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The exposed glue at the hairline annoyed me. |
Carly arrived in June 2025. She needed a bit of TLC to make her presentable. The exposed glue at her hairline was the first thing I tackled (after washing her face and limbs with a damp cloth and removing her dress and matching panties to wash).
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A coily textured wig closely matches Carly's human hair color and texture. |
In my wig storage bag, I found a coily-textured wig that closely matches Carly's dark-brown hair color.
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Curls were cut from the wig.
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I trimmed several strands and cut them into smaller pieces. With a toothpick, I applied
Aleene's Tacky Glue, which dries clear, to each small piece before gently pressing each piece along the old glue area of Carly's hairline.
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The wig curls were glued to Carly's hairline to cover the old dried glue. |
After covering the hairline with the cut strands, I loosely tied a
styling strip around the curly strands to hold them in place until the glue dried. I removed the styling strip after a couple of hours to allow the new hairline hair to air dry completely.
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I left the styling strip on for about 30 minutes to hold the glued-on curls in place before gently removing it. |
Next, I soaked Carly's dress and panties in warm soapy water with Oxy-Clean added to the soak. The water was so murky that I poured it out, made another bowl of soapy water and Oxy-Clean, and let the clothes soak overnight. I always use a vintage Tupperware bowl to soak small doll clothes in, and it is only used for that purpose.
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The clothes were hung outside to air dry. |
I rinsed the clothes the next day and hung them outside to dry. In shaded 90-degree weather, the clothes were dry within a couple of hours.
The next step was to find shoes and socks to cover Carley's feet. I did not have socks to fit her, so I made a pair using a white
scrunchy by cutting it across, removing the elastic, and cutting two equal-sized tubes long enough to cover Carly's ankles and feet. Next, I stitched the bottom end of the tube socks closed and hemmed the tops. I found a white pair of Mary Jane shoes in my shoe storage bag for large dolls that fit Carly perfectly.
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Carly now has socks and shoes. |
The original brown eyelashes remained on the right eye; the left eyelashes were missing. After a failed attempt to replace the left eyelashes, I removed the right eyelashes, which were barely visible anyway.
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Carly wears a bracelet on each wrist. |
I used two child-size stretch beaded necklaces to make bracelets for Carly.
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After placing her on a suitable doll stand, Carly posed for a full-view photo. |
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Here, she shows off her new hairline. |
With her new hairline, clean clothes, socks, shoes, and the original eyelashes removed, Carly looks much better as illustrated in the full-length and close-up photos above and the before-and-after headshot below.
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She appears to be happier now, too. |
See the first blog post about Carly
here.
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