Nn

"Nick"

13/07/2012 12:19 AM

How to build a dolls house?

Hello folks,
I'm from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the advice
I can get.
Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good thing.
My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably equipped with
tools & know how to use them.
But.
(1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
(2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can enjoy
not only when she's old enough but also for her future.
(3) I haven't seen a dolls house for about 50 years.

Scale 1:12

Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
Thanks,
Nick.


This topic has 13 replies

n

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

12/07/2012 8:39 PM

On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 00:19:19 +0100, "Nick"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Hello folks,
>I'm from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the advice
>I can get.
>Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good thing.
>My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
>granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
>I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably equipped with
>tools & know how to use them.
>But.
>(1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
>(2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can enjoy
>not only when she's old enough but also for her future.
>(3) I haven't seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>
>Scale 1:12
>
>Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
>All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
>Thanks,
>Nick.
>


One of the women's magazines (Good Housekeeping?) had a set of plans
available in the 70's. Ranch style, just one floor, chimney came up
through the (removable) roof and served as a handle to carry the doll
house. Mostly simple carpentry (plywood) and most of the decoration
done with paint. That's about as simple as a doll house gets.

I think the plans included some furniture, but if not, build to the
scale of the Fisher-Price "Loving Family" doll houses and get used
furniture from ebay (worked for my grandkids).

Mm

Matt

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

13/07/2012 9:08 AM

On 7/13/2012 8:58 AM, willshak wrote:
> Nick wrote the following on 7/12/2012 7:19 PM (ET):
>> Hello folks,
>> I'm from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the
>> advice I can get.
>> Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good
>> thing.
>> My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
>> granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
>> I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably
>> equipped with tools & know how to use them.
>> But.
>> (1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
>> (2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can
>> enjoy not only when she's old enough but also for her future.
>> (3) I haven't seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>>
>> Scale 1:12
>>
>> Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
>> All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
>> Thanks,
>> Nick.
>>
>
>
> When my daughters became old enough to handle things without breaking
> them, I built them a doll house. This was back in the mid 1980s. I
> started with a victorian type house kit bought at a local arts and
> crafts store (A.C.Moore here in the US).
> Like you, I tend to go into too much detail.
> I tended to get more satisfaction out of building the furniture than
> buying it.
> Since I would be working in 1/12 scale, my standard wood tools were all
> too big and too powerful. I had to go out and buy miniature power tools.
> I bought a Dremel miniature table saw with a 4" blade, a Dremel wood
> lathe (6-1/2" max length) for table legs, bed posts, and newels, a
> Craftsman 10" scroll saw for other small cuts. I still have the lathe
> and jig saw. The table saw was lent out some years ago and got 'lost".
> As far as I know, Dremel no longer makes the lathe or table saw, at
> least that was so when I last checked some years ago. I see some offered
> on eBay.
>
> For books and plans, Google the following;
> '1/12 dollhouse plans'
> '1/12 dollhouse books'
> '1/12 dollhouse furniture'
>
> BTW, there doesn't seem to be any newsgroups for dollhouses.
> Perhaps a forum somewhere?
>
>
>
Good point about the size of tools required for dollhouses. A source
for mall tools: http://www.micromark.com/

Anything you might need / want, including small table saws, scroll saws,
lathes, etc. etc. etc.

Matt

Mm

Matt

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

13/07/2012 11:27 AM

On 7/13/2012 9:08 AM, Matt wrote:
> On 7/13/2012 8:58 AM, willshak wrote:
>> Nick wrote the following on 7/12/2012 7:19 PM (ET):
>>> Hello folks,
>>> I'm from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the
>>> advice I can get.
>>> Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good
>>> thing.
>>> My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
>>> granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
>>> I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably
>>> equipped with tools & know how to use them.
>>> But.
>>> (1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
>>> (2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can
>>> enjoy not only when she's old enough but also for her future.
>>> (3) I haven't seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>>>
>>> Scale 1:12
>>>
>>> Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
>>> All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
>>> Thanks,
>>> Nick.
>>>
>>
>>
>> When my daughters became old enough to handle things without breaking
>> them, I built them a doll house. This was back in the mid 1980s. I
>> started with a victorian type house kit bought at a local arts and
>> crafts store (A.C.Moore here in the US).
>> Like you, I tend to go into too much detail.
>> I tended to get more satisfaction out of building the furniture than
>> buying it.
>> Since I would be working in 1/12 scale, my standard wood tools were all
>> too big and too powerful. I had to go out and buy miniature power tools.
>> I bought a Dremel miniature table saw with a 4" blade, a Dremel wood
>> lathe (6-1/2" max length) for table legs, bed posts, and newels, a
>> Craftsman 10" scroll saw for other small cuts. I still have the lathe
>> and jig saw. The table saw was lent out some years ago and got 'lost".
>> As far as I know, Dremel no longer makes the lathe or table saw, at
>> least that was so when I last checked some years ago. I see some offered
>> on eBay.
>>
>> For books and plans, Google the following;
>> '1/12 dollhouse plans'
>> '1/12 dollhouse books'
>> '1/12 dollhouse furniture'
>>
>> BTW, there doesn't seem to be any newsgroups for dollhouses.
>> Perhaps a forum somewhere?
>>
>>
>>
> Good point about the size of tools required for dollhouses. A source
> for mall tools: http://www.micromark.com/
>
> Anything you might need / want, including small table saws, scroll saws,
> lathes, etc. etc. etc.
>
> Matt
>
>
ok - that should read "SMALL" tools... since I missed the "s"
originally, I don't think I can claim "fat fingers"... sigh...

Matt

Sc

Sonny

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

13/07/2012 1:46 PM

> Now I have a three-year-old granddaughter and (being a bit smarter in my =
old age, and having heard from her grandmother that this house better not t=
ake 5 years), I'm starting to formulate my plans. =A0But I just can't see m=
yself buying shingles :-)
>
> Larry-


I've never done this, but just a thought - For shingles or shakes:
Cut your own thicker than normal veneer and either pencil in the
shingles/shakes over a whole sheet or cut strips (from the veneer),
then small kerf cuts to resemble shingles/shakes and overlap/stagger
the strips. Easy to replace, maybe, if any get broken.

Sonny

Mm

MJ

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

12/07/2012 5:00 PM

Nick,

Congrats.

There's tons of dollhouse books out there. I can't
recommend any single one, but perhaps you
can look through your local library first?

If you are very handy,these things can escalate
to the absurd level - meaning such detail and fussiness
that one will never finish until the child is in college.

I've seen some rather simple but attractive plans
around. Check eBay.


Good luck!

MJ


Gs

"Gramp's shop"

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

13/07/2012 12:26 PM

On Thursday, July 12, 2012 6:19:19 PM UTC-5, Nick wrote:
> Hello folks,
> I&#39;m from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the=
advice=20
> I can get.
> Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good thin=
g.
> My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for=20
> granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
> I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably equipped w=
ith=20
> tools &amp; know how to use them.
> But.
> (1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
> (2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can enjoy=
=20
> not only when she&#39;s old enough but also for her future.
> (3) I haven&#39;t seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>=20
> Scale 1:12
>=20
> Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
> All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
> Thanks,
> Nick.

Your post brings back a lot of fond memories. 30 years ago, I began a doll=
house for my 4 year old daughter. She received it on her 9th birthday. I=
built just about everything by hand with the help of a 4" dremel ts. Cut =
every one of the shakes by hand (boring), built double wall construction so=
I could run the wiring between walls. =20

Now I have a three-year-old granddaughter and (being a bit smarter in my ol=
d age, and having heard from her grandmother that this house better not tak=
e 5 years), I'm starting to formulate my plans. But I just can't see mysel=
f buying shingles :-)

Larry

MO

Mark Ohlund

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

13/07/2012 3:16 PM

On 7/12/2012 7:19 PM, Nick wrote:
> Hello folks,
> I'm from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the advice
> I can get.
> Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good thing.
> My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
> granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
> I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably equipped with
> tools& know how to use them.
> But.
> (1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
> (2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can enjoy
> not only when she's old enough but also for her future.
> (3) I haven't seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>
> Scale 1:12
>
> Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
> All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
> Thanks,
> Nick.
>
>

A couple of suggestions:

1. Why not make the house a model of *her* house (or yours perhaps)
rather than some unrelated house plan? Doesn't have to be perfect, just
recognizable.
2. While you can buy doll house furniture, you'll probably get a lot
more satisfaction building it - and get better at it as you go along.
That way you can provide new furniture regularly at birthdays,
Christmas, etc.

~Mark.

ME

Martin Eastburn

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

13/07/2012 10:13 PM

In the mid 50's Dad build a 'doll' house in the back yard.

It was L shaped in the corner of the yard (rock walls).

It was elevated off the ground - no wood touches ground.
The roof was a single slant to the rear (walls) and a grownup
could walk in if slightly stooped. Mom easy and the kids.
It was 8' by 16' to the corner - maybe longer.
It was from scrap wood we scrounged from shipping crates and
whatever. I saw it in the mid 70's - new shingles and paint.
The house looked good from the street on a drive-by.

Martin

On 7/12/2012 6:19 PM, Nick wrote:
> Hello folks,
> I'm from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the advice
> I can get.
> Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good thing.
> My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
> granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
> I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably equipped with
> tools & know how to use them.
> But.
> (1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
> (2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can enjoy
> not only when she's old enough but also for her future.
> (3) I haven't seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>
> Scale 1:12
>
> Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
> All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
> Thanks,
> Nick.
>
>

ww

willshak

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

13/07/2012 11:58 AM

Nick wrote the following on 7/12/2012 7:19 PM (ET):
> Hello folks,
> I'm from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the advice
> I can get.
> Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good thing.
> My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
> granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
> I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably equipped with
> tools & know how to use them.
> But.
> (1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
> (2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can enjoy
> not only when she's old enough but also for her future.
> (3) I haven't seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>
> Scale 1:12
>
> Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
> All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
> Thanks,
> Nick.
>
>


When my daughters became old enough to handle things without breaking
them, I built them a doll house. This was back in the mid 1980s. I
started with a victorian type house kit bought at a local arts and
crafts store (A.C.Moore here in the US).
Like you, I tend to go into too much detail.
I tended to get more satisfaction out of building the furniture than
buying it.
Since I would be working in 1/12 scale, my standard wood tools were all
too big and too powerful. I had to go out and buy miniature power tools.
I bought a Dremel miniature table saw with a 4" blade, a Dremel wood
lathe (6-1/2" max length) for table legs, bed posts, and newels, a
Craftsman 10" scroll saw for other small cuts. I still have the lathe
and jig saw. The table saw was lent out some years ago and got 'lost".
As far as I know, Dremel no longer makes the lathe or table saw, at
least that was so when I last checked some years ago. I see some offered
on eBay.

For books and plans, Google the following;
'1/12 dollhouse plans'
'1/12 dollhouse books'
'1/12 dollhouse furniture'

BTW, there doesn't seem to be any newsgroups for dollhouses.
Perhaps a forum somewhere?



--
Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
In the original Orange County. Est. 1683
To email, remove the double zeros after @

ww

willshak

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

14/07/2012 9:08 AM

Sonny wrote the following on 7/13/2012 4:46 PM (ET):
>> Now I have a three-year-old granddaughter and (being a bit smarter in my old age, and having heard from her grandmother that this house better not take 5 years), I'm starting to formulate my plans. But I just can't see myself buying shingles :-)
>>
>> Larry-
>
>
> I've never done this, but just a thought - For shingles or shakes:
> Cut your own thicker than normal veneer and either pencil in the
> shingles/shakes over a whole sheet or cut strips (from the veneer),
> then small kerf cuts to resemble shingles/shakes and overlap/stagger
> the strips. Easy to replace, maybe, if any get broken.
>
> Sonny

I made dollhouse hardwood flooring by taking apart the bamboo 'slats' of
a Chinese calendar. You know, the roll up wooden kind that used to be
found hanging in a Chinese take-out restaurant.
The 'slats' were about 1/4" wide so they would scale out to about 3"
wide in 1/1 scale.


--
Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
In the original Orange County. Est. 1683
To email, remove the double zeros after @

Gn

Gerry

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

13/07/2012 12:22 AM

On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 00:19:19 +0100, "Nick"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Hello folks,
>I'm from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the advice
>I can get.
>Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good thing.
>My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
>granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
>I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably equipped with
>tools & know how to use them.
>But.
>(1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
>(2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can enjoy
>not only when she's old enough but also for her future.
>(3) I haven't seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>
>Scale 1:12
>
>Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
>All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
>Thanks,
>Nick.
>
There are lots of websites with good ideas and plans. Here are a few:

Let's Build a Dollhouse!
http://www.letsbuildadollhouse.com/

Build a Dollhouse or a Dolls House Style Bookcase From Baltic Birch
Plywood
http://miniatures.about.com/od/dollshousesandshops/tp/balticbirchhouse.htm

How to Build a Dollhouse: Make Your Own Family Heirloom
http://www.motherearthnews.com/do-it-yourself/how-build-dollhouse-zmaz89ndzshe.aspx#ixzz20Tb1f6Yd

The build-it-yourself doll's house with working circuits that aims to
boost young girls' interest in technology
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2162830/The-build-dolls-house-working-circuits-aims-boost-young-girls-technology.html#ixzz20TbLbP8J

How To: Make a Modern Doll House
http://www.curbly.com/users/craftmel/posts/10184-how-to-make-a-modern-doll-house

Painted Lady Dollhouse
http://www.squidoo.com/painted-lady-dollhouse

That should be enough to get you started. You may want to purchase
some of the materials you need for finishing - such as mineature
shingles, siding, flooring strips, etc. Here are a couple of sources
of supplies.

http://shop.greenleafdollhouses.com/Dollhouse-Siding.html
http://www.rockler.com/product.cfm?page=10436
http://www.dollhousesdear.com/shinglesandsiding

Hope this helps.

Gerry from the prairies in the Great White North

Change the email to gmail to reply

RR

Ray

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

14/07/2012 6:26 AM

On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 12:26:42 -0700 (PDT), "Gramp's shop"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>On Thursday, July 12, 2012 6:19:19 PM UTC-5, Nick wrote:
>> Hello folks,
>> I&#39;m from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the advice
>> I can get.
>> Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good thing.
>> My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
>> granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
>> I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably equipped with
>> tools &amp; know how to use them.
>> But.
>> (1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
>> (2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can enjoy
>> not only when she&#39;s old enough but also for her future.
>> (3) I haven&#39;t seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>>
>> Scale 1:12
>>
>> Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
>> All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
>> Thanks,
>> Nick.
>
>Your post brings back a lot of fond memories. 30 years ago, I began a doll house for my 4 year old daughter. She received it on her 9th birthday. I built just about everything by hand with the help of a 4" dremel ts. Cut every one of the shakes by hand (boring), built double wall construction so I could run the wiring between walls.
>
>Now I have a three-year-old granddaughter and (being a bit smarter in my old age, and having heard from her grandmother that this house better not take 5 years), I'm starting to formulate my plans. But I just can't see myself buying shingles :-)
>
>Larry


I built a doll house for my grand daughter. I contains about 2000
pieces of wood. It was a couple months job on and off. The shingles
only took a day or two. I had some old redwood pickets that I ripped
and planed. I banded then together with tape and cut them to length.
The beveled edges were done with a shop made jig that fit on a sander.
The plans for the house were on some free web site. A picture of it
is about 2/3 of the way down on this page.

http://ray80538.home.comcast.net/~ray80538/Woodwork/woodwork.html

kk

in reply to "Nick" on 13/07/2012 12:19 AM

13/07/2012 6:09 PM

On Fri, 13 Jul 2012 15:16:28 -0400, Mark Ohlund <[email protected]>
wrote:

>On 7/12/2012 7:19 PM, Nick wrote:
>> Hello folks,
>> I'm from the other side of the pond and would much appreciate all the advice
>> I can get.
>> Our daughter has recently made us proud grandparents. This is a good thing.
>> My wife and daughter have entrusted me to make a dolls house for
>> granddaughter. This is not a bad thing.
>> I have enjoyed working with wood all my life and am reasonably equipped with
>> tools& know how to use them.
>> But.
>> (1) I have a tendency to get bogged down with detail.
>> (2) I would like to make something that Elouise [granddaughter] can enjoy
>> not only when she's old enough but also for her future.
>> (3) I haven't seen a dolls house for about 50 years.
>>
>> Scale 1:12
>>
>> Anybody know of good books or sites to get some reference please?
>> All tips and hints would be muchly appreciated.
>> Thanks,
>> Nick.
>>
>>
>
>A couple of suggestions:
>
>1. Why not make the house a model of *her* house (or yours perhaps)
>rather than some unrelated house plan? Doesn't have to be perfect, just
>recognizable.

Before my parents built their house, my father built a 1:12 model of it (50
years before SketchUp ;-), so they could "see" it better. It wasn't fancy,
just built out of 3/4" ply, three pieces (basement, first floor, and attic)
not attached together. No one played with dolls in the family so it sat in
the basement for 30 years until the grandchildren came along, when it became
quite a hit.

>2. While you can buy doll house furniture, you'll probably get a lot
>more satisfaction building it - and get better at it as you go along.
>That way you can provide new furniture regularly at birthdays,
>Christmas, etc.

Whoever invented the charm bracelet was a genius.


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