拢50. It was obvious to me that I needed to sell in order to carry on the hobby. I usually make them according to my own preferences and hope that buyers like them, but I have made dolls to order before. The one I鈥檓 working on now is for a customer order. The doll I'm working on now is a kit called 鈥淎riella鈥. It鈥檚 a larger doll 鈥 made to look like a three to six month-old baby. You get the limbs, head and everything. This one鈥檚 a sleeping baby. I'm shading it at the minute. When you first get them they鈥檙e just plain vinyl 鈥 they don鈥檛 look very life like. I've added capillaries and some shading to this one so far. It takes a long time. The paint that we use is heat-set oil paint put on in many layers.
The next step is to root the hair. I've just started this one. Tiny strands of mohair are inserted into the scalp one by one to give a realistic look. Sometimes I sit and do it in front of the telly, sometimes I sit in my little workshop with the radio on. It鈥檚 very time consuming. That鈥檚 why when people comment that the dolls are expensive I say it鈥檚 worth it. We really don鈥檛 get much when you break it down to the hours involved! It鈥檚 more a hobby. When the hair is done, the doll is weighted. Most of us use granules. We started off using sterilised sand that you might use in a child鈥檚 sandpit. It was sterilised in the microwave. But because of import regulations (some countries don鈥檛 allow sand to be brought in, especially Australia) we now use little tiny glass granules, inserted into the head in a little pouch. Kath's pride & joy: a one-off clay doll Then around that pouch, we stuff polyfill, a soft fibre filler to make the head heavy. This is also done in the body. You buy a cloth body. It looks a bit strange until the arms and legs are attached. I use soft elastomer pellets which feel very much like baby muscle. In the body they add weight and feel very soft. We add the soft fill again until the baby feels sort of 鈥渇loppy鈥 like a real baby. The arms, legs and head have ridged in where the body 鈥渟uit鈥 is attached and fixed with cable ties.Then you get to pick baby clothes. I spend a lot of time in Mothercare! Then I post the doll out. By courier, usually. One of Kath's finished dolls, "Anna". A lot of reborn artists do make a living from this hobby. Some internet ones make a lot of money. Collectors buy them, mainly. When this new phenomenon started, people who used to collect antique dolls or other items switched to reborn dolls, simply because they鈥檙e so realistic. I collect myself. I even have a special one-off doll that was made from a lump of clay. It is incredibly detailed, even down to having cradle cap! I don鈥檛 know of people who buy them for other reasons myself, although I have seen stories in the media about people who ask for dolls to resemble their own children who might have died. My aim has always been to make something that looks realistic and that people are happy with and I have achieved that. I鈥檓 happy to say that all my dolls have sold. I鈥檝e made about thirty five so far. In February I had one very big sale 鈥 I made 拢990, but that is really a one off. 听I鈥檝e never sold a doll for that amount and I was quaking in my shoes! Ebay is very fickle, though and the next doll I sold went for 拢215. It was just as nicely done, but that鈥檚 the way it goes. Some reborners regularly make a lot of money, but for me, as long as I can keep going and not be losing money I鈥檓 happy to carry on. My husband Keith is very supportive about my work. My daughters have children of their own and they love what I do because they know it makes me happy. My son is 22 and he鈥檚 very typical, not quite sure about the dolls but very happy for me when I made my big sale! Kath Cryerlast updated: 07/05/2008 at 10:20 SEE ALSOYou are in: North Yorkshire > People > Your stories > "I'm always busy making babies!" |
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