I had a good friend 7th-9th
grade when I lived in Hamilton Ontario. Her name was Stephanie W. She is probably my earliest crafting
friend. It started with joining the
model train club in 8th grade.
OK, she & I joined and were the only 2 girls in the club. We weren’t stupid. All the cute guys were in the club. I had so much fun climbing over the
structure, learning how to solder, and making things in miniature, flirting with
the cute guys and going on field trips to visit really big model train tracks.
One day while we were at Stephanie’s house she showed me her notepaper
collection. Maybe that where I got
hooked on paper too. I know it wasn’t
long before I had my own collection. But
the real draw was her dollhouse that she and her dad had built. I don’t remember what it looks like, but I
remember after seeing it I knew that I wanted my own.
It wasn’t long after that we moved to Ft
Lauderdale. There was a store near my house that had dollhouse kits. I
always had to check them out. Finally in the summer before my junior year of
high school Country House Model #1002 was mine.
It took 2 ½ years to finally put it all together. At one point, I had to painstakingly wet it
down, dissolve the glue, and rebuild the walls because everything had warped in
the summer humidity. After the build
came the electricity. I was so proud of
myself, 18 years old and wiring a dollhouse for electricity, and it worked! That is until that same humidity shorted
everything out a few years later. I
built a few walls to add a bathroom, after all what home doesn’t have a
bathroom. I wallpapered with fabric,
reupholstered a chair, stitched a rug and made Christmas decorations.
My kitty loved to sleep in the house, and the second
floor is forever warped because of that. The house moved when I moved. It almost didn’t make the last move. But after my Father-in-law gave me a stern
talking to about how this house was such a part of me, and therefore it was
important to him, I found it a place in our new home. After all, it’s not often my Father-in-law
comments on decorating or stuff, so when he has an opinion, I usually act on
it. The house has collected dust over
the years, I’ve added some lighted Christmas & Halloween decorations
(battery powered, as I never put the electricity back in). It was never a play toy.
A few years ago my daughter & I decided it was
time to redecorate. Out came all the
wallpaper and flooring. And was replaced
with fresh wallpaper& parquet flooring in some rooms. I
added a pretty lattice to the bottom. We
decided the bathroom would be moved to the other side of the house (as in the
rooms that are on the other side of the hall, so it’s invisible now. Harry Potter movie posters were hung in the
boy’s room, and Monet water lilies in the girl’s room.
It’s been gathering dust again. Which brings me to the craft closet. Up on the shelf in the closet is a green
plastic bin. Today’s craft project was to
check out the green bin. I tossed the
old electric stuff. The quilling paper and instructions to make flowers, they
are going in the give-away bag. The
hooked rug kit, not started, and the ¾ finished cross stitch rug, I will keep
for awhile and maybe one day finish them. The photo album was falling apart so
I took out the photos and kit instructions and scanned them. That left three items. My official project for the weekend has been
determined.
I had two kits for furniture Chippendale style, a desk
and a chest of drawers, and a kit for a staircase. I pulled out the furniture kits. Amazingly I had all the pieces. After reading the instructions I discovered I
was missing 8 itty bitty screws. I was
also supposed to use tinted glue and stain the furniture when I was done. Quick decision was made, I didn’t want the
fold down writing surface, and mahogany stain was boring anyway. Problems solved. I have everything I need to
complete the furniture.
I’ve spent a few hours gluing and assembling and
painting. And to top it off. Glittering.
I had some glitter left over from a prior project that was shades of
green, copper & brown. Much more
sparkly than boring stain.
It’s always bothered me that the dollhouse didn’t have
any way to get to the third floor. It’s
something little kids pick up on instantly.
I had bought a staircase kit when I started with the earlier
renovations. I’m pretty sure it will
fit. Gluing the spindles is crazy hard –
the instructions say to be sure they are 1/8 inch from the edge, centered on
the step, and dry straight. Really? Do they know how skinny these spindles are? And I don’t want big globs of glue on the
bottom. Every time they fall over,
there’s another glob at the base. I’ve
scraped away so much, it’s a wonder there is any glue holding it up. I managed to got it done and painted. Now staircase fits in the dollhouse and the doll family can make it up to the third floor.
All that’s left for this weekend to is to dust and
straighten out the rooms.