When I took apart the Rowhouse’s stair rooms so I could fix the wallpaper, I made an executive decision not to put back the staircase between the second and third floors. It just blocked too much of the room.
I thought about filling in the hole and having no staircase leading up to the third floor — that doesn’t bother me in dollhouses — but I didn’t have enough of the hardwood flooring pieces to patch that big of a hole.
While I was pondering this, I remembered I had a set of folding attic stairs in my stash that I bought on eBay several years ago. This set was made by Datim Miniatures, who appear to be out of business. I was unfolding the ladder, trying to figure out if it would be long enough to reach the floor, when the stairs started falling apart in my hands.
These stairs are pin hinged both at the top and at all the joints where the ladder pieces meet, and all the pins had rusted and were breaking off as I manipulated it. I managed to replace some of them, but the pins that hold the ladder pieces together were inserted into little wood blocks glued to the sides of the ladders, and one of these (not the one pictured below) split in half when I inserted a new pin. And then as I was messing with it the rungs started popping out. It just couldn’t be saved.
So that was pretty disappointing. (I think I spent around $30 on that staircase!) Timberbrook makes a nice set of folding attic stairs in 1:12 scale — I actually used them in my first dollhouse and have another set in my stash that I bought at a flea market — but they don’t come in 1:24 scale. Alessio makes a set in half scale that cost $40. I’d so fallen in love with the idea of fold-out stairs I was willing to pay that much, but I did the math and found they would be too short for my 5″ ceiling — they’re designed for a 4.5″ ceiling and wouldn’t reach all the way to the floor.
So I did what any self-respecting miniaturist would do… I made my own! (Instructions follow, see the bottom of the post for a list of supplies needed.)