Showing posts with label Doll house. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doll house. Show all posts

My Ten Minutes in The Little Dollhouse Company

While I was in Toronto recently, I kept driving by the most intriguing little shop by the above name. Unfortunately, each time, we seemed to be driving to a destination and had a time line to keep. There is not a whole lot of shopping spontaneity when you are travelling with three kids and an early bird husband!
On our last day in the city, I managed to get my reluctant hubby to stop and let me out to take a look inside. Well, he had barely come to a stop before I leapt out (of a huge Suburban...our eco-friendly rental car) and nearly landed on my behind! Oh well, I knew my time was limited...what's a cracked tailbone in the pursuit of a great shopping experience? I felt like one of those contest winners at the grocery store who has 3 minutes to fill his/her cart before someone blows a shrill whistle and ends the fun. Well, my whistles were in the car feeling quite impatient and counting down my "ten minutes" (we were going to the mall of all places...blah...) so off I went.

From the minute I stepped into the store and heard that old-fashioned jingle as the door swung shut, I felt my breath catch: I was in a little girl's paradise and I had ten minutes!!!!!! Now, I love my husband dearly, but it is moments like these that I wish he wasn't such a non-shopper and that he'd understand my need to spend the afternoon marvelling over the authenticity of the miniature reproduction this and tiny vintage that. This place had piles of charm just peeking out from its shelves. Hand-crafted doll houses decorated with scaled-down versions of decorative perfection: tiny chandeliers dripping with tiny glass beads...that actually light up!!! Hanging baskets of flowers ready for the wrap-around porches, little lawn mowers, farm house sinks, baby cradles; if you can dream it, it's in that shop!!! Then there was me...with my meagre ten minutes...!!
Well, I snapped into action, allowing my eyes to dance over as much as I could when I spied what would be the purchase of my entire trip.........there in front of me, was the most realistic, scaled-down version of the fairy door of my dreams!! Now, it wasn't exactly a fairy door, but it would do a stand-up job as a substitute!! It had gorgeous moulding as the door frame, a tiny door handle, and...hold your breath for this one...a stained glass insert!!!! I dared not breathe as I asked the price. With the clerk's response, my excitement drained from me. It was well over one hundred dollars...definitely not qualifying as either a practical purchase (which it didn't have to be) or a purchase that I could sensibly justify to anyone, including myself. You see, I have problems with certain pricing points. If something is $19.95, no problem. If it is 17.95, the number doesn't sit well with me. If the price is $39.95, again, okay. If it is 52.95...it's probably not going to come home with me. In the same vein, I can buy five things for $20 each, but have a lot of difficulty buying something for $100. It's weird, and I can't explain it, but it just is. If I am going to spend $100 on a single item, it has to be big!! A fairy door for that price just doesn't qualify... The shop keeper, sensing my disappointment, laughed and reassured me that I could find a very similar unpainted version, sans the glass (which was fine with me), for next to nothing!!! Sure enough, at the back of the store, was a little display of unfinished doors with lovely frames and a selection of door accessories to purchase as well. I was thrilled to find the most beautiful wooden door and frame, handle with door knocker, and even accessories to set the scene scattered throughout the store. I paid in total, about $39.95 ( a good number) when all was said and done. That even included a little "cast iron" mailbox and some rubber boots for the "fairies" to slip on when they leave the house. In my efforts to be authentic to the fairy door people (who actually know the folklore behind these sweet, little doors) I decided to pick up a resin version for the inside of my entry as well. It was cheaper (in total, with accessories, $15) and painted up beautifully. Now, you all know I did this for my little girl,who unfortunately wasn't even with me, and I was dearly wishing she was as she would have been able to charm her Daddy into letting us stay a lot longer. Unfortunately, since this trip wasn't about the adults (is it ever?), I had to adhere to our schedule and take our boys to the mall! Sure enough, as I was paying, my dear, sweet hubby called me on the cellphone to "encourage" me to hurry along and let me know that the "bus" was leaving very soon...with or without me!!! The nerve! Do you honestly think the other man of my dreams would utter those threats to his wife??? I don't think so...!!!

With only seconds to spare, I hopped (climbed) back into our gargantuan vehicle where I had been unceremoniously relegated to the back seat while I was in the shop. The indignities I suffered just because my fellow travellers were mostly male!!!! You can just bet that the next time I return to Toronto, I will be the driver, I'll drop the the testerone at the mall first, and I'll save all my spending money for that adorable, little shop. You can bet your money on that one!!!!

The wonderful world of miniatures...

(holiday jenny)

(holiday jenny)


(Alicia Paulson)


(Alicia Paulson)




(midolls*melissa)


(The Paris Apartment)

(The Paris Apartment)



(amber e)

(amber e)


(La Belle Avenue)


(steaktaco)


(sevenfoldlife)

(sevenfoldlife)

(roblaliberte)

(Jaykissan)


(Lakeminis)

(Lakeminis)


(Hwar)

(Hwar)

(Hwar)

While I was quietly sitting, perusing through one of my favourite interior design books my daughter came to me and asked why I loved these kinds of books so much. I told her when I was a little girl like her, I loved to play with my doll house and decorate all the little rooms. If I didn't have what I needed for the rooms I improvised. This included cotton balls for pillows, hankie's for bedsheets, little cut out pictures from magazines for the walls and so forth. I then continued to tell her now I'm a grown up and have my own home I am still somewhat playing doll house but on a much larger scale lol. The books are an escape from reality for me just like anyone who is an avid reader of fictional novels. I actually dive into the pages and imagine I live in the rooms presented. I then jump back out and try to figure out how I can bring that fantasy room into my real home.

This conversation with my daughter prompted me to think about a post Claudia Strasser of The Paris Apartment made last week about collecting stunning miniature Parisian style furniture for her nieces, and picking up some gorgeous wall papers from a NY flea market for their doll house. I then became curious as to how seriously people decorate their doll houses these days and these are some of the pics I found...

Most of them I found on flickr. I love the vintage retro styles and the traditional. I am floored by the details in some of them and I adore those little french cafe style chairs in the pic by steaktaco. I also included a couple of extra pics I found by holiday jenny. She makes these absolutely beautiful shadow boxes as well as miniature girly framed prints. So cute!
My favourite find was Alicia Paulsons colourful doll house and all that adorable vintage furniture :) Her flickr sets are well worth having a peek as they also show off her amazingly happy and colourful home. I love it! Alicia's flickr page also led me to her blog, posie gets cozy, which is now one of my favourites to frequent. Read about all her wonderful creations and the new addition to her family....an adorable welsh corgi named Clover Meadow :)

Links...

"The thinks you can think, if only you try..." (Dr. Seuss)

I am a part-time scrapbooker. What I mean by that is I get heavily into "scrapping" a couple times per year. Usually in the winter, when life is more centered on being indoors, and when my pile of photos becomes overwhelming. Scrapbooking appeals to me for mainly two reasons. I am a very sentimental person and I want to honour my photos/memories and slapping them into a cheap album that will digest them over time strikes fear in my heart. Secondly, I have a terrible memory. I feel like I have spongy holes in my brain where information, and more importantly, memories get lost. Scrapbooking these memories symbolizes, to me, a place where I can go to get these memories back.

My first experience with the myriad of scrapbooking supplies out there didn't begin with their intended purpose. No, I tend to look at things and think- how can I use these items in a different way? So, in fact, I started making things (pictures, trinkets, etc.) out of these wonderful supplies before it was the norm to do so. I love the story, The Princess and the Pea, so I decided to make a picture using scrapbooking stickers and paper for Sophie's room. I had a fake peapod that for some reason (I have no idea), I had held onto for a few years. I glued it on to the picture I made and viola! Very satisfying!!






I also created a clothesline for her room by cutting clothing shapes out freeform and stringing them on scrapbooking threads. That was fun and turned out quite nice. I also often cover stretcher canvases from the Dollar Store with pretty paper and mount things to it. Cheap and easy art that even a child can do. It's also a great way to showcase a child's treasures.


Speaking of kids, I even used scrapbooking paper to decorate Sophie's Barbie house. I have to admit I had more than a little fun "wallpapering" the little house and using stickers and embellishments for Barbie's decor. I was a real Barbie girl as a child so I didn't have to go very far to find my imagination in my attempt to create a "dream house" for Sophie. I also went through a phase where I made all kinds of things for a "Sweet Shop" for Sophie and her friends. I even designed a menu for them to use when visiting the "shop"...who's the kid here?!?!

My point is, and I do have one, use your creativity and think outside the box when decorating your home (in this case, child's space). Take a trip to your local scrapbook store. You will be amazed at all the treasures that are at your fingertips, ready for your imagination...

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