Monday 29 October 2018

Building Grimalkins Part 1

The box for this house is huge and heavy. I had to get someone to carry up to my studio for me or I'm pretty sure I would have dropped it. Once up there I opened it up and instantly felt daunted as I'd never built a dolls house before and was determined to to do it without the help of my husband.



I went through the booklet that comes with it and ticked off all the pieces first to ensure they were all there then came the long, and laborious, step of sealing it. Like a lot of modern kits these days the Magpies kit is made from MDF, medium density fibreboard, and it's very porous. If, like me, you live in an old flat roofed house that suffers from humidity and damp then sealing it is something you really need to do. In fact you should really seal any MDF house you get to make it doesn't warp or go 'fluffy' with age and use.



I used MDF sealer from Wilko, it's about £4 a tin, and it goes a long way. I sealed every single piece of the house in the box, stairs, walls, roof, you name and I sealed it. Once it was all bone dry I started to put it together. In the kit there is superglue and PVA included. The PVA is meant for joining the main house parts together and I used it liberally wiping away the excess with my fingers and the corner of a bit of card so it didn't get everywhere. My lovely Hobster bought me some corner clamps and I can't thank him enough. They were incredibly helpful and I'd recommend anyone building a house get some.




It took me about 3 days in total to build the frame. It seems like a long time but that does include drying times. At each stage I let everything dry totally so that all the joins we're held tightly in place and I had a solid base to work with. What you may not realise from the above picture is the glaring mistake I made. A mistake that took me close to 6 hours work to fix. That's another blog post though!










Saturday 1 September 2018

A childhood dream come true

When I was a child I remember making houses for my Sindy dolls out of old crisp boxes and things I could find around the house. Back then we moved a lot, the RAF likes to do that to people, so my Mum would throw away those boxes each time we moved on. I think I gave up around the age of 12 and decided it would have to wait. Three kids and two marriages later and I still wanted a dolls house to call my own.

This year I took matter in to my own hands and bought myself a Quay Woodcraft Fantasy Villa. It's a 1:24 scale tab slot model that cost me the wondrous sum of £26. Six weeks later, on our 13th wedding anniversary, my lovely Hobster bought me Magpies from the Dolls House Emporium. Two months after that a dear friend bought me the add on for it, Jenny Wrens.

This blog will document the journey from unboxing onward.

The Quay Woodcraft Fantasy Villa now named Mistwood.


The Magpies shop, now called Grimalkins Arcana, or the Grey Cat.