Last Saturday was the Producers Guild of America annual awards ceremony at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza, and I loved sitting a few tables away from Clint Eastwood, Brad Pitt, stunning Keira Knightley et al. The highlight was listening to producer Gale Anne Hurd describe how she climbed that ladder as a female producer in the '80s.
Photo courtesy of John Shearer |
Anyway, I owe you photos and explanation as to how I made more of the furniture in the Santa's Workshop miniature piece. People have asked about the hutch, so I've explained below.
Note to non-American English speakers... 'hutch' is not something to keep your pet rabbit in. Here in the US 'hutch' means Welsh dresser. Yes, hutch means dresser. I know... baffled me at first too.
When designing the Santa / Father Christmas Workshop set, my aim was that it shouldn't look too realistic or dollhouse-esq, but like a whimsical, magical little world. I created the furniture to be a bit kooky and asymmetrical. You can see a sketch of the hutch in a previous post here. It should look a bit like a gingerbread house, full of unusual sweets and with painted decals like something from Germany or Switzerland.
I started by cutting odd shapes of basswood and gluing them together with wood glue. I built up the shelves and sides of the hutch with further pieces of basswood. Each time I glued something down I had to clamp it and wait as basswood easily distorts.
I cut the top front piece with an arch, to display something decorative inside it, and made sure the heights of the shelves would fit my tiny glass jars.
The candy took days longer than the hutch. Pieces were made by me from polymer clay using a caning technique. I made lids for these tiny glass jars (jars were sourced), filled them with different colourful candy and glued the lids down.
The cupboard doors and drawers didn't need to open, so I made paper templates of different fun shaped door facades, then traced them onto basswood, cut them out, sanded them, stained them with the same wood-stain and glued them down.
I drilled holes into each door facade and glued tiny wooden doorknobs in. This really helps to create the illusion of an opening door / drawer. I also painted detailed tiny patterns at this stage.
Next all I had to do was glue all those tiny glass jars of candy in place, and paint a wooden ladder in a candy cane design. I also added individual pieces of candy on the bottom shelf and tiny folded silk cloths which were ironed and glued into shape beforehand.