Friday, January 8, 2021

Real Good Toys Princess Anne

 This is one of the first houses I made for a paying client.  It was built when I still had the original store space that Tom O'Dea occupied which would make it spring of 2015.  The buyer was an adult child who wanted a new dollhouse for his mother for Mother's Day.  I finished it pretty quickly so he could have it in time for the big day.


As you can see, it is a Real Good Toys Princess Anne. I've always liked this particular house as it's compact but super cute.  Just six rooms but if you want something small, this is a great choice.  I no longer remember the paint codes but I know those shingles were dyed using MinWax's Ebony color.

The hardest part of the assembly is the porch, and really, it's not that hard. If you lay the house on its back you stand a much better chance of the different levels gluing up properly.

Shingling a roof like this doesn't have to be hard.  I always start with the front facing parts of the roof and then the dormers.  I do one row at a time.  First I do a front facing row and then the dormer row.  I've found it makes tighter corner seams that way.  Also, this is a good time to point out that if you have drawn your lines on your roof ahead of time to line up the shingles, the lines on your dormers will not match up with the lines on the front facing part of the roof.  Don't blame me, blame math or physics or something. 

Here is the inside.  Pretty simple but ample if you just need a small house.  The only thing I don't like is that the stairs are in the rooms themselves.  That hurts furniture placement.  You can always remove the stairs though.

Bay windows.  Can't beat 'em!



Would you like to know the most time consuming part of the build for this house?  Painting the windows and porch posts.  

The mom who received this house ended up coming into the store a few weeks after Mother's Day and told me how much she loved it.  She also told me that she had taken it to Bell's to be wired because Leonard is the one who had made all her other houses.  

About a week or so after her visit, Leonard and Jean Bell came to my shop because he needed a couple of lights for this house.  At that point they were no longer ordering inventory themselves.  For those of you who never got to meet Leonard or Tom O'Dea (the original owner of my shop), they had a bit of a rivalry going.  Both loved to talk smack about each other's work. As Jean shopped my store (much to Leonard's chagrin), Leonard told me that although I had done a "good" job on the house, I had made a few mistakes.  I asked him what those mistakes were.  He explained that on a real house the shingles overhang the roof edge and mine don't do that.  He's right.  I absolutely refuse to hang shingles over the edge of the roof unless a client specifically requests it and understands my objection.  What is my objection? Overhanging shingles are just begging to be ripped off or mangled.  I explained my reasoning to him and he just stared back, not sure what to say.  So I stared back at him and smiled.  He conceded that I was correct.  So then I asked him what other mistakes I had made and he mumbled, "None."  Serious high praise considering the man had been building dollhouses for years and real houses long before that.  Tom, Leonard, and Jean all passed away in the last few years but their houses, and legends, live on.



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