Monday, October 10, 2011
Ouch!!!
I just dropped my medallion on the floor and when I bent over to pick it up, I slammed my head on the back of a chair! Now that the stars have cleared, I think I'm getting a black eye...Ugh! I look a hot mess!
Sunday, October 9, 2011
Two Steps Forward...
...And three steps back! Ugh! What a busy weekend it has been. Unfortunately, mostly puttering around the house, trying to ready things for when the weather finally turns. END OF TIMES ALERT!: It's still hot and summer-y here, we almost turned on the air-conditioner! In October? We usually have the furnace fired up by now. Spooky.
In spite of the balmy weather, we emptied the fish pond and brought all the gold-fishies in for the winter. And by 'we, ' I mean Glen! Don't judge me, yours truly was busy cleaning out the garage. We finally made the sad decision to sell the little convertible. 'Gia,' poor dear, has been sitting in the garage for ages and we never seem to be able to scrape up the cash to have her repaired. It's only a one-car garage, so the space has been rendered for the most part, useless.
Until now!
Sad as it was to see Gia towed away, the garage is now positively brimming with possibilities for a new workshop! And OMG! You would not believe the cache of tools I found.
Anyway, I did manage to work on Merriman Park a bit, this afternoon. But I am afraid my efforts were for naught! OK, you guys: I was once practically a straight-A student (except in Math) so it's not like I'm a blubbering imbecile. But whilst trying to hook up the fireplace sconces to the socket strip I blew everything up! Now, nothing works, and the socket strip warning light is going crazy! Ugh!
I figured out what I did wrong...I won't say what it was because it's simply too embarrassing for words! Suffice it to say that it was a typical 'guy-thing': in other words: I should have read the directions.
Oh, well. Live and learn, right?
I started cutting the pieces for the cornice --and that was no treat either! My cornice is made from resin and it's a drag to work with. And those inside corners all need to be coped which is tough enough on real wood, but the resin --Ugh!-- you have to go slow because the saw blade heats up and starts melting the resin. It's a gooey mess!
I got some fireplace stuff: the grate, fender, andirons and tools are from the local dollhouse store, Little Enchantments, in Edina. The lady who owns the shop is such a delight --do pop in if you ever find yourself in town. The vases are from a Canadian source, The Little Dollhouse. (Shout-out to Giac)! They are of an ancient Greek design, I figure the owner of Merriman Park picked them up on his Grand Tour of Europe.
I had to correct a mistake I made in the floor border: I neglected to factor in the thickness of the wainscot and the skirting and it bothered me that the borders were not all evenly wide. I have also decided to add a medallion to the canter of the floor. I could tell by the sound of crickets chirping when I asked what you thought of the old medallion I made up that it didn't quite make the medallion mustard (it's OK --I didn't care for it, either)! I found a gaw-jess medallion on-line and honeys, you are going to love it!
What else? I cut mirrors for the top of the stair, though it probably wasn't necessary--they don't really show. I'm working on the banister finals, with my new-found tools (no more kitchen knife, thank you very much)! I think I'll take Karin Corbin's advice and buy some 'mini-files.'
I am thinking about removing the door on the stair landing and replacing it with a tromp-l'oiel view into another room: one of my heroine, Mrs. James Ward Thorne! Do you think that could work?
In spite of the balmy weather, we emptied the fish pond and brought all the gold-fishies in for the winter. And by 'we, ' I mean Glen! Don't judge me, yours truly was busy cleaning out the garage. We finally made the sad decision to sell the little convertible. 'Gia,' poor dear, has been sitting in the garage for ages and we never seem to be able to scrape up the cash to have her repaired. It's only a one-car garage, so the space has been rendered for the most part, useless.
Until now!
Sad as it was to see Gia towed away, the garage is now positively brimming with possibilities for a new workshop! And OMG! You would not believe the cache of tools I found.
Anyway, I did manage to work on Merriman Park a bit, this afternoon. But I am afraid my efforts were for naught! OK, you guys: I was once practically a straight-A student (except in Math) so it's not like I'm a blubbering imbecile. But whilst trying to hook up the fireplace sconces to the socket strip I blew everything up! Now, nothing works, and the socket strip warning light is going crazy! Ugh!
I figured out what I did wrong...I won't say what it was because it's simply too embarrassing for words! Suffice it to say that it was a typical 'guy-thing': in other words: I should have read the directions.
Oh, well. Live and learn, right?
I started cutting the pieces for the cornice --and that was no treat either! My cornice is made from resin and it's a drag to work with. And those inside corners all need to be coped which is tough enough on real wood, but the resin --Ugh!-- you have to go slow because the saw blade heats up and starts melting the resin. It's a gooey mess!
![]() |
| I also added gilt powder to the stair, for extra sparkle. |
I had to correct a mistake I made in the floor border: I neglected to factor in the thickness of the wainscot and the skirting and it bothered me that the borders were not all evenly wide. I have also decided to add a medallion to the canter of the floor. I could tell by the sound of crickets chirping when I asked what you thought of the old medallion I made up that it didn't quite make the medallion mustard (it's OK --I didn't care for it, either)! I found a gaw-jess medallion on-line and honeys, you are going to love it!
![]() |
| I need to pick up a pair of lamps for the Hall table. I bought a frame on-line for the large painting, but when it arrived, it was too small! |
I am thinking about removing the door on the stair landing and replacing it with a tromp-l'oiel view into another room: one of my heroine, Mrs. James Ward Thorne! Do you think that could work?
Labels:
Giac,
Karin Corbin,
Little Enchantments
Friday, October 7, 2011
Pondering...
Whilst readying the Chanel mannequins for the upcoming Trunk Show at the department store where I work in Display, I 'came out' of the miniaturist closet to Patric & Susan, co-workers at the aforementioned emporium.
Our store is in the process of phasing-out the 'ye-olde' accoutrements of yesteryear --namely : cash registers! It's all changing over to I-Pads, darlings, who carries cash, nowadays? Anyway, I just happened to casually mention that I was building a dollhouse and was blogging about its progress and in a whirl the I-Pad was produced and the next thing I knew my blog, Merriman Park, was staring us in the face.
I think it's safe to say that Patric is perhaps even more Obsessive-Compulsive Disordered than yours truly --he collects decorative carrot objets, for god's sake! (I'm not judging, I'm just saying)! He peppered me with a barrage of questions: "what year was Merriman Park built? Oh, that was during slavery days--how many slaves are indentured to Merriman Park? What? Oh, no, Merriman Park is most-definitely not a Newport residence, if its not Virginia, it's South Carolina...."
All this forced me to decide, once and for all, Merriman Park's history. I guess I've harbored pretensions that Merriman Park was a European residence, but Patric's grilling of me made me realize that it is undoubtedly and unabashedly American. I mean, the architecture of Thomas Jefferson inspired it! And Thomas Jefferson was from Virginia and the houses that I modeled Merriman Park after, Edgemont and Bremo are both located in Virginia. So that means if I accept the idea that Merriman Park is an antebellum Southern house, there were most definitely slaves afoot.
I'm having a hard time adjusting to this reality!
Am I making too much of a big deal over this? I'm not one of those 'politically-correct' types, but it does make me think a little about my 'hero,' Thomas Jefferson, who wrote so eloquently that 'all men were created equal' --except, I guess --his chattel!
Our store is in the process of phasing-out the 'ye-olde' accoutrements of yesteryear --namely : cash registers! It's all changing over to I-Pads, darlings, who carries cash, nowadays? Anyway, I just happened to casually mention that I was building a dollhouse and was blogging about its progress and in a whirl the I-Pad was produced and the next thing I knew my blog, Merriman Park, was staring us in the face.
I think it's safe to say that Patric is perhaps even more Obsessive-Compulsive Disordered than yours truly --he collects decorative carrot objets, for god's sake! (I'm not judging, I'm just saying)! He peppered me with a barrage of questions: "what year was Merriman Park built? Oh, that was during slavery days--how many slaves are indentured to Merriman Park? What? Oh, no, Merriman Park is most-definitely not a Newport residence, if its not Virginia, it's South Carolina...."
All this forced me to decide, once and for all, Merriman Park's history. I guess I've harbored pretensions that Merriman Park was a European residence, but Patric's grilling of me made me realize that it is undoubtedly and unabashedly American. I mean, the architecture of Thomas Jefferson inspired it! And Thomas Jefferson was from Virginia and the houses that I modeled Merriman Park after, Edgemont and Bremo are both located in Virginia. So that means if I accept the idea that Merriman Park is an antebellum Southern house, there were most definitely slaves afoot.
I'm having a hard time adjusting to this reality!
Am I making too much of a big deal over this? I'm not one of those 'politically-correct' types, but it does make me think a little about my 'hero,' Thomas Jefferson, who wrote so eloquently that 'all men were created equal' --except, I guess --his chattel!
Monday, October 3, 2011
OMG! I'm FAMOUS!
It's true that I haven't been at this whole miniatures thing very long. But imagine my surprise and utter bewilderment at being plucked from relative obscurity and thrown into the center-stage of Miniaturist Limelight! You may be asking yourselves, Gentle Reader, "Oh hell, no, what the @#$ is she going on about now?" and so, I will tell you: Merriman Park just got a major shout-out from none other than Whitledge-Burgess!
Do you understand what this means? It's like you're a member of the corps de ballet and all of a sudden they cast you in the lead role...You guys, I'm like, The Black Swan!
I've been on Cloud-9 all the live-long day! Even at my job today at the Department Store where I work in Display, nothing and I mean nothing could get me down! Even knowing that Simon was yucking it up, touring the Stately Homes of England (whilst yours truly was slogging through the hum-drum ennui of making sure all gazillion opera-chairs from our Major Fashion Event this weekend were properly sent back to the rental company), couldn't get me down).
Whitledge-Burgess is now offering a selection of their gorgeous room-box settings in kit form! Read All About It in their latest newsletter:
http://whitledgeburgess.com/studio/index.php?main_page=page&id=3
In other news, I made a 'test run' of trying to carve a curlicue finial for my stair railing. I haven't carved anything in years, unless you count the Thanksgiving turkey. My Grandpa once gave me a 'whittling knife' when I was a boy and I totally scared my parents because I developed a certain penchant for carving miniature pagan idols from sticks! (I was really into Easter Island at the time --don't judge me)!
This was just a test-run! I need to glue up some stock to match the thickness of the railing. But I spent only approximately fifteen or twenty minutes with this practice piece of wood and a kitchen paring knife so I think I'm golden. I really think that I can do this! I suppose there is some high-tech tool that I should have used, (but don't own), that would work better. If you guys saw the few, primitive tools I own you would either laugh, or cry!
Do you understand what this means? It's like you're a member of the corps de ballet and all of a sudden they cast you in the lead role...You guys, I'm like, The Black Swan!
I've been on Cloud-9 all the live-long day! Even at my job today at the Department Store where I work in Display, nothing and I mean nothing could get me down! Even knowing that Simon was yucking it up, touring the Stately Homes of England (whilst yours truly was slogging through the hum-drum ennui of making sure all gazillion opera-chairs from our Major Fashion Event this weekend were properly sent back to the rental company), couldn't get me down).
Whitledge-Burgess is now offering a selection of their gorgeous room-box settings in kit form! Read All About It in their latest newsletter:
http://whitledgeburgess.com/studio/index.php?main_page=page&id=3
In other news, I made a 'test run' of trying to carve a curlicue finial for my stair railing. I haven't carved anything in years, unless you count the Thanksgiving turkey. My Grandpa once gave me a 'whittling knife' when I was a boy and I totally scared my parents because I developed a certain penchant for carving miniature pagan idols from sticks! (I was really into Easter Island at the time --don't judge me)!
This was just a test-run! I need to glue up some stock to match the thickness of the railing. But I spent only approximately fifteen or twenty minutes with this practice piece of wood and a kitchen paring knife so I think I'm golden. I really think that I can do this! I suppose there is some high-tech tool that I should have used, (but don't own), that would work better. If you guys saw the few, primitive tools I own you would either laugh, or cry!
Labels:
Black Swan,
Whitledge-Burgess
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Indian Summer
It was way too gorgeous outside today to be fussing with miniatures indoors! Sunny, blue skies and summertime temperatures enticed me out into the garden to apply gilt paint on the Entrance Hall stair.
Enough of that for today! Time to take the dogs out for a walk down the street to Minnehaha Park!
Wow! The leaves are really changing...hard to believe that in a month they will all be gone.
The Sumac are really on fire!
In the middle of the park sits the John Stevens House, the first home built in Minneapolis. It originally sat downtown, where the Main Post Office is today. It was identified and saved from demolition and moved to this spot in the late 1800's. I love this little home! Wouldn't it make a great dollhouse?
Also situated in Minnehaha Park is the Longfellow House. It was built as a 3/4 scale reproduction of the home of the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Longfellow immortalized Minnehaha Falls in his epic poem, The Song of Hiawatha. The poem was such a sensation in its day, it made Minnehaha Park a major tourist attraction. Sorry about the exposure.
I think this would make a great dollhouse, too. The pilasters could hide the seams where it opens up! I made a birdhouse modeled on the Longfellow House once a while back but I don't have any photos of it.
The flower gardens in back of the Longfellow House are winding down. We've already had a few overnight frosts.
Whew! Edie & Jack the Shelties are exhausted! Best get back to the house...Maybe I can get the stairway finished?
Later that night: The ends of the railing are whispering that they want a curlicue finial to finish themselves off. I've never used FIMO before, but do you think that would work? Also, since I finished the stair runners in black marble, should the landing runner be black marble as well? I kind of like it 'as is,' personally.
Enough of that for today! Time to take the dogs out for a walk down the street to Minnehaha Park!
Wow! The leaves are really changing...hard to believe that in a month they will all be gone.
The Sumac are really on fire!
In the middle of the park sits the John Stevens House, the first home built in Minneapolis. It originally sat downtown, where the Main Post Office is today. It was identified and saved from demolition and moved to this spot in the late 1800's. I love this little home! Wouldn't it make a great dollhouse?
![]() |
| John Stevens |
I think this would make a great dollhouse, too. The pilasters could hide the seams where it opens up! I made a birdhouse modeled on the Longfellow House once a while back but I don't have any photos of it.
The flower gardens in back of the Longfellow House are winding down. We've already had a few overnight frosts.
Whew! Edie & Jack the Shelties are exhausted! Best get back to the house...Maybe I can get the stairway finished?
Later that night: The ends of the railing are whispering that they want a curlicue finial to finish themselves off. I've never used FIMO before, but do you think that would work? Also, since I finished the stair runners in black marble, should the landing runner be black marble as well? I kind of like it 'as is,' personally.
Saturday, October 1, 2011
Slow Going
Lucky for me, I usually have weekends free at my job at the Department Store where I work in Display. But not this weekend. We had a Major Fashion Event at the store today which required me to go in late last night after closing and set up a huge stage set and catwalk and seating for eight hundred. Then I had to go back early this morning and tear it all down! So there wasn't a whole lot of time to work on Merriman Park.
When I arrived home this morning my entire body was positively screaming for a little nap (and, I'm not going to lie, a Bloody Mary, too)! But I foreswore those tempting diversions when I caught a glimpse of poor, neglected Merriman Park, sulking in its corner of the dining room and so, to work!
Here it is, under construction. I just love my new bannister from Sue Cook Miniatures! I added some bull-nose molding to the stair landing as per Giac and took Irene's advice and tarted up the stair runners with black marble. In deference to Simon I thought the bannister splats should be highlighted here and there in gold, all the better to draw attention to the detail.
I'm trying so very hard to resist attaching the railing until it is completely dry! Patience is not one of my virtues, I fear. (But having to sand off my fingerprints once already may be deterrent enough!
In addition to the stair splats, I also picked up this keystone from Miss Sue. The old keystone, I'm afraid, simply did not make the keystone cut. This little beauty I also used on the facade of Merriman Park. I personally love to have continuity between indoors and out, (especially in an Entrance Hall), and I thought this would be a subtle reference to the exterior. Of course, the stair splats are the same as my exterior balcony, so maybe I am taking this concept too far? As a matter of fact, I am toying with the idea of replacing my Entrance Hall chandelier with a hanging 'lantern'-style fixture. I've noticed that this is appropriate to a Hall (thanks, Irene)! but, try as I may, I can't seem to find a lantern that I like. So for now, I guess I'm sticking with the chandelier!
When I arrived home this morning my entire body was positively screaming for a little nap (and, I'm not going to lie, a Bloody Mary, too)! But I foreswore those tempting diversions when I caught a glimpse of poor, neglected Merriman Park, sulking in its corner of the dining room and so, to work!
Here it is, under construction. I just love my new bannister from Sue Cook Miniatures! I added some bull-nose molding to the stair landing as per Giac and took Irene's advice and tarted up the stair runners with black marble. In deference to Simon I thought the bannister splats should be highlighted here and there in gold, all the better to draw attention to the detail.
I'm trying so very hard to resist attaching the railing until it is completely dry! Patience is not one of my virtues, I fear. (But having to sand off my fingerprints once already may be deterrent enough!
In addition to the stair splats, I also picked up this keystone from Miss Sue. The old keystone, I'm afraid, simply did not make the keystone cut. This little beauty I also used on the facade of Merriman Park. I personally love to have continuity between indoors and out, (especially in an Entrance Hall), and I thought this would be a subtle reference to the exterior. Of course, the stair splats are the same as my exterior balcony, so maybe I am taking this concept too far? As a matter of fact, I am toying with the idea of replacing my Entrance Hall chandelier with a hanging 'lantern'-style fixture. I've noticed that this is appropriate to a Hall (thanks, Irene)! but, try as I may, I can't seem to find a lantern that I like. So for now, I guess I'm sticking with the chandelier!
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Bannister Splats Arrived!
I need to get a new life. All day long all I could think about was 'will my stair bannister splats from Sue Cook Miniatures arrive from England today?' Pathetic, right? --but true!
I literally sprinted home from the train station this afternoon, even in the unseasonable heat. As I neared the steps to our shaded front porch, the tension was palpable...
Would there be a package waiting?
I suppose, gentle Reader, you're thinking that the title of this post is a dead giveaway. But the sad truth is there was no package waiting for me upon my arrival . The disappointment cut me to the quick. I felt just like the boyhood Christmas when I had asked for a 'Big Jim' doll --er, Action Figure, and received 'Major Matt Mason,' instead. Lame.
When would the package arrive? What if it got lost in the mail? Will the Entrance Hall staircase of Merriman Park ever be finished? These were the questions that haunted me and swirled through my mind as I retired to the backyard patio for the one thing that could assuage my growing anxiety:
Cocktails!
No, I wasn't day-drinking alone! Don't judge me!...our friend Eric was there to console me (and shake up the first round).
The afternoon was far too gorgeous to be spent indoors hunched over my work table, anyway. Won't be many more --if any- days like this here in Minnesota, this season. But the barking of dogs at the picket-gate soon snapped us out of our reverie and a quick look-see at the front door brought --that's right! My dearly-awaited cast balustrade!
And now....to work!
I literally sprinted home from the train station this afternoon, even in the unseasonable heat. As I neared the steps to our shaded front porch, the tension was palpable...
Would there be a package waiting?
I suppose, gentle Reader, you're thinking that the title of this post is a dead giveaway. But the sad truth is there was no package waiting for me upon my arrival . The disappointment cut me to the quick. I felt just like the boyhood Christmas when I had asked for a 'Big Jim' doll --er, Action Figure, and received 'Major Matt Mason,' instead. Lame.
When would the package arrive? What if it got lost in the mail? Will the Entrance Hall staircase of Merriman Park ever be finished? These were the questions that haunted me and swirled through my mind as I retired to the backyard patio for the one thing that could assuage my growing anxiety:
Cocktails!
No, I wasn't day-drinking alone! Don't judge me!...our friend Eric was there to console me (and shake up the first round).
The afternoon was far too gorgeous to be spent indoors hunched over my work table, anyway. Won't be many more --if any- days like this here in Minnesota, this season. But the barking of dogs at the picket-gate soon snapped us out of our reverie and a quick look-see at the front door brought --that's right! My dearly-awaited cast balustrade!
And now....to work!
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