The Back Story
The Southern mansion is the secondhouse of my dollhouse making career to have a story and a history prior to finding it's way to my tea/work room.
The first house was the Yorktown , previously owned by Beulah Caplinger, a lady I felt a connection to but never knew. That house is on the blog with other prior finished houses.
Back to the Southern Mansion. My father arrived for the holidays in 2008 pulling a small trailer behind his car. On Christmas morning the contents of the trailer revealed the biggest dollhouse I had ever seen. It seriously filled my entire dinning room table. He had purchased it at an auction sale in Ohio, and drove it in this trailer all the way down toSouth Florida.
So, here it was, someone's gigantic project that was never finished. Also along with the house was a huge box of furniture and furniture kits. So very much time and money had been invested in this well build shell of a house.
Looking at the raw wood rooms, and half assembled stair cases, I could not help but wonder what theback story wasand who it had been made for. Did they know? Was it a surprise? I'm fairly sure the house was constructed by a man.
The house had to be removed from the enormous base it was on, and accessing the gigantic foot print it still had, the only reasonable design solution was to take off the two wing additions. The house then was 32 inches long. This is a respectable size for a big house and would also allow the house to be easily shipped. With no space in my work room at the time the house was taken over to my Mom's house a few miles away and lovingly stored on a work bench in her garage.
The Challenges
In the fall of 2010 I decided to retrieve the house from Mom's garage, and see what the possibilities were for it. I had a house with two door openings on either side that had been entrances to the wing additions, damaged siding, and no base floor. The kit windows , if you could even call them that ,were not going to cut it, and this stately home deserved a lovely entrance and beautiful doors.
I decided rather than replace the siding, which was actually the walls themselves, to fill them in and do the elegant paper stone finish that I like doing, and would give the house more character. I used joint compound and leveled out the exterior wall surfaces.
For the Restyling of doors to nowhere, I decided to do a chimney on the outside and floor to ceiling fireplaces on the inside, for one side of the house. A side door and a French door with a small balcony for the other side of the house. We seen to have a plan.
The house details and decor
The exterior
The exterior is done in textured paintable paper individually cut into block style shapes and individually applied. The crisp whitegives the house a fresh clean look and a pallet for adding richer and defined tones. The English chestnut front door and shutters help ground the house with a warm tone and wood texture. For the window boxes I painted them in a fashion forward new neutral color for an updated look. The pallet for the flowers is tonal pinks and bright white with greens in the lighter shades, for a soft feminine , and very dollhousey look.
Change of plan
I had planned to make a kitchen as one of the two first floor rooms. The house was just not having it. Everything I did in that direction for one reason after another just did not manifest. The room simply had to be an elegant dinning room. When I run into to many road blocks , I know enough to stop and reevaluate the plan. As soon as I went with the elegant dinning room concept, everything just flowed into place. Actually more like gushed, with things just going together, blending and matching perfectly.
Now with a huge beautiful house with no kitchen, I wondered if I could somehow make a matching kitchen from parts of the wing additions. On our trip last year to Williamsburg, I saw many homes like this with the summer kitchen being in a small separate building. This was a great fun project. It allowed me to still have some elegant touches to match the palate of the main house, but also add earthy tones and textures like the warm red brick fireplaces, and rustic tile floors.
The interior
Again, the use of large amounts of white, keep the feel of the house bright cheery, and clean. The floors are marble papers individually cut and applied in assorted subtle patterns. This is a large house with big floor areas and larger tiles really show it off. The wallpaper choices for the first floor follow thewarm earth tones, and a deep burgundy color is the pulled through everyroom in the house to flow and compliment.The white papers are all dimensional. The two fireplaces are the showpieces of the house, and designed and decorated specifically for this house. The staircase sides are detailed with matching border prints, and wood trim.
So, this Southern Mansion house is now finished.
I still wonder in looking at it what the original owner's vision had been for it and what had happened. But again I feel that for what ever reason, I was just supposed to be the one to finish it. Now it will be up to the next person to decorate and enjoy it.
fantastic perfect work congratulations for these so good works
ReplyDeleteGorgeous job on the house!
ReplyDeleteIt was originally built from a kit, the Dura-Craft Southern Mansion (SM 700). Here's a photo of the house from the kit box:
http://tinytara.pbworks.com/f/Dura+Craft+Southern+Mansion.pdf
Awesome design! This is an ingenious piece of artwork.
ReplyDeleteGreat creation, I like the design.
ReplyDeletecondo for sale
i recently purchased the duracraft southern mansion for my daughter and have been trying to do research on it and was just wondering if anyone knows how much the kit originally cost cuz i was just wondering if i got a good deal or not i believe i did but if anyone has any info about it i would greatly appreciate it and To Robin your house is beautiful i cant wait til my husband finishes ours now becuase he is such a perfectionist that i am sure it will be amazing . hopefully its as lovely as yours.
ReplyDeleteYour house looks beautiful! I am thinking about buying a kit to make this myself - and I have two questions I hope you can answer. First, how hard is it to put together? Second, is the third floor roomy enough to put furniture in (e.g., as a nursery or something) or is it really just an attic space? Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThe 3rd floor space is huge. If you look at the house from the side you will see it also includes the area extended over the porch. These rooms are not attic space, but large full size rooms.
ReplyDeleteMy email is on the home page of the blog, for any special questions about my houses. This house will be offered for sale, if you are interested,please contact me.
omgoodness. I love it. My mom bought me one for Christmas a long time ago. She paid over 100.00 for it and I was so ready to put it together but you have given me imspiration to try. I have bits and pieces put together but yours is so pretty. It is goregous. I have lillian russell furniture for mine if I could ever do it. Thanks for sharing your talent. It is fabulous
ReplyDeleteIt was a great post. I love your doll house. It was very lovely and the designs are incredible. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI have looked at this house and dreamed that I could finished mine. Some of the walls have been put together. My family says goodwill, I just can't. Looking at these beautiful, one of a kind homes, I just want mine to look like yours! Thank you so much, you for sure have a gift!
ReplyDeleteIt is indeed the Southern Mansion by Dura-Craft. My husband purchased on for me for an anniversary from Michael's 20 something years ago I am guessing. It retailed then for $159.00 (price tag still on the box). Because of many moves from house to house and state to state and life in general, it has never been built and is still in the box!
ReplyDeleteThe box is ratty and has mover's stickers and writing on it but I have it.
The children are long gone now and I have decided to dig it out and build it which led me to this search! I am hoping to find a local group to learn from since I have never done such a thing!
Awesome house! Beautiful!
ReplyDeletethis is lovely, thanks for the ideas
ReplyDeleteRobin, you've done an amazing job fixing this up! We have the same dollhouse that is also going through a rehab itself. I was hoping you could share your paper technique on the siding? I wanted to recreate this on ours, but wasn't sure which paper you used, if you painted it prior to cutting - and if so whether you would be willing to show photos of this process if you had them available? Anything would be appreciated!
ReplyDeleteI have the southern mansion 1981 edition and cannot find the instruction. I have looked on ebay and many many sites and groups hoping someone would have a copy I have had it for so long and I won't to build to for my daughter. Your version is so beautiful and definitely makes my drive to get mine built so much deeper.
ReplyDeleteIs this really the ONLY version of the duracraft SM 700 southern mansion to be found online? Anywhere? I have a original completely built, but can't find ANY OTHERS. I have searched for years and can't find another soul who has a complete original. I was hoping to find some information about its worth, as I might be looking to sell mine. It has working lights and is in good condition. Any information about value would be helpful. Thanks
ReplyDeleteIf you want to sell yours, I might be interested. I have this dollhouse; my dad built it for me from the Duracraft Southern Mansion kit purchased from Michaels in 1989, however after several moves, including one cross-country, the wood glue got old and brittle. I took it apart a couple years ago, with the intention of restoring to its original condition...then my son was born, life got chaotic, the pieces got mixed up, we moved 2 more times, and quite frankly I just don't think I have it in me to put it back together again! I'd love to replace it...I have no idea what one of these is worth, but I'm interested, if you wish to sell.
ReplyDelete