emilymorganti.com

The Fairfield’s garden, in full bloom

My Fairfield has been in progress for six and a half years, and it’s *this* close to being complete. I have some details to finish (a few baseboards, the upper porch railings), plus I’m still working on furniture for some of the rooms. But even though it’s not quite done, the house has been placed on a base and fully landscaped—with a lot of help from my mom and dad during their visit last week.

The house sits on an 18″ x 20″ base with a turntable. We would have made it 20″ x 20″, but the Lemax grass I had in my stash—which I got for 70% off from Michael’s in January—was only 18″ wide. Oh well.

The base is made out of plain old plywood, with trim covering the edges. My dad mitered and attached the trim, which I then stained with Minwax Golden Pecan to match the shingles. The bottom part of the base is covered in felt so it won’t scratch the surface it sits on.

The wire for the lights pokes in through a hole drilled in the base and connects under the kitchen. The house itself is not secured to the base, but I’m not planning to move it unless I really have to, for fear of messing up the plants. (I did remove it mid-project, to take the turntable outside and stain it, and managed to get it back into place without any major catastrophes. But I don’t want to tempt fate!)

The flagstones in the path and the sundial are among the only items we bought at an actual dollhouse store. Almost everything else in the garden was made using fake flowers from Michael’s and the Dollar Tree. I’ll post another blog this weekend that goes into more detail on how we created the garden, but for now, here’s some eye candy… (Update: the blog with how-to details is here.)

The plants we made include pink and purple azaleas, white rose bushes, globe arborvitae bushes, white hydrangeas, a yellow foxglove, and a bridal veil bush. We also found spots for a couple of pine trees that I got at the dollar store last Christmas.

The little rocks bordering the flower beds are from the gardening section at Michael’s. The “soil” is finely ground coffee.

To make the path, I first glued down the flagstones, then covered the areas around them with Mod Podge and dropped in the pebbles. Next I diluted Mod Podge with water and dribbled it all over the pebbles to form a seal.

The window boxes are made out of skinny sticks and clippings from the same fake flowers we used for the rest of the garden. The tree (my mom thinks it looks like an elm) is dried caspia basil wrapped with masking tape, which I then painted brown to form the trunk.

The flowering tree was originally a bare winter tree from Lemax that I got on clearance at Michael’s years ago. The blossoms and leaves are precariously attached with hot glue. My mom did most of them… I tried a few myself and seemed to be knocking off two leaves for every one I glued on, so I gave up. Some trees in my neighborhood are just starting to get their leaves while other trees and plants are in full bloom, so at art is imitating life…

Here’s the finished Fairfield in its new location—right in the entryway, so it’s the first thing that anyone will see when they come in. (After so many years under construction, it’s about time!)

8 Comments

  1. Krista Chesal

    Wow! You and your Mom did a beautiful job. Plus, it’s so great that you could share your hobby with her! I’m really looking forward to the detailed garden information. Well done!

  2. mary morganti

    Em it looks great! I came home and gardened and gardened trying to coax real plants to behave as well as the Fairfield variety. Love, Mom

  3. Marie L. Meegan

    Emily, You are amazing! Your project has such skill, good taste and beauty. It does not surprise me considering your background. Imagine a dad “engineer” and a mom mathematician/landscape gardener. The combination of genes helped, but I know you did the work and had the vision. Congratulations! Love and peace, Marie

  4. Todd Billig

    Hi Emily, your folks were boasting, so I had to check it out. WOW these doll houses are beautiful! Of course with such creative and resourceful parents, you have good genetics for becoming the creative artist! Great Job!
    Todd (mom & dad’s massage therapist)

  5. Emily

    Thanks everyone! :)

  6. Shirley

    Hallo Emily,

    I like your house it so beautifull.
    Can I ask you where I can bay the Siding?
    I hope you can help me.

    Greats, Shirley

  7. Emily

    Thank you! I bought the siding at Miniatures.com. But you can get it from other places, too. It’s Houseworks brand and has a 1/4″ lap.

  8. Heather

    Love this!!! Really creative! You all did a great job!!! Very informative! Thank you! :)

Leave a Reply to Marie L. Meegan Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2024 The Den of Slack

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑