well, I'm sure some are able but its very difficult to have someone send you their doll and return it on top of the cost of the labor.Realrobotdoll wrote:Hi you could make a fortune tattoo owners dolls I'd pay
but maybe someday .
well, I'm sure some are able but its very difficult to have someone send you their doll and return it on top of the cost of the labor.Realrobotdoll wrote:Hi you could make a fortune tattoo owners dolls I'd pay
I believe tattooed dolls said he developed or found a special ink to work with silicone, but he would not tell anybody. He implied regular ink for human use would not work well w/ silicone.Gjavonni_2020 wrote:Great to know real tattoos work. I cant wait to try
I know of a doll maker that uses thinned and airbrushed Sil-poxy to seal the makeup on their doll faces. Maybe the same would help on a tatted doll?tattooed dolls wrote: SNIP
Some ink from a company called “eternal” is amazing but it doesn’t work in dolls for some reason , I wasn’t trying to hide the brand , as I was just trying to protect their brand name , I don’t want ppl to think their products suck, their great for human skin, doll skin is another class of animal.
Much more delicate and non self repairing.
If you go too deep you can cut the silicone like butter.
That’s a similar idea that I had , I wanted to use dragon skin paint , I may have that wrong , but it’s a transparent layer sealer , however , after so long, even that comes off, more so if it’s not done right away after casting , so I figured it would make it look worse when pealing off.rubherkitty wrote:I know of a doll maker that uses thinned and airbrushed Sil-poxy to seal the makeup on their doll faces. Maybe the same would help on a tatted doll?tattooed dolls wrote: SNIP
Some ink from a company called “eternal” is amazing but it doesn’t work in dolls for some reason , I wasn’t trying to hide the brand , as I was just trying to protect their brand name , I don’t want ppl to think their products suck, their great for human skin, doll skin is another class of animal.
Much more delicate and non self repairing.
If you go too deep you can cut the silicone like butter.
Thank youDick Vicious wrote:Big fan of the tattooed doll. Wow, very sexy!!
EasWesNJess wrote:Wow that's amazon! I wich i could do the same on my TPE doll. I did tattoos a few years ago and above average for a beginner, so it's not scarring me at all. But from what I've read on this forum, TPE is a bad material for tattooing.
Keep on your good work!
EasWesNJess wrote:Wow that's amazon! I wich i could do the same on my TPE doll. I did tattoos a few years ago and above average for a beginner, so it's not scarring me at all. But from what I've read on this forum, TPE is a bad material for tattooing.
I think I might have found a TPE tattoo solution. For TPE tattoos most folks use temporary tattoos. Unfortunately sometimes there are problems with them blending and staying on when the doll flexes. They crack and start to disintegrate. Been testing methods to apply and seal tattoos on TPE in the thread here viewtopic.php?f=229&t=131728. First sample look is on page 5. The image is real, no BS. I got finally got them to seal, blend and flex with the TPE. I will be posting test results with real pics and step by step so anyone can do a decent and long lasting tattoo on TPE. Will be posting it on Friday, 08-28.tattooed dolls wrote:Thank you, and yes sorry to say that I had no success with TPE material and tattoos, at least in the way I apply them.
I hope someone can engineer a method .