#ime the slowest times are whenever the local schools are in session
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I've worked at a build a bear so I can confirm the restuff thing!! If you bring in a build a bear we will restuff it for you to your preferred fluff level (the only criteria I was given was that it has to be loose enough for us to be able to sew them shut before you take them home).
A note—if you're bringing in an old/thrifted bear, please give them a cursory clean first! We don't know where they've been and want to touch mystery grime even less than you do 😰
hello sorry if this is a stupid question and if it is feel free to ignore this ask, but how do you go about starting a horse figure collection? like, i know the best answer is probably to Just Start ! but the whole thing is kinda overwhelming, and I'm from a country where figurine collecting of this kind isn't really A Big Thing so the overseas shipping alone would be A Lot lmao,,,
that being said seeing these guys on my dash everyday always makes me smile, so if all else fails i can just live vicariously through this blog HSJJDJS thanks for ur work o7
Disclaimer: This is the opinion of one horse collector, it's not the objective truth of horse collecting. That said, it's an opinion I very strongly believe in.
The thing is, you don't really "start a collection." You just buy the horses you like and within a few weeks or months or years you'll have a small collection. And some day, if you keep surrounding yourself with horses you like, you'll have a big collection.
Gonna get a bit preachy here, but it's something I keep seeing, so I feel like I have to talk about it: I think entering this hobby with the mindset of "wanting a collection" can make you very impatient and vulnerable to fomo and completionism. You get so into the idea of Collecting Everything that you end up wasting $1000s on overpriced listings because you didn't even stop to think if it's gonna get relisted, if the seller is a scammer, or if you even really want that particular horse/doll/pokemon/model car/trading card/memorabilia/etc., or if you only "want" it because it's part of a set.
Collecting hobbies aren't really about having a collection. They're more about the act of collecting continuously. Maybe you take a break from it (I'm a Bella Sara collector who hasn't actively collected for 3 years), but you never really have a "complete" collection. And you need to accept that you'll never have a complete collection, otherwise you're gonna burn out and the hobby won't be fun anymore.
I'm sorry if this sounds harsh, I really don't mean it to. I'm trying to warn you because I'd hate to see yet another potential fellow collector burn out and leave the hobby after a few years. Collecting can be a wonderful lifelong hobby that creates lasting friendships. But only if your center your hobby around the act of collecting, rather than the idea of your collection itself. (I also find that people who focus more on their collection than the act of collecting are often a bit jealous or self-important, but I might just have run into some bad apples).
If you wanna get into a collecting hobby, the best place to start is to go out (to the thrift story, toy store, ebay, craigslist, you name it) and scour the market for things you like. And then buy a handful of cheap ones. Display them, photograph them, tell your friends about them, look up what other figures/cards/etc. are in that series, and in general just... sit with them. Get a feel for them. Are they satisfying you? Do they spark joy? Did you enjoy hunting them down and do you enjoy taking care of them and looking at them?
If yes, they spark joy, you can start looking at more specific brands, styles, colors, etc., and try to focus on what kind of horses you wanna collect. Maybe you wanna focus on palominos. Maybe you love Barbie horses. Maybe you find a really fun community of glass horse collectors that keeps you coming back. And maybe you fall so deeply in love with the hobby that you wanna collect every kind of horse figure you come across. Just be patient and focus on the act of collecting, rather than having a collection.
#wolfy speaks#it DOES have to be a build a bear plush we aren't allowed to restuff other plushes#theyre correct in that we will restuff as many as you bring in but esp in busier locations try not to come in at peak hours#restuffing takes a bit longer than a regular stuff!#ime the slowest times are whenever the local schools are in session#this will also probably vary from location to location but you can most of the time be upfront about stuff w the person stuffing#ive had someone tell me they were going to take out some of the stuffing for a different project and i went ok cool and extra stuffed it#there are rules about what we are and arent allowed to put in the plushes but we can walk you through doing that at home if u ask#my boss straight up made somebody a goodie back with string and some extra sewing needles so they could do it themselves#also also—we arent supposed to (re)stuff bears that have obviously been modified (dyed/Frankensteined/etc)#if you get someone chill they might not really bother to enforce that rule but just keep it in mind#anyways. ik its not really on topic w the post but i thought an insider pov might be helpful? idk#last thing i can confirm we use ladder stitch to close seams when we sew by hand! there are lots of good tutorials on youtube
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