Upcycled doll heads into angel ornaments
how to'sSorry, I only have “after” shots.

Actually, I might have gotten a little bit out of order, because the hair comes after the ribbons, flowers, and feathers. If you add the hair first, it’s in the way. You need the other pieces in place so the hair can cascade over them.

On a few of the heads, I subbed a blossom in place of the trailing ribbons. The main consideration is to fill in the hole where the torso was once connected, and camouflage it with something pretty- lace, flowers, jewels, etc.
After each is complete, I glue a ribbon loop to the top of her scalp as a hanger. Some dolls have a rubbery head, and you can also secure the hanger with a pin. I try to either hide the spot with another curl over it, or a bit of bling.
Remember, anytime you glue something, the glue is only as strong as what you’re attaching it to. That is why, with these, I get the ribbon down through the curls, onto the scalp itself. If it were glued only to the hair, when hung on a tree, the hair could pull away from the head. Gluing the hanger directly to the head, not the hair, is much more secure.

Aren’t they sweet?






Randy gifted me this one to redo.
Lots of glitter! And some white mink.


I had a couple old sheet music pages of Jingle Bells and one of God Rest Ye Merry Gentleman and thought both titles were just right for these sprites.
The my caroling book, where I was finding all the perfect sheet music, had a quaint little village on the cover and it inspired this painting.









And plenty of angels. Not to mention the deer, trees, and Santas.














We had a nice kitchen, so were able to eat in when we wanted, but went to all of our favorite restaurants too.




