Margaret Grace is the pen name of
Camille Minichino, a lifelong miniaturist and the author of three other mystery
series: the Periodic Table Mysteries, the Professor Sophie Knowles Mysteries
(as Ada Madison) and the Post Office Mysteries (as Jean Flowers). Learn
more about her and her books at her website.
Crafts with Gerry and Maddie
Geraldine Porter and her 11-year-old granddaughter,
Maddie, love making dollhouses and miniatures together.
In their newest adventure, Manhattan in Miniature, released last week by Margaret Grace, the
two travel to New York City to help with a miniatures fair at a hotel near
Grand Central Station. One of Maddie's favorite demonstrations is a DIY
miniature chair made from the cages of champagne bottles, perfect for a patio
or an ice cream shop.
Here's her instruction sheet!
SUPPLIES
• 2 "cages" from champagne bottles (As you
see from the designs in the photos, the cages need not be from the same
winery!)
• pliers
• wire cutters (optional)
• cork (optional)
INSTRUCTIONS
Step 1.
Disassembly.
Remove the bottom wire from each cage: Either use
pliers to untwist the ends or use wire cutters to snip out the twisted section.
Slide the wire through the loops at the ends of the "legs." Put the
loose wire aside.
* You now already have a stool! But let's get a little
fancier. We'll call this the seat and legs of the chair and move on to
construct the back.
Step 2. The
chair back.
Take the second cage, also minus its bottom wire, and
bend two of the legs straight down, the other two across each other. (If you
dislodge the cap from the legs, don't worry, it can be snapped back later, or
glued in place.)
Step 3.
Attaching chair back to seat.
Twist legs of the second cage around bottom legs of
the first cage.
Step 4.
Finishing touches.
Straighten any crooked sections. Turn bottom loops out
to form a "feet" and adjust legs so that all feet touch the floor.
You're done. Have a seat!
VARIATIONS
(1) Take the bottom wire extracted from Step 1. Twist
the wire into any shape you like (Make it smoother than I've done here!), and
attach the ends of the wire to the legs of the stool in the same way as Step 3
above. The result: a typical soda fountain chair with a fancy wire back.
(2) Make a cushion from scrap fabric and add to the
seat of the chair.
(3) Make a table using a cork as a base. The top can
be a piece of glass or any other rigid material that can be supported by the
cork. Or simply use the cork as is. Most corks are too tall for the scale of
their cages, and will probably need to be trimmed down.
I hope you have a good time furnishing a soda
fountain or café. Each of the eight miniature mysteries by Margaret Grace has
tips at the end for other fun projects.
Manhattan
in Miniature
Perhaps Manhattan, like Christmas, is
best seen through the eyes of a child. Gerry Porter provides both magical
experiences for granddaughter Maddie when a SuperKrafts manager takes them to
New York City for a huge crafts fair. They get to work on both making
miniatures and solving crimes, the detecting duo’s favorite pastimes. All this,
plus Rockefeller Center and Radio City, too! But a crafty murderer wants to
make sure they don’t make it safely home again to California….
2 comments:
Thanks for welcoming me, Anastasia! Let me apologize for the typo in Step 4 - it's that Maddie again, too eager to play soccer to read over her work.
I admire your talent. Thanks for sharing, Camille!
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