Yanagi-sen wrote:Why would you want to pay $3 to $15 for a single container of 1-4 colors of make up when you can get 32 colors of the right material to use for less than $10?
Because I don't have a car, there's no craft store in my walking distance but a beauty salon at the end of the road, and the colors come 'pre-mixed' to human skin tones? Thanks for the link, though. I'll try to save up for their portrait set.
magkelly wrote:But on the couple of dolls that I used real makeup, like Cover Girl blush there was a permanent stain and yellowing of the doll's face that did not go away with acetone.
Thanks, that was the kind of answer I was looking for. I always was one of those daft kids who had to know not just not to do something, but why not to do it. XD And irremovable yellowing is icky. I think maybe that's what happened to the knockoff barbie I got at a church rummage sale now. Her face had a weird orange-yellow cast to it and was slightly tacky until I gave it several washings.
Thanks for all your information, as that was basically what I was wondering... how could there be a difference between pigment and pigment, as long as one made sure it didn't have oils. It really does seem safer to get the pastels at blicks after saving up. The trick is that I'll have to save for it instead of being able to sneak it in on the groceries, so could be a month or two.
I saved up for good Liquitex paints, and have thinner and tiny brushes supposed to arrive in the mail. I'm also hoping to save up for a bunch of little dropper bottles so I can pre-thin the paints and then mix them 'by the drop' sort of like we used to for food coloring when dyeing eggs. That way I can be sure of the ratios to re-mix any useful colors later.
I also have some really fancy watercolor pencils, but I haven't seen where they make too much of a mark on Barbie heads. Do you use them wet for that? That seems like a good possible option for some details.