Evelien wrote:I don't think anybody said one is better than the other. Everyone has their own preference. I love vinyl for its posing but I like resin for its weight and feel. You need to feel both to make up your mind
. Or better yet, you don't need to choose at all and you can just have both ^^
A note to start, this has become way, way longer then I had intended it to be. I'm not anti-resin, I just like hearing other's reasons for their choice, and figured I should at least provide my reasons in exchange. ^.^
I chose soft vinyl because of it's posability, feel, weight, cost, and the Obitsu specifically because of ease of getting replacement parts. In my experience resin is heavy and rather fragile (various formulai of resins used for 28mm miniature wargaming, lighter then metal, but heavier then the polystyrene 'hard plastic miniatures' are made from). If I don't like the weight balance of my Obitsu I can add ring weights to it's internal skeleton to rebalance it a bit. Incidentally I don't actually see any positive of resin other then the extreme level of detail it can hold, though I can see that easily countering many of those.
This brings in the purpose of the doll which affects how important each of those values is, so I can understand why people would prefer resin dolls. (There seems to be, at the very least, a much much wider selection of sculpts in resin then vinyl.) I don't want a heavy doll, I'm planning on carrying them around a lot at conventions, being lightweight but sturdy is important. I like my doll's skin to have a little give when I touch them, makes them feel more... real? alive? human? warm? comforting? not sure what to call it, but less cold and lifeless. There's also cost, when I can get 1.5 to 6 Obitsu for the same price as a doll that poses worse, weighs more, and is more prone to damage... I haven't had one that calls to me strongly enough to counter those hurdles.
While I don't mind dolls with minor damage (it gives them extra character), serious damage needs repairs, which Obitsu assists with greatly. Allison arrived with a broken shoulder and a damaged hip, though I didn't notice the hip till I was attaching her tail, and as the damaged hip hasn't affected posability much (she can't high kick long with that leg, it ends up slowly drooping), I've been holding off replacing it. She just tends to favor one leg over the other slightly.
I don't own any resin dolls (unless the Freya counts, I thought she was PVC or ABS), I have handled a few at conventions... they are one of the big reasons I held off as long as I had getting into the dollieh hobby, they seemed far to fragile to be hauling around at anime conventions, especially given their cost (which had I known how much they cost when I was at the con, I probably would've been too afraid to even touch them).