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The reasons why so many of us make miniatures vary widely. As a hobby, miniatures are engaging, enjoyable and a great way to direct inner creative energies. Some makers spend their time in this arts and crafts category to build, assemble and decorate a dollhouse or room box. Others enjoy the process of making tiny things while being part of a club or organization where there is collective camaraderie and shared community of like-minded folks with similar passions. Others turn to miniatures to help navigate difficult times, a means to help manage emotions, process traumatic experiences or to help survive a personal crisis.

Adam Koch, the theatrical stage and musical set designer from Brooklyn New York, channeled his grief after the passing of his father in 2017 by igniting his childhood passion for dollhouses and miniatures. He yearned to experience a satisfying and therapeutic healing and bring himself pure joy and fun during a particularly dark time. On losing his father, Adam says “…I had this impulse to invest in that dormant passion, I didn’t know where it would lead, but it felt good!”

He started his @DollhouseTherapy Instagram account by posting images of miniatures he found appealing including those from the famed Thorne Rooms at the Chicago Art Institute and Queen Mary’s Dolls House. As the COVID-19 pandemic became the 2020 reality, Adam began to expand his passion and yearning for joy and started to purchase and renovate vintage dollhouses, all the while documenting his progress on social media. His account has grown considerably as fans began following and enjoying his dollhouse and miniature projects. He truly found a new hobby to keep him busy during this difficult year.

Virginia-based arts educator and miniaturist Amanda Kelly (Instagram: @PandaMiniatures) is best known for her work “Her Bed” featured in the 2018 Badass Miniatures exhibition at D. Thomas Fine Miniatures in Yonkers, New York. The piece, inspired by work by the artist Tracey Emin (whose work has been featured at the Tate), is a vignette of the artist’s bedroom after a particularly distressing bout with depression during her college life. Amanda explains that sometimes making miniatures helps her to escape into another world.

A more recent piece, “Isolation,” which was on view at the Shelter in Place Gallery (a virtual exhibition space on Instagram @ShelterInPlaceGallery) is a 1/144 scale representation of an apartment building near her home in Brooklyn, New York, where she lived prior to relocating to Virginia.

The piece offers a view inside each of apartment (with marked moving boxes strewn about!) and reflects anxiety she was feeling and the flight response she had to the pandemic. She felt uprooted from her hometown of 10 years and reflects feelings of isolation and anxiety in New York City during the early days of the pandemic/quarantine, felt by so many. Amanda uses miniature making as “process therapy” and once she completes a project she says, “I can now move on, reflect back at a snapshot in time, while closing a chapter in my life. I feel like it’s definitely therapy.”

Robin Warner, from Portland, Oregon is a mom, artist, activist who creates “Diotraumas.” These are small scale vignettes and scenes crafted from found objects representing “short little chunks of time,” particularly hard times in her life. In one diotrauma, Robin recreated her childhood bedroom, from a particularly chaotic period of her life, filling a discarded razor package with items she recalls helped to soothe her anxiety especially books which she turned to escape into. Robin explains that once she completes a piece, “…it’s like releasing your inner ‘whatever’ through art so it becomes a piece on my shelf and is no longer stabbing my heart.” She goes on to say “I more fully understand that moment in my life. I understand how it fits today. Yeah, and I can love this little girl and I can forgive and thank this little girl. So, there's definitely a huge therapeutic component!” Robin plans to create several additional diotraumas and continue using them as a way to help cope with past experiences.

There are many reasons we turn to miniature making: creating to move past trauma, to overcome grief by helping to soothe the soul or to ease pain. We can learn to channel creative energy to help survive, overcome and move forward. Miniatures really do make happy!

Head over the DollsHouse and Miniature Scene Magazine for more news, features and talk about miniatures from the UK and around the world!

Until Next Time - Live Your Best MiniLife!



We met up with Craig Labenz from Craig Labenz Miniatures for a special Saturday edition of Meet the Miniaturist/Furniture and Structure Edition on May 8 at 3pm.

Craig is a freelance visual designer and WordPress developer who has had a passion for miniatures since he was a kid (sound familiar?).

Craig's technical miniature making skills are unmatched. Most of his work centers around recreating period furniture, environments and other objects (metal work!) in fine scale. He is quickly earning "master miniaturist" status and we wish he would quit his day job so there would be more of his awesome miniatures in the world!

We had a great chat with Craig, learned more about how wildly talented he is and focused on 1/12 scale furniture and structure and is skilled working with various materials like hardwoods and metals.

In addition to sharing his tiny treasures, workspace and favorite tools, Craig gave us a really good sense for what puts the "fine" in a fine miniature.

Thank you for all your support and encouragement for the Meet the Miniaturist series. There is no cost for this programming but If you like what you see and would like to contribute to the development of this ongoing series, follow this link: paypal.me/dthomasminiatures

Until Next Time: #LiveYourBestMiniLife



Ognyan Stefanov is an accomplished aviation photojournalist and graduate of the prestigious National Academy for Theater and Film Art in his native town of Sofia, Bulgaria. His award-winning aerial photographs have been featured at exhibitions and appeared in numerous global publications. Stefanov has an impressive resume of roles including official photographer for the Bulgarian Air Force and exclusive photographer to the President of Republic of Bulgaria. He has also achieved as much success with his work in miniature by winning scale modeling awards in featured competitions around the world.

Skyville is Stefanov's first, original creation and represents a utopian village in 1/87th scale measuring over 36" high (91 cm.) and 16” wide (41cm). It is a perfect and natural space, perched high in the sky, removed from the often seemed “unstable and modern crazy world" as he described in preparation for this post. Lush gardens and jeweled-toned landscapes highlight the small-scale environs presenting a community filled with homes, shops, barns and a two-story gazebo leading to a library.

Stefanov says, "I wanted to create a self-contained utopia where people have everything they need to live, surrounded by greenery and gardens and even a local inn offering traditional hospitality." Skyville is the perfect combination of cutting-edge architecture, fantasy art and futuristic design in small scale.

Large trees surround a hilly meadow which acts as the base of the structure and includes rock formations and a short footbridge over a narrow stream. A tall, winding and jagged truss extends up to the village where a number of unique structures are interconnected by a series of multi-level paths, pulleys, stairways and bridges which join the various areas together.

The village is highlighted by a large main house featuring a dramatic pitched roof with modern, sharp-edged tiles and irregularly shaped windows. Colorful flower beds with extending green vines fill window boxes to help soften the architecture while adding warmth and a sense of delight.

Additional structures necessary to sustain a traditional community are included in the village; each building and space is intricately designed to work together to carry the eye throughout the piece and provide a sense of discovery and wonder. Tall trees in large pots hang precariously throughout the piece and create an interesting design element while complementing the Stefanov’s concept of a self-contained environment.

Each figure in Skyville is placed with strategic purpose. A farmer dressed in overalls with tool box in hand appears in the meadow on the lower platform, heading to work. An elderly couple is seen enjoying afternoon tea on an outdoor balcony and a child plays on a swing in a nearby garden.


The interiors of each building are highly detailed. A bedroom features a dressed wrought iron bed, an ornate hanging chandelier and potted plants with blooming flowers. A dining room includes a large dining table topped with a checkered tablecloth set for a family’s evening meal.

Skyville was mostly scratch-built, crafted of wood stirrers and popsicle sticks, and took Mr. Stefanov more than 2 years to complete. Photo etching techniques were applied to create many of the very smaller details and parts including the furniture, railings and decorative elements.

Individually laid tiles line the pitched roof of the main structure. One extended wire secures the entire village atop the center truss which was built using elasticized adhesive allowing for some "give" while keeping the piece from crashing down. Large potted trees hang throughout the piece and create interesting design elements but also fit within the artists concept of a self contained environment.

A system of water drainage pipes meander throughout the structure, also crafted using photo etched materials, and designed using a number of weathering and aging techniques.

Stefanov hand-painted manufactured figurines and purchased landscaping materials for the perfectly staged trees, shrubberies, hedges and flowers seen throughout the piece.

Elaborate, mostly unseen, architectural and decorative elements were incorporated into the Skyville design. A sliding pine was built into one of the lower-level interior spaces seemingly just for fun. Extensive wood beamed ceilings, while virtually hidden, act as structural integrity while complementing the design. The artist built a system of jigs to help meticulously curve and form many of the rounded wooden elements ("The Round House") found in the piece including the rooms, stairways and balconies.

Skyville is clearly Stefanov’s masterful achievement of art, architecture and design in small scale and a wonderful contribution to the scale modeling and miniatures world. We look forward to seeing future work from him and future visions brought to life in his strong and optimistic way.

Skyville is available for sale, priced at €55,000. The piece measures 36" inches high, 16" inches wide and weighs 26kg (approximately 60 lbs.). It will arrive with a custom glass cover measuring 42.7 x 42.7 x 105.6 cm. along with a bound book filled with detailed photos and artist notes culled from the building process. Complementary delivery is offered to the buyer throughout Europe and additional delivery options may be discussed.

Please contact Ognyan Stefanov directly at steffanovi@gmail.com with purchase inquiries and to learn more or head over to his Facebook page dedicated to Skyville here: http://bit.ly/SKVLE You can also find and follow Mr. Stefano on Instagram @ognyan_stefanov_airphoto

*Awards & Achievements

IPMS Itali, NovoSlet Digital (Russia), IPMS Peru, IPMS Argentina, IPMS Nederland




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