Showing posts with label doll's house. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doll's house. Show all posts

Tuesday, 1 December 2015

DIY doll's house shower

This is made from an After Eight box, a couple of straws, some beads and buttons, some plastic wrapping, a plastic clothes tag and the blister packaging from a packet of tablets.


How I made it

First I removed one side of the After Eight box but kept the fancy edge which I glued onto the new edge. I painted the edges with white acrylic paint, and lined the inside with sewing pattern paper that I'd painted with acrylic paints to give the impression of tiles. Then I glued a round plastic clothes tag onto the base to make the shower floor.




I covered the outsides, top and bottom with foam sheet




I made the shower unit from a bendy straw-  I glued 2 blisters from a pack of tablets half way down to make a soap dish, a piece of straw with a red and blue button either side to make taps, and a large flat button at the top to make the shower head. Once it was all glued firm I painted the whole lot with several layers of silver acrylic paint, and put black dots on the shower head.


I also glued silver beads along the top and sides to attach to the shower unit, and glued it in place.




I made the shower curtain from a piece of plastic wrapping- I painted hearts on with acrylic paint, then stuck circular stickers along the top and punched holes through with a hole-punch. I made the shower rail from a bendy straw with a pipe-cleaner threaded through and hooked the whole thing up.





Wednesday, 18 November 2015

DIY Doll's house fridge-freezer

Here's a doll's house fridge-freezer made from a biscuit box, some foam card and a few other bits and pieces.  
              



Instructions

First I took a biscuit box and cut it down to make two smaller boxes of the same size, with extra length to make flaps so I could close the boxes.





I lined the insides with foam card (apart from the front where I wanted the door to be), then glued the flaps shut.


I cut doors out of the front, then glued the two compartments together. Then I covered the outside with white foam card.






Next I traced and cut door frames from a piece of white card, and glued them onto the frames of the doors.



I also cut pieces of panelling for the inside and outside of each door from white foam card, which were slightly larger than the door itself. Once all glued in place, I trimmed them all down to size so that the doors were very slightly smaller than the frames and were able to close shut.


Next I made door handles from pieces of straw covered with the discarded silver wrapper from the biscuits that were inside the box! I glued the wrapper in place, and stuck silver star stickers onto the ends to seal the handles shut. 





I glued the handles in place on the doors, and cut a strip of coloured card and glued round the middle to cover the joints.


Finally I made shelving out of some corrugated plastic from a vegetable container, and I made a door shelf and vegetable tray from some moulded plastic from the inner packaging of a box of something (possibly a phone or modem) I'd kept by. 





And put it all together. All the shelves are glued in place, apart from the vegetable tray which is removeable. Voila!




Thursday, 12 November 2015

Cardboard box doll's house

Kids toys are pretty expensive in Gabon, so I'm turning into a bit of a bag lady, stockpiling household rubbish in the hope of making all kinds of inspirational recycled toys.
This was my first efforts at turning cardboard box into a dolls house. The box came from a garden swimming pool and was about 1m high. I just cut the thing in half lengthways, and cut up the discarded half to make the floors and roof. I covered it with a load of patterned paper I'd bought and also some photos from magazines. It's not finished yet, btw.



Wednesday, 11 November 2015

DIY doll's house sink unit

I got inspiration from a few websites (e.g. http://www.mnn.com/family/family-activities/blogs/diy-recycled-doll-house-furniture). 



To make this version I used:

Material
1 box from a bottle of medicine
1 plastic razor-head cover
1 plastic bendy straw
1 sheet of pale yellow foam card
1/2 sheet of white foam card
5 small round silver beads
1 small red bead
1 small blue bead
1 blue sequin
2 gold flower stickers
1 piece of silver metallic card
White and metallic silver acrylic paint (or you could use tin foil or foil wrapper)
Glue
Black biro or fine marker pen

Instructions
  1. Glue open end of the box shut. Decide where the sink should go, and trace the outline of the sink hole around the bottom of the razor head cover.
  2. Using a scalpel, cut a hole out of the box for the sink, and adjust the hole size just enough so the razor head cover fits inside to form a sink. Remove the sink for later.
  3. Cut 6 pieces of coloured foam to fit around the six sides of the unit and glue in place, making sure they line up exactly at the edges.
  4. Using a scalpel, cut a hole through the foam sheet around the sink hole – making sure the foam is just very slightly overlapping the cardboard underneath.
  5. Push the sink snugly into place.
  6. Cut a piece of silver card fit into the bottom of the sink and glue in place. Stick a blue sequin or button on as a plug hole.
  7. Cut a piece of silver card to make a draining board and use a fine marker pen or black biro to draw on the corrugated lines. Glue in place.
  8. Cut a piece of bendy straw the right length for the faucet, making sure it’s long enough to touch the floor of the sink unit when in place. Either paint it with acrylic paint (3 coats white + 3 coats metallic silver) or cover with silver foil (glue in place).  Glue a silver bead onto the end.
  9. Cut a small hole next to the sink in the place you want the faucet to go, and push the faucet through the hole until it reaches the floor of the sink unit.
  10. Glue the red and blue beads in place as taps.
  11. Cut 3 squares and 3 small rectangles of white (or coloured) foam card to make drawers and cupboard doors, and glue in place.
  12. Cut six tiny lozenges from the petals of gold flower stickers and stick onto drawers and cupboards as handles.
  13. Glue four silver beads onto the base as feet.