Replies to zirconmermaid
Kanekalon has actually been around for a while. I had falls of it back in the 70s.
I didn't know that. Thanks.
Just because the body says 1966, that does not mean necessarily that the doll is from then. That's the copyright date.
Yeah, if I thought she was really that old, she wouldn't be in the Back Room Experiment pile. I basically meant that she's not a 'bellybutton' one, but one of the kinds they had around when I was a kid. I think she might even have been one of my cousin's.
The dollar store hair is the cheapest hair available. Definitely not Kanekalon. Probably Nylon. Boil with care. It works, but be gently with it - 10 seconds is plenty of time, and don't try to change it later with more boiling.
Thanks. I'm probably not going to boil perm in most cases, other than whatever steps are needed to get the hair to lay down after rooting, but I do like to know how things might react to what I might do to them.
Replies to SillyLilPuppet
Most all newer Barbie hair is kanekalon, the soft fluffy stuff. Its very popular because of the fine texture and how easily its set, though it does frizz quickly with play. I think Liv dolls use this too.
That sounds like most of the matte stuff. Came off Bellybutton Barbies with the exception of the Midge, and it's very fluffy and soft, almost like fur.
Really the only way you're going to know how the hair will react is to do a test strand of each bundle from each doll, test it in boiling water, and just lump the hair that reacts the same together. I'd do this even if the hair type was confirmed, really.
I'll set up a test date and some samples and confirm then. Thanks.
Replies to DollyKim:
Dollar Tree hair on headbands with a braid?
Yes, that's the stuff! I spent about $8 and got two of the brown, two of the yellow blond, two of the red, one of the white-blond, and one of the neat dark magenta. The Evil Overlord already wants her single large barbie rerooted with a mix of the brown, red, and magenta. XD I'll probably spend most of my free time today carefully combing out any tangles, braiding it up to prevent future ones, and snipping it off the headbands for storage. And being sure to remove the braid across the top too. So far, my favorite is the weird magenta, even if I can't think of any of my headcast with that color hair... well, except Digit's 'kool aid stripes'...
I haven't boiled any of it but when I was holding a head the warmth from my hand was enough to make it want to stay that way.
I'll test some of it with lower temps first and see what happens. I know I'll be glad if I don't have to deal with boiling water for any needed styling.
Here's a thread where I've used different DollyHair kinds. viewtopic.php?f=13&t=7745 The polypropylene has finer strands, the saran clumps in strands, the nylon is softer and smoother. Haven't used the kan yet. I've mixed nylon and saran without problems
Thanks a lot for that! It really helps to see how the kinds of hair really look on a doll. It also really looks from those that the nylon has much more of a shine, which also matches the Dollar Tree hair, and the rest are somewhat in the middle as far as shine. The shine/reflectiveness concerns me as much as the texture does, maybe a little more, because I have some charas for whom that would work and some that it wouldn't... and I wouldn't want to get hair that's the right color and have it still be off. What can I say, I can be picky. XD
If you're really curious what each kind of DollyHair can do order a 38" hank of each kind. Cut each in 4 pieces for a Barbie and you'll have plenty of hair for a Barbie with the needle and thread method.
I managed to get Fabri-Tac yesterday at a hobby store I rarely get to visit, so I can rework my eventual Dollyhair order... and there are colors I'm interested in in more than one kind. I'll stagger my order around a bit and get different kinds when I save for it, and use a little extra for testing purposes. Thanks for the idea.