A dollhouse
is a toy home, made in miniature. For the last century, dollhouses have primarily been the domain of children but their collection and crafting is also a hobby for many adults.
Today's dollhouses trace their history back about four hundred years to the baby house
display cases of Europe, which showed idealized interiors. Smaller doll houses with more realistic exteriors appeared in Europe in the 1700s. Early dollhouses were all handmade, but following the Industrial Revolution and World War II, they were increasingly mass produced and became more standardized and affordable.
Contemporary children's play dollhouses are commonly in 1:18 (or 2/3") scale, while 1:12 (or 1") scale is common for dollhouses made for adult collectors.
The term dollhouse
is common in the United States and Canada. In UK usage, dolls' house
or dollshouse
is usual.
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A DOLL'S HOUSE TICKETS
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History
Miniature homes, furnished with domestic articles and resident inhabitants, both people and animals, have been made for thousands of years. The earliest known examples were found in the Egyptian tombs of the
Old Kingdom, created nearly five thousand years ago. These wooden models of servants, furnishings, boats, livestock and pets placed in the Pyramids almost certainly were made for religious purposes.
The earliest known European dollhouses were the
baby houses
from the Sixteenth Century, which were cabinet
display cases made up of rooms. They showed idealized interiors complete with extremely detailed furnishings and accessories. The cabinets were built with architectural details and filled with miniature household items and were solely the playthings of adults. They were off-limits to children, not because of safety concerns for the child but for the dollhouse. Such cabinet houses
[1] were trophy collections owned by the few matrons living in the cities of Holland, England and Germany who were wealthy enough to afford them, and, fully furnished, were worth the price of a modest full-size house's construction.
Smaller doll houses such as the Tate house, with more realistic exteriors, appeared in Europe in the 1700s.
[2]
The early European dollhouses were each unique, constructed on a custom basis by individual craftsmen. With the advent of the Industrial Revolution, factories began mass producing toys, including dollhouses and miniatures suitable for furnishing them. German companies noted for their dollhouses included Christian Hacker, Moritz Gottschalk,
Elastolin, and Moritz Reichel. The list of important English companies includes Siber & Fleming, Evans & Cartwright, and
Lines Brothers (which became Tri-ang). By the end of the nineteenth century American dollhouses were being made in the United States by The Bliss Manufacturing Company.
Germany was the producer of the most prized dollhouses and doll house miniatures up until
World War I. Notable German miniature companies included
Märklin, Rock and Garner and others. Their products were not only avidly collected in Central Europe, but regularly exported to Britain and North America. Germany's involvement in WWI seriously impeded both production and export. New manufacturers in other countries arose.
The TynieToy Company of Providence, Rhode Island, made authentic replicas of American antique houses and furniture in a uniform scale beginning in about 1917.
[3] Other American companies of the early twentieth century were Roger Williams Toys, Tootsietoy, Schoenhut, and the Wisconsin Toy Co. Dollhouse dolls and miniatures were also produced in Japan, mostly by copying original German designs.
After World War II, dollshouses became mass produced in factories on a much larger scale with less detailed craftsmanship than ever before. By the 1950s, the typical dollhouse sold commercially was made of painted
sheet metal filled with plastic furniture. Such houses cost little enough that the great majority of girls from the developed western countries that were not struggling with rebuilding after World War II could own one.
As a hobby
Dollhouses are available in different forms. From ready-made and decorated houses to kits to custom built houses made to the customer's design. Some design and build their own dollhouse. Simpler designs might consist of boxes stacked together and used as rooms.
Miniature objects used for decoration inside dollhouses include
furniture,
interior decorations, dolls and items like
books and
clocks. Some of these are available ready-made, but may also be homemade.
There are dozens of miniature trade shows held throughout the year by various miniature organizations, where artisans and dealers display and sell miniatures. Often, how-to seminars are part of the show features.
Construction
In the United States, most houses have an open back and a fancy front facade, while British houses are more likely to have a hinged front that opens to reveal the rooms.
Children's dollhouses during the 20th century have been made from a variety of materials, including metal (
tin litho), fibreboard, plastic, and wood. With the exception of
Lundby, 2/3-scale furniture for children's dollhouses has most often been made of plastic.
Contemporary kit and fully built houses are typically made of
plywood or
medium density fibreboard. Tab-and-slot kits use a thinner plywood and are held together by a system of tabs and slots (plus glue). These houses are usually light-weight and lower cost but often require siding, shingles, or other exterior treatments to look realistic. Kits made from heavier plywood or MDF are held together with nails and glue.
Standard scales
The baby houses of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and the toy dollhouses of the nineteenth and early twentieth century rarely had uniform scales, even for the features or contents of any one individual house. Although a number of manufacturers made lines of miniature toy furniture in the Nineteenth Century, these products were not to a strict scale.
Children's play dollhouses from most of the 20th and 21st centuries are
1:18 or two third inch scale (where 1 foot is represented by 2/3 of an inch). Common brands include
Lundby (Sweden), Renwal, Plasco, Marx, Petite Princess, and T. Cohn (all American) and Caroline's Home, Barton, Dol-Toi and Triang (English). A few brands use 1:16 or 3/4"-scale.
The most common standard for adult collectors is
1:12 scale, also called 1" or one inch scale (where 1 foot is represented by 1 inch.) Among adult collectors there are also smaller scales which are much more common in the United States than in Britain.
1:24 or half inch scale (1 foot is 1/2") was popular in Marx dollhouses in the 1950s but only became widely available in collectible houses after 2002, about the same time that even smaller scales became more popular, like
1:48 or quarter inch scale (1 foot is 1/4") and
1:144 or "dollhouse for a dollhouse" scale.
In Germany during the middle part of the 20th century 1:10 scale became popular based on
the metric system. Dollhouses coming out of Germany today remain closer in scale to 1:10 than 1:12.
The largest common size for dollhouses is
Playscale or 1:6 which is proportionate for
Barbie, Ken, Blythe and other dolls 11-12 inches tall.
Notable dollhouses
- The Doll's House of Petronella Oortman c. 1686-1705. The Rijksmuseum Amsterdam estimates that P. Oortman spent twenty to thirty thousand guilders on her model house, the price of a real house along one of Amsterdam’s canals at that time. This dollhouse shows the linen room (laundry room), kitchen, and bedrooms in great detail. [1]
- The Tate House
(1760), on exhibit in the Museum of Childhood in London, England. [2]
- Queen Mary's Dolls' House was designed for Queen Mary in 1924 by Sir Edwin Lutyens, a leading architect of the time, and is on display at Windsor Castle. The house has working plumbing and lights and is filled with miniature items of the finest and most modern goods of the period. Writers like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Rudyard Kipling contributed special books which were written and bound in scale size. [6]
- Colleen Moore's Fairy castle
has been on display since 1950s at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, Illinois. [7]
- The 68 miniature Thorne Rooms
, each with a different theme, were designed by Mrs. James Ward Thorne and furniture for them was created by craftsmen in the 1930s and 40s. They are now at the Art Institute of Chicago. [8]
- In Tampere in Finland, the Moomin Museum displays the Moomin house
, a dollhouse created around the Moomin characters of Tove Jansson. The house was built by Jansson and some of her close friends and later donated to the town of Tampere. [9]
- The Dollhouse Museum (German: Puppenhausmuseum
) in Basel is the largest museum of its kind in Europe.
See also
References
- Doll's house - Rijksmuseum Amsterdam - Museum for Art and History
- Tate Baby House - 1760
- A Brief TinyToy History
- Doll's house - Rijksmuseum Amsterdam - Museum for Art and History
- Tate Baby House - 1760
- [1]
- [1]
- Thorne Miniature Rooms - The Art Institute of Chicago
- http://inter9.tampere.fi/muumilaakso/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=24&Itemid=47