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Snazzing up the bar

I bought the bar that will go inside the Blackbird Bar for $15 at a miniature flea market. It has a label on the back that says “Handmade by the Mini Wizards” – I don’t know who these wizards are and haven’t been able to find any details online. If you’ve heard of them, please tell me!

The bar needs shelves to hold the glasses and liquor bottles, but first I had to give the thing a good dusting and make some minor repairs. The trim around the mirrors had come unglued and was only being held in by silver tape on the backs.


I folded the trim pieces back into place and used tacky glue to resecure them to the mirrors.

The wood was kind of dingy and I wanted to darken it up, but the bar is polyurethaned and has a lot of corners and hard-to-reach spots, so painting or re-staining seemed like it would be difficult. I had this jar of Old English scratch cleaner left over from my old house, where we used it to cover up scratches in our kitchen cabinets. A coat of this helped spruce it up.

This wine rack was disconnected when I bought the bar, and I was torn about whether to glue it back in. I like the idea of glasses hanging down off the wine rack, but it takes up a lot of space and doesn’t have the elegance I’m going for.

I started thinking about adding a wine rack to one of the shelves under the bar and went as far to search for one with the right dimensions, when it occurred to me that I could cut down the one that came with it.

A perfect fit! In this location you’ll still be able to see it, without having it dominate one whole side of the bar.

I’m planning to put bottles on the large side and glassware and the cash register on the small side. The trim is notched to accommodate the top of the wine rack, so I couldn’t just remove that piece. I thought about hanging a television off of it.

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New project – the Blackbird Bar roombox

After working nonstop on the Victorianna almost all year I decided to distract myself with a smaller project. In the early 2000’s I had a grand but short-lived plan to enter one of Miniatures.com‘s annual contests with a bar roombox. I bought some furniture and mini bottles but never got around to doing anything with them. Then in 2014 I found a handmade bar for $15 at a mini flea market — I bought that and a Chaplin Roombox to put it in.

These have been sitting on a shelf untouched ever since, until a few weeks ago I started thinking it would be fun to put little people in the bar. Houseworks makes these resin figures (or at least, they used to — they’re discontinued now) that are very lifelike, but never appealed to me in a dollhouse because of how staged they are. Here’s a scene HBS/Miniatures.com featured on one of their holiday catalogs:

I tend to think of dollhouses as living places — not frozen moments in time — so there’s something weird to me about having frozen people in the house. (I made an exception in the Little House Cabin, but those dolls are much more doll-like.) I work in the video game industry, where the subject of the “uncanny valley” often comes up — it’s when 3D characters look so close to human, but not quite, that they’re creepy. I’ve always felt that way about the resin dollhouse dolls, too.

Still, the idea of adding them to the bar got me excited. I liked that each of these people can have a little story that you can piece together based on what’s going on around them. And I’ll admit, once I found out they’re discontinued, finding each of the dolls I wanted to use became an irresistable challenge. I made a few impulse purchases the week before Thanksgiving, and the Blackbird Bar is now officially under construction.

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More nursery animals

I started cross stitching a rug for the Victorianna’s nursery in July and finally finished it this week. It shouldn’t have taken that long, but I’ve been working on a life-sized cross stitch project and have only been squeezing in a couple of evenings a month on the rug.

I adapted this pattern from a real rug I found online. I’m pretty sure I found it on Wayfair at the time, but I didn’t save the link and it’s not there anymore. (Maybe it’s recently been discontinued?) I think its official name is the Carter’s Wildlife Rug, but it may just be the Wildlife Rug and Carter’s is the manufacturer. Here it is on Amazon.

If you’d like to stitch this rug for your own miniature nursery, I’ve posted my chart for personal use: Jungle Animal Rug chart

For my 1:24 scale nursery, I stitched the rug over one on 40 count linen for a finished size of about 3.5″ x 2.5″. To make the rug for a 1:12 scale dollhouse, you could stitch it over two on 40 count or over one on a lower count fabric.

Another recent nursery project involved making knee walls for the areas next to the tower room. These are resin embellishments I originally bought to use on the bay windows, that turned out to be too big for that purpose. I glued scrap wood to the backs to make them stand up and provide a surface for gluing.

Before gluing these in, I wallpapered the outside of the tower room.

Between the angle and the chair you can barely see the knee wall back there, but it looks better than the sloped roof going all the way to the floor.

Now on to today’s main attraction: a rocking zebra! I scored a Cassidy Creations rocking horse kit on eBay. Some Cassidy Creations kits turn up more than others and this seems to be one of the rare ones.

Pop quiz: are zebras white with black stripes, or black with white stripes? I started thinking about it and I realized I had no idea. (I’m sure you’re thinking to yourself, that’s dumb, how could she not know that? Well, do you know? Are you sure about that??)

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