Tuesday, August 31, 2010

The Sandra Morris Colllection

Sometime in April this year, Sandra Morris of Dimunitive Dolls made the difficult decision to part with some of her much loved dollhouse books, books which she had collected for the past 25 years. I wasted no time and made a beeline for them. I bought so many that Sandra had to split the parcels into 3 different lots. She is from UK and I am in Singapore. To save on shipping, I picked surface mail. I knew I would have no problem receiving them because my experience with UK surface mail is they come slowly but surely. I received Parcel 3 6 days after they were posted out. In Sandra's words, "That's not just amazing, it's practically impossible!  It must have gone by air instead of surface mail.  Even if I'd got on a boat in England  along with the parcels I wouldn't have arrived in Singapore yet!"
These are the books in Parcel 3 :
DOLLS 
by Max von Boehn


GREENWARE PREPARATION FOR DOLLS HEADS with Eye Cutting Techniques
by Neva Wade Garnett
DOLLS (The Collector's Corner)
Grange Books


DOLLS
by John Noble 


HOW TO MAKE CERAMIC CHARACTER DOLLS and their accessories
by Sylvia Becker


THE DOLLS' HOUSE BOOK 
by Pauline Flick (pic of inside page)


OLD TOYS
by Pauline Flick


DOLLS' HOUSES Furniture and Decoration 
by Pauline Flick & Valerie Jackson (pic of inside page)


THE LITTLE DOLL ARTIST
by Beverly Parker


DOLLS' HOUSE DOLLS 1850-1900
by Magdalena Byfield


2 days later , on 29th April 2010,  I received Parcel 2. Apparently everyone was surprised including the staff at the post office in the UK. Parcel 2 had the rarer and more expensive books:

MINIATURE INTERIORS- Inspirational Interiors for Dolls' Houses
by Nick Forder


DOLLS' HOUSES -Domestic life and architectural styles in miniature 
from the 17th century to the present day
by  Olivia Bristol and Leslie Geddes-Brown (one of my favourite)


Make and Clothe Your Own DOLL'S HOUSE DOLLS
by Ellen Bedington


JUMEAU -Prince of Dolls
by Constance Eileen King (Pic of inside page)


And then we waited and waited and waited. More than four months later , Parcel 1 arrived today. I am so happy because this parcel has my favourite: 

DOLLS & DOLLS' HOUSES 
by Roger Baker


DOLLS' HOUSES -THE COLLECTOR'S GUIDE
by Valerie Jackson Douet


DOLLS AND DOLLS' HOUSES 
by Constance Eileen King


LETT'S GUIDE TO COLLECTING DOLLS
by Kerry Taylor


Thank you Sandra. I will love and treasure these books.  I am keeping them all in one place and they will collectively be known as The Sandra Morris Collection.

Friday, August 20, 2010

American Architectural Styles And Suggested Colour Scheme Pt 3


DUTCH REVIVAL/DUTCH COLONIAL

Modelled on the frame houses of the early Dutch settlers around New York, New Jersey and Delaware, the Dutch Revival house is a common suburban sight. The style usually features a sloping gambrel roof which jutt out over the facade, and a second-storey front that rises from the roof like an oversize dormer. These revived Dutch Colonials enjoyed their greatest popularity during the suburbia building boom of the 1920s to the 1940s, but variations on the type are still being built.
 

TUDOR REVIVAL

There's not much of the late Elizabethan about the American suburbs - except for the rambling Tudor Revival homes of the early twentieth century and their later more modest cousins. Thee slate roofed, half timbered houses were inspired by the English Renaissance houses of the sixteenth and early seventeenth century, and featured steeply pitched rooflines and rows of casement windows. Soon the style was adapted to smaller, more middle class suburban homes, though it made use of the same elements- steep roofs, overlapping gables, decorative half-timbers, or stone masonry and stucco exteriors. Tudor Revival was tremendously popular in the 1920s and early 1930s.

SPANISH COLONIAL REVIVAL

In the 1910s and 1920s, when architects and homebuilders in the Northeast looked to the past for inspiration, they tapped into their English colonial heritage. But in areas such as Florida, California, and the Southwest, the heritage was Spanish, and the style it produced was powerfully Mediterranean in flavour. Thick, textured stucco walls, red tile roofs, arched windows and heavy wood doors are all hallmarks of the style, which continues to be popular today, lending design elements to everything from new housing to shopping plazas.

GARRISON COLONIAL REVIVAL
 
The Garrison Colonial was one of the most popular  of the later Colonial Revival styles, reaching its peak from around 1935 to 1955 (though adaptations of the style are still built today). The hallmark of the Garrison is a slight second-storey overhang with the first storey often clad in brick and the second in wood siding. Many have a gabled side addition that houses either a garage or a family room. 




SPLIT LEVEL

As American as a backyard barbecue, teh classic split level was born during the post war building boom of the 1950s and 1960s. With a single storey at one end (usually the living room and kitchen) and two at the other (sunken garage and family room below and bedrooms above), the split level was soon a familiar sight throughout the countries as cars opened up farmland to residential development.



 
 
 
This is the end of the series on early American architecture. I hope you'll find this write up useful for the building of your dollhouses.

Monday, August 16, 2010

American Architectural Styles And Suggested Colour Scheme Pt 2


COLONIAL REVIVAL

 Following the patriotic celebrations of the 1876 Centennial, a new interest in American history inspired a revival of American Colonial architecture. Designs for houses for such fashionable architectural forms as McKim, Mead and White incorporated distinctive Colonial-era features, including the Palladian window, columned porticos, doors and windows pediments, and classical swags and urns. In its early phase, beginning in the 1880s,  the Colonial Revival was limited to opulent, large houses in exclusive neighbourhoods and summer resorts. By the 1920s, it was the favoured style  for more modest and suburban houses and has been popular since. The traditional colours for the early Colonial Revival houses was white, cream or pale yellow, with trim and shutters highlighted in a dark shade, such as green, blue, red or black. Red, brown, grey, blue and green have also become popular body colours, use any of these with contrasting trims.


GEROGIAN REVIVAL VERNACULAR OR FOURSQUARE

These plainspoken houses were built around the simple principle of the Georgian square or rectangular block, usually with a front porch and a sensible floor plan of four rooms on each floor arranged one in each corner. Foursquares were usually covered in clapboard, but there are certainly examples of the style in stone,  brick and stucco. The style predominates in the small towns of the Northeast and Midwest, but at least one classic American foursquare can be found in most older residential estates.


EARLY SEARS PREFABRICATED

Between 1908  and 1940, Sears, Roebuck and Company sold more than 50,000 precut homes- kits that included everything from blueprints to lumber and nails. The kits were shipped by rails, so most Sears homes were built in the Northeast and Midwest, the areas best served by rail lines. Styles were wildly eclectic -buyers paging through a Sears' "Catalogue of Modern Homes" could choose anything from a simple bungalow or cape or English or Spanish Mission-style cottage. Many Sears homes still stand today, particularly in the Midwestern farming communities that were once so dependent on mail-order goods.

BUNGALOW

From its birth in the 1900s through its boom through the following two decades, Americans were crazy about the bungalow. These solid, snug, one or one-and-a-half storey homes fed the need for affordable, modern housing, and they became one of the most popular housing styles. The typical bungalow featured a deep porch, incorporated under a wide, overhanging roof; a long, low profile and a simple interior with lots of built-in cupboards and nooks. Cheap and easy to build, bungalow designs were published in magazines and sold through the mail. Their porches and shady interiors were intended for warm-weather Southern and Western climates, but the styles spread into far frosting regions before its popularity faded.

CRAFTSMAN

Inspired by the English Arts and Crafts Movement, the Craftsman style is closely associated with the furniture maker, and designer Gustav Stickley, who published numerous designs for modest houses and bungalows in his Craftsman magazine (1901-16). The style, which reached the peak of its popularity in the 920s, is also identified with the works of such California  masters as the architects Greene and Greene, who rejected mass-produced materials and emphasized fine craftsmanship in wood and stone. The braod overhanging roof, deep porch, often sheltered by pergolas or trellises, and the horizontal lines of the Craftsman bungalows are the distinguishing features.The typical palettes incorporated natural greys, browns and greens to blend with the natural settings.