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personal Style - Dollhouse Decor


Veronica ScottThe home is supposed to be a representation of one's taste and style. You take pride in what you buy for your home, making sure the furniture, curtains and Read more...

Today's Article:

finished Doll Houses

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Laura Anne Grey

If you want a finished doll house but the prospect of building, decorating and lighting your own dolls house is a bit daunting don't despair. Let someone else do all the hard work and deliver a fully built, decorated and lit dolls house directly to your door and ready for you to start enjoying. Building, decorating and lighting a dolls house is a big job. It will take the average collector several months to get their dolls house finished and ready for furnishing. Although this process is very enjoyable for most if you hate DIY or can't wait to have your dolls house finished it can be a chore. A much easier option is a fully finished doll house that you don't have to do any work to and is ready for your doll family to move in.

There are many dolls house shops worldwide that will be happy to build, light and decorate the dolls house for you. You can go to a shop and choose the dolls house, wall paper and lighting you want. You can specify which room each piece is to go in and they will do all the hard work for you and deliver your dolls house when complete. The plus side of getting a shop to do the work is that you can choose exactly what you want and know that it will be fitted professionally.

You won't have to worry about getting all the pieces in the right place or whether you should paint your house before or after building. You won't have the problem of lights not working or how to test you wiring circuits for faults. And you won't have the problems that all new dolls house collectors have with wallpaper not sticking and peeling off and bubbling. Your dolls house will be delivered fully finished by an experienced miniaturist.

Remember to leave plenty of time to have your doll house built because it can take up to a month for a dolls house shop to build a finished doll house.

Another option is to purchase a ready painted doll house. A ready painted doll house would be fully painted on the outside and ready for you to decorate on the inside. This is a more cost effective option than purchasing a finished doll house.

Laura Anne Grey has been a doll house builder and miniature enthusiast for over ten years. She own a doll house business in South Wales and is an expert in her field. Find out more information on doll houses at http://www.doll-house-miniature-club.com and http://www.ladollshouse.com

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  • Hanging in there

    In more ways than one! Had a fun day today - my friend Karen has an art play day every month and I was able to make it today. We played with fabric paint and Shiva paint sticks. Fun. I don't own any rubbing plates (amazing, eh?) - and she didn't have the paint sticks - so it worked out great, lol. While I was there I colored my severed hands with Dye-na-flow - and when I got home I strung them up in the garage to dry. I don't know why I didn't think of that before. They do look kind of creepy hanging there!


    Please continue reading Hanging in there at Art Dolls



  • Plush, plush

    I have nearly sold out of the plush down at The Stash so I bought a bunch more fleece and I'm making more. I'm SO glad they are being loved! These are the latest two .. this is LizzieBeth - Lizzie wants to be a stripper but Beth wants to be an electrical engineer - they aren't really happy with each other right now.


    Then we have EllieMae - she told me her story but the radio was on and she was whispering. I asked her to repeat it but she refused. So, who knows? When I took these down to the store there were two little girls there with their Mom - and the younger one (7? maybe 8?) immediately picked up Ellie and hugged her. Can't ask for a better compliment!!!!


    and and and ... I got a start on four severed hands today ! It feels good to be making something again!


    Please continue reading Plush, plush at Art Dolls



  • Slowly, slowly

    Did a bit more work on the collage - fixed the hair and did some 'decorating'. I'm up to the face but I haven't drawn one in 7 months. I traced the shape onto some tracing paper and tried to draw one. Ai yi yi. Not a good thing, LOL. I'm going to have to do some practicing before I lay down more paint on this.


    Please continue reading Slowly, slowly at Art Dolls


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    Vintage Doll Collecting - Engel-Puppen Doll Company

    Connie Limon

    Engel-Puppen has been in business for more than 100 years. It is the oldest doll factory at its location in Roedental, Bavaria, Germany.

    The Engel-Puppen dolls produce almost any type of doll from small playable vinyl dolls to decorative dolls in original German costumes, from nostalgic collectible dolls to valuable artist dolls made of porcelain in limited editions. The company also produces a large variety in doll clothes and accessories. One very important fact about the Engel-Puppen doll lines and accessories is that they are all made in Germany and meet the standard of quality that German products are known for all over the world.

    At the end of the 19th century, home-workers in the city of Rodental, collected materials from their contractors located in world city of toys, Sonneberg. The dolls were usually complete. Most of the workers worked from workshops in their living rooms.

    The first doll factory was established in Monchroden in October/November of 1896 by Edmuch Knoch and his wife, Emilie. Together they started working in one room of her father's house, but soon outgrew the space and moved to another house in Rothinestr 7. They moved into their own factory building in 1908 in Lange Wiesen 6.

    The first big success of the Edmund Knoch Company was the small princess dolls sold mostly by exporters from Hamburg. Their next biggest customers were the export companies from Sonneberg, which is the oldest toy city in the world.

    Edmund Knoch died in 1934. Edmund's son, Otto and his mother began to run the company, which now had 30 employees and home workers.

    After the Second World War, Otto Knoch and his wife, Helga restarted the doll production with a trade mark of the letters "E.K." with a crown over them. Most deliveries went to the wholesalers and exporters in Sonneberg until the year of 1948.

    Three more important doll factories were established in Germany. These were:

    • E. Maar & Sohn in 1910
    • Drei-M in 1920
    • Zapf in 1931

    The materials changed over the years from pressing compo, paper-mache, casting compo, porcelain and rubber to hard plastic and vinyl. Hard plastic and vinyl are materials of choice for doll production today.

    With the death of Helga Knoch, Otto retired. His son, Lothar, had become a lawyer and was not interested in the doll business. Otto Knoch died in 1985.

    January 1, 1976, Helmuth Engel came into the company and rented it for three years. Helmuth Engel worked with dolls all his life. After his childhood days in school, he joined the Drei-M doll company, which was one of the largest doll companies in Germany at that time. After 25 years working for the Drei-M doll company, Helmuth Engel decided to start his own company.

    Helmuth Engel lead the Knoch Company in 1976 and at that time a new trademark was designed. The trademark was an angel with a crown placed in an oval. In 1979, Helmuth Engel bought the Knoch Company and moved the company to a larger building at Monchrodener Str. 55 on the main road in Rodental, which is located near the old factory. The company's name was changed from Edmund Knoch to "Helmut Engel."

    Helmuth's daughter Susanne joined the company in 1983. By 1992, Susanne Engel created a part of the Engel collection. Markus Engle, the youngest child of Helmuth was the designated successor of Helmuth Engel. He joined the company in 1989. The company changed into a corporation with the name of "Engel-Puppen GmbH." Markus Engel now leads the business as the sole manager.

    Source: Engel-Puppen Online

    Important Disclaimer: The URL address in the resource box of this article is not associated with the Engel-Puppen Doll Company or any of its employees. This article is offered for information to the would-be and avid vintage doll collector.

    This article is FREE to publish with the resource box

    © 2007 Connie Limon All Rights Reserved

    Written by: Connie Limon. For more information about starting and maintaining a Vintage Doll Collection visit http://smalldogs2.com/VintageDollCollecting For a variety of FREE reprint articles as well as special sections in U.S. History and the Kennedy Administration visit http://www.camelotarticles.com

         

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