The outhouse on my grandparents farm had two holes....one small (for children) and one large (for adults). My mom would have to come with us kids, when we were small, because we were afraid of getting locked in there or falling in or during the winter (to help us get undressed and hold up our jackets, out of the way). Since the outhouse was a bit of a walk from the house, she would use the facility at the same time as we were going...so, fortunately there were two holes to sit on. 😊
@@queencityminis Yes....indoor!!!! Heated and flushable. Close at hand (not a half mile away, uphill both ways 😉), and with real toilet paper (not roughed up pages from the Sears catalogue). Gotta love these modern inventions. ❤️🙂
That wooden craft piece is actually a quilting frame, you pin your quilt to each side and quilt it as you roll it, it will keep it tight. Those 2 pieces that look like a salt and pepper shaker are actually chess pieces from a travel kit. My favorite pieces are the unicorns and the sea shell shadow boxes. I also love the bathroom set too, I can see a pink tiled walls and put the jacuzzi up next to it. Have a great day
This is a great video. Like a lot of people I can't afford to buy miniatures and seeing these is a help when you have to make your own (more fun making your own anyway!)
All the miniatures you showed are nothing short of adorable, BUT--I get the biggest kick out of your sense of humor😁 You always manage to make me laugh😊
I know I'm late to the party, but the larger tub with the bucket in yellow with dark trim, and a wash board (5:49)? That larger tub is for bathing! The way the sides angle is perfect for resting the arms. When I was very young, this what my grandparents bathed in (separately of course!).
@queencityminis the running water in the house was from a hand pump on the closed in porch where you would bathe. You'd manually pump buckets of well water, heat it on the old coal stove, then pour it into the tub. Yeah, not fun. Especially if you were a modest little girl..
The glass vase might be from Italy. They are very talented with glass miniatures. The wooden rack looks like my quilt rack. It’s for when you are actually sewing the quilt by hand.
It was fun seeing the topper from the Elegant Dollhouse in Sacramento. My mother and I owned a miniature shop in Stockton; just a few miles south of there. 😁
The mouse stealing the cheese is just too cute! I think you should cast your Bundt pan as well, so you can create more Bundt cakes for a bakery. :) The “flask” from a bead is extremely clever! Excellent look for something so simple.
Others have probably told you, but the wooden piece is a quilting frame--the unfinished quilt is pinned onto the frame and the ratchets allowed the quilt to be rolled up as the work progressed. There are similar things used for larger pieces of embroidery and needlepoint so which you have would depend on the size.
I think the vintage bucket and the thing with the washboard in it, is actually a 19th century bathtub and the bucket was used to bring water. I saw these in the old westerns.
@queencityminis lol, my hubby watches alot of westerns, and I grew watching them...I remembered that shape. You know what, they used things back then for more than 1 purpose, so I can see a lady standing behind the tall end washing clothes.
One of my favorite minis i have off the top of my head are the tiny packages and envelopes with readable writing on them. Thank you for sharing your adorable minis. My favorite of yours is probably the tub with the tiny wash board 😊 so so cute
I love videos like this Shyra because you see things that you have an idea of how to make, it gets miniaturists thinking about which items could possibly be used and how to use them to make the miniature.
Hi I also love the mouse table. So cute! My own personal favorite mini I own is a 1/12th replica of the Christmas stocking my Aunt gave me the Christmas before I was born. (which is in Jan) My stocking is now 681/2 years old. It is dark red felt with white velvet and a large netting at the top and piping along all the seams. There is a large angel on the front of the stocking with a pearl head and lots of embellishments. I did my best to replicate it and it looks pretty darn close. The mini one is only about an inch high, the real one fits my foot and comes below my knee. It was certainly a challenge to make but very rewarding. You do amazing work.
That is such a cool idea! That sounds like an amazing miniature. My favorite miniature is a Hallmark ornament of the 1998 Barbie Dreamhouse. It's a plastic, mass produced piece, but I have so many great memories surrounding that dollhouse.
That one piece is more of an embroidery stand, than a loom. It was, and still is, used for doing very large embroidery pieces that won't fit in your typical hoops. I actually have one. heh
Thank you! I can't even imagine doing an embroidery that big. I suppose back when people had no electronics to distract themselves, the idea of spending so much time embroidering a large piece wasn't so strange but still.
You know I remember that glass basket from when I was a kid in the late 70s. I got one from Disneyland. I have no idea if that's the same story for yours.
Your videos are inspirational - and you have a wonderful collection of artisan pieces! I particularly love the plants you make, so delicate and realistic. Many thanks from England!
I know that wooden loom as a tapestry frame. The tapestry is attached to the round poles and rolled around like a scroll to whichever section you are working on.
My faves are the salt and pepper shakers and the tools. I was thinking the loom thing could be used to hold a cradle. I love most of the miniatures i own.
The mice are adorable ,the wooden frame might be a drying rack or a quilt rack I know that embroiders 11:15 .use a similar item to do needle work on .as well 😃
So many awesome treasures. My favorites are the kitchen island with the mice, so cute! And the chicken coop! That one piece looks like a clothing line, to dry clothes. Maybe? I love them all. So cute. I don’t have many miniatures. I have a tea light fireplace holder that could be used in a diorama possibly. I do have some miniature pieces that I put in my plants. My favorite is a miniature plant garden scene a friend made me. I want to make my own, a book nook!
Very good choices! I was just talking to a friend about how making minis from scratch can be a bit intimidating for someone who wants to get into the hobby. Maybe you should get started with a book nook kit or you could make a simple flask from two beads to dip your toe in :)
I'm filming another dollhouse miniature haul video right now so you'll get to see more of my things in a couple days. I've been organizing my miniatures and materials. It's been a huge undertaking.
That's fun! What styles are the houses? I had a Victorian style dollhouse I built from a vintage kit. I built the whole thing and painted the exterior, shingled the roof, and painstakingly laid the wood floors piece by piece. Then I wasn't sure what to do inside and sold it for $25 😆 I have a little more confidence now so I'll have a dollhouse again someday.
The kitchen table with the rats looks like a U.K. Country Treasures composition. I believe the husband and wife team have retired from their business, but their daughter who makes tiny wildlife, continues it both online and at KDF .
Double holders were common as you would not send a youngster out back by itself in any weather or the dark or would you leave it alone in the house when you needed the facilities. Ours was known as the Kybo which we were told was an aboriginal word until Granny, born 1877 informed it was short for keep your bowels open.
It is a quilting frame. I have one with quilting material stretched from back to front. In real life you would sit at the front and quilt as far as you could reach and then roll the quilt forward so you could quilt farther until you had finished the entire quilt.
The fishing pole looks like it was made from a wooden pick up stick from the game pick-em-up sticks. The "loom" is a quilting frame for the quilting stitches of a hand made quilt.
The mice on that awesome table scene are by Falcon miniatures. I'm addicted to those little guys, I have at least one in each of my antique dollhouses. Your glass basket is most likely German, post war. Though in the '60s and '70s they were made in Japan, this one has more of a German feel to me. Your heavy chair is faux JE Stevens. The actual JE Stevens chairs are far sharper in detail and don't have the cut out.
@@queencityminis You're very welcome. I have several vintage and even more antique dollhouses, so I've learned a few things along the way. Sigh, we don't talk about MY bins of extra minis....at least, we don't talk about them in front of my husband 🙂
Loved your video. I like the quiet for a change. Enjoyed seeing part of your mini collection. Seems you have quite an extensive collection. That wooden piece you were asking if anyone recognized I believe is a rug or embroidery frame. My sister uses one while she’s doing her embroidery. What state are you located in? I’m in NY. Would you be interested in any miniatures I have that once I decide I’m at that age I shouldn’t keep them any longer? I’m sure my family would probably just donate them or dispose of them. It would make me happy to know someone would enjoy them. I’m guessing by your voice you have MANY wonderful years left to enjoy your treasures.
Thanks for the feedback regarding the lack of music. That makes a lot of sense. It probably is some kind of rug or embroidery frame. Maybe I'll find some embroidered fabric to pair with it or wrap a rug around it. Sure! Message me at queencityminiatures@gmail.com and we can discuss your collection.
The wooden piece you asked about appears to be a quilt rack to secure a quilt to hand quilt it. 2 or 3 women would each stitch a section by hand to help the sewer complete the work faster
Wow tiny stuff. Your wagon with the handle was made on my birthday accept for the 78 part I was born November 8th 1984. The bill G table looks like a drafting table without the top
Here's the what for on the outhouse. There are two holes so as to fill the hole in the ground without wasting the space with one hole. Believe me if you had to dig that hole in the ground by hand as we did you wouldn't want the space wasted. Lol
Oh, you must be a city girl. 2 seater outhouse, made so Momma could take her little one to pee at the same time as she went. Outdoors could be a cold place to go potty, and everybody wanted the chore to go as quickly as possible so as to get back to the wood stove.
Hmmm, I don't know. They were mostly items I got in an enormous local haul (13 boxes for $200. Large boxes!) Other items were from eBay and earthntree.com
Do you listen with headphones? Just in the last couple videos, I started recording my voiceover in stereo so it can be heard through both ears with headphones. Without headphones, the sound should be fine. Thank you!
@queencityminis There was a larger hole for adults and a smaller hole for children. I can't imagine a small child slipping through the adult-sized hole. YUCK!
You need a 1/12th dollhouse for so many of your beautiful 1/12th miniatures 😊
That would be cool! Maybe one day I'll decorate a dollhouse of my own.
Cinderella's furry friends ate enjoying their feast. That table is perfect for a Cinderella diorama.
Aww so true
Let me know what you think about this quiet video with no music :)
The no music is one of the reasons why I appreciate your video very much :)
This is why I enjoy your videos and your voice
@@cillamoke thank you 😊
I prefer no music or very low. It is less distracting when concentrating on all the little details. I love hearing your descriptions. So inspiring!
@@JK-rj2gp thank you!
The outhouse on my grandparents farm had two holes....one small (for children) and one large (for adults). My mom would have to come with us kids, when we were small, because we were afraid of getting locked in there or falling in or during the winter (to help us get undressed and hold up our jackets, out of the way). Since the outhouse was a bit of a walk from the house, she would use the facility at the same time as we were going...so, fortunately there were two holes to sit on. 😊
That sounds so awful! I am so grateful for indoor plumbing
@@queencityminis Yes....indoor!!!! Heated and flushable.
Close at hand (not a half mile away, uphill both ways 😉), and with real toilet paper (not roughed up pages from the Sears catalogue).
Gotta love these modern inventions. ❤️🙂
That wooden craft piece is actually a quilting frame, you pin your quilt to each side and quilt it as you roll it, it will keep it tight. Those 2 pieces that look like a salt and pepper shaker are actually chess pieces from a travel kit. My favorite pieces are the unicorns and the sea shell shadow boxes. I also love the bathroom set too, I can see a pink tiled walls and put the jacuzzi up next to it. Have a great day
Thanks for the info!
I agree on it being a quilt frame
This is a great video. Like a lot of people I can't afford to buy miniatures and seeing these is a help when you have to make your own (more fun making your own anyway!)
Glad it was helpful! I know what you mean. I've made a few minis after seeing an expensive version.
Mouse table ❤ Love it.
It's amazing! So incredibly detailed.
All the miniatures you showed are nothing short of adorable, BUT--I get the biggest kick out of your sense of humor😁 You always manage to make me laugh😊
Oh thank you! I appreciate that 😃
I know I'm late to the party, but the larger tub with the bucket in yellow with dark trim, and a wash board (5:49)? That larger tub is for bathing! The way the sides angle is perfect for resting the arms. When I was very young, this what my grandparents bathed in (separately of course!).
Oh wow! That doesn't seem ideal lol
@queencityminis the running water in the house was from a hand pump on the closed in porch where you would bathe. You'd manually pump buckets of well water, heat it on the old coal stove, then pour it into the tub. Yeah, not fun. Especially if you were a modest little girl..
The glass vase might be from Italy. They are very talented with glass miniatures. The wooden rack looks like my quilt rack. It’s for when you are actually sewing the quilt by hand.
Thanks for the info!
My grandmother had that pencil sharpener- I just got hit with such a wave of nostalgia when I saw that!
Awww that's sweet ✏️
If you haven't used the rubber duck yet, you might be able to take a mold of it to cast silicone versions. That'll give that rubbery feel.
That's a cool idea. It would mold easily. Thank you
It was fun seeing the topper from the Elegant Dollhouse in Sacramento. My mother and I owned a miniature shop in Stockton; just a few miles south of there. 😁
The mouse stealing the cheese is just too cute! I think you should cast your Bundt pan as well, so you can create more Bundt cakes for a bakery. :) The “flask” from a bead is extremely clever! Excellent look for something so simple.
Great idea!! Thank you. I forgot all about casting the Bundt.
Your one piece is a quilt rack maker. Ladies would sit around and hand sew quilts together in a sewing circle. Blessings to you and yours 😇
That's such a quaint image! Thank you for the info :)
Quilting bees! It would be neat to make a tiny quilt-in-progress to put on it
@@queencityminis no problem 😁
@@soundslikephiladelphia that would be awesome, not sure if I have ever seen that idea in miniatures.
We call it a quilting frame here in Kentucky.
Omg the mouse 😍. I also love the sink with chip. Beautiful ❤
Thank you! 🤗
Others have probably told you, but the wooden piece is a quilting frame--the unfinished quilt is pinned onto the frame and the ratchets allowed the quilt to be rolled up as the work progressed. There are similar things used for larger pieces of embroidery and needlepoint so which you have would depend on the size.
I wish I had patience for sewing. Maybe I'd make a quilt for it.
I think the vintage bucket and the thing with the washboard in it, is actually a 19th century bathtub and the bucket was used to bring water. I saw these in the old westerns.
Oh, that's possible! I've never heard of that. It makes sense
@queencityminis lol, my hubby watches alot of westerns, and I grew watching them...I remembered that shape. You know what, they used things back then for more than 1 purpose, so I can see a lady standing behind the tall end washing clothes.
@@queencityminis question, how do you make an extended counter hinges, I'm stumped
One of my favorite minis i have off the top of my head are the tiny packages and envelopes with readable writing on them. Thank you for sharing your adorable minis. My favorite of yours is probably the tub with the tiny wash board 😊 so so cute
Glad you like them! I love mundane things in mini.
I love videos like this Shyra because you see things that you have an idea of how to make, it gets miniaturists thinking about which items could possibly be used and how to use them to make the miniature.
Thank you! Making minis has given me a different perspective.
Hi I also love the mouse table. So cute! My own personal favorite mini I own is a 1/12th replica of the Christmas stocking my Aunt gave me the Christmas before I was born. (which is in Jan) My stocking is now 681/2 years old. It is dark red felt with white velvet and a large netting at the top and piping along all the seams. There is a large angel on the front of the stocking with a pearl head and lots of embellishments. I did my best to replicate it and it looks pretty darn close. The mini one is only about an inch high, the real one fits my foot and comes below my knee. It was certainly a challenge to make but very rewarding. You do amazing work.
That is such a cool idea! That sounds like an amazing miniature.
My favorite miniature is a Hallmark ornament of the 1998 Barbie Dreamhouse. It's a plastic, mass produced piece, but I have so many great memories surrounding that dollhouse.
Flask! And mouse trap!!! Now I must have some of my own!! I'm going to start hunting for stuff to make them myself!!
TinyKeyHoleMinis made a noise trap recently, and it was adorable.
I prefer no background music. Loved your pieces, my favorite I think would be the cast iron chair. 👍🏼
Thank you very much :)
That one piece is more of an embroidery stand, than a loom. It was, and still is, used for doing very large embroidery pieces that won't fit in your typical hoops. I actually have one. heh
Thank you! I can't even imagine doing an embroidery that big. I suppose back when people had no electronics to distract themselves, the idea of spending so much time embroidering a large piece wasn't so strange but still.
I believe it's a quilting frame, having used one myself in real life.
You know I remember that glass basket from when I was a kid in the late 70s. I got one from Disneyland. I have no idea if that's the same story for yours.
That's so cool!
Eggs! And a fishing pole! I love them. The bundt pan is super cool as well!
The Bundt pan is mass produced but I just love the tiny scale of it.
Your videos are inspirational - and you have a wonderful collection of artisan pieces! I particularly love the plants you make, so delicate and realistic. Many thanks from England!
Thank you so much! My favorite actor is from London (Tom Holland)
@@queencityminis I'm a Londoner too! 🙂
Holy crap girl your collection is absolutely phenomenal! I am positively green with envy from that first little glimpse. 😮💚😍
Thanks! It's been a while since I've done a haul video. Ironically, this Saturday's video will be a haul from Temu. I went a little overboard.
I am so excited! Vicariously shopping minis via you lol
I know that wooden loom as a tapestry frame. The tapestry is attached to the round poles and rolled around like a scroll to whichever section you are working on.
Oh, interesting! Thank you
Thank you for sharing I really enjoyed this.
You are so welcome!
I wish I had a full sized version of that sink in my kitchen. 😊 I wouldn't mind the chip at all!
It's a classic! Really nice
The nesting box is adorable!
It's so cute 🥰
Wooden loom looks like something my great grandmother used. She had the canvas(?) stretched across for doing her needlepointing.
The patience required is mind boggl8ng
Love this! I am so envious of your collection! Great miniatures.
Thank you :) My collection is growing all the time.
Oh! I love the tiny mouse taking the cheese from the trap!
Same here. That little mouse is adorable. It's quite delicate. I'm glad it hasn't lost an ear over the years.
My faves are the salt and pepper shakers and the tools. I was thinking the loom thing could be used to hold a cradle. I love most of the miniatures i own.
I love everyday items like that too. Mundane items in miniature are so cool.
I am out of my mind! I forgot to mention my actual favorite item: the wagon toy box from 1978. I absolutely love that piece.
The mice are adorable ,the wooden frame might be a drying rack or a quilt rack I know that embroiders 11:15 .use a similar item to do needle work on .as well 😃
Oh, thank you!
Isn't Bill G's "mystery item" a quilters rack? Used when the woman (or several women) is quilting layers together.
That was my suspicion too
So cute ,what are you saving them all for?
I'll be making a website and listing these for sale
8:47 That looks just like my quilting frame!
That's what it is!
The first table is a town square miniature, I believe the rest was done by Mama's Home Cooked Miniatures. Hope that helps ❤
Yes! Thank you!
So many awesome treasures. My favorites are the kitchen island with the mice, so cute! And the chicken coop! That one piece looks like a clothing line, to dry clothes. Maybe? I love them all. So cute. I don’t have many miniatures. I have a tea light fireplace holder that could be used in a diorama possibly. I do have some miniature pieces that I put in my plants. My favorite is a miniature plant garden scene a friend made me. I want to make my own, a book nook!
Very good choices! I was just talking to a friend about how making minis from scratch can be a bit intimidating for someone who wants to get into the hobby. Maybe you should get started with a book nook kit or you could make a simple flask from two beads to dip your toe in :)
@@queencityminis I’ve been looking at the kits you made, the birdhouse, with books. I might start there.
Love to see some of your collection. That piece you are asking about… it is a needle point frame. I have a full size one.
Whitney la brie is amazing and so much fun u must find her she is lovely I'm her number 1 fan xx
Oh I love Whitney LaBrie's channel! I also love her eBay store. I linked it in the description.
@@queencityminis me too only problem I can't buy her items I'm in UK and postage is crazy otherwise I'd be buy buy buying lol
Wow you really do have a lot of things!! That's always fun to see parts of your collection
I'm filming another dollhouse miniature haul video right now so you'll get to see more of my things in a couple days.
I've been organizing my miniatures and materials. It's been a huge undertaking.
@@queencityminis I need someone good at organization
I just found a sink just like that at a small little dollhouse store in Maryland!!! I just fell in love with it.
It's such a cool, antique style. I could build a whole kitchen around that sink.
@@queencityminis oh you should!!!!
Oooooh newbie here I love ❤ all minis I got 2 houses on the go it's so addictive x
I love all ur bits and bobs do you sell pieces?
That's fun! What styles are the houses?
I had a Victorian style dollhouse I built from a vintage kit. I built the whole thing and painted the exterior, shingled the roof, and painstakingly laid the wood floors piece by piece. Then I wasn't sure what to do inside and sold it for $25 😆 I have a little more confidence now so I'll have a dollhouse again someday.
I can send pics if u email me hun
The mouse/mice!❤
They're so cute 🥰
That wooden frame work I think it could be weaving machine or for making tapestry
The kitchen table with the rats looks like a U.K. Country Treasures composition. I believe the husband and wife team have retired from their business, but their daughter who makes tiny wildlife, continues it both online and at KDF .
I think you're right! I checked out their website and the pieces in their Gallery seem very reminiscent of that table. Thank you 😊
@@queencityminis 🥰
Double holders were common as you would not send a youngster out back by itself in any weather or the dark or would you leave it alone in the house when you needed the facilities. Ours was known as the Kybo which we were told was an aboriginal word until Granny, born 1877 informed it was short for keep your bowels open.
That's so interesting! Thanks for sharing.
I love your channel so much! So glad I found it!!!
That's awesome! Thank you so much
It is a quilting frame. I have one with quilting material stretched from back to front. In real life you would sit at the front and quilt as far as you could reach and then roll the quilt forward so you could quilt farther until you had finished the entire quilt.
Thanks for sharing! That's really cool
awesome video
Thanks for the visit!
The fishing pole looks like it was made from a wooden pick up stick from the game pick-em-up sticks.
The "loom" is a quilting frame for the quilting stitches of a hand made quilt.
Thank you!
My favorites are the Kohler sink ( I worked at Kohler Co for 10years), the mouse pillage table and the washtub and bucket.
Thank you! I've been told the washtub and bucket may be from Falcon Bowls. I've never heard of them but it's a lead.
My collection includes an old-fashioned horse collar, leather, complete with brass buckles, a pair of loafers, also leather, and a WW1 German helmet.
That's incredible! I'd love to see the WW1 helmet.
The mice on that awesome table scene are by Falcon miniatures. I'm addicted to those little guys, I have at least one in each of my antique dollhouses. Your glass basket is most likely German, post war. Though in the '60s and '70s they were made in Japan, this one has more of a German feel to me. Your heavy chair is faux JE Stevens. The actual JE Stevens chairs are far sharper in detail and don't have the cut out.
Wow! Thank you so much for all the info. You have a lot of knowledge about miniatures.
@@queencityminis You're very welcome. I have several vintage and even more antique dollhouses, so I've learned a few things along the way. Sigh, we don't talk about MY bins of extra minis....at least, we don't talk about them in front of my husband 🙂
I love this video with no music!!!,
Thank you! It's an oldie but a goodie
Loved your video. I like the quiet for a change. Enjoyed seeing part of your mini collection. Seems you have quite an extensive collection.
That wooden piece you were asking if anyone recognized I believe is a rug or embroidery frame. My sister uses one while she’s doing her embroidery.
What state are you located in? I’m in NY. Would you be interested in any miniatures I have that once I decide I’m at that age I shouldn’t keep them any longer? I’m sure my family would probably just donate them or dispose of them. It would make me happy to know someone would enjoy them. I’m guessing by your voice you have MANY wonderful years left to enjoy your treasures.
Thanks for the feedback regarding the lack of music.
That makes a lot of sense. It probably is some kind of rug or embroidery frame. Maybe I'll find some embroidered fabric to pair with it or wrap a rug around it.
Sure! Message me at queencityminiatures@gmail.com and we can discuss your collection.
The wooden piece you asked about appears to be a quilt rack to secure a quilt to hand quilt it. 2 or 3 women would each stitch a section by hand to help the sewer complete the work faster
Thank you! That makes sense
The frame after the fishing rod is a tapestry frame for sewing
Thank you!
Thanks for sharing items from your collection - Your kitchen work table looks like it may have been made by artisan Deb Stenholm?
Maybe! I'm not sure
Wow tiny stuff. Your wagon with the handle was made on my birthday accept for the 78 part I was born November 8th 1984. The bill G table looks like a drafting table without the top
That's so cool that the wagon was made in your birthday! It's such a cool piece. I really love it and I'm so happy the handle has never been lost.
The mouse table is actually rats 🐀 you can tell by the tails it's still cute 😍
Oh yeah 😂 Of course they're rats! I've had pet rats so you'd think I'd be able to identify them.
@@queencityminis lol that's so funny xx
Here's the what for on the outhouse. There are two holes so as to fill the hole in the ground without wasting the space with one hole. Believe me if you had to dig that hole in the ground by hand as we did you wouldn't want the space wasted. Lol
Oh wow! That's a really point. I never thought of that. Fortunately, I've always had a toilet at home! Thanks for the info
The wooden piece looks like a stand for hand sewing a quilt.
Thank you!
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Thank you 😊
Oh, you must be a city girl. 2 seater outhouse, made so Momma could take her little one to pee at the same time as she went. Outdoors could be a cold place to go potty, and everybody wanted the chore to go as quickly as possible so as to get back to the wood stove.
Yikes! I'm so grateful for indoor plumbing
Wow!!!! How much did you pay for all of these treasures?
Hmmm, I don't know. They were mostly items I got in an enormous local haul (13 boxes for $200. Large boxes!) Other items were from eBay and earthntree.com
I think the wooden rack is a quilt rack. My aunt has several real ones.
I think you're right! Thank you
What's a rim box?
Room box. It's one room of a dollhouse rather than the whole dollhouse.
The larger piece with the washboard looks like a child’s bathtub to me
That's true!
Quilt frame
Thank you
It's a quilt frame
Thank you :)
The piece you think is a loom, is actually a quilting frame
Thank you! I appreciate that info
quilt rack
Thank you 😊
Loom
Thank you!
Love your videos, but have to say the sound always sounds muted and impossible for me to hear
Do you listen with headphones? Just in the last couple videos, I started recording my voiceover in stereo so it can be heard through both ears with headphones.
Without headphones, the sound should be fine. Thank you!
With a top on it, the tilting wooden piece is a drafting table for architects and artists
I've seen those. They have a light under them for tracing, I believe.
It wasn't uncommon to have a double- holder outhouse.
Ohh that makes sense
@queencityminis There was a larger hole for adults and a smaller hole for children. I can't imagine a small child slipping through the adult-sized hole. YUCK!
I hate the mice
Mice certainly aren't for everyone