If there is gel underneath that area then I'd be careful with injecting glue. Probably best to just contact Sanhui/vendor first for advice. If only there were some pictures of how the gel looks like in thereWight wrote:Now that looks sad, I am sorry. If you can locate the loose point, it could be possible to inject Permatex or Silpoxy there to re-attach the silicone to the foam. Or the foam to the skeleton. I am not expert so it could be wise to ask the manufacturer how it can be fixed and with what glue.
For me and for how I use that doll in particular I think it's soft enough, and it makes sense on a fit body like the AIO's. But everyone will think differently, and I'm pretty sure most would think it's too firm, at least if you are used to TPE dolls already.Doll Master wrote:
Do you think your doll is soft enough without the gel inserts? This isn't the first sign of trouble with the soft gel.
I like the idea of soft gel implants but if it isn't done right then the gel just comes undone and it starts to look like old woman flab.
Obviously that's not sexy. But neither is unrealistic firmness of the parts that are supposed to be soft.
Seems like Sanhui just has a lot of problems. Pricey, skeleton breaks, gel coming loose, wrists breaks, tears, whatever.
It sucks because I really like their faces and bodies.
Imo there is just not enough feedback on gel implants yet. It's been a thing for a couple years now but there is still very little experiences to read about, both good and bad. There will always be someone having issues with it, but so far it seems to me that most are not, and that's at least a good thing. If the doll was cheaper I'd go all in too and just hope for the best, but past $3k I'm not taking unnecessary risks like that.
But all manufacturers have their issues. Sanhui is just still in the spotlight because of some support issues from last year regarding a skeleton that isn't even sold anymore. Personally I chose Sanhui because they had least amount of issues that mattered to me. Pick your poison.