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Victorianna master bedroom: finishing the closet

Remember just last week when I said I wasn’t going to start on any big projects until I finished the Rowhouse shingles? I’m going back on my word. I want to get the roof on the Victorianna and to do that I need to finish the three rooms on the third floor. The nursery and master bathroom are more or less done so I turned my attention to the master bedroom.

I started by papering and gluing in the sloped roof.

There wasn’t a lot of edge to glue to, so I glopped glue in the slots for good measure.

Last year I built a closet to go in this room. The closet is made from a door and a wall that I hadn’t yet glued together. I wanted to add a clothing rod to the closet, which required gluing in the wall but not the door, so I’d be able to reach in to add the rod.

I cut a piece of 1/4″ x 3/8″ strip wood the width of the closet, to provide support for the wall.

This also blocks a gap between the roof and floor that was visible through the closet door.

Then I cut pieces to go on the opposite side of the wall. The wall is now wedged between the strip wood, which gives it support.

The strip wood also ensures that the knee wall stands up straight, and provides a surface to glue to.

Like on the other side of the house, the triangle behind the knee wall will be covered up with siding.

I planned to make a clothing rod and shelf like I did for the closet in the girl’s room downstairs. I’d bought another set of the Northeastern Scale Lumber brackets (which are discontinued and hard to find), but when I opened them I discovered these were a larger style than the ones I’d used elsewhere in the house.

Here’s where the bracket would have had to go to fit behind the closet door. That makes the clothing rod much too low.

I cut off the ends so the bracket could fit higher up on the wall.

Here’s the idea. A shelf will go on top.

Before gluing in the walls, I traced them on to a piece of wallpaper. The seam at the top of the knee wall will be covered with quarter round.

When I cut the wallpaper, I messed up where the diagonal and straight pieces meet – the angle should have continued until it meets the horizontal edge. This resulted in a little triangle of bare wood visible behind the wallpaper.

I added a scrap of wallpaper so that bare wood won’t show.

Next I glued in the strip wood and the two walls. The closet door is not glued in at this point — it can be removed by sliding it up.

I added one more piece of strip wood behind the knee wall, to give the siding more of a surface to attach to.

This is not glued in yet (it needs to be painted first), but here’s how that will look.

I cut the wallpaper so it ends right at the edge of the knee wall, rather than wrapping around (which was dumb). I painted the edge of the wall in case it’s visible at the edge. This is the pink house color, which is fairly close to the wallpaper color.

Before gluing in the clothing rod, I made some hangers and clothes to go in the closet. It’s too hard to reach into the closet (and will be impossible once the door is glued in), so I had to do this as part of the closet assembly. I made these the same way as the clothes in the bedroom closet downstairs (you can read about it here).

I tightened the loops of the hangers on the rod so they can’t fall off, and then I inserted the rod into the brackets and glued the brackets to the walls. The shelf went in last.

With the closet door open, you just get a peek.

Next I glued in the wallpaper and quarter round trim.

And then I added the (now painted) siding piece.

I’d hoped to do the whole bedroom this weekend, but this all took longer than I thought it would! I’ll do the other side of the room next. For now, here’s how it looks with the roof on.

13 Comments

  1. Kathy

    Really cool! As I read your blog, I’m always amazed at how your mind envisions so many details before you move forward with any part of a project. Incredible!

    • Emily

      I think that’s why it takes me so long to get things done — I have to figure out exactly how to do it first. ;)

  2. ann

    You do such nice work. I am having to cut a new chimney because the bricked one looks awful and now I have to cut a another new piece because I glued it together wrong. I am thinking of making it out of lap siding. You are using lap siding in this post. Did it come with the kit or did you buy it and cut it to fit? Is it easy to work with? The bedroom looks very nice.

    • Emily

      I use the Houseworks siding (with a 1/4″ lap for half scale). You can get it at Miniatures.com. I’m not sure I’d use it for a chimney, though… I cut it with a utility knife and the edges tend to be ragged. It’s thin, so you would still need a block of wood for the chimney, and then put the lap siding over the wood. Generally I use corner trim at the corners to hide the ragged edges… depending on the size of the chimney there might not be much visible siding left after that!

      Have you tried egg carton stone or brick? Those could work well for a chimney since you can wrap stone/brick around the corner.

      • ann

        Thanks for letting me know about the siding. I have decided to use the stone stencil that came with the kit. Just makes me nervous getting the compound the correct consistency. Yes, I have considered egg cartoons, except that we have hens and when I have an over supply of eggs, I sell them and the cartoons don’t always make it back to me, so I have resisted cutting mine up. They would be so much easier to work with.

        Thanks for getting back to me. You are so good to do that.

  3. Sheila

    What a lovely room! The closet is perfect and there’s still enough room with the bed for a little sitting area or a big dresser

    • Emily

      Thanks! There will be a built-in dresser next to the tower room. I’m trying to decide if I should add another dresser to the open wall, so you see it from the back, or if that will look strange.

  4. Elizabeth S

    Not many dollhouse have the room for a closet let alone one with clothes hanging in it but you have incorportated both! The tutorial on how you made the clothes was BRILLIANT as well as your creative built- in which maximizes an otherwise wasted space- VERY CLEVER!
    I’ve also enjoyed your method of stabilizing the half-wall with the in-fill strips behind it, wihch makes perfect sense.
    The color of the room and the Beautiful bed you are including, is transforming this bedroom into a heavenly retreat.

    • Emily

      Thanks! :)

  5. Diane Siegler

    Beautiful room! I love how you put closets in your rooms. It adds a nice touch of realism.

    • Emily

      Thanks! :)

  6. Carr

    I am always so fascinated with dollhouse closets, and yours did not disappoint. I love the black iron bed too!

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