I am fairly new to reborning- made around 15 babies- I have done mostly MRing but I did one baby with prism pencil hair (boy) and went over it with heat set varnish. Looks nice. Well, now that GHSP's are on sale- thought I would buy some different browns and try painting the hair. After the actual painting is done- bake at 265 and then what do people recommend - varnish, thickener etc.?
I will admit I'm not up to speed on all the abbreviations and was wondering.... what is "MRing"?
As for your question about what to recommend for GHSP hair, you can use the thick medium to give it a little texture. Use the matte varnish or shine remover only if there is too much shine. When GHSP and thick medium are baked at 265 for about 8 minutes, the color and finish are permanent and don't require sealing or varnish.
Linda
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Linda Dreyer~ Forum Moderator Secrist Certified Newborning Teacher & Dealer Apple Valley DW Dealer Play Days Dolls & Collectibles PlayDaysDolls.com (Current Avatar: Erinfrom Secrist Dolls)
I tried the pencils and I had a hard time getting the color to show up(hmm hard to explain hope you understand) So my black hair baby looks like a little old man with gray hair!
Duh... "Mring" = "microrooting". Thank you for letting me know, Liselle! I thought that might be it, but thought I had better ask.
Kristi, I forgot to mention if you use the GHSP for painting hair, be sure you have a very thin liner brush available. You might even want to try using a brush that is used for eyebrows as it will lay down a line that is very fine like baby hair.
Linda
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Linda Dreyer~ Forum Moderator Secrist Certified Newborning Teacher & Dealer Apple Valley DW Dealer Play Days Dolls & Collectibles PlayDaysDolls.com (Current Avatar: Erinfrom Secrist Dolls)
Okay that helps!! I will try the thickening medium and probably layers right? I look at my real baby's hair and he has layers of hair going in different directions from crown. Thanks
I agree on the thick medium if you want texture/depth to the painted hairs. I use a 20/0 script liner brush with the loooong bristles. The length of the bristles gives you a nice thin line and also holds more paint than a short bristle brush.
I paint the outer edges/hairs first and go in "layers" as you said. Once I get them how I want them I bake those. Then I go to the next layer of hairs and when I paint them in, I overlap the tops of the roots of the ones before them. Just look at someone with short hair, it's all hair on top of hair, etc. KWIM?
When I get to the crown, I do directional painting so it has the crown swirl. Just google or look on ebay for painted hair reborns on auction. Then look at some really good artists who ahve done painted hair. Just try to copy their technique.
It does look so lovely, but I think if it is supposed to be reborn, it shoud resemble real hair. JIMO, even though I hate, with a passion rooting hair. LOL XXXXXX June.