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Rare Wax Head "Bye-Lo Baby" Doll
Bye-Lo Baby Doll, c.1924
Created by Grace Storey Putnman; Los Angeles, California
Fabric, wax, cloth and cotton; 18 x 12 x 6 in.
35310
Gift of Mr. George Putnam The Bowers Museum holds in its collection nearly 1700 dolls from around the world. One of the rarest and often inquired about from collectors and researchers is the original Bye-Lo Baby with wax head and cloth body. Bye-Lo Babies are among the biggest money-makers of all time along with Barbie, Kewpie and Shirley Temple. The doll was designed by Grace Storey Putnam who desired to create a doll which was as life-like as possible. In 1920 Putnam visited the Salvation Army day nursery in Los Angeles where she studied a 3-day old sleeping girl. Using clay she quickly worked at the baby’s side to sculpt its likeness. It is said that when she returned to the hospital with the finished the wax model and laid it beside the baby the onlookers could hardly tell which was the live baby and which was the doll. The doll’s realistic coloring was achieved by patting paint from oil tubes onto the wax. A cloth body made of one piece of fabric and designed so the legs turned inward in a naturalistic position completed the doll. Putnam's doll was the first ever on the market to resemble a newborn child and it became an instant success. In 1922 distributors George Borgfeldt & Co. commissioned the first Bye-Lo babies that were made of German bisque and hand-blown glass eyes. They soon after commissioned several German and American manufacturers to produce a variety of Bye-Lo Dolls including some with heads made of wax and in one case wood. Putnam was never completely satisfied with the look of many of the dolls feeling that the life-like nuances were lost in the manufacturing process. This sentiment is expressed in a letter to the museum’s former curator, and great lover of dolls, Mrs. Coulter, who is responsible for establishing a relationship with Putnam. Their relationship led to the donation of a 1922 wax head Bye-Lo Baby cast from Putnam's original, a mold used to form the first bisque version, several other variety of the Bye-Lo and other Putnam dolls, and many of Putnam's descriptive hand written letters and documents. Grace Storey Putnam is often referred to as the "great American success story" in doll lore, she was the most known doll designer of her time. All text and images under copyright. Please contact Collection Department for permission to use. Information subject to change with further research.
Created by Grace Storey Putnman; Los Angeles, California
Fabric, wax, cloth and cotton; 18 x 12 x 6 in.
35310
Gift of Mr. George Putnam The Bowers Museum holds in its collection nearly 1700 dolls from around the world. One of the rarest and often inquired about from collectors and researchers is the original Bye-Lo Baby with wax head and cloth body. Bye-Lo Babies are among the biggest money-makers of all time along with Barbie, Kewpie and Shirley Temple. The doll was designed by Grace Storey Putnam who desired to create a doll which was as life-like as possible. In 1920 Putnam visited the Salvation Army day nursery in Los Angeles where she studied a 3-day old sleeping girl. Using clay she quickly worked at the baby’s side to sculpt its likeness. It is said that when she returned to the hospital with the finished the wax model and laid it beside the baby the onlookers could hardly tell which was the live baby and which was the doll. The doll’s realistic coloring was achieved by patting paint from oil tubes onto the wax. A cloth body made of one piece of fabric and designed so the legs turned inward in a naturalistic position completed the doll. Putnam's doll was the first ever on the market to resemble a newborn child and it became an instant success. In 1922 distributors George Borgfeldt & Co. commissioned the first Bye-Lo babies that were made of German bisque and hand-blown glass eyes. They soon after commissioned several German and American manufacturers to produce a variety of Bye-Lo Dolls including some with heads made of wax and in one case wood. Putnam was never completely satisfied with the look of many of the dolls feeling that the life-like nuances were lost in the manufacturing process. This sentiment is expressed in a letter to the museum’s former curator, and great lover of dolls, Mrs. Coulter, who is responsible for establishing a relationship with Putnam. Their relationship led to the donation of a 1922 wax head Bye-Lo Baby cast from Putnam's original, a mold used to form the first bisque version, several other variety of the Bye-Lo and other Putnam dolls, and many of Putnam's descriptive hand written letters and documents. Grace Storey Putnam is often referred to as the "great American success story" in doll lore, she was the most known doll designer of her time. All text and images under copyright. Please contact Collection Department for permission to use. Information subject to change with further research.
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