Welcome to the Miniverse, the little place where I would love to share my love for all things miniature. I hope I can provide some inspiration by sharing my work and telling you how to make minis so you can have your own Miniverse.
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Scrooge scene
For me Christmas is not Christmas without Mr Scrooge from Charles Dicken's Christmas Carol. I have seen the movies, I have seen musicals and plays and I own a collection of books with lovely illustrations as well.
Of course I had to have Mr. Scrooge in 12 th scale as well. So here he is.
I used an old battered copy of the Christmas Carol as a background. The illustration by Anton Pieck shows Scrooge in his chair talking to Marley's ghost.
The perfect backdrop I felt and I did not even have to make a ghost. I dressed my doll to look like Scrooge. I always loved Albert Phinney in the musical with the red stockings with holes in them so my Scrooge got those too.
I used the table to link the book and the scene together and added things similar to the ones in the illustration.
You will notice the tiles around the fire are missing. I did not add them because I wanted to be able to read the story on the page.
I added a few things I thought that Scrooge would need like his walking stick, a box of documents and some fire wood.
I used a square tile for the floor and placed that inside a picture frame . I made sure the the frame was a bit bigger than the tile so there would be room to fit the open book between the tile and the frame. That way the book would stand up nicely, I did use a little glue to be sure it would all stay in place . The wood floor is printed paper decoupaged to the tile.
The outside of the book has some nice illustrations as well so the scene works very well as a centre piece for the holidays.
Monday, December 21, 2015
Decorating my mini trees.
Here are some of my Christmas trees in a setting I made years ago.
I did get some nice comments about the trees and I said I would show them more close up. So here they are.
They are just ordinary trees from various shops including the dollar store and a mini shop.
I always add snow paint or even just white paint and ultra fine glitter to mine to make them look festive.
This one has beads for baubles. Some have loops for hanging and others are just glued to the branches. I cannot remember where I got the tinsel. If you look closely you will tiny plastic icicles.
If anyone out there knows where to find these please let me know !!
This is the center tree in the setting. Stockings are metal things for holding paper together, the Santa's are so tiny and they were a gift that I did love so much. The bow is plastic but I think it looks fine.
The tree on the left is my angel tree. I could not take a new picture of it because it now lives in Sri
This is one of the angels I made. Using tatting thread and a 0,60 mm crochet hook.
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Julia's Christmas
In this scene little Julia is getting everything ready for Santa's visit. His glass of milk and cookies are ready and she is very pleased about how it all looks. But who is outside looking through the window?
This is the front of the scene standing on a shelf, The actual scene is in two halves. The first one is the living room with Julia and the cats, the other half shows what is going on outside.
The windows that divide the scene where a flea market find. I think they belonged to a Barbie house once. They are perhaps a bit big for 12 th scale but I like the effect a lot.
I painted the floor on the outside side with snow paint and the inside half got a coat of varnish. I glued the window down using a glue gun. The inside got decorated with garlands . On the outside I used Mod Pdoge for a frosted effect and plastic icicles. I glued down the furniture and the doll as well as the trees to make it cat proof for I have a cat who loves minis.
The two cats playing with the christmas things is just what always happens at my house.
On the left Julia inside and on the right Rudolf outside.
Julia has a decorated tree on her half of the scene and Santa has one in the garden covered in snow.
I displayed the scene on a lazy Susan so it could be used as a center piece. The cat loved spinning it around and around so we both enjoyed the scene.
The great thing is that after Christmas it was easy to pack and store : the whole thing fits into a hat box.
Julia was the first doll I ever wigged and dressed. I struggled quite a but I am pleased with the result now.
Friday, December 4, 2015
My little christmas buildings
Lots of people love building christmas villages . I have seen some that I really liked but never got one because they were too expensive.
THis year I am starting Christmas with two houses that cost only 50cents !
This is what I bought at the charity flea market. A little carry along house that opens into two little half houses. One with a pink roof and one with a blue one.
This is the inside of one half house. I tried tons of furniture inside but nothing worked. So I decided to concentrate on making the outside look good and use them for my Christmas decor.
A coat of primer and some paint changed the whole look of the house.
To add glass inside the window frames I used Mod Podge and a brush. It takes a bit of patience to carefully cover each little window with the Mod Podge but it is well worth it. Some windows will have holes in them after drying. No panic ! You can remove the Mod Podge and try again.
More paint and some snow paint were added.
And some christmas decorations.
A battery tealight fits perfectly inside the house to light it up.
Here is " Twelf and a half cents cottage "all ready for Chrismas
The cottages also fit inside my christmas wreath. With the tea light to light the house and lights on the wreath I think this looks great too. The batteries for the lights can be hidden inside the house. Brilliant !
This is the other half of "50 cents cottage"
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
From broken DH doll to lovely ornament
What do you do when someone gives you a broken doll for your dollhouse ?
The head and arms were sort of OK but the rest was broken. Still I could not make myself throw her away so she lived in a box for a long time.
But then serendipity took over. I found a bag of pretty tassels at the thrift shop and remembered seeing some tassel dolls on Pinterest.
I know mine is not a real elegant lady like the ones they showed there but I am still pretty pleased with my little angel ornament.
Here is the head I used.
And here is the tassel. I felt the top part of the tassel looked a bit like a bodice already.
Arms with a piece of chenille stem added for length and the fabric I chose for the sleeves.
Sew fabric into tunnel and insert hand.
Gather fabric at wrist.
Fold the fabric over the arm to make the sleeve.
Sew sleeves to sides of tassel at shoulder height.
Ready for the hairdresser and the details.
I added some chenille doll hair and to cover the neck area I used some angel hair yarn from my stash and wings made out of pretty ribbon.
There she is with some jewelry added and enjoying the nice weahter in my garden.
Here is her twin sister who I made this weekend.
I got carried away and also made a grandmother for them who know lives in my kitchen scene.
Monday, November 23, 2015
Old clock into old world Christmas
When we hear the words winter or Christmas a lot of people, including me, start thinking about the world as described in Charles Dickens stories. One artist who illustrated this wonderful world very well was the Dutchman Anton Pieck. I am a great fan of his work. I have in the past done several projects based on his art work but when I found this battered old clock case in a charity shop I was tempted once again.
Actually it was my friend who saw it first. He held up a rather unfriendly looking building supposed to look like a pub and said : I bet not even you can make something nice out of this.
So I gave it a good look and noticed it was supposed to be a clock but that the actual clockwork had gone missing and that taking the dial off would give me a nice upstairs window because there was a hole behind the dial where the battery unit had been.
. The wood was fine and all the out of scale stuff like barrels and bottles and signs and the dial could be easily removed plus it had the advantage of being able to stand or hang on the wall because it was actually just the front of a building. It was sort of 1: 24 scale and the price was right: $1. So I took it home , made coffee and started thinking about this new project.
I knew it had to be done in Anton Pieck style and I wanted either a toy shop or a bakery. I also realized that unless I wanted to build a sort of box or house behind it I would be left with a very shallow place with very little room for any kind of interior. After a good think I decided that decoupage would be the best way to solve this problem. I searched the net for pics by Anton Pieck and found some gorgeous bakery scenes but no suitable toy shops and I knew it was to be a bakery.
But first I had to strip the sad looking house. My hairdryer soon melted all the big blobs of glue and I got rid of bottles and other stuff. I decided to leave the door and the door frame so I had a base for the new door. I gave the whole place a coat of white paint and then glued crumpled tissue paper all over the front and sides . After a few coats of cream paint that turned into nice old looking plaster and I was on my way.
I tackled the roof first because I was not yet sure how I would deal with the interior of the shop. I cut shingles out of sandpaper and glued them down with tacky glue. Then I painted the roof black and dry brushed it with gray so it would look old.
By that time I had figured out that a shallow sort of box frame glued to the front of the house where the original bottles and barrels had been would make a nice shop window. The Anton Pieck picture I wanted to use did show a bakery shop seen through a window so it was perfect for my scene. I decided that I would use a small section of the picture behind a glass door and the rest would go behind the window I was going to make.
I glued the piece of the picture I wanted to use for the door on top of the old door. Then I made a door frame what would fit over the old door and sit on top of the old frame. There would be some space between the glass and the picture this way and that would add some depth. I glued clear sheet behind the door frame and glued it in place. It is a good idea to paint the door frame before you add the glass ..............yup I learned the hard way.
For the window I used a wood box frame which would look nice beside the door size wise. I glued the other part of the Anton Pieck picture to the back wall of the box. I did give the sides a coat of clear varnish. Then I added the shelve and filled the window with baked goodies left over from my clay free experiments. Remember to make sure you will still see the picture behind the shelves !!
Adding the baked goods will immediately add a 3 D effect I glued the box frame to the house before adding the “glass “and the window frame.
I Painted the wood to match the door. Yes I did spill some on the walls but decided it would add to the old and well lived in look that I needed and I just wiped most of it off with an old cloth.
Then I had to face the top floor . I will tell you all about that later so bear with me..
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