Tag: dolls

Windsor Castle Fantasia

Posted by – June 19, 2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Prepare yourself for doll house squealing. I’ve just come across the most ornate doll house I’ve ever seen: Queen Mary’s doll house, as the box above so eloquently states. Completed in 1924, it was made to a scale of 1:12, is over three feet tall, and contains models of tons of products made by companies of the time. (Did I mention that Queen Mary was an adult at the time of this doll house’s creation?) Many of the items in the house are 1/12 replicas of items in Windsor Castle, and tons of the little pieces actually work. It was constructed to serve as an historical document as to how how a royal family might live during that period in England. Which is very opulently, if the bathroom is correct (and in the 1920s, no less!). I’d love to see this in person.

[Via]

America’s Dollhouse: The Miniature World of Faith Bradford

Posted by – November 16, 2010





I’ve always coveted an elaborate dollhouse. Filling its rooms with miniature decorations would not only be a hobby, but a pleasure. The intricate interiors of D.C. librarian Faith Bradford’s 23-room dollhouse are enough to make me sweat a little. This artifact has lived at the Smithsonian Museum of National History for the last sixty years, and it (as well as its eccentric creator) is now the subject of a book written by famed curator and all around cool guy William L. Bird. The synopsis:

“On the museum’s third floor sits a five-story dollhouse donated to the museum by Faith Bradford, a Washington D.C. librarian, who spent more than a half-century accumulating and constructing the 1,354 miniatures that fill its 23 intricately detailed rooms. When Bradford donated them to the museum in 1951, she wrote a lengthy manuscript describing the lives of its residents: Mr. and Mrs. Peter Doll and their ten children, two visiting grandparents, twenty pets, and household staff. Bradford cataloged the Dolls’ tastes, habits, and preferences in neatly typed household inventories, which she then bound, along with photographs and fabric samples, in a scrapbook. She even sent museum curators holiday cards written by the Dolls.”

I can’t wait to rip through this book! Christmas list, you’re on. (And I couldn’t forget to mention The Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death, but that’s a post for another day.) Read more about the author’s intentions in this month’s Five Questions interview at Imprint.

Also! Check out Bird’s other work. He wrote a book on paint-by-numbers and the art of holiday display! Rad.

Dear Nancy Allen

Posted by – November 6, 2010

…You’ve were one lucky little girl! This enormous dollhouse was loved, I’m sure — I wish the furniture was still in it for more effective decorating and arranging. Gloriously faded and used, this handmade miniature was tagged years ago in childlike all-caps with “NANCY ALLEN.” What I would do with a dollhouse, god only knows, but that doesn’t stop me from wanting one as an adult! Available at 1st Dibs.

[Via Anonymous Works]

Calvin Black’s Possum Trot

Posted by – August 24, 2010

Folk art appeals to me on so many levels: aesthetic, conceptual, gut. I appreciate the earnest artwork of the untrained, the insane, the imprisoned, so much more than those who learned their skills from a higher institution. I obsess over chipped, wonky pieces of yard art and untrained painters’ landscapes. There’s a lot to be said for creating work for yourself alone.

So, on that note, I hope you weren’t freaked out by the falsetto singing of a doll (you know I love that stuff). This video, narrated by one of folk artist Calvin Black’s “actresses,” shows a panoramic scene of Possum Trot and the “Bird Cage Theater.” Located in the bleak Mojave Desert, Black spent his life creating this installation, including more than 80 life-size female dolls, each with its own personality, function, and costume. Each of the dolls perform and “sing” in voices recorded by the artist. Was this carnival ever intentioned for the public? I’m not sure. I wish it still existed, nonetheless. Can you even imagine coming upon this?

Watch the short documentary on Calvin Black and Possum Trot in its entirety on Folkstreams.

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