Monday, December 28, 2015

DIY Vintage Barbie Furniture REDO

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Last February my husband and I discussed the idea of building a Barbie Dollhouse for our granddaughter for this Christmas (2015). I had looked online and found all sorts of pink and purple abominations, vintage and new which had no relationship to a real house or real life.

However, there were tons of vintage/new furnishings in online stores and some great plans for DIY dollhouses. We decided, I should look for furnishings-cheap---because we could afford to build a quality dollhouse but not buy all new quality furnishings---and so my quest began, long before the dollhouse was even a sketch.

I began perusing thrift stores, Goodwills, Savers and online for inexpensive furnishings for a Barbie scale dollhouse (1inch to 6 inches). It was soon obvious that the 1:6 scale wasn't always easy to find. But, I did have some incredible luck, first starting with a few pieces.

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Here are the final plans, basically drafted around the furnishings we found and ended up using. The original plan was to have an island in the kitchen and no table as shown, but hubby found the great round wood table/set, so we readapted, but did not have to change the lay-out. We did make a drop leaf on the table, though to give Barbie and friends more room to move.

I can't stress enough how much planning we did, and how this saved time and sanity. I'm so glad we went with the stairs and 16" deep. The first thing the Grand did on Christmas was totter the dolls up and down the stairs...every time she moved them...so it was worth it. Not to mention the great views.


 Here is the potential kitchen laid out to see if it would work and fit.

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The pink dishwasher is from a sink barcounter set in the "So Much to Do Kitchen" 1995. Because it was bar height I had to do some surgery on it. The wood table and chairs are from an antique mall, hubby found that---perfect size for Barbie. The new refrigerator was snagged from walmart for 10.97, a bargain in Barbie land. Here everything is laid out on the floor of the unbuilt house to make sure we will have enough room for stairs.

Basically the house was built around the furnishings we found.

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The old dishwasher was attached to a counter/sink combo, next pic. Working within the plans of the house as we were drafting it, it was going to be too high and the two-sided counter not going to work in the small area allotted for the kitchen.  Pulling off the counter(again Mattel doesn' t make it easy to dismantle these things...I ended off coping sawing off the top 3/8" of plastic of the dishwasher.

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Here the old counter is still attached. The pink is absolutely gross. The dresser was not so bad, except we were going to use it in the livingroom, so an OLD REDO was necessarily for both. We did not end up using the locker---it didnt' fit under the stairs, but will be used at Grandma's house for play here.

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The NEW painted white dishwasher---I wrapped the basket in tape, and hubby added a shelf to the top, that might have been missing. We planned the kitchen cabinets, just like you would in a real kitchen. I never did find a vintage or inexpensive stove, so my hubby made that.

Extra cost added to the dishwasher---spray paint, painters tape and small shelf---minimal. counter top was used for all the cabinets, so maybe $1.50 extra for the dishwasher.


NEXT the VENDING MACHINE

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Another big score came with a practically new---Barbie Dream House Fashion Vending Machine-2013-4. Not really vintage, but purchased at Goodwill for $1.99.

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This is how it looked when i got it, jammed with shoes still tightly wrapped in shrink wrap and the vending carousel to the right was broken. Reviews on this product were dismal--and someone had basically given up trying to get the shoes, etc. out...and donated it to Goodwill, who listed it for $1.99 and a note-- broken. Well, I bought it for the shoes, etc. and the thought...maybe I could do something with it.

First thing I did was unscrew the back panel off...which consisted of two large filigree plastic panels, which I planned to use for the dollhouse windows, one in the bedroom and one in the bath.

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This REDO turned out so cool. I loved to take photos through them, so does the Grand.


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Isn't this neat...see the pony-tail head, center right? It's Barbie all the way.



Let me tell you----Mattel makes things really well, and I spent easily 2-3 hours trying to get this vending mechanism completely apart. The entire concept was cool, but just too many moving parts/mechanisms to make it work properly. It also had a spring load to push the chosen vending item into the slot to fall down the hole. Very complicated?


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After some sawing, unscrewing, unratcheting,  clipping,  hammering, and prying (cursing also involved)---I finally removed the vending belt mechanism.


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 Lots of funky screws and pins held this together.

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Next I dremel tool-sawed the center stickered vending machine area out. WOW! It had little reinforcement ledges inside---I used to hold up shelves. Here are four small wooden shelves inserted and painted hot pink to match the plastic. Everything was Gorilla glued in place.

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The bottom center has a trimmed plastic bottle clothes bin. A plastic pin was trimmed and glued for a handle.
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An aluminum clothespole was added on the right for hanging clothes and screwed in place. The original left spinning turntable works for shoes and purses. I did not put a rear wall on it...as shoes can become trapped behind the turntable, another design flaw on Mattel's part...but say it makes a nifty REDO closet---Mr. Mattel. The Grand can pull the whole thing away from the wall and unjam it. She put the brush and toothpaste  on the shelf there and moved the towels around.


Cost added, minimal--50 cents for the bottle clothes bin and maybe 50 cents for the shelves paint, etc.
So two windows, shoe/purse storage, towel storage, clothesbin and closet with doors, for $2.99 and a couple hours of cursing under my breath.


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The closet was planned for the large bathrrom on the third floor. Here it is right before packing up.

The toilet and sink were purchased for $10.97 in a 2015 Barbie kit. I never did find any toilets or sinks in the 9 months of looking for vintage or used.

Savers had great bags of miscelanneous---it took two 1.99 bags to get the parts for one bathroom and a tub for this bathroom.

The tub to the left was part of a bag of goodies from savers. Originally it attached to the "All Around Bathroom Play Set", by Mattel  2002, that I found in another bag. The only fix for the tub, was to build it in with a 'tiled' planter on the open end where it had originally attached to the funky blue shower walls for Ken's bathroom.

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The planter was a 2x4 cut off 3 1/2" high and 'tiled' modge-podged to match the walls. Three holes were drilled and then filled with plants and the whole thing was secured to the walls, and floor, permanently like real plumbing including the toilet nad sink.

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Here is the window panel from the back of the vending machine, the tub and planter---all installed. Don't you just LOVE IT~!?


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Here is the rest of the goofy shower walls for that set from "All Around Bathroom Playset" from 2002.

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All the parts were there, including yuggy decals, but the hinges went over 350 degrees...so it was very flexible to use however you wanted.

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First, I removed the stickers and all the loose pieces that popped out.

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 This wierd litttle vanity in purple was supposed to be used from both sides? But, the top flips over to reveal the sink. I just finally took it completely apart to see how I could best use the pieces.


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Here's Ken with the proposed sink/vanity---but purple and pink, just weren't his colors...LOL. After wrapping all the 'metal' parts in tape, I cleaned everything twice with alcohol, and the built-in shower from the parts bags. I need to raise it a bit more---we did this with a small wood piece of candlestick part where the drain would be.


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I hand-sawed all the extra plastic pieces off the shower, and replaced them with the same molding we used on the ceilings. This helped to square up the shower and give some clearance to the parts in the back that were sticking out.

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Here is the newly painted blue shower parts, sans the add-on caps and stickers. Once cleaned with alcohol all the pieces were carefully sprayed with white gloss paint for plastic. The base is a margarine tub lid with thin piece of wood underneath to level it. Everything was glued with Gorilla glue which is permanent~including a bit of finger skin, here and there---that stuff really holds, lol.

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Hubby counter-sunk a screw to hold it together and then glued a washer on the hole for a drain.These pieces are glued in place in the dollhouse or screwed...just like a real house...permanent. The brown mirror is removable.

All the pink shower parts were sprayed with matte silver and I hand-painted the faucet. Oversize brown knobs were added to the vanity which also was squared up with a new wood top, the shower mirror was untaped after painting. A small plastic shelf was glued on before painting, from a goody bag of doll things from Savers.

Added costs to the bathroom-shower/sink... were paint, glue, washer, screws, wood trim, wood base, and knobs--less that $3.00. I'm still looking for the towel bar for the sink---it's in a bag---somewhere, in a box--somewhere. It will turn up or I will create a new one. All the shower parts turned out so cool. Eventually maybe a shower curtain will be added. I used gloss white paint...so everything looks so new and clean.

The Living room has some vintage in it also.

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The small chest of drawers on the right was the easiest REDO of all. It's from the Barbie, "So Much to Do Bedroom Collection" from 1995 and was perfect for the dining room area---where we needed some sort of buffet/endtable next to the couch.


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The dresser is shallow and has one working drawer...good lines and clean design. Perfect to go with the contemporary furnishings...sorta contemporaray cottage chic. LOL. It was simply cleaned and sprayed white.

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I didnt' even fuss with the knobs. Santa's deadline was coming down to the wire, so we decorated the top with some bottle trees, a lamp, and of course a cheese tray.

Added cost ---paint--25-50 cents for great storage in the living/dining room.

Remember this:

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I haven't been able to find the date on this, I thought it said 1998...yet I assume it isn't very old, and definitely Mattel Barbie...so this isn't probably vintage, but a great REDO. First---that color has to go.

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Here is the couch drying after one of three coats of green spray paint. Again very carefully cleaned with alcohol before painting...
 
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For the cover I  chose 1" thick regular foam---$3.74 from JoAnnes.  I used fabrics from several places, all cotton, so they will be able to be washed. I enclosed the cushion and permanently sewed and attached a skirt. The cover is strapped behind and velcro holds it tight on the green couch.
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The original Savers label, 1.99. You can see the strap and velcro on the back to the right.

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 I also covered a bolster and made a few accent pillows. Definitely cozy enough to sleep on or for many guests or Ken's naps.

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Couch 1.99, fabrics 2.50, foam 1.00, stuffing and velcro, 50cents. Second couch was purchased new (IKEA) in a set with other items,  and a new cover made for it another $2.00 or so.

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And its' all perfect for Ken to take another nap on Christmas Eve. The Grand put him there, not me, Lol. Now the Decor is not pristine, because it is a three-year-old's work in progress, but she was having a ball with two family friends.

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Barbie immediately took a bath, twice, and Ken napped while three little girls moved all the Barbie's and Ken's furnishings and clothes into the new house!



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It was a MERRY MERRY CHRISTMAS and have a Happy New Year, 
from the Grand, Barbie, and Ken!
Thanks always for stopping by or leaving comments. I will try and answer all your questions and comments, they make mine and Barbie's day.


All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions or posts. Please do not use photos without linking back to this blog without my permission. Thank you for your cooperation, Sandi Magle

I will be posting to these great parties: 
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Let's Talk Vintage 
Thrifty&Vintage Finds 
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Sandi







Vintage Underneath the Christmas Tree:Hi-Yo, Silver!


Now that all the wrapping paper has been picked up, the ribbons retired or saved for a REDO,  and the holidays are winding down, it's time to talk about what was underneath the Christmas Tree.

 

It's not a secret here, OLD and Vintage anything is prized in this house.
 This has extended to my boys. 
Underneath the Christmas Tree for my husband was this spectacular gift, 
so nostalgic and a great find. 
My youngest has become quite the thrifter, and he had this wrapped up from Santa for my hubby.


A copyright 1938 Parker Bros. Lone Ranger Game. Now, if you were a child of the 1950's you remember the TV series. But, the Lone Ranger is older than that, some eighty years he has been urging Silver on with a, "Hi-Yo, Silver," first in radio programs during the 1930's.  


Anyway, the entire OLD game is in surprisingly good condition. I do remember playing this when I was a kid---I'm not that old, but I had older boy cousins by 10+ years...who must have had this. Because when I spotted the lttle mounted metal men and the spinners, memories flooded back. As a child of parents who suffered the Depression, taking care of all possesions and saving them was a way of life.


The game's beautiful graphics and all the parts are still intact---even the directions...what a find. My husband was delighted.

The game board is perfect---a bunch of lead weights and plastic pieces included. Designed for 4-6 players, one additional piece is there. I will be on the look out for a green piece I think or perhaps white?.



Here's the copyright down in the corner...1938 Parker Bros. The boys want to play this---and we will have a family game night for sure. The box has some clear tape on it...but who cares, this was a gift from a Son to a Father...what could be better?

Parker Bros., is best known for it's depression game, Monopoly, and the post WWII game, Risk. A great information source on the Parker Bros. game empire is here =110 years of Fun Story of Parker Brothers.


A small sticker is in the lower corner---covers something along the way, in its seventy+years of age.


 We had a very merry, merry Christmas here, what OLD Vintage goody was under your tree?

Thanks, for stopping by and I will be happy to answer any questions or comments.

All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions or posts. Please do not use photos without linking back to this blog without my permission. Thank you for your cooperation, Sandi Magle

I will be posting at these great Link Parties:

Sandi



Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Vintage DIY Terra Cotta Gingerbread and more

Family traditions are most important. 
Across the northern Chicago suburbs, I hope some of the several hundreds of terracotta Gingerbread houses in the 1970's-90's I made for craft shows are still lighting and warming homes.

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Our village collection is a smattering of those I made, and those purchased for a memory or likeness of something in our lives. We added the slide-in frame that juts out from the buffet, to give us some more village room. The frame has a lid, so the electrical, pond, streets all stay the same now and the whole thing is stored in the garage. Setup is now an couple of hours, instead of days.

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 Here is our house...of course not to scale, but certainly a good facsimile, complete with birdfeeder and bath and the tree in front with the lights. One of the four reindeer is left on the roof, and Santa must be down the chimney--because he isn't in the sleigh anymore.

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All the terra cotta houses/shops were all made with slabs of red clay--glazed with tinted froth--that was used on the ceramic trees so popular at the time and fired in a kiln. I used chromium green, a yellow, white, pink and blue frosting look and that's all. They were assembled with silicone tub caulk.

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I added new houses/shops each year and made special requests, the prices ranged from $20-$50. All were custom decorated with amber windows, little decorations---which have held up pretty well over the years.

Across the street from our house is the sweet house with a front porch and train decorations...it is has the lovely blue roof, and of course, real bottle trees, already 40 years old or so.


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Over the years have added a few meaningful pieces for various manufacturers.

Up the street is a Victorian, very close to the one we had in northern Wisconsin. Remember the movie "The Money Pit"---yes that was it--a three-story Victorian with original plumbing a monster oil furnace and a 1/4 of a lot. Only thing missing on this is the listing front porch...LOL.

Here is its lovely--all painted, shingled, roofed and lovely. It's perched on a small hill and all the neighborhood kids are sledding there.

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 Here is Snoopy and Woodstock sharing a house with a family pet. (They are vintage from the 1980's, I believe.)


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Just west of the Victorian is the Market---the meeting place for carolers...and like all good merchants, the entire place is on SALE, lol.

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Across the street in the park is the Municipal tree, and of course our armed forces represented, purchased when my son was in the navy in the early 1990s.

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The park has a playground for the kids,


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and icefishermen jaw as they fish the pond.  A few kids enjoy a bonfire and roast marshmallows---on the pond, lol. The three-year-old Grand did most of the figure placing...missed that. The ice is a mirror with stain-glasspaint on it, and the snow is just that---snow. It's magic you know. Great-Grandpa stands ont he dock with the fishing gear. Hope he has good luck to stock the Fishmarket.

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Across the street from the park is of course the Candy shop---complete with sucker decorations and candy canes. Yellow gumdrops are glazed on the front. You can see the texture of the glaze and the 'icing' dripping. The bicycle built for two must be ours...as we shop for candy for the stockings.

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 To the left of the Candy Shop is the main bridge over the stream that feeds the pond...trickling over rocks and piles of snow.

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 Also in the center of the village is the church--complete with steeple, glazed cross doors. I didn't tell you all the glaze was applied with squirt bottles for authenticity---and if it dripped, it dripped. The reverend is calleing everyone to 9:00 services ---see on the clock! Some of my lamposts have lost their tops---need to call the city maintenance teams about that!


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 You can see the Steeple on the church just to the left of the blue stream.

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The Bakery is all yellow and pink, see the cupcake painted on the side. The window is full of decorations, and unlike Chicago there is lots of snow!


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 One of my favorite shops is the Mercantile with its flat front and Victorian roofline. Goods spread out on the porch, everything from bread and fruit to animal feed. Santa is busy collecting for the kettle. And kids sledding between the shops.


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In the back corner is the Sports Shop, made for my boys in the 1980's as they got older and toy and bakery shops weren't that exciting. Behind is the Deer Grove-a real Forest Preserve near our house. When we moved here in the 1980's, we had deer, possums, pheasants, bull frogs, and a racoon that dragged clams up from the lake to wash in our little pond. I could tell because he left the clam shells smashed on the sidewalk.

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When I added floral designer to my resume in the 1990's we purchased this floral shop. It is very reminiscent of my shop BarberryLane in the Volo Antique Mall complex. I was there for 10 years, until my parents needed more care.

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We are avid fisher people, so the Bait shop was made for my husband and has tons of miniatures around it. Yes, that is a bobber display and Coke next to it. Lures and worm tins are in the window.
I had so much fun making this one-of-a-kind for my hubby!

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For my family history is the FishMarket. My Dad loved this...and the proprietor has quite a fish from right off the boat. The window is full of Fresh Catch---There's always good fishing here.

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Now a quick sleighride home, can't you just hear the sleigh bells!

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From our Village to yours....Merry Christmas!


Thank you always for stopping by, I will be happy to answer any questions and answer comments.


All the opinions and photographs in this blog are my own, I have not been paid or reimbursed in anyway for my opinions or posts. Please do not use photos without linking back to this blog without my permission. Thank you for your cooperation, Sandi Magle

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