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Doll enthusiasts lose doll shoes.
Fashion dolls are a type of mass-produced doll with removeable clothing and shoes. “Action figures” with removeable clothing are a subcategory of fashion dolls. Doll clothes and shoes are interchangeable within manufacturers' product lines. A large percentage of feminine fashion dolls worldwide have diminutive feet, 20 mm (0.8 in) from heel to toe. The overall size of shoes fitting those feet can be as small as 8×10×20 mm (0.3×0.4×0.8 in). Many of the fashion dolls with tiny feet are constructed on tiptoe, necessitating specific heel pitches and footprints depending on the doll.
Once the shoes are removed, they're easy to mislay or destroy. A doll with only one shoe, or none, loses play value; it's difficult for their owners to enjoy imagining them on a runway, at a ball, or even venturing outdoors. Owners require new doll shoes.
Shoes comprise two parts: soles and uppers. The sole is the base of the shoe, the part that underlies the sole of the foot and makes contact with the ground. The upper contains the foot it-self, and affixes to the sole through diverse methods comprising sewing, glueing or construction of one piece.
It is possible to create new shoes by hand.
Whether for flat shoes or high-heeled ones, preparing uppers isn't difficult. An upper can be as simple as a strip of adhesive tape, or ribbon glued to the sole. Depending on the skill and fancy of the enthusiast, they can be made of diverse materials comprising textiles, plastics and modeling compounds.
For dolls with flat feet, creating soles is simple: trace the doll's foot on a textile; cut the tracing to create soles, then affix uppers.
For dolls with high heels, on the other hand, soles require precision to reproduce the necessary dimensions and heel pitch.
The challenge is in properly shaping a sole to conform to the high-heeled foot. A method and device that enables doll enthusiasts to reproduce the high-heeled shoe soles accurately frees them to craft pleasing uppers, attach them to the soles, enjoy their doll's complete outfit and extend the play value of the doll.
There being no such method at present, doll owners must either hand-sculpt their high-heeled soles individually, or buy mass-manufactured shoes.
A fashion doll shoemaker is a toy that enables home production of shoe soles for high-heeled fashion dolls using devices such as die cutters, extrusion molds and cavity molds. It forms soles out of modeling compounds comprising wheat dough, clays, resins, and polymers. Given soles of the proper dimensions, doll enthusiasts can craft uppers and attach them to the soles.
The shoemaker toy is a method and associated devices enabling amateur production of high-heeled shoes for fashion dolls. Specifically, it simplifies the process of precisely crafting shoe soles, freeing the doll enthusiast to create and attach the uppers.
To craft new fashion doll shoes, the enthusiast requires soles and uppers. To prepare soles, he or she begins with a modeling compound that hardens, comprising clay, dough, polymer or resin, then shapes it into soles (11) and allows them to cure through air drying, heat treatment or catalysis.
Given that many doll owners are children with developing motor skills, the preferred embodiment employs a cavity mold device as shown in
In another embodiment, the enthusiast can extrusion mold the modeling compound into the cross-section of soles, then slit them into individual soles. Using a lever-operated extrusion toy, the user inserts the rail shown in
In another embodiment, the user inserts a disc rail
In another embodiment, the literate user designs or acquires software instructions to 3D print fashion doll shoe soles (11) using plastic filament. This method can produce attractive soles but lacks the satisfaction and educational value to a child of enabling her or him to create shoes from the ground up.
In another embodiment, the user rolls or pats a malleable compound comprising dough or clay into a sheet, and then uses a die to cut individual soles.
This application relates to provisional application U.S. 63/160,130, and to U.S. Pat. No. 4,993,932 (“Clay dough toy extruder,” D'Andrade, Feb. 19, 1991).