
FYI, flocked toys are those that have undergone the "the application of monofilament fibers, usually nylon, rayon or polyester onto a surface that has been previously coated with an adhesive." The resulting texture is very soft, similar to velvet or velour.
Back in the 70s, flocking was the rage. Almost all types of Christmas decor – trees, snowflakes, stars, lettering, candy canes, and holly – were flocked to death. Printers flocked everything from greeting cards to invitations to colored paper.
Very quickly, flocking became mass produced, and soon spread extensively to cheap and whimsical objects defined as kitsch. Even the once-luxurious jewelry box became tacky with all the flocked red lining. By the end of the 80s, flocking had lost its appeal.
Today, toy designers like Gary Baseman, James Jarvis, Touma, etc. have been reviving interest in flocking by creating flocked versions of their famous toy designs.




Well, at the end of the day, softness is happiness. :-)
Info from craftflocking.com, swicofil.com, wikipedia / All pics by yours truly
wow you could connect anything in your life to your toy bear, like in this post, nice work!
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Thanks,Kcatwoman! I guess there's just so many kinds of Bearbricks in this world. :-)
ReplyDeletei've gotta say you've got me hooked on your blog! fantastic stuff here :) btw, any chance you can share where i can get this?
ReplyDeletePingpingss,
ReplyDeleteI get most of them on eBay, some during my travels abroad, especially around Asia.
Where are you from? :-)
well good on you! i'm from singapore and i'm hooked on bearbricks ;)
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