Keeping a doll with a history.
Whether you believe a doll carries something, or simply that it carries a century, the care is the same: warmth, respect, and a small measure of ritual.

Keep the body well.
Antique bisque, composition, wax, and cloth each have their frailties. A few habits keep a century-old piece for another century.
- Keep dry and out of direct sunlight — both fade and crack old materials
- Avoid damp and sharp temperature swings; a stable room is best
- Dust gently with a soft brush; never wash hair, fabric, or painted faces
- A glass case or shelf away from traffic protects fragile limbs and finishes
Welcoming a new arrival.
Old customs, kept by collectors and keepers long before us. Take them as ritual or as courtesy — both serve.
Greet it by name
Introduce yourself and your home when it arrives. A first acquaintance sets the tone.
Give it a place
A shelf, a chair, a case of its own. A doll with a settled place tends to settle.
Change its world slowly
Learn its temperament before rearranging. Some pieces are particular about their company.
Mind your manners
Speak kindly near it and ask before you move it. It costs nothing and keeps the peace.
Dormant, stirring, active.
How we describe a piece’s reported activity. These are observations passed to us by prior keepers — offered as lore, not as a promise.
If you’re wondering.
Meet the residents.
Each doll’s page carries its full history and its care note. Find the one that’s meant for your home.