Showing posts with label composition doll repair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label composition doll repair. Show all posts

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Composition Repair and Sandals for Scootles

Circa 1920s composition Scootles by Cameo, designed by Rose O'Neill (the Kewpie doll designer), looks almost perfect, but she had a few issues.


For years, I've desired an original 1920s composition Scootles, but passed on the few I've seen for sale for various reasons. I knew eventually, the right one would find me.

After viewing her online pictures, she was almost perfect except for some troubling areas where the composition had separated at a seam and had lifted in a couple of other areas. After the seller discounted the original asking price for me, I decided to bring Scootles home, and I'm happy about that decision.

What was done to repair my adorable dimple-cheeked, double-chinned Scootles is captured in the video below:




Scootles has been repaired and is wearing her new handmade sandals in this picture.

She is so adorable!  Each time I look at this little gem, I smile. She was so worth the wait. 

Read Scootles' Virtual Black Doll Museum installation here

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All photos and text are copyrighted and cannot be used elsewhere unless permission is granted by the author.

©Black Doll Collecting/dbg

There are countless items to collect and write about. Black dolls chose me.
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Thank you for reading. Comments that are not spam are appreciated. Spam comments will not be published. To contact me directly, go to the About page (visible in the web view mode); find and use the email link.

Visit and follow DeeBeeGee's Virtual Black Doll Museum for detailed installations of antique, vintage, modern, and one-of-a-kind black dolls. http://virtualblackdollmuseum.com

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

A Topsy Doll from the UK

An 11-inch Topsy from Enfield, England, needed repairs.


An 11-inch circa 1930s Topsy arrived from Enfield, England on 07/22/2025 in need of repair. It was offered to me by the daughter of the original owner. It has been her mother's childhood doll. The daughter believes her mother made the doll's dress.

I retrieved the package on 07/28/2025 and began working on the doll the next day. Using her original hand-knit dress, after thoroughly sanitizing and hand-washing it, I gave it "Patrick Kelly" embellishments using buttons from a button tin that my mother gave me several years ago. All necessary doll repairs were completed by 08/01/2025: retouching and sealing missing paint from the head, extremities, eyes, mouth, and teeth, and restringing. Topsy is now incorporated into my collection with similar dolls. The details of the repair are captured in the following video (posted previously on Instagram and Facebook). 


Navigate here if the reel does not load immediately. 

Three US-sold (and/or made) Topsy dolls pose with the repaired UK Topsy.


Many antique and vintage black dolls made in England and other parts of Europe often had ebony complexions similar to the repaired doll. They obviously sold well there. The repaired doll is my first composition Topsy of this size and complexion, known to be made or sold in the United Kingdom. Most composition Topsy dolls sold in the United States during the same time (1920s-1930s) had light to medium brown skin tones, as illustrated in the group photo above. Except for early 1900s stereotypical dolls sold in the US, merchants must have felt that lighter-complexioned black dolls would sell better here than deeper-complexioned dolls. 


Related Links
Topsy Dolls Found in Early Sears Catalogs

__________

All photos and text are copyrighted and cannot be used elsewhere unless permission is granted by the author.

©Black Doll Collecting/dbg

There are countless items to collect and write about. Black dolls chose me.

__________

Thank you for reading. Comments that are not spam are appreciated. Spam comments will not be published, so don't waste your time. To contact me directly regarding dolls or any of my posts, please use the contact form on the right of the home page, which is visible in "web view." A link to web viewing should be visible at the bottom of this page.

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Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Straight-Legged Topsy Needed TLC

Three circa 1920s-1930s Topsy Dolls: 9-inch Topsy baby (a recent gift) and 12- and 16-inch Topsy toddlers


Seen in a comparison photo with a 9-inch circa 1930s Topsy doll gift and a 12-inch Topsy toddler, the 16-inch straight-legged Topsy arrived during the late 1990s with crazing issues that have progressed throughout the years. After her recent photograph with the 9- and 12-inch dolls, I decided to repair the crazing (lifted and/or missing composition).

Before Photos

Crazing was on the sides of the legs as illustrated here and in the next photo.




Some of the composition had lifted from a couple of areas on the head and the arms were crazed as illustrated here and in the next photo.


Layers of Mod Podge filled in or covered the crazed areas.

Mod Podge applies white but eventually clears.

The Mod Podge is still wet in this photo.

Painting and Sealing

In the following photos, the face, body, arms, and legs have been filled with Mod Podge and allowed to dry. These areas were then painted brown and sealed with Mod Podge. The lips were repainted red and sealed.

I used Chocolate Bar Brown acrylic paint.






Prior to painting and sealing the head, the three tufts of hair were wrapped with cling wrap. Mod Podge has been applied over the original paint on the head in this picture and in the next.


Almost Done
Except for the head and repainting the fingernails and toenails, all areas have been painted and sealed.

The head has been painted and sealed and she has received a mani- and pedicure.

She poses for a profile photo here and in different positions in the next two photos.



Fresh grosgrain red ribbons were added to her hair and to her dress.

She arrived with bare feet.

She now has socks and shoes to complete her refreshed look.



dbg


There are countless items to collect and write about. Black dolls chose me.
__________

Thank you for reading. To contact me, please use the contact form on the right of the home page, which is visible in "web view." A link to web viewing should be visible at the bottom of this page.

Check out what I am selling here
Check out my eBay listings here.
Please follow my sister blog Ebony-Essence of Dolls in Black.
Donate here to support this blog. Thank you!

Monday, January 27, 2020

Antique Composition Doll by Trego Doll Manufacturing Company


This 25-inch antique composition doll by Trego Doll Manufacturing Company has a ball-jointed body.  She is jointed at the neck, shoulders, elbows, wrists, hips, and knees.  She wears a replaced Shirley Temple-style wig.  She has brown sleep eyes and an open mouth with four upper teeth.  My doll's eyes have probably been replaced and the teeth may have been replaced as well. 

Close-up of teeth
Very little is known about the Trego Doll Manufacturing Company.  This U.S. company is said to have attempted to complete with German doll makers.  Formerly located at 3267 Third Ave., New York, Trego made dolls under the Trego name for only three years from 1918-1921.  According to Doll Reference, “The Trego Doll Manufacturing Company made antique composition dolls; some dolls have imported bisque heads, others have composition heads, both dolls have composition German like multi-ball jointed bodies.”

This photo illustrates the ball joint in one of my doll's knees.

On the doll's upper back, TREGO is written within a rounded rectangle above MADE IN U.S.A.

The January 1921 issue of Toys and Novelties documents "Indian" and "Negro" dolls made by Trego in various sizes including the 25-inch size like my doll.  I have only found two online images of other Black dolls like this one (see related links at the end of this post).  It can be safely assumed that Black versions were made in fewer quantities and few are available today.

My doll was purchased in 2011.  Below are the original photos that the seller used in the auction listing.

Photos From 2011






Updated Photos

I recently took updated photos of this doll for an antique doll photo-sharing event.  While taking the photos, I noticed a couple of flaws in the composition that I wanted to repair.  She had one major flaw when she arrived, but the other flaw was relatively new.

This photo illustrates the ball joint in her elbow.  The wrist is ball-jointed as well.
It was when the above photo was taken that I noticed the ring finger was missing from the doll's right hand.  This is the flaw that was present when she arrived, but it had completely slipped my mind.   At the time of her arrival, I had no plans to repair the finger.  But since I've replaced other dolls' fingers in the recent past, I decided to replace hers.

Here is a better look at the hand with the missing finger.
In the above picture, in addition to the hand with the missing finger being visible, the portion of the composition above her left knee that was missing is partially visible.  That was her second flaw which was not present when she arrived.

This is a better image of the huge piece of composition that was missing above her left knee joint.

This photo and the next one illustrate her rounded bottom that is designed for her to sit, although she can stand as well.

This is another somewhat off-centered view of her bottom from the back.
The Repair


I used several layers of Elmer's Carpenter's Wood Filler to rebuild the missing composition above the left knee.

The wood filler was also used to strengthen a weak portion of the side of her left calf. 

I used air-dry clay to (crudely) sculpt a new finger.  All areas were left to dry overnight.  The area above the knee was sanded some prior to painting.
Post-Repair Photos

I used a mixture of brown acrylic paints to match the existing paint and to repaint the knee joint...

...the side of the leg...

...and to paint the new finger.  Again, the finger is a little lumpy, but she has all her digits now.  That's what matters.

Close-up of finger and knee area

She appears to be happy with the repairs

Recovered and redressed
My Trego girl has now been redressed in her period-appropriate plaid satin dress, off-white eyelet-trimmed half-slip, and white pantaloons.  The red patent-leather shoes she arrived wearing have been exchanged for black faux leather shoes.  (Yes, I know; she needs leather shoes.)  The off-white nylon socks she arrived wearing are either stored or being worn by another doll.



dbg


There are countless items to collect and write about. Black dolls chose me.
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Check out what I am selling here
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Wednesday, September 20, 2017

From One Arm to Three

27-inch one-armed transitional mama doll and her replacement arms

First seen here in a post about mama dolls (dolls with voice boxes that make the ma-ma sound when the they are tilted or otherwise positioned), this 27-inch doll arrived to me during the late 1990s missing one of her composition arms.

A closer look at the missing arm area
A couple of years ago I was gifted an identical white version of this circa late 1940s/early 1950s doll for the sole purpose of using the white doll's arm to replace the black doll's missing arm.  I could not bring myself to destroy an otherwise well-preserved doll to restore another. So Lynn, the black mama doll, remained in need of an arm while Jane, the white doll, was spared.

My husband suggested that I make a mold of Jane's arm, which I did.  He then sculpted, on his own, what looked like the perfect replacement arm for Lynn.  Unfortunately, he used a mixture of old and new polymer clay which did not properly bond.  The arm was also very heavy.

So I created a papier-machΓ© arm using the mold of Jane's arm, which has served Lynn well.  I never was content with the way I painted the fingers, which could have easily been repainted, but deep down I really wanted her to have a composition replacement.

I created and saved an eBay search for "composition doll parts" and received daily updates for years, but arms in the length and shape needed remained elusive.  One of these search results included two composition arms from a child-size store mannequin that I purchased.  Unfortunately, they were not the correct size.  I listed these on eBay for the same price I paid and they sold.

Recently, my eBay search notification included a buy-it-now or make-offer auction for "a pair of baby arms for repair of German bisque head baby" that measure 8 and 8-1/2 inches.  An 8-inch arm is what I needed.  I made an offer which the seller counter offered and I accepted.  My plan had been to use the arm I needed and resell the other.

Seller's photo of replacement arms
The arms arrived as described and shown above and in the first image.  The circumference of the biceps area, however, is larger than the doll's original arm should be.  I discussed the dilemma with my husband and showed him the doll and the replacement arm. He agreed that the potential replacement was too large.  The following conversation ensued:

Him:  "Why didn't you buy the other arm?"
Me:  "I did.  I have both arms."
Him:  "Then you can just replace both arms and you'll have a match.  You didn't think of that?"
Me:  No.  I was focused on just replacing one arm, but yeah... I can do that.

Geesh!  Why didn't I think of that?  Probably because my intent was to keep the doll's original arm intact and because it would be so much easier to replace just one arm.  He offered several suggestions on how the repair should be done.  I said, "Nope, you're going to have to do all that.  It's just too much."  He said, "No, you need to learn this!"

So... I (we) did it!

Original arm after removing
First the doll's original arm and rotational disk to which it was attached was removed.  This required slitting open the cloth upper arm area by gingerly removing a few stitches.   (My husband did this part with an Xacto knife while I held the patient.)

Patient post amputation
For the replacement arms, using a wire clothes hanger, the doll doctor created a fastener for each that looks like an inverted U with laterally extended arms that insert into the inner arm.

Fastener centered inside replacement arm with tissue paper stuffed around it
With the fastener in the center-most area of the arm, my husband used tissue paper to fill in the gap between the arms of the fastener and the inner arm.  Over this was applied air-dry clay to permanently hold the fastener in place.  I worked on the other arm simultaneously completing the same steps except the inner arm was filled in by me with polyfill before covering with air-dry clay.

Both arms with fasteners centered in place and air-dry clay molded around to permanently hold the fastener inside

New rotational disks for new arms
I created two new arm disks using cardboard.  These were made firm with several coats of Mod Podge, which was applied after the above photo was taken.

Flawed ring and pinky fingers
As the seller had described, the hands of both replacement arms had flaws.  A fracture of the ring finger of one hand had been previously repaired. The pad of the pinky finger of the other hand was worn down.


I used wood filler to create a new finger pad for the pinky finger and to reinforce and smooth the fracture line of the ring finger.  The wood filler applied to the fingers and the air-dry clay molded around the fasteners were allowed to dry overnight before additional work proceeded.


After everything hardened, the disks were placed onto the fasteners and a metal dowel was fashioned from a metal clothes hanger to hold the disks in place.  Not shown in the above photos, but Epoxy was added to areas where the inserted dowel and the fastener meet to secure the dowel in place permanently.


The arms were painted using a combination of nutmeg brown and real brown acrylic paint as base coats and a top coat of toffee brown.   The final coat  was a mixture of toffee brown and matte varnish to seal and add a slight sheen.  A few drops of dark red acrylic paint were added to the toffee brown and acrylic mixture and dabbed onto the elbows and the dorsal surface of the hands and knuckles to add blushing.

Painted arms

New arms attached to body (one is a little lower than the other, but Lynn doesn't mind).
Before inserting the new arms into each cloth armhole, the bottom opening of each armhole was reinforced with a few stitches.  Next, the arm disks were inserted into each cloth armhole and the cloth at the top stitched closed.


With two arms now, Lynn is happily redressed and back on her doll stand.

Lynn rejoined her friends and Jane, the doll that was willing to sacrifice one of her arms for her.

After nearly 20 years of being here with only one arm, Lynn now has three.  Two are attached replacements and the third (her original arm) has been stored in the event that another left-arm-only doll is in need of an arm that size.

(Note:  The arm replacement process wasn't as difficult as I had imagined.  Doc Garrett was right, I needed to learn to do this myself.)


dbg
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