Wednesday, October 23, 2019

I Looked in my Stash and Found. . .

As I opened the blog and saw the date, I was aghast that it has been a month since I last posted. Can I account for my time? Well, yes: LIFE. We were talking with friends the other day who are bit younger than we are about retirement. They were wary about retirement, wondering what they would do with all that time without a job. Trust me, the days fill up, especially if you have varied interests to keep you occupied. I've got a few irons in the fire, which accounts my lack of working on my miniature projects.

I got side tracked, too, with a project that I will eventually put together. I belong to the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR). Each year they sponsor a creative contest with categories in very creative endeavor from crochet to poetry to doll making to sewing to music, and quilting. I came up with the idea to build a room box depicting Betsy Ross making the colonial flag commissioned by General George Washington.

Digging in my reserves, I came up with some pretty 
rudimentary items. The window is too big, so I will
buy a window that opens in the center, as I would imagine
a late 18th century workshop might have.
What a fascinating woman she was. Briefly, a Quaker, who married young and outside her religion, much to her parents disappointment; widowed at 24; remarried and again widowed when her husband was captured by the British and shipped to London to be tired for treason where he died in prison. I believe that she had two girls from that marriage. To keep her family fed, she continued her husband's upholstery business which she worked until she retired in her late 70s.  She remarried a third time and had more children. She was a working class woman who probably just kept her head above water. As I researched how I wanted to portray her flag making, I found the same half dozen paintings that depicted her dressed in a fine day dress, sitting comfortably, hand stitching the stars in place. That scene would be easy to bring to life in a 1:12 room box.

The Betsy Ross flag was a massive 10 feet long.
Mine is six feet long and 4 feet wide or 6 inches by 4 feet.
I won't sewmine together; rather, I will have her working on
the stars, all hand cut and hand sewn. Thesewing machine
wasn't invented untilthe 1830s  in France, and Eli Whitney
had the first Americanpatent in 1846. I may redress this doll, but I have
 found dolls at HBS thatmight work.
Then I found photos of her workroom in the Betsy Ross House Museum in Philadelphia and I decided that I would try to recreate that room. Not such an easy task because I have little to go on. I will write the museum to see if they can give me dimensions of the room. The front of the house has gone through several renovations over the last two centuries and the current facade does not represent the original design in 1777 and it is doubtful that there would even be a drawing of the original building. I will go by what might be more historically accurate instead of representing the museum's interpretation of what Betsy's workshop might have looked like.

This project, however, is on hold because when I finally read in detail the guidelines for the DAR project I realized that Betsy Ross pre-dates this year's theme: interpretation of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, women's right to vote. I might be able to tweak the project maybe: While she couldn't vote, Betsy Ross still contributed to the colonies' fight to win independence from the English. I do plan to compete this project--sometime.

As I read about your endeavors in miniatures, some of you are expressing the same thoughts as I am: Will I build another big house? Yes. I have one more, a San Franciscan 557 that my daughter has. I have yet to complete the one that I have been working on, my goal for the week, but I am now struggling over how to electrify it. As I look at the current lines of houses that Greenleaf and Real Good Toys carry, there really isn't a house that I just have to have. While the exteriors are interesting and different than the two farmhouses that I have, the interiors are the same. No challenge there.

As for older kits, especially those made of that thin plywood that splinters and breaks, I will avoid those kits, especially after what I have gone through with the San Fran.

Others have been writing about their creations from their stash. I love these projects. It is so much fun to see what you have come up with as you search through your left over supplies. I throw very little away and have quite a mess of wood pieces. Most of my miniature time this fall has been spent working on apothecary shelves. Let me show them to you.

I have already shared the bed that I made for my grandson. He has a Duracraft Lafayette that will be his Halloween house, so now he has a bed for it.



Next he needs an apothecary. I dug in my stash to find this shadow box. Long Story short, I was told that a junk dealer specializing in toy cars had some dollhouse furniture, so I trotted off to his Quonset hut with my husband to see what he had. I left with six boxes loaded with miniatures, some good, some pretty junky, but I have managed in one way or another to use most of what I bought, like these two shelves. This one sat on my work counter collecting dust and cobwebs, which I left in place. It dates back to the decade when these little shadow boxes were all the rage. This one was filled food themed items, like eggs and a Morton salt container. The eggs will appear again later in the post. 

  1. Alligator: Hobby Lobby pack of weird animals
  2. Shells: collected from various beaches by various friends
  3. Skull: Tim Holts pack of 12. Cool bones
  4. Books hand made
  5. Globe of skull beads: Joann's; globe jewelry finding Hobby Lobby
  6. Butterfly cut from scrapbook paper
  7. scorpion and moth: Etsy store: Easy Cut and Print
  8. Crystal ball: Marble (my collection), jewelry finding
  9. Bottles: a variety from HL and Tim Holtz
  10. Labels: an Etsy store, not impressed. Don't show up
  11. Pumpkin: HL
I didn't glue the items in in case Nathan would like to rearrange it. I did seal some of the bottles shut with glue, like the tall one with blue food dye.



This next apothecary is for my daughter. It will go in the San Fran. This piece also came from my extensive stash. It is a House of Miniatures cabinet that was so poorly glued together and falling apart. At first I was going to fix it, but decided to leave it as it is because the San Fran is in just as bad a shape. It will be perfect for what Jen wants to do with her house. I've put a few things in it, and it is ready to send off to her.


The scrolls were fun make from Easy Cut and Print on Etsy.





I'll have more to say about the Greenleaf Westville, a charming little four room house with lots of character. You've seen it on the blog before. It is one of three that I bought. I have decided to keep it original, making it a turn of the 20th century apothecary with a weird woman who lives there. I've had so much fun working on this one. It is still in the developmental stages, with the faded wallpaper and bare floors.




Looking through the windows gives a different perspective of what is inside. I find that it helps to create a character or a theme to bring a house together. I don't know if I will have a doll to add or the imagination will suffice.




So with this house, I am trying to use the furniture and pieces that came with it. The kitchen will serve as part of her store front with the sales counter in place by the stove. Small and cramped, the kitchen will serve that dual purpose.


From my stash: old table (junk dealer), chairs: I bought them from another old guy who ran a TV repair store where he had his wife's collection of miniatures and dollhouses for sale. I think at one time she had a miniature store and he he was trying to get rid of her things after she passed. We drove by the other day and he is out of business. 

As I dug through my stash I found the scales and the coffee grinder came from the general store that I had purchased when I first started my bad habit. The copper pots came from Etsy, a fish pot and a dutch over. I had the tea pot.


The living room will be her study where she delves into all sorts of things. The curtain is temporary, left over cheese cloth. I've built my own apothecary shelf that needs to be finished. The eggs were originally in Nathan's shelf. Lots of ancient volumes that cover everything from astrology to astronomy to human anatomy. 


I love how my shelf turned out. Best piece that I have made so far. 


The furniture for this house came from kits. In fact I have the same kit in my stash. I will make a new quilt for the day bed. The upstairs bedroom serves as her living space and her sleeping space. I have the chamber pot and washstand, but I also have bathroom fixtures in the fourth room, not pictured because I don't know what to do with that room yet. 

I have to decide on flooring. It has carpeting that is faded and dusty, but I am thinking marble tile? I decided that working with the house as it is makes sense for a turn of the century worn out house, much like our grandmothers might have lived in.

But here is the real Elephant in the room, the Duracraft Bellingham, my modern Texas Farmhouse that I started three years ago. It needs a roof. I am procrastinating on that, along with install the chimney that is made of miniature plaster brick and is very heavy. The gables were poorly installed so there is a big gap between the gable and the roof that I have to find a way to close.  Right now there is a make-shift copper gutter. There is also more trim that needs to be glued in place. 


There are other things on my plate, too. As recording secretary of my DAR chapter, I now have other obligations. DAR is a service organization, so one of our service projects this year is to make holiday greeting cards for soldiers. Since I have a large stash of scrapbooking supplies and a Circut my sister-in-law and another member helped to make cards last week. We have 40 packets that will go the VA hospital in Cheyenne, Wyo. Each packet has 3 stamped cards that soldiers can use to send holiday greeting to loved ones. (No, Joddi, I have not purchased the new one. After I saw the Martha Stewart gold edition, I am really tempted.) 




Veteran's Day falls on November 11th, so I have started the second round of cards, all hand made. My goal is to make 60. There are 50 beds in the VA nursing home in Cheyenne and I want a "Thank You for Your Service" card for each veteran in the nursing home. So far I have pulled supplies from my scrapbooking stash, having to buy more cards, but that's another stash where I have a lot of stuff.


Finally, I have to share Elinore's (12) miniature project. She and her sisters have the massive collection of horses, barns, fences, and on an on. She build a loft to one of her barns. She has watched me build and proudly showed off what she has built. I love her imagination and her ability to create exactly what she wanted.


The clothes pins are hooks for her bridles. 




So there you have it 

Now it is time to get on with my day. Thanks so much for visiting. 

2 comments:

  1. Wow Ann! You definitely have many fun and interesting irons in the fire! I love your idea for the Betsy Ross room scene and I know you will come up with a clever way to merge it with the club's theme!
    Great work on all of the apothecaries! I love how you specialized each one to fit the person and the decor!
    Those cards are amazing! So jovial and creative with so many special layers! What a special and wonderful thing to do for our vets!!!
    Your granddaughter has her grandma's creative gene and I love how you encourage her to make thing and imagine! It's awesome!
    As for the roof, I can lend my moral support because I find them mundane and laced with opportunities to go way off the lines. I always manage to mess them up not matter how determined to do it right. If you have a little mini money to spend, the Greenleaf speed shingles do make an easier job of keeping the lines straight. And, I glued mine on the Storybook Cottage with a hot glue gun and then stained them with stain pens after they were on the roof. Worked beautifully! LMK if you want some more info about that process. Hugs!

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  2. What a Terrific post, Ann! So many things to see and to enjoy! I have to say FIRST that your DAR chapters commitment to making Christmas cards with stamps for the hospitalized vets to send to their loved ones, is both Selfless and Commendable, and I Applaud you and so would Betsy Ross! :)
    The roombox you are planning featuring her sewing the stars onto the flag sounds Perfect as a DAR contest entry; and I look forward to seeing how your idea evolves.
    I've also enjoyed looking at your apothecary shelves- Very Creative. I LOVE the muddle of books on top and the various charts spilling out of the bottom drawer which is Delightfully Atmospheric!
    The Westville cottage is Charming and again the cosy atmospheric lighting and the plethora of BOOKS all over the house, is Wonderful!!! I hope that you DO make a new quilt for the bed because it will certainly add to the character of the room.
    And I noticed one more thing about the Westville study, the light peeking through the cracks of the closet door under the staircase is BRILLIANT! What a great way to entice and draw in the viewer as a dollhouse mystery as to what might be going on behind it?

    As to the roof gap on your Texas farmhouse - been there myself, and your gutter looks good.

    Elinor's Barn Loft is WONDERFUL and how Pleased and Proud of your granddaughter you must be! She has a gift of seeing things not as they are but as they could be and her building the units for the tack from clothes pegs, is Marvellous!
    Obviously her gene hasn't fallen too far from your tree! ;D

    elizabeth

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