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Saturday, December 19th, 2009

Cleaning House – Caring for your Dollhouse

We all have things in our lives that hold some sort of sentimental or monetary value. For some, it is a prized collection of coins or rare books. For others it is an irreplaceable antique or piece of jewelry. It is these things that always require special care and preservation, whether it is a yearly polishing or a consistent cleaning.

The same practice holds true for avid dollhouse collectors. Dollhouses are basically miniature replicas of a large-scale home, equipped with wood furnishings, electrical lights and even miniature pieces of china and crystal. Dollhouses, and their accessories, require the same kind of loving care that a regular home needs.

First of all, you should never place a dollhouse in a room that gets direct sunlight. The suns rays can heavily damage the delicate woods used in making most dollhouses. It can cause paint, wallpaper and fabrics to fade dramatically. And in extreme degrees of temperature changes, it could even end up warping or cracking the wood.

Another thing to keep in mind when caring for dollhouses is to always dust it regularly. Dust collects in our own homes on a daily basis, and the same holds true for dollhouses. All the accessories are so small and intricate that they require a good dusting and polishing to maintain their value and beauty. The dolls, animals or other small figurines you purchase for your dollhouse should also be dusted regularly to maintain their quality.

You should never store a dollhouse in damp climate. Dampness, such as in a basement, can deteriorate the materials used to make a dollhouse. It can also lead to mold development that can be difficult to remove or eliminate from fabrics or carpeting. You should also be weary of storing a dollhouse in the attic because moths or other household varmints could do damage to the house itself or its accessories.

Be sure to keep your dollhouse away from household pets. Pets love to chew and nibble on small objects, and what better chew toy than a piece of dollhouse furniture or a miniature figurine? Small children and toddlers should also be kept away from dollhouses. Children of this age like to put things in their mouths. The small accessories present a choking hazard to younger children who donâ??t understand the value of what they are touching.

Not all dollhouses are going to be detailed enough to go to extreme measures of protection. But for most avid collectors, these precautions are necessary. In fact, one of the best ways to store a prized dollhouse is to have a special case made for it, usually from a clear material. This prevents dust from collecting on items inside the house and it keeps pets and small kids from touching it. And if you are a smoker, a case is a great way to keep smoke from tobacco away from the dollhouse.

Prized possessions need proper care, so it is best to stay on top of keeping your dollhouse in tip-top shape.

Learn more about the fascinating world of miniatures. Visit TheMagicalDollhouse.com today for a great dollhouse and dollhouse accessories from top miniature companies.

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Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Melissa & Doug Heirloom Victorian Doll House

Victorian doll houses are my favorite! I just cannot get enough doll houses-I own a couple of them. My dream as a child was to own several Victorian doll houses. As a young lady, I promised myself one. After researching dollhouses on the net, I was thrilled to find a high quality heirloom dollhouse that was affordable & beautiful. The Melissa & Doug Classic Heirloom Victorian Doll House is now making the dreams of so many children come true. Just fill this doll house up with miniature furniture as it’s already built.

Melissa & Doug Classic Heirloom Victorian Doll House is the perfect dollhouse to give as gift to your little girl or to that woman with a childhood dream like mine. This doll house is built extremely well and has wall flooring and wall paper. Most people fall in love with inside and outside decorative detailing. This doll house is very easy to assemble and furnish with your miniature furniture.

It’s obvious that Melissa & Doug are serious about everything that they design. I have noticed that all the items that they create for children bring years of enjoyment. Most of their products are made so well, that they are passed from family to family.

Since the early sixteen-hundreds, hand crafted doll houses have been a large part of a child’s training to become an adult. Soon, even the non-privileged realized the amount of joy it brought their children, so they too started hand crafting their own wooden dolls houses, supplying them with intricate accessories for their young children to enjoy for hours on end.

Wonder why most of the collectors prefer wooden doll house over those made from plastics? Wood has always been the choice of craftsmen. These doll houses are not the mass-manufactured type. These are hand crafted with the best detail that resembles the Victorian homes England. A wooden doll house by the natural properties of wood will last significantly longer.

Depending on your budget and personal taste, you can buy a miniature Victorian wooden doll house of 10 to 20 rooms. However, while buying a wooden doll house, you must consider the purpose of buying it and the size of dolls you intend to place in it.

The product reviews are outstanding.As one satisfied owner said “This doll house was easy to put together and is the best. It seemed like every peice lined up perfect. Very study weighing probably 30-35 pounds. Perfect for the adult collector too. Most owners cannot stop talking about this great doll house. Can easily be put together in 2-3 hours with only a power screwdriver. You won’t be sorry”.

Christmas Day is just about here and do you know what that means? The best childrens doll houses like the Classic Heirloom Victorian Doll House are going to be in short supply.Wood doll houses are in short supply because they are collectors items. This doll house will arrive safely to your home as it will be handled with gentleness.

Get your Melissa & Doug Classic Heirloom Victorian Doll House Today.

Angel Perris in foot hills of the Sierra Nevada mountains in Northern California with her husband and 4 children. She has been collecting doll houses for over 25 years. She does nearly all of her Christmas shopping online.

She created Christmas Top Selling, a successful Internet shopping portal to help people save time and money by shopping o

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Sunday, December 6th, 2009

elka dolls house 7418

  • Inclusive bathroom
  • Inclusive living-room
  • Inclusive kitchen
  • Inclusive bed-room
  • GS-Certificate

Product Description
Measure after structure: Height 75 x Width 85 x Length 35 cm

Material: Frame in BEECH, Roof and Back parts in MDF

Creative and colored Design

Solid manufacturing

Inclusive 4 persons-family… More >>

elka dolls house 7418

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Saturday, November 28th, 2009

A House Fit for a Queen

Queen Mary’s Doll House is arguably the most magnificent display of beauty, detail, and creativity of any dollhouse in history. King George V of the United Kingdom presented this house to Queen Mary in 1924 as a gift from the people of England to reveal to future generations how royalty lived during the early twentieth century. 

Princess Marie Louise was the first to broach the idea of creating such a masterpiece with Sir Edwin Lutyens, one of England’s top architects of the time. Taken by the notion, Lutyens immediately set forth on designing a house that would be fit for a queen, no expenses spared. He wanted to create a fully furnished miniature home that was accurate to items found in Windsor Castle, down to the finest detail. 

Built at 1:12 scale and standing nearly three and a half feet high, the forty room doll house began to take shape. Lutyens employed artists and artisans to work on the interior. To provide an idea of the detail and care given to these rooms, they built a front foyer complete with a swirling staircase to the second floor, a library with walnut bookcases, a servant’s pantry equipped with all modern conveniences of the day, and a Queen’s bedroom with a four-poster bed, the night sky painted on the ceiling. 

These little touches alone would be enough to make the Queen Mary’s Doll House one of the most impressive miniatures ever created. Sir Lutyens had plans that were more ambitious. 

He insisted it necessary that everything within the house be fully functional. He hired electricians to make every light and chandelier work, plumbers to make every toilet flush and tap run, and crafters to have the two elevators stop at every floor. He even went so far as to have a one-twelfth scale gramophone built to work as a normal one when played. 

Sir Lutyens had talented furniture makers of the day make small replicas of the furniture found in Windsor Castle. He had all cupboards stocked with canned goods that bore logos of popular brands found in the real Queen’s kitchen. He had linens, curtains, clothes, nursery toys, and rugs created to scale. The basement wine cellar contained miniature bottles of wine with real labels filled with a thimble’s worth of the actual advertised wine. The lavatory even had its own roll of toilet paper. 

Over one hundred and seventy writers, from Poet Laureate Robert Bridges to Rudyard Kipling, were commissioned to write miniature books for the Library. Well-known artists supplied watercolours and art for the Queen Mary’s Doll House. 

As the project ballooned, Sir Lutyens chaired a Dolls’ House Committee to oversee all these artists, writers, and companies eager to lend there services to his vision. 

No detail was forgotten. There was Royal Doulton and Wedgewood China, a Singer sewing machine in the linen room, utensils, ornaments, napkins, stamp albums, and a little snail crawling on a leaf in the garden.

By the end of the project, nearly fifteen hundred people were involved in the creation of the dollhouse. Queen Mary took great joy when she saw her gift, and ruled this house shared with everyone so that people might see and appreciate the ingenuity of the English people. 

It made its first appearance in 1924 at the British Empire Exhibition, attracting two million visitors before it was relocated to Windsor Castle. There the dollhouse remains today for anyone to see and enjoy.

Add to your miniature collection, or start a new one! Come see our large selection of wooden doll houses and accessories. Visit us online at http://www.TheMagicalDollhouse.com today.

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Friday, November 27th, 2009

A Miniature History of Dollhouses

Tracing the history of the modern dollhouse starts with items that bore little resemblance to the toys and collector pieces of today. 

The earliest known miniature replicas date back to ancient Egypt, found within the tomb of Meketre. These wooden replicas of buildings, boats, animals, and people capture a glimpse of life in Egypt four thousand years ago. Some of these highly valued miniatures are located in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, and the miniatures have spawned many copies of the originals. 

Moving forward, most doll “houses” built before the invention of the modern dollhouse took the form of religious artefacts detailing Christ’s Nativity scene. These original doll “mangers” are still created today and can often be found in churches and homes during the Christmas Season. 

However, the first recorded proof of a modern dollhouse turns up in 1544, the house created by Duke Albrecht V of Germany for his daughter. This opulent dollhouse was said to have had four floors, sixty-three windows, and seventeen doors. Sadly, the house no longer exists, presumably destroyed in a fire. All that remains of this creation was its inventory list. 

After this time, dollhouses were made for royalty, seen more as collector’s items than toys, but enthusiasm for these exquisitely detailed houses spread throughout Europe’s middle class. Skilled craftsmen, cabinet makers, and other artisans were employed to construct these beautiful dollhouses. 

Germany produced some of the best and most detailed dollhouses during this period, yet the most impressive and one of the oldest existing houses hails from Holland. The Utrecht House, built in 1680, resembled a cabinet with fifteen separate rooms and a garden. Dutch artists spared no expense in adding gemstones and creating miniature replicas of paintings and furniture for some of their creations. 

The oldest Colonial-style dollhouse in North America is located in the Nursery at the Van Courtland Museum. Built in 1744, this impressive house is a replica of a New York City mansion. It is the only dollhouse in America that is older than the US itself. 

Until the advent of the Industrial Revolution, dollhouses were mostly exclusive to the rich and royal. When toy factories began mass-producing dollhouses and suitable wooden furniture, the items continued to be of good quality but with lesser focus on detail. To the excitement of girls in middle-class families, these toys became affordable for everyone. 

By the end of World War II, toy factories stopped making houses out of wood in lieu of plastic because of cheaper production value and a recovering American economy after the war. 

Today, we live in a time where new dollhouses come in the many forms: mass-produced plastic, plywood and fibreboard, even some classic artistic accomplishments that rival those made in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The popularity of dollhouses hasn’t waned but instead has been increased by the variety of toy choices in the world. A walk around any large-scale toy store can prove that. What can be made today is only limited by our own imagination and pocketbook.

Visit the place for dollhouses and miniatures. Find everything from play dollhouses for young children to grand mansions for collectors. We specialize in doll house kits for every skill level and budget. And don?t forget the dollhouse furniture! Visit us online at http://www.TheMagicalDollhouse.com today!

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