Showing posts with label Teeny Tiny Settee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teeny Tiny Settee. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Long Weekend, Short Pieces.....




Lots and Lots of Little Pieces....

The Long and the Short of it Dear Readers, is that even when I have a Three day weekend, I end up not getting much accomplished on my many mini projects! Perhaps this is due to having too many projects under way, and no clear plan of action written out. And perhaps it is just that I Expect too much of the three days. Nevertheless, I did make a Lot of Little improvements to several of my current Big projects, and several big improvements to some of my smallest projects! To begin with, I shortened the legs of the teeny Tiny settee for the Roombox in the Folly. I know, you can hardly tell with the fractional amount I cut from each leg, but it had bothered me that the legs were just too tall in the first place. Here you can see above, the newly lowered version! And while I was making such monumental adjustments to tiny things, I decided to make the tiny hassock that goes with the settee.

Yes, that is it, stuck to the bit of cardboard 
so I wouldn't loose it while the paint was drying!

And here Halcyon has come to show you 
that it could indeed pass for a hassock!

And here you can see them both in the Roombox 
on The Folly Parlor shelf....
The original hassock in The Folly Parlor is a RL ring box
which my sister and I appropriated from our Mother 
when we were young!
 
And while I was waiting for that Tiny bit of blue paint to dry
(after I had carefully rounded the edges of the block of wood)
I was also working on the Porch for Hardwick Hall.

I apologize for the dark night photo....
but here you can sort of see the completed framework of the front porch
 propped in place... or rather temporarily squeezed in place!
This porch framework has to be "inserted" 
between the porch floor base and the porch ceiling, 
 which is an extension of the second floor itself..... 
And there is not really room to test any of the fit 
of the "tabs" before you try to "insert" it!
I am really trying to get the exterior of this kit to a point 
where all the trim pieces have been attached 
and I can move on to the base itself.


Here you can see I have followed the instructions to 
"lay the house on its back" 
in preparation to inserting the porch between the floors....

And here you can see I have "inserted" 
the porch framework and glued it in place!
It was not easy to make it fit! 
I even trimmed the length of a couple of the tabs
 at the bottom of the posts... 
and even then two of them snapped off
 while trying to squeeze it into the slots!
But it is now attached and Nothing will make me take it off again!
And while the house was turned on its back, 
I also added the front steps framework... 
pieces which interlock with part of the foundation framework.

Of course, once these steps have been added, 
it no longer is easy to turn the house on its "front" 
to work on the underside where the wiring comes through!
I also had prepared all the pieces of trim that circle the house at the Foundation level, 
but when I tested them for fit.... 
several of the pieces came up Short by a good quarter of an inch!
Hmmm.... what to do, Dear Readers.....
start from scratch or make a patch????
How about switch to another project while you can't decide!

Which is where I introduce you to another one of the Teeny Tiny Sisters....
Her name is "Theodora"... she is the black haired one 
which you can barely see there in the front of the group.....
She is Quiet.... and bookish.... 
but you must not mistake that for "plain" at all!
I started on her gown... and she had requested 
a black velveteen spangled with blue and gold glitter...
And sleeves.... we had to start with the sleeves....

I do apologize for the blurry photos,
 it is very hard to get good focus on these tiny ladies!
Theodora is on the right, and Halcyon is on the left in the above picture.
 
 
And for Halcyon's sleeves you might notice 
that I added a double layer of gold mesh to the edges of the sleeves.
You start by gluing the strip of cloth to the back of the arm.
 Let it dry completely before trying to wrap it around the arm!
Once it is dry, you wrap it around and glue it to the back, 
trimming the extra length. 

Here I have started to glue Theodora's gown on....
I did end up trimming the length of the pile of the velveteen 
on her sleeves... they were just too puffy!
You have to glue the gown on one bit at a time, 
starting from the center front...
and wrapping first one side to the back and then the other, 
trimming the excess length as you go.

Here you can see Halcyon's gown started.... 
I have cut her a "v" neckline and slots for the arms...
and I am gluing the neckline in front first...
Then you carefully glue the shoulder tabs over the shoulders...
working around the hair (a sewing pin is what I used to dab the glue) 
and another one to prod the fabric into place...

Here you can see Theodora's gown is nearly finished... 
and a good shot of Halcyon's from the back...

Theodora's gown from the back.... 
all it needs is a little bit of trimming at the hemline!

Here is Halcyon's gown with the main part finished.
 
 And here is Theodora with her finished gown!
 
She does have a very Serious nature!
And here is Halcyon .... 
(remember to poke the pictures to see them bigger!)

Can you see how lovely she looks?
Oh, but wait, she says her gown is Not done yet?
It is lacking the overskirts in gold mesh?
(If you insist!)
 
 I am adding the gold mesh, 
and using the scissors to hold it in place while the glue dries!

She says one layer is not enough!
So we add another one......

A much fuller layer...

She says that is much better!
"Now I feel as Radiant as a Summer Sunrise!" she declares!

And here they are gathered together....
it's hard to believe there are still two more sisters to dress!
 
And did I make a start on the Attic 
of the Lovely Old Dollhouse, I hear you ask?


Yes, I did! I managed to cut out two new walls... 
and the door openings....
but I have not yet decided how or where they will be attached!
I seem to remember having this same problem
 many many years ago when  I first tried 
to re-design the attic of the Lovely Old Dollhouse!
 
So you can see, Dear Readers,
my Long weekend was filled up quickly 
with lots of Tiny Pieces
And no Shortage of Projects!

Monday, April 18, 2016

The Tiny Settee Upholstery....




How Hard Can It Be....?

I Left you last week, Dear Readers, with the incomplete Settee for the Tiny Roombox, and me struggling with which fabric to use. I thought I had made a perfectly good carpet in the first attempt. At least it looked well with the colors of the room. But it was not a good match to the carpet in The Folly itself, and with the tiny roombox trying to be a copy of that room, I thought I might have to try again. And then the settee was not at all to my liking using the same fabric as the carpet, it just didn't look enough like the settee in The Folly, and the two together were all wrong! So I was back to square one seeking fabric in tiny patterns and colors similar to the one in The Folly! How hard could it be?  Well, I spent a considerable amount of time pawing through my fabric stash.... Looking for tiny prints in patterns and colors even close to the Chinese red and blue in The Folly! Over and over again I found pieces that were not small enough, not the right color, too thick.... this was much harder than I thought it would be! But I got lucky! I found a piece of fabric with a tiny bit of print that would probably work for the carpet..... but only if I got creative.....

Here you can see the new carpet completed... along with the old one....
So you can see the colors are a good, almost Perfect fit!
But I had to piece this rug together from tiny pieces of patterned print...

Can you see it on the little fan in the middle...? 
Fan shaped... not rectangular.......
I cut the fans out and glued them onto a piece of silk seam binding....

Here you can see some of the trimmed pieces.....

And the carpet glued together... 
made up of three sections of the pattern aligned carefully!

Yes, I do like that carpet! 
But the fabric on the settee is still all wrong!
I went back to searching my fabrics.
And while I was at it, I made a tiny hearth rug too.....
 
It is not exact...... but it resembles the one in The Folly.....

Which you can see in this picture... 
(I know there is a lot of mess on the floor!)
And you can also see a glimpse of the settee
 and the fabric I am hoping to copy.....
And while I was searching my fabrics again and again...
I also made a tiny framed picture for the wall behind the settee.

Sorry this picture is upside-down, 
because the image is so small that 
I had it turned the wrong way when I took the picture!
It is a Madonna and child .... 
taken from a printed mini book page of a Medieval Manuscript.
The colors and subject are right, even though 
it is not the same painting as the one on the wall in The Folly!
(Remember you can poke the pictures to enlarge them!)

I tried other prints from that same fabric......
 
 
But I really didn't like the way they looked at all!
This was much harder than I thought it would be!
But then, Dear Readers, 
I remembered that I had (half-jokingly) 
responded to a comment last week,
 that I would probably end up painting some cloth....!
Well....Just How hard would That be???

Well, it turns out Dear Readers,
 it was Not very hard at all!
I found two scraps of silk, 
a white with a texture and an off white raw silk...
pulled out my acrylic paints 
and painted a "similar" design to the fabric on the settee.

The design is so tiny, I have really only approximated it......
But it gives the stripe and medallion feel of the pattern, 
and the colors are right. I even used the gold paint!

I decided to use the white textured one... 
and I was so excited that I forgot to take any pictures of the process! 
So you will just have to imagine the next steps.
The fabric is glued to a piece of plain paper cut to the exact shape needed,
and the edges are then turned under and glued to the back of the paper....
and then it is glued to the settee.
Basically the same method used for larger pieces, just very small!

I did my best to match the stripes and pattern.....
I really think it looks remarkable....!
(sorry it is a little blurry... so hard to photograph this small!)

Can you see it now?

And in the roombox...?

Can you see the resemblance...?

Maybe if we move some of the mess....
Now it looks like I imagined it could!

Well, Dear Readers, That is the smallest 
upholstery I have ever attempted!
And it really wasn't as hard as I thought it would be!



Monday, April 11, 2016

Not Much To Show...




Tiny Progress.... Or The Fabric of Life...

There really is not much to show you this week, Dear Readers, because it was the first weekend of Garden Season, and I needed to get outside and clean last year's dead leaves off the flower beds in my RL Garden! But that doesn't mean there is Nothing to show... because I did manage to work on a couple of Tiny things! The first is the petitpoint cushion in the Tree Of Life pattern from Janet Granger. I know, you are saying I showed you that last week... but that was the one made from her kit! As with the first cushion, there were leftover threads, and I decided to make another one using the 28 count canvas I had, which does make a slightly smaller cushion. You can see it in the photo above, nearly finished... and nearly at the point where I RAN OUT of the thread supplied with the kit for the background! We All know how Impossible it is to match the color of different batches of thread, even when we know the brand and the name of the color... neither of which I knew! But I decided to dig in my embroidery basket and see if I could come up with something close... and then I would "explain" the color change with a story about an Old Pillow that had tea spilled or some such tale! I found a skein of ivory floss.... but the skein no longer had it's color and number label, (I have had these embroidery threads for at least thirty five years!!!) but it looked to be a close match with the ivory supplied with Janet's kit... so I finished the stitching.....


And I don't know about you, Dear Readers, 
but I CANNOT tell where the new thread begins!!!
Can you imagine how unlikely it seems 
that I would have the Perfect threads for so many years?
So this is the second in the Tree Of Life cushions... 
all I need to do now is the backing and stuffing.
I do Love this pattern!
And because I am now having so much fun with the needlepoint kits, 
I needed to start another one right away!

Fortunately, I had another of Janet Granger's kits ready to sew....
This is a "sampler" done on 32 count canvas with a single strand of floss,
 so it is another step smaller than the cushions, 
even the 28 count ones I made.
(I used my magnifying glass!)

It is relatively quick to stitch, and as with real "samplers" 
the background is not stitched.
(And I only made one notable mistake!)

It is designed to be an "antique" with the stitching date of 1806.
I think it is quite charming,
 and like many things in the mini world,
 I have Always wanted to make one!
The kit even comes with a frame... 
I will have to show you when I get that step done!

I have a few more of Janet's kits ready to sew, 
I have bought some of her smaller count projects....
 I will be sure to show you as I get them done. 
I am now a confirmed petit-point addict.... 
when I finish one project, 
I need to start the next one right away!
(Even if it means running out of the right threads 
or using a different count fabric!)

And the last Tiny thing I worked on a Tiny bit, Dear Readers, 
was the settee for the Tiny Room-box!

I had already made the seat part last week....
But I have not been able to find the right fabric to use as upholstery!

Yes, I know you can barely see the pattern in this light.....

And then I thought I should add the legs now, 
even though they would be delicate 
and might make it harder to add the fabric later....

Just the tips of toothpicks, 3/32nds of an inch long.... 
but I think they are too tall and will need to be trimmed.

And with the legs painted too....

Isn't it Adorable?
But I am still not settled on the fabric to use...

This is the same fabric as the carpet in the roombox...
And I think it makes the seat disappear when it is put in the roombox.
Which defeats the point entirely!

So I have not decided whether to use it of not.....
I still might change one or both of the fabrics....
And because it is so Tiny, and so Incomplete....
I didn't take any pictures of it IN the roombox to show you!
Just this picture.
None of these belong together...
And they come from such diverse sources....
Old Threads and new.... 
Fabric from my former mother-in-law....
Kits from overseas and cardboard from work....
Coffee stirrers and toothpicks....
Somehow, Dear Readers, 
These Tiny Things become the Fabric of My Life!