Mum of 4 boys who always wanted girls spends £3100 on lifelike female dolls which she treats as her children
39 year old Leah Perry
who always wanted daughters but ended having four boys spent around
£3100 on five lifelike female dolls, which have realistic fingernails and hair.
She also spends a fortune on clothes, toys and accessories on
the dolls and calls them her daughters.
Leah,
39, has been married to husband Chris for 13 years and has four sons –
Christian, 13, Caden, 12, Cameron, 11, Caleb, 9. She said:
"I've had a
maternal instinct from a very young age and I really wanted to replace some
childhood dolls that I had lost over the years. I went online and started
searching for baby dolls and came across these reborn dolls that looked real.
Although she said it was
a "surreal experience" unpacking a box with a realistic looking baby
inside, she was instantly hooked.
Two months later, she
bought another doll, she now has five, who she has named Scarlette Winter,
Emberleigh Elise, Harlow Annalise, Linleigh Michelle and Ava.
The dolls come as plain
body parts and Leah paints their faces. She said:
"I get to use the
girls' names I would have had for my own daughters, and buy all the sweet
clothes and bows for their hair. They fill in that missing part in my heart. I
would love to have daughters, but I didn't - so now I have reborns.
"It's a very
fulfilling thing because I can dress them in the way that I want. They are the
daughters I never had."
Leah buys her doll
daughters adorable tutus and dresses and also gathers hand-me-down garments
from other reborn mums, who she meets on Instagram. She now paints dolls to
sell to other women for £556 ($800).
She spends up to
two-and-a-half weeks painting the skin and threading each individual mohair
hair onto the babies' small heads.
"I really enjoy
being able to give somebody else that joy of opening up that box with a baby
inside," she said.
"It has a lot of
meaning for them for whatever reason. They find it very comforting to have that
outlet. I don't find my babies comforting, but I do think they are fun.
"I just made a baby
with Down's Syndrome, which I thought was adorable. The woman who ordered the
doll said she had a miscarriage where she believed the baby had the condition
However,
though the reborn community is a tight-knit one, not everyone is a fan of
Leah's hobby - and even her family are divided. While two of her boys adore the
dolls and even take part in dressing them and holding them, her other two find
them unnerving.
She said:
She said:
"My husband
thinks they're a great hobby for me because he knows I love painting them and
creating them for customers, and he knows it's a bit of me time. But he won't
pick them up – he associates dolls with girls and he's a bit of a guy’s guy. I
do get a lot of people who tell me that I'm crazy and that they're not real
children. They don't understand that it's just role-play.
Photos of the dolls:
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