So...
I had a few ponies (some fakies, some McD's ponies) with aggravatingly frizzy hair that no amount of conditioning or boiling water would fix. I was browsing the forums searching for info on smoothing out frizzy hair, and kept seeing curling irons, hair straighteners and flat irons being brought up. However, aside from shampoo, conditioner and brushes, the world of hair care products is a strange and foreign realm to me (I was very sensitive to touch as a kid, so hair-brushing was a real ordeal for several years).
Then, I suddenly remembered something that I'd bought at Michael's a few months ago -- the Walnut Hollow Versa-Tool:
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loginIt's primarily used for wood-burning, but it can be used for a variety of other artistic activities as well -- transferring designs onto glass, cutting plastic, soldering and embossing to name a few.
I suddenly realised, "Hey...I have a tool that can be heated up that has an attachment that acts like a tiny iron. I wonder what would happen if..."
Well, long story short, here's McDonald's
Poofie Pinkie Pie before undergoing the Versa-Tool treatment:
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loginAnd here she is after said treatment:
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loginI was pretty happy that this experiment turned out so successfully. Sure, the hair doesn't end up
completely frizz-free, but at least Pinkie no longer looks like a shaving brush. I used more or less
the same hair-straightening method that's described here, only with the Versa-Tool with its embossing attachment instead of an iron, and it really, really works. Its small size gives me a lot of control, especially on very small ponies. It even helped straighten the crinkly, bunched-up tinsel on a couple of G3s that I've been cleaning.
So if there's anyone out there with a creative streak that doesn't feel like buying a straightening iron just for the purpose of fixing frizzy pony hair, there's a great alternative that can be used for a variety of other things as well. (Sorry if this is coming across like an advertisement, but I've never seen the Versa-Tool brought up on this forum, and I really felt that it deserved to be mentioned.)