Miniature artist Hannah Lemon's houseplants were a big hit, earning her a spot on season 2 of Best in Miniature. Learn more in the full interview!
1" Scale for Dollhouse 2" wide x 2" deep x 4" tall Black wooden sink decked out to the max inside and out w/ various supplies for an artist. Visit my miniature shop at: marquisminiatures.etsy.com
Prepare to be amazed by the miniature world of Tomo Tanaka, a Japanese artist who has been making 1/12 or even 1/24 scale models for over a decade. Using materials like clay and epoxy, Tanaka meticulously crafts highly detailed miniature versions of common household items, including delicious-looking meals that are small enough to fit on fingertips.
Artist Kerri Pajutee creates incredibly beautiful, real-looking animal sculptures that are to 1:12 to actual size. Pajutee’s remarkable attention to detail imbu
Ideas for Dollhouse Miniature Things: Life is good when it lets you find happiness in the just the cute miniature things (rule out the weird situations when
Tiny ghosts roam through Victorian-style dollhouses with gravestone gardens, cushy furniture, and gilded frames holding family photos.
Sorry it has been so long since my last post. I did not really get to post anything Halloween themed.. Maybe later in the week I will share ...
Imagine the sweetest dolls house you've ever seen, packed with crocheted mice. Welcome to the Amsterdam's Mouse House!
Just for fun! This Etsy product (already sold) shows how far one can go to make painting materials compact and portable.
Japanese artist Kiyomi brings some interior design chic to the world of dollhouses, with a range of handmade miniature antique furniture and accessories.
"Robertson’s tool chest contains all the same tools that were found in the original. All the tools work, even the plane’s tote (handle) is set a scale 1/8″ to one side as the original. The saw has 160 teeth to the inch. Robinson says that the hardest tool to make was the folding rule with 5 leaf hinge. It is about .030″ thick and hand engraved on boxwood. Things like the shears and dividers also have nice little joints..."
Miniature Scenes In Boxes Can Be Crafted For special occasions, like a wedding, a birthday, or why not: the opening of a real-life store!
Artist Kerri Pajutee creates incredibly beautiful, real-looking animal sculptures that are to 1:12 to actual size. Pajutee’s remarkable attention to detail imbu
Do you like to make miniatures that are replicas of items that you collect in real life? I sure do! If I decorate my life size home with something I will make it in miniature form in a heartbeat! I go to yard sales and estate sales and can't help but look for and buy old paint brushes. They have so much charm. I decided to make tome tiny ones and they turned out so cool! Gather together some old or cheap paint brushes that you don't mind cutting the bristles from. Cut out hole punches from cardstock. This picture shows aluminum foil but it didn't work for me. For the silver "metal" part of the paint brush I wound up using some silver plastic from a pill casing. You could just cardstock and paint it. Take the hole punches and glue six or seven together with just a dab of wood glue between each one. I used my ice pick and made an indention in the middle of the hole punch stack and glued in the end of a toothpick. The purple on is the tip of one of the paint brushes I used. Take your metallic piece and cut a strip about a quarter inch tall. Glue it to your hole punch stack leaving a sort of well for the bristles to sit in. I hope that makes sense. Choose which bristles you want and, holding the bristles tight between two fingers, cut a wad for your brush. Place glue in the well of your metallic piece and place the bristles inside. It's ok if the bristles are longer and shaggy. You're going to trim the to the length and shape you want after the glue dries. Then paint up however you want! The other paint brushes here are made from stacked up cardstock. So much fun to make! Don't you love that?? When you make one of something and wind up making several because they are so easy and fun to make! Hope you like them! XOXO
I spent 9 months working on the studio using hundreds meters of wood and lots of other materials like plastic, copper, paper etc. I built more than 100 miniature objects all designed and built according to that era. All the objects were made from scratch.
Arcanum Miniatures - Potter Shelves Set Detail
Miniature Crafts: How to Make Realistic Miniature Bricks
TO ORDER! Production time is 7 working days, delivery time is 14-20 days The price is for 1 branch! The basket is not included! Miniature lilac for a dollhouse Scale 1:12 Lilac handmade from polymer clay. The height of the branch is 3 cm, the height of the inflorescence is 15 mm. Please select the shade you need and the number of branches. If you have any questions, you can write to me here or by email [email protected] You can also find me on Instagram @miniature.clay.flowers
Since April 2011, art director and photographer Tatsuya Tanaka’s imagination has built a magnificent number of miniature worlds (previously here and here). Through the artist’s clever lens, everyday activities like construction work, walking the dog, getting a parking ticket, and plowing through a blizzard become delight-inducing scenarios. Tanaka also plays with pop culture references, building staple skyscrapers for Godzilla to prowl. You can see more from Tanaka’s ongoing Miniature Calendar project on Instagram, where he shares his creations each and every day. More
Hi everyone, I had so much fun last month making my first house out of cardboard when I created the San Francisco House that I wanted to create another one from cardboard. I was inspired by this picture I found on the internet of an abandoned house that someone had drawn. When I started out this house had both sides, but it was to large of a house for what I wanted, so I cut the right side of the house off. This was one of my hardest designs to try to create since when I started looking at the inspiration picture that there was not one truly even square or realistic edge in the picture. The porch was also a challenge trying to create it from the picture but I think it turned out darn awesome. I think I spent about 2 weeks this May creating this Haunted Mansion and it was so much fun and enjoyable using the cardboard. Yes it kills my hands to do the Thousands of cuts to create the house but so worth it. I am loving Cardboard and love how I can design so much from it at a Low cost compared to using the fancy Expensive Wood that you have to buy at dollhouse shops. I spent one day alone creating the interior cardboard boxes and trash and newspapers for the interior, plus I didn't have any fireplaces to put into the home so I created some out of cardboard...lol.. I also am loving how the aged patina came out with the painting process of the house, which for the life of me I don't know if I can remember how to recreate it again. Again the use of cardboard made the house so light, but also so hard and sturdy. I hope you all like my newest creation. Have a Wonderful Month! Stan
These artworks might be small, but they’re sure to make a big impression.
As of March 2022, this directory will only be updated on my Miniature Blog www.suzysminis.com please update your bookmarks An updated list c...
Miniature Calendar is an incredible ongoing project by Japanese artist Tatsuya Tanaka, that features beautiful miniature dioramas of everyday life using
These breathtakingly intricate miniatures are the work of Japanese artist Kiyomi, a mother of two who manages to find the time to dedicate to her hobby sometimes even waking up as early as 4 AM.
Ben je op zoek naar nog meer printjes van boeken en kranten voor het poppenhuis? Kijk dan op mijn Pinterestbord “Dollhouse Printa...
What is this, a house for ants?!
Hi everyone, I had so much fun last month making my first house out of cardboard when I created the San Francisco House that I wanted to create another one from cardboard. I was inspired by this picture I found on the internet of an abandoned house that someone had drawn. When I started out this house had both sides, but it was to large of a house for what I wanted, so I cut the right side of the house off. This was one of my hardest designs to try to create since when I started looking at the inspiration picture that there was not one truly even square or realistic edge in the picture. The porch was also a challenge trying to create it from the picture but I think it turned out darn awesome. I think I spent about 2 weeks this May creating this Haunted Mansion and it was so much fun and enjoyable using the cardboard. Yes it kills my hands to do the Thousands of cuts to create the house but so worth it. I am loving Cardboard and love how I can design so much from it at a Low cost compared to using the fancy Expensive Wood that you have to buy at dollhouse shops. I spent one day alone creating the interior cardboard boxes and trash and newspapers for the interior, plus I didn't have any fireplaces to put into the home so I created some out of cardboard...lol.. I also am loving how the aged patina came out with the painting process of the house, which for the life of me I don't know if I can remember how to recreate it again. Again the use of cardboard made the house so light, but also so hard and sturdy. I hope you all like my newest creation. Have a Wonderful Month! Stan
This work will create a museum in miniature. A miniature display is a unique thing that will look perfect in any room as a great independent thing. The wooden display case was made of sapeli wood veneer. Acrylic glass is used. Size - L-5cm, H-4,2cm, W-8 mm, L-2in, H-1 7/16 in, W-5/16 in. Materials -sapeli wood veneer, Acrylic glass, Seashell.
Ideas for Dollhouse Miniature Things: Life is good when it lets you find happiness in the just the cute miniature things (rule out the weird situations when
Every miniature artist knows that to recreate any object at micro size, they must not overlook even the smallest detail, because that's where the beauty of this art lies. If you take a peek at the works of Hungarian miniature artist Fanni Sandor, that's exactly what you'll see—meticulously planned and crafted miniature animals that are the next best thing to the real ones.39-year-old Sandor told Bored Panda that she's a biologist and worked with nature conservation projects until her kids were born, but now she is a full-time miniaturist.
Hi everyone, I had so much fun last month making my first house out of cardboard when I created the San Francisco House that I wanted to create another one from cardboard. I was inspired by this picture I found on the internet of an abandoned house that someone had drawn. When I started out this house had both sides, but it was to large of a house for what I wanted, so I cut the right side of the house off. This was one of my hardest designs to try to create since when I started looking at the inspiration picture that there was not one truly even square or realistic edge in the picture. The porch was also a challenge trying to create it from the picture but I think it turned out darn awesome. I think I spent about 2 weeks this May creating this Haunted Mansion and it was so much fun and enjoyable using the cardboard. Yes it kills my hands to do the Thousands of cuts to create the house but so worth it. I am loving Cardboard and love how I can design so much from it at a Low cost compared to using the fancy Expensive Wood that you have to buy at dollhouse shops. I spent one day alone creating the interior cardboard boxes and trash and newspapers for the interior, plus I didn't have any fireplaces to put into the home so I created some out of cardboard...lol.. I also am loving how the aged patina came out with the painting process of the house, which for the life of me I don't know if I can remember how to recreate it again. Again the use of cardboard made the house so light, but also so hard and sturdy. I hope you all like my newest creation. Have a Wonderful Month! Stan