Build Your Own Inexpensive Dollhouse: With One Sheet of 4' by 8' Plywood and Home Tools
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Anyone, even a novice woodworker or a child with adult supervision, can build this spacious dollhouse. All it takes is six basic tools (a folding rule, square, saber saw, rasp, sander, and hammer) and a single sheet of 4' x 8' plywood. The finished two-story model measures 36 1/2" x 26" (scale 1" x 1') and boasts six rooms, plus a staircase, windows, shutters, and a front door.
The easy-to-follow instructions offer advice on purchasing the appropriate kind of plywood and trimmings and explain exactly how to cut and assemble the pieces. Helpful tips include suggestions on sanding, which pieces to nail first, constructing the roof, and finishing the project with paint or siding.
The basic house design is simple, so builders have ample room to refine the house to suit their own preferences. Dozens of diagrams and instructions show how to add optical touches such as dormers, windowpanes, a fireplace, flower boxes, and much more. All instructions are clarified by illustrations — over 40 diagrams and photographs appear throughout the book, showing the dollhouse in various stages of completion.
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Build Your Own Inexpensive Dollhouse - E. J. Tangerman
SHUTTERS
Introduction
My objective in this book has been to design a dollhouse, in the standard 1 foot to 1 inch scale, that can be built for under $30, from one sheet of 4′ x 8′ plywood, using basic home tools. The house can be built in a kitchen or living room (rather than in a workshop) by someone with no carpentry skills.
There are a number of design options to enable you to tailor the house to your own needs and preferences. For instance, while the house includes both a kitchen and bath, either or both of these rooms can be converted to a den, study or nursery. The upstairs hall can be omitted entirely; partitions can be moved to change room dimensions and functions; additional rooms can be added in the attic. Such details as the stairs, interior doorways and doors, dormers, chimneys and fireplace can be entirely omitted, if you choose. Window positions can be altered and windows added or subtracted—all without changing the basic dimensions or shape of the house. It is even possible to omit the back wall and affix the front one permanently (one or the other should be stationary for stability) if an open display case is preferred.
This is, in other words, a simple, flexible design for a sturdy dollhouse that will give you a special satisfaction because you have made it yourself and that you will be proud to hand down to your children and grandchildren.
It is a good idea to read all of the instructions before beginning to work on the dollhouse.
The costs of building this dollhouse will probably increase over time. The cost estimates in this book were made in 1977.
1
The Bill Depends Upon the Bill of Materials
This house is made from one full 4′ x 8′ sheet of ½″ interior plywood. The plywood must be ½″ thick, but the grade can suit your preference and your purse.
Fir plywoods are least expensive (nothing is cheap anymore). You can buy fir sheathing for about $10 per sheet. This will have knot-holes, splits and other imperfections on both sides, and will not be sanded smooth. AD fir, at about $14 per sheet, will have one good, clear side, but the other will have blemishes. AB grade, costing about $18, has one side of clear, first-quality wood, but the other side has had the blemishes cut out and patched. If you are planning to cover all surfaces with decorative materials, such as miniature siding, brick, wallpaper, etc., these inexpensive plywoods would be good choices. However, if you are planning to paint the dollhouse, a good deal of time and effort will be necessary to eliminate the blemishes by filling them with water putty and sanding them smooth. Surfaces to be painted will need a prime coat of Firzite or shellac to keep the grain from rising and showing through the finish as a result of variations in humidity. Fir-faced plywoods also tend to splinter easily, and thus require careful handling.
Much less likely to splinter are plywoods faced with either white pine or birch. These woods have less obtrusive grains and easy-to-finish surfaces; in fact, the surfaces look good even unfinished, and they can readily be stained to simulate paneling. The house illustrated in this book was made with AB grade birch plywood, costing about $34 a sheet.
It is possible to get mahogany or even walnut-surfaced plywood (at $58 and $70