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Monday, December 01, 2008

Small Wonders: Miniature Palaces & Dollhouses


"QUANTUM SHOT" #505
Link -- Article by M. Christian of "Meine Kleine Fabrik" and Avi Abrams


Get yourself a house of infinite craftsmanship

Doll's House enthusiasts usually trace the origins of their fascination to European “baby houses” of the 1700s, though kids were kept far, far away from these elegant treasures; they were more a status symbol than a real plaything.


Vintage Dollhouse in Amsterdam, Holland. Photo by Natalya Bushina

If you want to use a broader description, though, miniatures (more suited for children to play with) arguably have roots as far back as the ancient Egyptians, if not further... There is something magical in making things smaller; even your office tower may look like a doll house from a certain angle, without you realizing it:


(image credit: Aduna)

True doll houses, featuring elegant miniaturization and suitable for children to play with, really began to come into their own with the industrial age, around the turn of the 20th century. The finest makers of houses (and their mini-furniture), were usually German (before the first World War) and then the British and Americans. Dolls and their houses existed before machines took the place of skilled craftsmen, but only rich kids could afford them -- and then only played with them very, very carefully.


Dollhouse in the Frankfurt shop window, Germany. Photo by Tatiana

Some of the kids who enjoyed them grew up and transformed their childhood fun into a seriously wonderful hobby, if not magnificent art.


Colleen Moore's Fairy Dollhouse

One of the more celebrated doll houses lives in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. Created by legendary silent picture actress Colleen Moore with the set designer Harold Grieve, the fairy castle is a magnificent work of art as well deliriously scaled precision.




Towering more than eight feet tall, the house features murals painted by someone you may have heard of (Walt Disney), chandeliers with real diamonds, the tiniest Bible ever written, tapestries featuring the smallest recorded stitches, a library of more than 100 hand-printed books, a pure silver bathtub (with running water), and still more amazing treasures and exquisite details.





You could say that bathrooms like this will never go out of style:


(images credit: Museum of Science and Industry)


Being a screen queen gave Colleen Moore an opportunity to create a magnificent fantasy castle, but if you want true opulence in small scale you have to … well, let’s just say it’s good to be the queen.


Queen's Miniature Windsor Castle

Created in 1924, Queen Mary’s Dolls' House has a pedigree worthy of any stately home in England; the queen’s cousin, Princess Marie Louise, commissioned the famous architect Sir Edwin Lutyens to construct it. (more info)


(images credit: Victorian Station)

But the Queen’s dollhouse was more than a plaything. It was, and still is, a frozen moment in British history, a miniature collection of the pride of the empire with works and features showcasing the best the country had to offer. Like Colleen Moore’s castle, the library had an extensive collection of handwritten books, but because she was the queen, after all, the royal doll house’s library had unique works by Kipling and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.


(images credit: Victorian Station)

Moore’s house had running water, but the queen’s house not only had that but a flushable loo, too. And that’s not all: the floors were done in fine woods and marble, the kitchen sported a working coffee mill, and even the wine cellar featured bottles containing real wines (and not just the cheap stuff, either) -


(image via)

Accurate in every aspect: right down to tiny little wine bottles with real wine, tiny magazines and books, real carpets, plush furnishings, fireplaces, with real framed art hanging above them. Perhaps the most impressive of all is the five inch-long vintage motorcycle, which reportedly has a real, working motor.


True labour of love: The Miniature Hobbit™ House

There are simply far too many curiosities and small-scale wonders to talk about in one article – from immaculate working steam trains and gasoline-powered racing cars. But this incredible doll house might take a special place in your heart - once you see how lovingly it's made and how warm and cozy the detailing is. Livejournal user ObeliaMedusa built a perfect replica of Frodo™s Hobbit House, using a usual dollhouse scale, 1 inch: 1 foot - with all two rows of rooms together measuring about 25" by 36".





Here are a few more hobbit-eye views:





Look into the pantry...



... and here's cozy Bilbo's room, complete with books and a nice desk:



See more incredible detailing and interior shots here and in-progress page here. By now you must be really amazed at the sophistication of this project... but here's how it all started:



That tells you that even the most intimidating of projects are possible, if you start with a small wonder and add to it... one little step at a time.


(images credit: ObeliaMedusa)

Miniature food for dollhouses (that Borrowers would die for) -


(image credit: Stéphanie Kilgast)
(special thanks to Ian Nigel Staveacre)

Also Read:
Russian Imperial Faberge Eggs
Creation and Destruction of Sand Mandalas

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COMMENTS:

8 Comments:

Anonymous Will said...

Wow, also, the Swiss were extremely fine makers of Doll houses.

___  
Blogger kalos_eidos said...

The detail that goes into those doll houses is amazing to me! I can't imagine the patience it takes to make them.

___  
Anonymous LittleInsect said...

I own a 1" scale Streamline Art Deco house. see here http://www.oceanboulevard.co.uk/2.html
Until I started furnishing it, I had no idea how much it would cost me to furnish it accurately. For instance, if you look in the dining room, there's a circular display cabinet, which cost me £80!

___  
Blogger JM said...

I went to school in chicago and fell in love with this collection of miniature rooms at the art institute of chicago:

http://www.artic.edu/aic/collections/thorne

___  
Anonymous Nonnie's Dollhouses said...

Kalos, you're absolutely correct. It also takes months if not years to finish a dollhouse or roombox with this kind of attention to detail. We've built a few dollhouses, and although not museum quality, they do take patience and craft.

Cheers,

Nonnie

___  
Blogger dollshouserestoration said...

I restore vintage dolls houses and love to see older houses.

www.dollshouserestoration.com

___  
Blogger Mags Cassidy said...

As a miniature food maker, I found this a very interesting read, thank you.margaretcassidy

___  
Anonymous fluffybricks said...

It's not true that 'true' dollhouses are for children to play with.
check out the miniatures on my blog, they're all for adults only! And still true dollhouses.

___  

Post a Comment

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  • Right about now a remote tropical island looks pretty good to me. I enjoyed this post.
    Read more

  • Wonder how much it would cost to buy and renovate this kind of old rig. It would be great to live in such a place :p
    Read more

  • Looks like a cool place to visit!
    Read more

  • Hey, get me to all that nice place.-smile-
    Read more

  • You can see it on Google satellite maps, very high resolution actually.
    Read more

  • is the island of LOST!!!
    Read more

  • Absolutely fascinating! I want to go there, as I'm sure many others do too. It's best we don't though as it'd get ruined pretty quickly. I'm glad there are sites like this to learn from.
    Read more

  • Back before Mac OS X, the Macintosh operating system had a Map control panel. If you typed "Middle of nowhere" in the text box and hit Enter, the map cursor would land on Tristan da Cunha.
    Read more

  • It's a paradise.. I would love to visit the island. Hope I can do it one day..
    Read more

  • anyone know the coordinates?
    Read more

  • 37° 6'18.90"S
    12°16'39.66"O
    Read more

  • How about the Easter Island?
    How remote is that?
    Read more

  • I am from St Helena! Everyone should see this place!
    Read more

  • This is, in fact, a fantastic world!...The island was first sighted in 1506 by a Portuguese sailor, Tristão da Cunha, but he didn´t land due to high clifs all arround the island. I just can imagine what these explorers, such as Livingstone and Magellan (Magalhães), may wonder when they discover places like this. Imagine you start hearing some distant but intense noise in middle of inexplored jungle in Central Africa and finally get a first sight of the Victoria Falls... Feel so envy!
    Read more

  • I looked on Google Earth, but couldn't find the oil rig.
    Those islands look like my kind of place, wonder if they have a radio station!
    Read more

  • They DO have a radio station! Wonder if they need a broadcast engineer!?!?
    Read more

  • Great post, very interesting. Thanks
    Read more

  • Abandoned oil rig; nice! The responsible company who abandoned it should dismantle it.

    Yeah, let's to that to the Artic refuge in Alaska!
    Read more

  • I would live there... no problems! Would mean going back a few decades in technology, but id find a way to bring some wind turbines to get me enough electricity to run a few luxuries
    Read more

  • Why are there no trees? It isn't that far south.
    Read more

  • This is not the remotest place on earth. Go to Google Earth and find this island. Now pan back. You'll notice a little green baloon a bit down and to the right.
    Read more

  • dammit, someone beat me to the punch. i was going to say "craphole island!".
    Read more

  • When the zombie outbreak happens, this is where i will move. hehehe
    Read more

  • If I'm ever featured on America's Most Wanted, this is the place I would run to!

    Looks like a cool place to visit, but how long and where would you stay? I didn't read anything about an airport, and even the South Pole gets mail more often than once a year.

    I wonder how the diving is?
    Read more

  • Any attractive women there?
    Read more

  • Tristan da Cunha is not the most remote island in the world! Bouvet is!

    Tristan da Cunha is the most remote archipelago in the world.
    Read more

  • I'd love to go urban exploring on that oil rig.
    Read more

  • That oil rig demands its own post.... let us know if you'd get more pictures!
    Read more

  • Right about now a remote tropical island looks pretty good to me. I enjoyed this post.
    Read more

  • Wonderful posting, really !
    Read more

  • Great post, I wish there were more pictures and meet some people from the island. How much would a boat trip be and how long would it take? Thanks again.
    Read more

  • Any attractive women there??
    Read more

  • would love to visit one of these places
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  • I thought that that oil rig would be the coolest place in the world to live. Then I found this.
    Oh Noes! Oh well... Nothing lasts forever.
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  • Looks like an amazing place to visit, but I couldn’t handle it for more than a couple of weeks, unless there were lots of beautiful virgins.
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  • The building in 'post-apocalyptic Moscow' is actually in Warszawa, Poland (see here)
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  • Re: Aerocar - Gorgeous! And it's especially darling with the wings and tail removed.

    When I finally get around to writing the mixed-up 1930s-60s vacuum-tube-punk pulp masterpiece, my heroine will certainly drive something just like that.

    And then when I become filthy rich by selling the option to Hollywood, I'll buy that one.
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  • Wow, the wife in that video is suicidal or something...

    Especially love that crazy monster plate. I want dishes like that in my cupboard
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  • The angel statue is the "Angel of grief".
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angel_of_Grief
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  • I want one of those fancy blood orange KitKats.
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  • The angels hiding their faces are pretty cool -- but don't look away. Don't even blink. Blink and you're dead.

    Beware of the weeping angels....
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  • I want the silverware in that dish picture.
    The plate is pretty awesome too. XD
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  • Most of the "If Women Controlled the World" images are from Worth1000:
    http://www.worth1000.com/galleries.asp?rel=If+Women+Ruled&display=photoshop&id=10467
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  • Warsaw (World) without us, more info
    http://www.mondolithic.com/?p=64
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  • Thanks!
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  • Mysterious objest is one of US bomblets, not sure about this type, but it seems to be scaterable anti-personel mine. When hitting ground, holder (five star-like objects held together) falls off releasing spring-fired tripwires. After shord delay needed to settle down, mine is ready, so hitting tripwire mahes it BOOM
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  • The Flying Penguin video was an April's fools production by BBC this spring, as can be seen on this Telegraph link:

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1583517/Flying-penguins-found-by-BBC-programme.html

    Thanks for a great site, by the way!
    Read more

  • Pettter - I am curious if anybody would believe it's true. I'd like to speak with this person :)

    glad you like DRB
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  • Engineer Xavier Borg doesn't convince me that his ideas comprise anything that is not already known to science. In fact I don't even see a theory in his 2 pages of writings.
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  • The image in the The Smallest Refrigerator (Cooler) is actually a Scanning Electron Microscope image.
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  • Hobbiton's in the Midlands, or just possibly the Cotswolds, not where London is!
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  • I've been to the Marrakech market, and those stall owners are the best salesmen I've seen. If you simply pass by them and glance their way, they make you feel guilty for not buying.
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  • Anonymous post 1 is correct on the unknown object it is most definitly a bomblet, to be precise it is a cluster bomblet. They are used both as anti-personel and anti-vehicle devices.
    Read more

  • Avi:

    Oh, I have no doubt whatsoever about that, considering the beliefs of some people,

    On the other hand, my faith in humanity may not be on the most healthy of levels ;)
    Read more

  • Anonymous picture is a CBU-26 cluster bomblet, american, vietnam era.

    http://www.vietnamgear.com/kit.aspx?kit=511
    Read more

  • I am quite disappointed with all of you. The "Mystereous object" is OBVIOUSLY the Holy Handgrenade of Antioch!"
    Bah! People these days. No sense of history.


    ;)
    Read more

  • Hmm, about the image with the foot- and wingprints in the snow... couldn't it just have been a bird landing and walking through the snow?
    Read more

  • ha... I think you nailed it
    Read more

  • Ebeneezer you beat me to it!
    Read more

  • Its a cluster bomb unit "bomblet". But I'm not sure whose it is -- It doesn't look like the US ones, and might be a Russian or Eastern Bloc unit CBUs were manufactuered by 34 different countries, and have been used by a number of countries and non-state organizations (such as Hezbollah in Lebanon in 2006).
    Read more

  • Thank you guys - you got the answer - post updated.
    Read more

  • the "Bender" picture is superimposed over a scene in a movie titled "Casablanca".
    Read more

  • You mean Bender wasn't really in it? :(
    Read more

  • Gorgeous pictures! Who knew life so small could be so pretty =).
    Read more

  • Wow dude that is way cool. Pretty neat stuff.

    jess
    Read more

  • wow, just looking at that pollen makes me want to sneeze - very pretty though.
    Read more

  • An incredible light microscopic images

    Pictured above are some of this year's entries in the light micro photography contest held by Olympus.the beauty of the natural world.
    Read more

  • OK - that does it for me. I'll never look at a frozen pizza the same way again.
    Read more

  • Hi all at drb. You have all put together one of the BEST Websites EVER. Just a note to say how much i enjoy your site. Thank You

    regards,
    Read more

  • when these types of machines were reported on 'alternative news' websites (read: conspiracy theory) decades ago, the posters were called nuts, tin hat wearing conspiracy theorists.

    i guess you're one as well, even though you have pictures :)
    Read more

  • 19m diameter... that is insane

    I was totally unprepared for that. This type of stuff is truly hard-core engineering (no pun intended, but I'll enjoy the serendipity of it)

    I can barely even fathom what the project management is like for the design and development of those (both TBMs and tunnel systems alike.) One minor error could be hugely compounded. Remarkable, great post!
    Read more

  • Hi there. I've been a huge fan of DRB for years now, and it's this kind of post that I love. Fantastic, imagination-catching stuff. Wow, can you imagine the consequences of forgetting to carry the 1 on an alignment equation??
    Read more

  • "when these types of machines were reported on 'alternative news' websites (read: conspiracy theory) decades ago..."

    Huh? Which sites were you on in the 70s and 80s?
    Read more

  • "when these types of machines were reported on 'alternative news' websites (read: conspiracy theory) decades ago..."

    Huh? Which sites were you on in the 70s and 80s?


    LOL, nice catch!

    OT: Love the post. Incredible machines!
    Read more

  • Look here for a view of what looks to be an endpoint for the Little Skull Mountain tunnel.

    The internet (combining various maps and commentaries) suggests that the area in question is Nevada Test Site Area 25, and given the fact that that's a tunnel, the best guess is it is or was used for underground depleted uranium testing (of projectiles or armor or both).
    Read more

  • To all the fans - thank you! your good words keep us going.
    Read more

  • thank you for all. great site!!:)
    Read more

  • Thank you for the great post.
    Read more

  • Strabag AG is not the type of the machine but the construction company which owns it (www.strabag.com)

    But anyhow nice article.
    Read more

  • Really nice blog!

    I have seen the original photo 'an inquisitive cat' on Flickr... This is the link :)

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/kevinsteele/231795031/
    Read more

  • Thank you Marie, credit added.
    Read more

  • What's under the photos of Africa stops being funny after seeing that poor child shot in the legs.
    Read more

  • My dog can out-wise that one.
    Read more

  • Hey - those cartoons are great! I love that black Humor. It reminds me a bit of the old "Parking Lot is full" cartoons - http://plif.courageunfettered.com/ - worth a look if you haven't seen them already!
    Read more

  • The truck tire hole looks suspicious to me. Why is the rubber inside the hole the same color and wear as the outside of the tire? Shouldn't it be somewhat cleaner rubber?
    Read more

  • I agree that the punctured tire photo is almost certainly fake.

    Not only is the image dubious, but the physics behind it doesn't make sense.

    Those traffic cones are relatively flexible, and hollow all the way through; a tire like that would smash it flat, not be cut through by it.

    (And especially not in such a regular way, and while STILL smashing the cone flat and off to one side.)
    Read more

  • Sigivald...
    It's possible the orange cones were placed there to mark the spot of the STEEL PIPE STICKING VERTICALLY FROM THE GROUND which may, or may not, be able to cut a piece of rubber out of a tire that has several tons of pressure on it.

    As for the cut being dirty, the tire probably made quite a few rotations over dirt after the puncture was made. Since it's part of a dual they took the truck off the site to fix it.
    Read more

  • the truck tire hole is a fake. period.
    Read more

  • The last pic is from The Creature From The Haunted Sea. Really bad old horror movie.
    Read more

  • The 'Deadly Surveillance' robot guy was shot by me, thanks for consideration! Original flickr can be found here:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/floze/1588186509/

    There's some more shots of his fellas right here:

    http://www.floze.org/2008/04/big-brothers-work-in-progress.html

    Thanks again, cheers
    Read more

  • Thank you Floze, credit added, plus link to your other images. The Big Brother never slumbers, nor sleeps.
    Read more

  • I love those speed-stacking-cup kids! Imagine practicing a routine like that when they should be sitting in front of a TV playing video games!
    Read more


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