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Westville – (almost) instant gratification

May 2015: I started the Westville as part of a Greenleaf community build in 2005, and at the time we blogged our progress on the Greenleaf forum. After a few site upgrades the old community blog has become hard to link to and I’m redoing my website anyway, so I decided to move those posts over here and backdate them. Sorry for any weirdness that results!


I’m too sleepy to load up pictures right now, but I’m happy to report that I got through all of Step A tonight. Which means, essentially, that I have a house! Instant gratification.

First, I enlarged the kitchen window hole to make it wide enough for the casement window I bought, and filled in the gaps at the top and bottom. (The original hole is a vertical rectangle, and the casement window is horizontal.) I also enlarged the stair hole for the Houseworks stairs I’m going to use (just took a little bit of sanding) and chopped the bit of railing that protrudes into the kitchen off the center partition wall. Then I went through Step A, following the directions (rare for me!) and used a combination of wood glue and white glue to glue the pieces on. The shell is drying right now.

As I was going through Step A, I applied a piece of tapewire across the first floor and up the right wall. I don’t know yet where I’m going to put lights, but this gives me some flexibility. I did this before putting in the second floor because once that’s in, it’s harder to get the wire from the first floor to the second floor.

Step B is building the staircase, which I’m going to skip because I’m using pre-fab stairs. I went to the dollhouse shop this weekend but they didn’t have the set I want, so I am going to have to order them. I have a 20% coupon for HBS for the beginning of August, so I’m going to order the stairs then, along with the disappearing attic stairs and the closet door. That means I can move right to Step C, which involves putting together the rest of the shell.

Westville – dry fitting

May 2015: I started the Westville as part of a Greenleaf community build in 2005, and at the time we blogged our progress on the Greenleaf forum. After a few site upgrades the old community blog has become hard to link to and I’m redoing my website anyway, so I decided to move those posts over here and backdate them. Sorry for any weirdness that results!


Here’s my workspace on Day 1 of Project Westville:

As you can see, there’s not a ton of desk space. My other work table (you can’t see it in this picture) still has the Arthur on it, which isn’t quite done. So I did what any self-respecting miniaturist would do… I used the floor! (This is actually not unusual for me. I do a lot of my work on the floor, and have for years. I guess at some point I’ll have trouble getting up and down there, but for now I still can, and I take advantage of it!)

So, I got to work punching out all the pieces required for Step A. There are A LOT of them, and it turns out not all of them are going to be used in Step A. I hope I don’t lose anything (see messy workspace picture above).

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Arthur – I have this problem…

May 2015: I started the Arthur as part of a Greenleaf community build in 2005, and at the time we blogged our progress on the Greenleaf forum. After a few site upgrades the old community blog has become hard to link to and I’m redoing my website anyway, so I decided to move those posts over here and backdate them. Sorry for any weirdness that results!


I’m sure I’m not the only one out there who loves starting a project and hates to finish it. That’s become the problem with the Arthur. I really haven’t done anything on it since my last blog entry… and I’m embarrassed to check and see how long ago that was.

Well, I gave myself an ultimatum… I can NOT start on the Westville until the Arthur is finished. The Westville will be for me and I’m brimming with ideas for it… and, just by virtue of it being a new project, it feels a whole lot more exciting right now than slapping the rest of the shingles on my Arthur and painting more trim. But tonight I bit the bullet and got the bulk of the remaining work done.

About a week ago I glued the back roof onto the Arthur. Let me back up a bit though… a few weeks ago (after my last blog entry) I had another tantrum, akin to the siding incident from earlier in this project. This time it was with the wallpaper. I was just having a terrible time with it. I loved the colors I’d picked out but the scrapbook paper was too stiff to get it onto the irregularly-shaped ceiling easily. Plus, I’m apparently the only person in the universe who doesn’t like Yes glue. Even when I was super careful, I wound up with glue on my wallpaper. And it showed… badly.

Finally, after spending several hours futzing with the wallpaper and getting more and more frustrated, I stopped myself. Why was I spending all this time decorating a house I’m not planning to keep? The new owner will have her own ideas for how it should look, anyway… I know if it were me receiving the dollhouse I’d be thrilled to have the outside finished but would want to put my own touches on the inside. So, I ripped all the paper out.

That may be one reason I haven’t blogged lately… the inside of the Arthur looks really ugly and… well… plain, now. But I am trying to ignore that and focus on the outside. I am not planning to give the house away immediately, so I can always change my mind about this (and very well may!) But for now, it was holding me up!

Anyway, here’s the house with its back roof glued on.

It took me about 3 hours to do the shingles, but I’m SO glad to have them done. I was surprised by how few shingles I had left when I finished… only about 3/4 of a sheet. I expected to have a lot more since I didn’t do the porch roof. I might have run out if I had.

And I put one more coat of paint on a few of my trim pieces. Calamari only used one set of the trim that goes under the peak of the roof on either side of the house, and graciously sent me the extra when I asked. I am planning to use this on the front of the house, instead of the longer (more gingerbready) trim that’s supposed to be used. I’m also leaving off the trim from the peak of the roof. My roof doesn’t meet perfectly at the peak, so I’m going to have to get some corner trim from the mini shop to cover up the gap.

You can see the porch fence is getting a little more paint… I have not found a good way to secure it to the porch and it keeps coming off. I wanted to try sticking a mini nail up through the porch and into the post, but the blocks of wood I used to keep the foundation square when I glued it are in the way. I may just have to settle with glue and the knowledge that the fence is really fragile.

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