work at home Home-Based Business Home Based Business work at home jobs Work at Home Finance - Money Employer V.I.P Center Employers and Recruiters
Home Privacy Policy Terms of Use About Work-at-Home.org Advertising Information Business Development Opportunities Link Opportunities

AREAS

HOME

Work at home jobs

Get Work at Home News

Get Local Weather

Recruiters post Work at Home Jobs

Send Free Post Cards

.


Work-at-Home.org is a work at home jobs source and work from home community to provide information, support and resources to those who work at home and those who want to work from home. This special report was written by a third party not associated with Work-at-Home.org who is solely responsible for its content.


Work-at-home.org : Special Reports : Business : BUILDING DOLL HOUSES AND DOLL FURNITURE

BUILDING DOLL HOUSES AND DOLL FURNITURE

1993 by Home Business Publications

Well built and tastefully appointed hand made doll houses often sell for $400 or more, especially if
they are to scale, realistic looking, well-decorated and nicely furnished.

Materials used to build and furnish high quality doll houses are not necessarily expensive. The
real expenses is in the apparent hours of labor and high degree expertise required for their
construction.

However, many "expert" doll house craftsmen have no more training or background than a normal
wood-workers or wood hobbyists. If you have ever built a model airplane or car, you can probably
produce doll houses that will command a good prices. All it tales is a little attention to detail,
practice and a few tricks of the trade.

Basically, building doll houses involves selecting and cutting out (according to plans 1/8" to 1/4"
paneling for walls, a little stronger plywood for the bottom floor, and thin paneling with a simulated
overlay for the roof.

Cut out the required windows, doors and spaces for stairways. For efficiency, you will probably cut
out several parts from the same basic plan at a time.

Check these parts often to make sure they fit properly. Most walls and floors should be decorated
before they are permanently installed or you may not be able to get them to apply the desired
coatings or linings.

Although you will develop your own procedures, it's wise to follow the plan instructions explicitly for
the first few models. remember that although you can substitute materials freely, some
substitutions may require different applications from the plans so be careful!

If you want to try without a plan (a commercial plan is recommended, at least for the first effort),
you'll need a sheet of plywood (or plain 3/8" paneling), some ice cream sticks or tongue
depressors, glue, nails (brads), a few pins and screw eyes, a coping or jig saw, plus other normal
shop tools. Get wallpaper and linoleum (or contact shelf paper )remnants from the hardware store
and fabric scraps from an upholstery shop or yard goods store.

Much of the fun building doll houses is the ingenious and often, Unique methods craftsmen come
up with to create really amazing effects for door, windows, roofs, outside and inside decor. Your
total material cost could be as low as $200 including furniture. Of course, the cost can be much
higher with veneer walks, silk rugs and fancy furnishing.

Doll house patterns are available from many sources--your public library probably has several
books on the subject; discount book sellers offer a wide selection of books, plans and
suggestions.

Decorations and furnishings can also be obtained from a variety of sources (several are listed
under BUSINESS SOURCES). Subscribe to one or more trade magazines to learn and stay
abreast of additional sources for materials, building and marketing techniques.

The first "trick" is to build your doll houses to the scale of the furniture that you intend to use! This
is much easier (and smarter) than building one haphazardly or to a standard which the furniture is
hard to get or even unavailable.

This would mean trying to cut little pieces of furniture down or enlarge them to fit a non-standard
scale doll house.

Unless you are equipped to build doll house furniture from scratch to the described scale, stay
with the standard scales!

To find the scale of the furniture, measure the height of a table and compare that a similar table in
your own home.

If the doll house table is 2 1/2" tall and it equates to yours that is 30 inches (2 feet), that's a one
inch to one foot (or twelve to one) scale. An inch or difference ON YOUR TABLE is not bad. The
same procedure works on hour house scale. If your doorway opening is 32 by 80 inches ( 2 2/3 by
6 1/2 feet), then the same size opening in the doll house would be 2 2/3 by 6 1/2 inches. The one
foot equals one inch is a widely accepted scale. You can use any scale you want, however, even
metric.

A good tip for furniture is to buy imported doll house furniture cheap and refinish it even though it's
new (SMC has a nice selection of inexpensive "imported furniture" see BUSINESS SOURCES).
Buy a $1.30 chair, and sand and give it a coat of good polyurethane to make it into a $6.95 (retail)
chair instead of the suggested retail of $3.95.

Much imported doll house furniture is mass produced by children or untrained workers. It is poorly
sanded and lightly coated with varnish or other inexpensive finish (even shoe polish!). Their
materials and tools are often poor quality and the finishes usually look and feel rough. Their wood,
however, is usually excellent (good wood is cheap overseas.

With some fine sandpaper and sell wool, smooth the finish until looks and feels hand crafted. If
the stain and finish is really bad, remove it with BIX (at your hardware store), re-stain and refinish
it.

This process needn't take long, especially if you do several at once. Give your wooden furniture
one or more coats of quality vanish, polyurethane or liquid resin. Spray is fine a dust free area
(some overseas furniture markers spray out in the open with cars going by).

Check the upholstery for fit and quality. Replace if it doesn't look nice or go with your "decor" or
treat it. Trim loose threads and glue any loose corners. A few moments with piece of doll house
furniture can triple it's value. It can also make the difference between a $40 and a $400 doll
house!

Market your doll houses wholesale through craft shops (usually on consignment), toy or
department stores, and/or do your own advertising and sell from your "factory."

If you retail, two things will help immensely: a catalog and a nice display. Take a good
(professional quality) color pictures of each of your creations from several angles. Use
professional backgrounds and lighting to present them in their best possible light.

If you can't afford to have a catalog printed make up a scrapbook of your work to show both the
quality and the variety that your produce. Add comments and prices to make it into your catalog.
List various options and prices for each. For example, modifying the layout, adding a room or
porch, changing the type of roof.

Next, make arrangements to display your doll houses. This can be a corner of a room in your
house or shop or rented display window (check with real estate agents for windows in unoccupied
stores). Pictures and advertisements are nice, but you just can't beat the real thing. The closer
your doll house display is where little girls can see them, the better!

You can sometimes arrange with local businesses to feature a display (the bank, bowling alley) for
a week at a time. As a local craftsman of note, these businesses will often cooperate especially if
you're good. You get exposure; they have an added attraction for their customers at no cost.

Unless you live in a big city it would probably not pay to advertise continually in newspaper except
around Christmas. Of course, if you could get the names and addresses of parents with little girls
in the 3 to 10 age brackets, you could mail out brochures with pictures to their parents.

One way to obtain such a list is to offer a doll house as a prize. Contestants fill out coupons with
their name and address to enter (which becomes your mailing list). Take part in community affairs
to meet potential buyers. Operate a booth at the county fair, give out free balloons at the parade
and come up with doll house variations that the local paper will cover (perhaps a model of a
prominent local house).

Be sure to have several completed models on hand or at least ready to finish in time for
Christmas. This should be your best season. Don't over look the possibly of building (or finishing)
custom doll houses.

For example, a shape something like the family home, painted and decorated to match (these
would start at $00!). With 4 or 5 different basic patterns, you could make minor adjustments to
come up with quite a few totally different models.

One of your secrets that you keep all patterns, jigs, molds and simply change outer materials to
get different effects.

For example, all of your roofs will be similar, but some can be finished in painted sandpaper or cut
out thin panel wood "for asphalt shingles and tile. You can probably imprint some wood paneling
with brick design, spray it a light color, then roll it with a reddish brown to look like brick. Similar
designs inscribed on light wood would look like patio and walkway tile.

There is simply no end to interesting effects that can be realized from your imagination and a little
experimenting.

The best advice from this point is to remember that the more patience and care you take in
building each doll house, the more enjoyment some little girl will receive.

If this is your motivation, you will undoubtedly be a successful doll house and doll furniture builder.
Even so,, keep accurate records and always try to work out procedures to enable you to produce
sections of the doll houses assembly line fashion. This helps avoid mistakes, speeds construction
and increase your profits.

BUSINESS SOURCES

SPECIALTY MERCHANDISE CO.,9401 De Soto Ave.,Chatsworth, CA 91311, 818-998-2712.
Nice selection of imported, inexpensive doll furniture, 1" : 1" scale, plus other imported
merchandise. Membership required (costs about $500, but can be paid in installments).

COLLECTOR COMMUNICATIONS CORP.,170 5th Ave.,New York, NY 10010, 212/989-8700.
Publishes DOLLS, bi-monthly magazine for doll collectors, plus MINIATURE COLLECTOR,
magazine about furnishings and decor for doll houses.

JACQUELIENE'S, Box 23464, Oakland, CA 94263-0464. Doll house plans and furnishings. 70
page color catalog - $2.

DOLL HOUSE FACTORY OUTLET, 325 Division St.,Boonton, NJ 07005, 201/335-5501. Doll
houses, kits and accessories.

INTERNATIONAL DOLL MAKERS ASSOCIATION, 3364 Pine Creek Dr.,San Jose, CA 95132.
Association of doll makers and collectors.


HOBBY HOUSE PRESS, INC.,900 Frederick St.,Cumberland, MN 21502. Publishes DOLL
READER, trade magazine for doll dealers.

NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN DOLL ARTISTS, 5630 Clarksville Highway, Joelton,
IN 37080. Association of doll makers and collectors.

DOVER PUBLICATIONS, 31 East 2nd St.,Mineloa, NY 11051. Discount books, stencils, patterns;
excellent source for, ideas and decor accessories. recommend this one highly!

QUILL CORPORATION, 100 Schelter Rd.,Lincolnshire, IL 60917-4700, 312/634-4800. Office
supplies.

NEBS, 100 Main St.,Groton, MA 04171, 800/225-6380. Office supplies.

IVEY PRINTING, Box 761, Meridan, TX 76665. Low-cost printing.. Write for price list.

ZPS, Box 581, Libertyville, IL 60048-2556. Business cards (raise print _ $11.50 per K) and
letterhead stationery. Will print your copy ready logo or design, even whole card.

WALTER DRAKE & SONS, INC.,4119 Drake Bldg.,Colorado Springs, CO 80940. Short run
business cards, stationery, etc. Good quality but little choice of style or color. Can be difficult to
deal with (they are a "short-order" mail order house).


www.work-at-home.org - work at home jobs



Copyright 2002 Work-at-Home.org