Saturday, February 27, 2021

Not Knowing is Half the Fun

UPDATE: I've been to the basement several times since I began this post. I am glad to announce that my tax report has been turned over the accountant, so now I get on with my life with a bit less stress. 

I do feel a bit more free these days, despite what the news people say I should be feeling. My husband and I have had both our COVID shots, but I guess we are suppose to carry on as though we are contagious. I had adverse reactions while my husband has had none. 

We devoted a couple of days to sick pony. He's 34 years old this spring, and has been healthy, but a week of really cold, sub-zero temperatures have been hard him and he colic-ed mid week. We had the vet out Wednesday night and then hauled him to the vet clinic yesterday, but he seemed to be doing better. Now on medication and restricted diet, we hope to pull him through. He's lost so much weight and with really poor teeth he can eat only a wet mash. We will do our best for him.

It will be cold today, but hopefully will warm up this week and maybe we can see some hints of spring. I will continue to spend most of my time in the basement, trying to get Fairfield half scale finished. 

Here, then, is the post that I started last week: 


 When I head to my basement, I start out with a plan, like today I am going work on my tax prep or I could clean up and organize my work area, but then I see something laying on the counter and I'm off and running in a different direction, making something. After all, I don't see the accountant until next week.

This morning was no different, with good intentions of cleaning up a mess here, there, and over there, I got distracted by the Fairfield. Actually, I am making an effort to work on it so that I can move it out of the workspace. I never realized when I tore it all apart that it would be such a project to renovate. So here's an update on this little half scale project.

Sourcing miniature accessories and building supplies has presented quite a challenge. There just seems to be limited choices and some accessories are non existent or too pricey, so I'm making more things, such as these fireplace grates. The Fairfield has 4 fireplaces, so I started playing with ideas on how to recreate the wood grates and add fire. 

I began by digging in the trash can for a greeting card that I had botched and cut strips about 1/4 inch wide then glued them together in a rough grate.

                         

I ended up trimming the original 3 grates down to two and gluing it the fireplace log andirons--that's what those little brass things are called--that came with the house. The grates are not very fancy, but functional and won't be seen that much. I'll cut really wood branches to make my logs.


  

The downstairs fireplaces will get the grates with the brass Andirons, while the upstairs fireplaces will have the simple grates. I added silver beads as feet and will paint them black, too. For flickering fires, I'm ordering fireplace kits from Evans Designs, conveniently located nearly in my neighborhood in Ft. Collins, so they should arrive in a more timely fashion that orders from out of state--we would hope. I have one more grate to make. Never mind my feeble attempt to make "fire." I glue beads on a clear sliver of acetate, hoping to "make fire." Scratch that idea.


So this is where I stand. I've fitted and refitted, cut and re-cut all of my wallpaper templates, made 3 lights, with more to to make, and I still have more floors to make. I've cut the Cricut walnut veneer, I just need to create the floors.




One side of the house.


The other side: a bathroom, a long, hard to access hallway and the kitchen.



Another challenge has been this odd wall in the kitchen. Inspired by a Fairfield on the Greenleaf Forum, I decided to turn this odd space into a cupboard. I had considered cutting away this bit of wall, but decided not to. You can see the challenges that I am facing. 


Instead, I set about fashioning a cupboard door, using card stock to design my pieces. I cut them on the Cricut Maker, making an extension for the wall and cutting the door that will have a glass window in it.
 

And I manage to get a perfect fit second time I cut the piece. Next I will cut the door from basswood in the Maker.



There's also more work to do the exterior; I've pieced together the porch railing, but I'm still fiddling with it. 

                


So there it is, a work in progress. I've been putting off the wallpaper job, but I think it is time. 


I've been working on this house for months, fiddling with so many of the little details, leaving it to sit for weeks, returning to work, forgetting what I had planned, and starting over then remember my original plan. In addition, there are just so many little details that take up so much time, like the trim work. This week has been dedicated to getting the rooms wallpapered.

UPDATE: Wallpapering

I ordered wallpaper from my favorite online source last summer, Itsy Bitsy, only to be disappointed in some of the half scale prints that are so small, the detail is lost and the color is off. So this week I dug in my scraps stash left over from other projects and came up with a very small pink print that that I had used in the toy it. I do hate to repeat wallpaper in houses because I want each one different an unique; however, I have a hard time resisting pink.



Same process to finish this room: trim, light, and flooring. You can see the blue stripes the hallway. That will be a "fun" job to wallpaper with four 3 doors, and two windows with limited access.


The attic 3rd floor is a very difficult space with the slanted roof wall, the L-shaped floor plan and 3 triangle window walls to paper. I found just enough toile paper that I purchased on closeout at Hobby Lobby and used it in Lily's house, so I thought why not here, too. The print is 1:12, but next to the strip it doesn't seem too out of place, does it? The paper is not pasted in yet, perhaps today. But I need to order a 3rd sheet of the strip because two wouldn't allow to cut three triangles. 


                                     
  
                                       


After I had all of my templates recut and refitted, I cut the wallpaper then put each piece in place and began the pasting process. 

I am using an old Cricut cutting mat with a sheet of Press and Seal food wrap with sticky side up to hold the cut wallpaper in place and flat. Works like a charm. Thinner wall paper might tear when you peal it up, so be cautious. I spread a thin layer of paste with a craft stick.

             
Then I carefully position it on the wall. This bay window is especially hard to get the paper in place on the inside wall with the windows. 

                                 

Once the paper is in place I use an old gift card to press the paper into place and work out any air bubbles that might there. I keep a damp cloth handy to wipe glue from my fingers and excess from the wall paper.

                                  

The living room is now mostly done. I have to finish the fireplace, add the trim, and add the light, finish the flooring and build a fire. Oh and make curtains. 

                                    he l
 
Two rooms remain on the main floor, the kitchen and the tiny front entry. The kitchen has been problematic, too. I ordered 1 sheet of 3 separate patterns, underestimating the amount needed, so instead of ordering more paper, I decided to paint part of the kitchen and paper the bay window.

                            

I am a little more excited about the little house now that it is starter to look a little fresher and cleaner. There is still a lot of work to be done, but I am making good progress. 

I'v ordered bathroom fixtures for the Manchester from Shapeways that won't be shipped until this coming week and kitchen appliances for Elf that won't arrive for a couple of weeks. I am very excited for that house because it will be so different from the other houses I've done. 

Thanks for visiting. I enjoy reading your comments, so please day, "Hi." Stay well. 

Thursday, February 4, 2021

Making a Plan

After over 10 years of blogging, I'm finally getting the hang of it. It has sort of been a hodge-podge series of posts one right after the other, maybe each week, but not always and little to no continuity. Stream consciousness-like writing. I can get away it over at the Garden Spot, which is more like a gardening journal, but here I hope to teach or at least inspire others to try new things and not be afraid to fail and to keep working and to do what makes YOU happy. So with the Manchester Country Home Kit posts, I have created on my desktop one folder and add new folders with categorized content for each post. Hopefully the posts will be more organized and focused and I more easily converted for my Facebook miniature groups.

So this week, I am planning the electrical for the country home. There are some challenges:

  • getting the tape wire into the addition and up to the yet to be added 3rd floor. 
  • which type of transformer to use
  • waiting for supply shipments to arrive--which can be quite stressful because the post office in our little village has become grossly inefficient. We are all complaining about packages being returned for insufficient address. My Dec. 6 Bindel's order was returned and now that order has been canceled and I've reordered. Anyway. COVID, you know. 
  • Making as many of the chandeliers that I can--again challenging sourcing materials and having the skills to create what I envision in my mind.
  • I'm in the middle of making a chandelier for the bedroom from a Bindel's kit that did happen to get delivered, but I need to  buy a tiny file. More on that later when I show the kit and assembling it.

I decided to lay out my wiring plan using painter's tape to get feeling for where the lines would run. I'll be using Cir-kitConcepts http://cir-kitconcepts.com quick attach adapters that install directing in the tape line in the ceiling, making the chandelier essentially a plug-in light. I think installation will be much easier. Their website has great tutorial videos on how to use their adapters. They are expensive, but I think worth it. In the past, my tape wire has been installed on the floor above the ceiling lights, making it worrisome to glue in the floors, so I'm going to run the wiring in the ceiling. With the 3rd floor and roof not in place, it is easy to turn the house upside down to install lighting in the ceiling. 

My favorite Youtube tutorial explains in to instal the copper tape, install the lights, and how to connect lines between floors when there is not a stair opening to run the tape through. She uses round wire tucked away out of sight to make the connection. I'll be showing how I do that in future posts, too. Visit Dollhouses, Trains, and More  on Youtube to watch this video the makes wiring a dollhouse seem easy: "How to Electrify a Dollhouse." The narrator introduces a new transformer systems that appears to be more reliable than the hobby store transformers and she includes a shopping list in the video for Creative Reproduction 2 Scale. I'll be converting to this system, so I'll let you know how well it works for me. One advantage is that it will handle more lights and I think deliver more current for stronger  and better performance of lights. We will see. 

I have to add that there are a number of ways to add lights to you house, so you choose the best way that works for you. Some are intimidated by the copper tape wire and others have a hard time managing the small brads make the connections (as I am); still others worry about the longevity of the system. I will say that the three older houses that I bought that were wired with the copper tape, the systems have held up for all these years. Regardless of which system you decide to go with, there are plenty of Youtube videos that will help you decide which system to use and then how to install it. 

I will admit that I have had a lot of problems with installation. Now the transformers that I have purchased are failing, so I am going to with the transformers recommended in this video because I think they will be more reliable.

The addition will require tape wiring to pass through the door wllas or around the sidewall that will be covered with corner molding. I haven't decided on that yet.




I have decided that the wall for the stairs will be to left with an enclosure around the other side and the back. More and more in mini houses, builders are adding book shelves, entertainment centers, and such to that wasted space, as in real life. Pinterest offers a plethora of ideas for that space. With the main bathroom on the second floor in the Manchester, I've been trying to figure out how to put one in the stairwell, but the fixtures are just too big. I'll keep working on that.


The stairs in the middle of house really do break up the flow of the traffic, so even though I have assembled the the lower part of the house, I couldn't help but play around with the stairs to see if I couldn't get a better floor plan to include a quarter bath on the main floor.




Had I not cut such a wide opening between the house and the addition and moved the door on the second floor, I might have been able to move the stairs, but both pose problems. A word to the wise for the next builder who ponders moving the stairs, keep pondering and playing around with the dry fit until you are sure that you have the floor plan the way you want. Of course with the right hand held power tool, I could still cut a stairway hole in the ceiling, but never mind, but then I have to deal with openings that are already cut. 

                       

Which brings me back to the bathroom. I am still looking at Elf Miniatures for bathroom fixtures, but I am also looking on ShapeWays Market for Miniatures. I've found all the pieces, so I may just order from a shop there. Maybe I ought to invite Pink to help me shop around. She's always up for shopping.

Thanks for visiting. I'll have more in few days. 



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