Showing posts with label KT Miniature Workshops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KT Miniature Workshops. Show all posts

Saturday, 16 March 2024

Last Week's "Old Style Kitchen" Workshops.

We had great fun making furniture & accessories based on an "Old Style Kitchen" theme, at last Saturday's workshops in Thame.  Thank you to everyone who came - I look forward to seeing photos of your completed creations. Also sending our good wishes to Lindsey, who sadly went down with Covid two days before so not able to come. I do hope you are feeling better Lindsey!

MORNING WORKSHOP

Morning Workshop - Old Style Kitchen Project

Everyone had a choice to make their items in either 1/12th or 1/16th scales. 

Replica Ranges In Both Scales Based On Old German Style Toy Range. 
 

The ranges were made from card and mountboard, there was a choice of various colours with which to paint them. 
Utensil Racks & Jugs Made Out Of Card & Packaging. 


The items in this workshop project were mostly made from grey cardboard, mountboard, card, plus some recycled materials. 


Effective vintage style towels for the  racks were made from a strip of old cotton fabric that had been edged with red or blue pen stripes. 

Aerial Photo Of Morning Workshop Creations In Both Scales

As everyone was so engrossed in the actual construction of the kitchen items and thrilled with what they were making,  it was jointly decided to wait until the last hour of the afternoon and paint the items made in both workshops all in one go. 

AFTERNOON WORKSHOP
Afternoon Workshop - Old Style Kitchen Project


The afternoon workshop items were also offered in either 1/12th or 1/16th scales. 
Antique Style Sink
Antique Style Sink Made From Card & Cardboard, Based On A British Made Tin Sink Seen In A 1920s Dolls House I Once Owned

These items were also mostly made from grey cardboard, mountboard, card, paint, plus other recycled materials including lollipop sticks and salvaged taps from old dolls house furniture. 
Antique German Marklin Style Rack & Tins Made From Card

Scaled Down Replicas Of Old German Dresser From My Own Collection,
Simply Made From Cardboard & Mountboard. 

Aerial Photo Of Afternoon Workshop Creations In Both Scales


I had intended to take photos of all our projects as they progressed throughout the day, but time simply flew and I totally forgot to take any, until almost at the end of the day. I ended up only taking four, and out of those, only these two came out...oops, sorry ladies!

News of KT Miniatures' next workshop which I am aiming to run on a Saturday in October, will be coming shortly. Places are limited to only 6 people, so if you would like to come, please don't hesitate to get in touch and put your name on the "Workshop Reserve List".

If you click on the following link, you can see more photos on the March Workshop Albums:


Thursday, 9 July 2020

Fiona's Completed Miniature Workshop Projects - Absolutely Fab!

The other day I got a lovely surprise when a certain email dropped into my inbox from Fiona, with photos of two workshop projects that she did with us a while ago now, and which are now completed. I was so bowled over from what I saw that I asked Fiona if she would allow me to share her creations with you all on here, and she has kindly agreed. So here we are...


Here are the workshop project prototypes of the Early 1900s German Style Shop, a workshop that took place back in 2016. As you can see the project was offered in both 1/12th and 1/24th scale. 

Our "Nostalgia In Miniature Workshops" was a joint venture which I ran with Robin Britton for several years until we closed in the summer of 2016, due to Robin's retirement from miniatures. The very last project we made was an early 1900s German style shop, and it was at that last workshop that Fiona made this shop project. 

Fiona's Hat Shop

 As Fiona wanted to make a hat shop, she decided not to make all the drawers and some other bits & bobs that were provided with the kit, as she wanted to make more space for the hats. It made complete sense and by omitting them, has enabled Fiona to have a lot more display space to show off a real variety of lovely hats. 

Fiona was very taken with the way the cabinets were decorated with flowers cut from paper doilies and then painted - she felt that one did not need any artistic ability for that technique. It may be a simple technique, but we think Fiona did a brilliant job and they look very pretty indeed. 

Most of Fiona's hats were made following instructions which she bought from Cynthia Howe's website, and Fiona told me that she has been working on the hats during lockdown. Apparently she still has a few left to make. 
Fiona goes on to say that the handbags were made at a class run by Jamie Carrington at CMW, and the hat boxes and other small boxes she bought from Art Of Mini. I love the grey and white painted floor which Fiona created here. (You will see below that she used the same floor painting technique in her kitchen using different colours). 

This is the prototype of the Early 1900s German Style Kitchen workshop project that took place in 2018, offered in 1/12th scale only. Many of the vintage bits and pieces seen in this photo belong to my own personal collection and were used for advertising purposes in order to illustrate how one could fill the kitchen once complete. 
In 2018 I started up the workshops again, but this time just under the banner of KT Miniatures, and Fiona attended one of them. The project we made was an early 1900s German style kitchen, with some accessories...and here is Fiona's brilliant creation!


Fiona's Early 1900s German Style Kitchen
Fiona said that she had been meaning to send a photo of this ages ago to show me but then decided to wait until she was able to hang the warming pan and grill rack on the wall, which finishes it off nicely. Doesn't this look super!

She says that she really enjoyed working on this German style kitchen. She used the same painting technique on the floor as she did with the shop and says that it is such a thrill when the time comes to peel off all the masking tape to find one's painted checked flooring looking rather lovely underneath. On this floor she used a combination of terracotta and cream paint, and it does indeed look beautiful!



Some accessories were part of the workshop project so were handmade by Fiona. The rest are a mixture of both vintage and "modern" bits that Fiona has bought at fairs. She fancies having a go at making either a peg or Fimo doll to go in her kitchen (she has a mould which she can use) but says that is for some time in the future. 


I think you will agree with me that Fiona's creations are utterly brilliant. Thank you Fiona for letting us all take a peek! 
The original antique German kitchens and shops are becoming so hard to find these days, let alone affordable so it is great fun having a go at creating reproduction German style room settings such as these.