Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Faux Bamboo furniture

This 1/6 scale furniture is hot pink plastic. I sprayed it black. I keep seeing this wild Barbie furniture on ebay for a dollar or two.
Vixievaporous from Flickr turned me on to the phantom chairs. They are a little smaller than 1/6 and are perfect for 1/12 scale. They are used as table decorations or place card holders. Thanks Vixie!  
The lamp is Jonathan Alder sprayed black. I have found that using fabric from clothing is best as the patterns are smaller, so the striped cuhions are from an old jersey blouse.
Before, hot pink. After, black. Funny the 2 chairs are the same size
but the pink one looks bigger. Must be an optical illusion.

 Cheers CM

Friday, June 24, 2011

OMG My camera broke!

shell house by Kotaro Ide from Artechnic


 So last night I made this really cool graphic style pillow to go on this hot pink Barbie couch in faux bamboo which I had spray painted black.
AND when I went to photograph it I found out my camera was broken! The viewfinder was white...
I know in the end this will be good for me forcing me to buy a better camera, but for now I am empty, a lost soul, bereft of expressing myself.
This picture above is a summer/winter house built in Japan to withstand cold and hot weather. It is self contained and beautiful in it's simplicity in the natural setting.

This chaise is by Karim Rashid.
I love its sleek shape. I am tempted to start slicing paper towel rolls to achieve this look in 1/6 scale. Looking at these two oval inspired artifacts makes me feel better. Consider this therapy through design.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

The most ridiculous part of building you own dollhouse is

that it keeps collapsing on itself. The part of the I House made by Imaginarium is sturdy and play worthy. The pool extension and front door and family room I added keep falling over. Even just passing by can cause an earth quake. It's more like building a tower of blocks than a house. I need a nail gun, that's all I'm saying.



                         I house livingroom: I cannot EVEN imagine manufacturing, shipping, marketing and
the customer service involved with making a mini house! Most custom one's made of wood are so heavy shipping must be an issue. How difficult to check every box correctly.


The scale issue is a pain too. These made in Japan yellow plastic chairs were offered as Barbie size! Not. They are barely 1/12. They fit in with the Mattel vintage wooden Barbie furniture because that is not truly 1/6 either. I had to spray paint them orange and black... I HAD to.

                              A little "behind the scene" shot.

Credits: Mattel wooden vintage tables, couch and buffet. pinchopepper white tension lamp. Orange Jonathan Adler Barbie big lamp (repainted). Japanese made vintage Eames chairs (repainted) Purse made in Peru from Shale, Black boxes on table from Modern MC, planters shampoo bottle tops and makeup bottle top. Greenery from Michael's. Mexican carved pot and terracotta pot from ebay. Area rug and shell on a stand, Minimodernista. Back drop, old painting. Woven planter, napkin ring.

Cheers, CM

Monday, June 13, 2011

Phantom Chair

            I remember why I started this 1/6 scale  "I house" project.
       Designer chairs! This Phantom chair only comes in 1/6 scale.

                                                           I love it in the I House!
Credits: Couch and coffee table, "put together" vintage Barbie furniture with pad I made, recycled shampoo top planters with Michael's plastic greenery, note pad page for rug, Mighty World cup, plate coffee pot. Antique metal urns, vintage black lattice 1950's dollhouse wood balconey, Barbie TV. Styrafoam packing piece for alcove.



Credits for artwork: Large piece on left, Bozart.
Top and lower right modern art, Imagination house frames with pieces of a National Gallery flyer cut up to fit the frames.
Lower middle: Imagination House with original print.
Upper right: vintage '50's, I think.


Notice antique black metal urns.
These are some recent additions. Princess Patti (left) 1960's Made in Japan yellow plastic Eames chair, I spray painted orange and black (middle) and the Phantom chair 1/6 scale (right).

The funny thing about the orange chair is it was listed in a Barbie lot so I thought it would be bigger. It fits in with the vintage Mattel wooden Barbie set because it is slightly closer to 1/12 size. Size matters...

The only problem with the 1/6 is THEY ARE SO BIG! And I keep tripping over them. I am considering spray painting the couch and coffee table black... What do you think?  Cheers! CM

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Design Profile: Peter Tucker

Published in  Dollhouses Past & Present, Magazine #9 (May 2011)  by Carol Morehead, Leftcoastmini


Frank Lloyd Wright lamp & chairs



Dare I call Peter Tucker an Eminent Gris of Modern Miniature design? He is really not that gris. But if you look at the 25 or more articles that have been published about him his eminence is clear. His special skill is bringing artistry and technology together.



He currently lives in Vancouver British Columbia with his wife Jeremie. He has 2 grown daughters from an earlier marriage, Heather and Michelle.
Peter made his first doll house as a ten year old for his younger sister when his family was living in Montreal, Canada. It is unknown what happened to the house as the family furnishings were dispersed after his mother died.



He is particularly amused by the portable television.

Peter's second dollhouse, built from plans.

His post high school education began in Engineering and then he switched to Psychology. He began his career as School Psychologist.

He next started a database design consulting company. This job required constant travel and as he explained "upon hearing of the deaths of two people close to me in a hotel room on the other side of the globe, I decided to make a change and not spend most of my time away from my family".
This was his chance to explore his creativity which lead first to making one of a kind of roomboxes, then to the art of miniature furniture.



His room boxes, such as the Greene and Greene Gamble House dining room above, have exquisite workmanship and show a masterful understanding of perspective, so important to make miniature scenes look realistic.




His first show was in Seattle in 1997 or '98. He was noticed at that Seattle show by Andy and Marilyn Benedict of Maison des Maisons (a miniatures company which specialized in Native American and fine American and European art), who took him to his first Chicago show in 1999. They encouraged him and he has been showing his work there ever since.



 Frank Lloyd Wright stick back chair

After finishing his roomboxes he began to find a lack of modern furniture to put in them.




His next influence was meeting the collector Annie Herzfeld in 1998. Annie's father had been an engineer for Frank Lloyd Wright and she only wanted modern miniature productions and Peter became a devotee to that style.
He now creates miniature originals, focusing on roomboxes, lights and furniture in mainly art deco, arts and crafts, and modern styles.


He was captivated by the G. Rietveld Chair. "Some things are just a visual treat and I have to make them. It is a study in geometry and planes and primary colors," he said.


He makes beautiful miniature working lights. He initiated experimentation with LED based lights. Some of his creations are beautiful Lucite sculptures.

Sculpture or light?

Peter Tucker's LED lights at the Good Sam Show, San Jose, California in October 2010. Photo: MiniDork from http://modernminihouses.blogspot.com/


Peter attends many major shows where he exhibits and gives tutorials. His tutorials are very popular and he is willing to share his skills. You might have seen him last year in Chicago or at the Kensington Show in England this Spring.


Above: Peter Tucker's furniture at the Good Sam Show, San Jose, California, October 2010. Photos: MiniDork from http://modernminihouses.blogspot.com/

Below: Detail of the Art Deco / Moderne dressing table



I think the statement he made that most resonated with me is about Grandma's House. He points out, "Victorians are not what kids understand. Grandma's house is as far back as they go. Nobody's Grandma lives in a Victorian anymore, they live in a 1950's house at the earliest." Perhaps this reflects the younger miniatures audience's attraction to the '60's and even '70's design.




Chaise Me To Work: Two Peter Tucker modern chairs in Douglas fir, cherry, and ebony, in a scene and photo by Modern MC of Mini Modern


This echoes exactly what I experienced with my own Grandchild when her first words said while pointing at my dollhouses' items were,"Cell phone, bottled water, and remote" in baby talk.
Though I have many pieces of modern mini furniture I treasure the piece I have of his work. It is his molded plywood chair. The picture I took of that chair is one of my best photos, not because of my photography skill, and maybe in spite of it, but because of natural sunlight falling on his beautifully formed wood.



                                          Photo: Carol Morehead, Leftcoastmin

Today Peter has a web site at http://www.roomboxes.com/ which showcases his creations for sale. Much of his work is custom-made to collectors' ideas. He has even made roomboxes inspired by movie themes and loves to make his customers' ideas come to life.



He has a blog at http://roomboxes.blogspot.com/ called "Musings on Modern Miniatures: random notes on my working with miniatures: activities, designs, and design influences, techniques and brain storms." It's worth joining just for the brain storms! His blog shows his latest creations showing how his imagination and artistry work together.



Peter works in a garage converted to a studio, and says of his workspace,



"One thing for sure - I don't suffer from any compulsive neatness disorder - and I do like tools!"





As well as MANY hand tools, he has (above left) a Brynes 4 inch table saw, a compressor below, and dust collector; (above right) a drum sander atop a planer, jointer in the middle, disc sander to left with suspended vacuum hose adding a certain style; (below left) the big table saw; and below right, a Preac saw to the right with electronic stuff above and to right, band saw and tool chest to left.

In his basement shop (above), there are more tools, including a paint spray booth and compressor, a scroll saw and a microlux saw, a drill press, a mini mill, and a micro lathe.


Screen or room divider inspired by Eileen Gray



As he looks back at this beautiful body of work he created he knows one thing for sure — he won’t run out of inspiration for new and interesting pieces to design and build.







Cheers CM