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New set: Ethan’s doll studio — and some new dolls for dolls!

New set: Ethan’s doll studio — and some new dolls for dolls! published on No Comments on New set: Ethan’s doll studio — and some new dolls for dolls!

I finally put all my toys for dolls to good use and created a set of Ethan’s doll room. Besides doll customizing, he also likes robots, radio controlled things, steampunk, and sewing, so I put in appropriate miniatures in those categories. Continue reading New set: Ethan’s doll studio — and some new dolls for dolls!

Unexpectedly amazing Rements

Unexpectedly amazing Rements published on No Comments on Unexpectedly amazing Rements

A few years ago, Rement did some miniature terraria — more like terrarium-inspired miniature scenes — in a series called something like Petit Terrarium Country Life. It’s a series of 6 miniature scenes from European country life, each housed in an appropriate plastic container made to look like glass. There’s a farmer and a Holstein in a milk bottle shaped container. There’s also a person watching a donkey with a milk wagon, and that whole thing is in a milk bottle. There’s a person cooking over a stove in a square-sided bottle with a short neck and a cork and a man picking olives in a corked olive oil bottle. There are two wine-themed scenes: a woman jumping on grapes in a white wine flute and a man and a woman in a rowboat in a red wine flute.

Anyway, I bought these because I figured that the little figures could work as dolls for my dolls. And they do! Some of the scenes work well as tiny sets that 1:6 scale doll lovers have created!

I thought that these things would be smaller. For some reason, I expected the bottles to be 1:6 scale, rather than 1:2 scale. I was also not prepared for the ingenious construction. Every piece, from base liquid to background foliage to people to non-human animals, is separate, with detailed paint jobs on the people and appropriate translucency on the liquids. Rement has made these scenes as easy as possible to assemble, with removable bottoms for all the bottles so you can easily set the scenes in. There are also removable caps and corks.

The level of detail reaches Rement’s usual outstanding levels, although I think the milk wagon scene must be the best. It contains a milk bottle falling off the wagon and dumping milk back into the milk that the whole scene is floating in [see picture]. There’s also a lamb standing on the cart-pulling donkey for no apparent reason. It’s hilarious.

I like the fact that these aren’t just scenes stuffed into any old type of bottle; the coordination between container and scene makes these miniatures both strange and wonderful. An olive-picking scene in an olive oil bottle is delightfully apropos. It’s also weird because the little scene appears to be floating [?!] in the olive oil. In fact, 4 out of 6 scenes are sculpted so that they appear to be floating. This is, as I mentioned, a very loose interpretation of the term “terrarium,” and I appreciate the fantastical impression of the floating scenes.

Bottom line: I thought I was going to get rid of the containers and use the scenes as dolls for dolls, but I find the overall concept and execution so clever and well done that I think I’m displaying all of them as is when they’re not being used as props for my dolls!

Continue reading Unexpectedly amazing Rements

The Little Dorks in…Boating!

The Little Dorks in…Boating! published on No Comments on The Little Dorks in…Boating!

Little Allison and Little Theo went to my parents’ house with me and played with their boats in the puddles. Sadly the puddles were not deep enough for the boats to float, but they tried. Continue reading The Little Dorks in…Boating!

The Little Dorks in…The Motorwagen!

The Little Dorks in…The Motorwagen! published on No Comments on The Little Dorks in…The Motorwagen!

Little Silence and Ethancitx went out in Little Silence’s Motorwagen this afternoon! With temps nearing 70, I took them to the waterfront, right in front of the wastewater treatment plant. [P.U.!] It was too blustery for me to show them starting the car and getting into it, so I just showed them driving. The model is a Franklin Mint 1:8 scale reproduction of an 1885 Benz Motorwagen, the first factory line gas-powered car. It’s too small for 1:6 scale adults, but it’s perfect for 1:6 scale kids!

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The Little Dorks in…Sleepover! Part I

The Little Dorks in…Sleepover! Part I published on No Comments on The Little Dorks in…Sleepover! Part I

Ethan [with purple cat ears] and his older sister Meghna [with glasses] bring over some Maharashtrian food that they made.

Continue reading The Little Dorks in…Sleepover! Part I

Neither rain nor snow nor gloom of the night…

Neither rain nor snow nor gloom of the night… published on No Comments on Neither rain nor snow nor gloom of the night…

…shall keep Vermonters from the first creemee of spring!!! [ESPECIALLY not snow.] Silence Lucinda Saxon, left, and Ethan Coolidge Jones, right, of Hardship, VT brave a slush pile at the end of the Perkins Pier parking lot in Burlington to get their soft serve. [It was about 50 degrees out when I took these photos].

Continue reading Neither rain nor snow nor gloom of the night…

Finished! Big Theo!!

Finished! Big Theo!! published on No Comments on Finished! Big Theo!!

Big Theo, a 3D printed headsculpt with a likeness to the amazing Pearl Mackie, is finally completed! I’m so proud of this one. Pearl Mackie is a very hard likeness to capture because, like Sacha Dhawan, she has big eyebrows, wide nose, large mouth, and large chin, but none of it looks out of proportion. I knew that I succeeded when I made the character smile and her smile looked bigger than her face, as Pearl Mackie’s does in the most wonderful way possible!

This doll took so damn long to paint because I was trying to use very thin layers of paint for a more even coating. Not sure if the tedium was worth it, as I never examine dolls as closely as my photos do. She also took a long time to paint because I was color matching between her body and her head. I really wish there were articulated action figure bodies easily available in a variety of skintones.

Continue reading Finished! Big Theo!!

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