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Ladderback chair tutorial in April issue of American Miniaturist


Ladderback chairs pictured in the Fairfield, with a Cassidy Creations kitchen table that I built from a kit.

Last fall I was looking for half scale ladderback chairs to use in the kitchen of my puzzle house and, unable to find what I wanted, I ended up making my own. I looked at designs in All About Doll Houses and Dollhouse Style for inspiration. Then I went to my local mini shop and browsed the spindles to find some that had decorative tops that looked similar to the finial tops of a ladderback chair. Houseworks makes 2″ spindles that are perfect since that translates to 4′ in half scale—just the right height for a dining chair.

A tutorial for this project has been published in the April 2010 issue of American Miniaturist (issue 84). If you’d like to check it out and don’t have a shop nearby that carries it, you can buy a copy online.

This is my first article in American Miniaturist and I’m pleased with how it turned out. The magazine is smaller than a standard size magazine (like the old Nutshell News issues were) and they have a lot of how-to articles with clear, step-by-step instructions and plenty of pictures.

Sam & Max: The Devil’s Playhouse previewed

My hands-on preview of the upcoming Sam & Max season was posted this morning at Adventure Gamers. This was an interesting article to write, because for more than three years, I was the PR person soliciting articles just like this one. Tales of Monkey Island was already underway when I left Telltale, so even though most of the episodes launched after I left the company, I always went into them feeling like I knew too much. But during my last days at Telltale, The Devil’s Playhouse was still but a glimmer in the designers’ eyes—which means I finally get to experience a Telltale series as a fan, rather than an employee.

Sure, you’d think working for a company that makes your favorite type of game would be the best job ever, because you’d get to play all the games before everyone else. Problem is, playing games before everyone else means playing them long before they’re ready to be played. And dissecting the games months in advance of their release in order to figure out how to market and promote them saps a lot of the fun out of actually playing them.

Okay, so I DID play the upcoming Sam & Max episode before it was finished, and therefore before it was quite ready for prime time, but that’s not the point. I went into the experience knowing next to nothing about the storyline or what’s in store for the season. And after playing most of the first episode, I still don’t know what the design team has up their sleeves. Nor can I wait to find out.

Anyway. Go read all about it.

Recent half scale projects

This week I finished cross-stitching a “Blue Kirman” carpet in half scale. It’s stitched over-one on 35-count linen. The finished size is about 2.75″ by 4.5″ (which would be 5.5′ by 9′ if it were life-sized). This design comes from a free pattern that I found online.

Here it is in the Fairfield’s dining room (which I’m thinking of turning into a music room…)

I’ve also been working on filling up the Fairfield’s bookcase. I’m using a technique that I wrote up for Miniature Collector a few years ago. That article is archived here if you’d like to try it yourself (posted with permission from Scott Publications). Once the book covers are scanned, assembling them is an easy project that can be done while watching television. (Lately Wonderfalls has been my diversion of choice.)

Last but not least, I’ve written a how-to article for building half scale ladderback chairs that will appear in the April issue of American Miniaturist. So if you’d like to learn how to make them, that’s where to look! (My local mini shop is closed for renovations at the moment so I’m not sure if this issue is available yet…)

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