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Removing the eyes of a Paola Reina doll

One of the main reasons for my recent vinyl additions to the doll family was the idea that it would be fun to repaint them, or maybe even carve them. Something I wouldn’t want to do with a resin BJD. I have done mods before, but even sanding resin is a potential health hazard. Carving vinyl is like carving rubber – a lot less dusty. I am not sure if I want to modify all the Reinas, I really like the sculpts as they are. But I will repaint them.

Anyways, before I can start repainting them I need to change the eyes. I am still waiting for new eyes for the large dolls, but the old eyes have to come out first. I wanted to see them before I ordered new eyes, otherwise it would have been more practical to do the eye-swap as long as the head was hot in one go.

But how to remove the eyes of a Paola Reina doll?

Since I had a couple of questions myself before I tried it the first time, I thought I’d write a bit about removing the eyes for those who have the same questions. I googled for an answer before I tried it, and I found some posts and videos about removing vinyl doll eyes in general. They involved boiling hot water, possible damage to eyes, hair and hands. I also didn’t know what kind of eyes are actually in the sockets when they arrive and if their hair is heat resistant.

Paola Reina vinyl is pretty soft, so I thought maybe I can try something else before I resort to boiling a head- or rather put the head in a bag and hang it in a pot with boiling hot water. I have to admit that I was a bit afraid of doing that, and I didn’t want to risk damage to the hair. Since I don’t want to re-root them I wanted to keep the hair as it is.

What you can see in the picture below is all I used on the large dolls, and I managed to remove eyelashes and eyes without any damage to the doll or eyes and lashes. With the smaller head I really used the plastic bag-hot water version, it was easier to really just dip the wrapped face in a mug.

The blue gel pack is a simple hot-cold gel pack I kept from one of my numerous dentist nightmares. It’s large enough to cover the face. The black thingy is a tool from a very cheap clay sculpting kit. It has a tiny metal ball on one end and a silicone rubber sculpting shaper on the other. And a pair of tweezers to grab the eyelashes.

I laid the doll on the back an put some drops of warm water with a bit of dish detergent in her eyes. The head was still on the body to keep it steady. After a couple of minutes the glue dissolved and the lashes came off easily. Since they came off unharmed in one piece I put them in warm water to remove the rest of the glue later with a Q-tip.

I removed the dolls head and rubbed off the rest of the glue from her eye lids with Q-tips. After heating the gel pack in very hot water I placed it on the dolls face and wrapped a dish towel around it to keep the pack from cooling down too fast. When the doll head felt warm enough I used the metal ball to apply pressure to the inner corner of her eye from inside the head. It’s easier if you press on both cheeks and squeeze the dolls face to an oval shape. The eye came out of the inner corner quite easily, and I used the silicone rubber side to lever the eye out from the outside.

Removing eyes of a Paola Reina doll.

 

The eyes she came with are 12mm half round acrylics. They actually look like the top half of acrylic BJD eyes (the round-with-stem-kind of eyes you usually get with a doll). The eye sockets are thin vinyl, I guess it would be easy to cut them open to use eyes with putty, but since you can’t open the head you would need to adjust them by sticking one finger into the neck hole.

The easiest eyes to put back in are the 11mm soft silicone Eyeco eyes you can see below. Since they are silicone, they go in with the help of a fingernail, but I actually like the large irises for their faces better. I will probably find some nice oval flat backs for them. I have 13mm Eyecos as well, but I didn’t want to cut them, which would have been necessary to get them to fit. To put hard eyes back in she will need the heating procedure again, and I need to do that before I start repainting them. I am not sure a repainted and sealed face would take kindly to the procedure, even though the face paint she comes with survives an eye change unharmed. And of course I will have to tape the new eyes to protect them from the sealant, at least if they’re not glass.

PaolaReina with 11mm silicone Eyeco eyes Dresden

I hope this was helpful for those who are as afraid to try removing the eyes of a Paola Reina doll as I was. Piece of cake, really. :). Putting eyes back in is the hard part ;). It works best with oval flat backs, first slid them into the inner eye corner and then you need a bit of forceful pressing them into the eye socket. Which is a lot easier if the head is really warm and kind of flexible. The last picture shows my little newly customized Mini Amiga. She wears 6mm Glatzki eyes I still had from my eye haul. I love the color, but like all Glatzki eyes they look a bit eerie.

PaolaReina-MiniAmigas

 

12 thoughts on “Removing the eyes of a Paola Reina doll”

  1. Thank you so much for sharing this! I have a Nancy doll (also a Spanish girl πŸ™‚ ) who’s eyes need to be removed too, and frankly I’m not keen on doing it! I’m afraid to rip the eye sockets or something once they are hot. But you explain this very well, and I’m less scared now to try it. I look forward to the complete transformation of your Paola Reina dolls! Hugs!

    1. I am glad it was helpful :). I was really scared to do that, but if the head is warm and soft the vinyl is really quite flexible. That’s why I wrote all this, because I thought others might be as scared as I was. If your new eyes are flatter than the old ones you might have to use a bit of putty in the socket. Do you have one of the new Nancys or an older one?

      1. It’s a vintage one, her eyes need to be cleaned, they are yellowed. If I can’t get them whiter again, a few Spanish readers very kindly offered to search new eyes, so either way she’s going to look better. Good luck with your makeovers!

        1. I went to your blog to find her. Maybe it’s really nicotine. It might come off with on of those white doll cleaners- or lemon juice. But I think if you get her eyes out you won’t have difficulties finding grey eyes her size. They look like regular 12 mm eyes. Or do you want vintage eyes?

          1. I would prefer vintage eyes, or eyes that are similar of construction (they open and close). I’m going to give all the suggestions that I found online a try, and hope that something will work. πŸ™‚ Lemon juice might work, thanks for the tip! If you’re referring to the white sponge like cleaning blocks for BJDs, I just used it up completely, and have to order new ones. If I have the time this coming weekend, I’m giving the cleaning a try. Wish me luck. ;D

            1. A normal microfleece cloth or eye glass cleaner may even be better. One of those sponges might scratch the irises. Have you tried to contact Famosa about replacements? Maybe the do have old eyes they would send you. Keeping my fingers crossed πŸ™‚

    2. Thank you so much for this post Mia, I would never have thought of using a gel pack, but it makes sense. πŸ™‚ I have been too frightened to tackle this before, but you have given me confidence to try. The makeover you have completed on the smaller doll is really pretty, I haven’t seen the Mini Amigas here in Australia, but I haven’t really done a thorough search, how tall are they?
      Big hugs,
      X

      1. Happy to help. That’s why I wrote it, it’s really not as frightening as I thought before I tried it. You can do it slowly and you kind of get a feel for the material when the socket starts to bulge while you apply pressure. If it’s not flexible enough yet you can just stop and heat it up some more. The Mini Amigas are just 20 cm tall – about 8″.

      1. If the head is a customized head I would try to avoid removing it. The sealant doesn’t really react well to being squeezed. If it’s the factory make-up, you can get the heads off even without heating them, but you might want to put her in a plastic bag and stick the head into hot water for a while.

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