miniatures Archives - PlayJunkie PlayJunkie Wed, 05 Feb 2020 13:40:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 The Tiny, Incredible Dioramas of Mar Cerdà https://playjunkie.com/the-tiny-incredible-dioramas-of-mar-cerda/ Sun, 09 Feb 2020 06:00:00 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=35167 Illustrator Mar Cerdà is known for her miniature dioramas, made of cut paper and watercolors. Displayed in galleries around the world, her creations are adored for their whimsicality, as well as their unbelievable attention to details (from floor tiles to tiny stamps on handwritten letters). With a background in cinema and audiovisuals and a fascination […]

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Illustrator Mar Cerdà is known for her miniature dioramas, made of cut paper and watercolors. Displayed in galleries around the world, her creations are adored for their whimsicality, as well as their unbelievable attention to details (from floor tiles to tiny stamps on handwritten letters).

With a background in cinema and audiovisuals and a fascination with scenography and the treatment of space, Cerdà is a firm believer that characters can be defined by a space, even if they are not present at all. “I studied cinema in ESCAC, specializing in art direction, and when I had the opportunity to illustrate a children’s book suddenly 2D wasn’t enough for me,” she relayed in an interview with We Heart.

View this post on Instagram

Finally, I will update my online shop this weekend!!! Stay tuned! ✨

A post shared by Mar (@marillustrations) on

“I started cutting paper and creating little houses in 3D for the main characters in my first book, and I got hooked,” she says, adding that studying cinema had a great influence on the way she illustrates, not only taking influence from movies but also by the craft of making movies: the light, the mise-en-scène and, above all, the space.

Each piece begins with a sketch of what Cerdà has in mind, after which she hunts for reference images. “I like to find just the right tile designs or the best plants to go with the piece,” she explains. The whole process varies and can take between one or two days to more than three weeks.

Based in Barcelona, Cerdà is particularly inspired by the ceramic tiles that are a common feature in the city. “One thing that is repeated in my illustrations (and I think is totally influenced by my city) are the ceramic tiles,” she says. “Here in Barcelona tiles were very popular at the end of the 19th century; nowadays a lot of houses still have them. I’m also influenced by all the cities I’ve visited. Traveling is so inspiring.”

Take a look at some of her intricate designs in the gallery below:

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Miniature Artist Recreates Historic Interiors at a 1:12 Scale https://playjunkie.com/miniature-artist-recreates-historic-interiors-at-a-112-scale/ Mon, 27 Jan 2020 18:39:20 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=34682 Chris Toledo is a miniature artist who crafts adorable and very detailed historic building interiors. His impressive miniature rooms are a perfect recreation of historic architecture at an impressive 1:12 scale. Toledo’s love for art and architecture dates back to his childhood, and he claims he always loved to create. When he discovered miniatures it […]

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Chris Toledo is a miniature artist who crafts adorable and very detailed historic building interiors. His impressive miniature rooms are a perfect recreation of historic architecture at an impressive 1:12 scale.

Toledo’s love for art and architecture dates back to his childhood, and he claims he always loved to create. When he discovered miniatures it was love at first sight, because this art form is the perfect mix of every medium he’s ever loved.

“When creating my miniature pieces, the process can take from one month to almost two years to create a single piece,” the artist said in an interview with Bored Panda. “Each model I create starts with extensive research of the era and time period I’m trying to recreate,” Chris said. He goes through his collection of home plans and building guides from the early 20th century to make sure his pieces are 100% accurate.

Check out Chris’ miniature pieces in the photos below and make sure to follow this amazing artist on Instagram.

View this post on Instagram

Some detail shots of the finished kitchen.

A post shared by Chris Toledo (@ibuildsmallthings) on

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Marina Paredes Creates Miniature Wooden Houses https://playjunkie.com/marina-paredes-creates-miniature-wooden-houses/ Tue, 07 Jan 2020 14:30:51 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=33083 When Marina Paredes was a child, she used to collect miniature toys. “I had a whole shelf of them,” she recalled in an interview with The Daily Mini. “My favorites were the Polly Pockets.” Now a model maker and a creator of miniatures herself, her miniature wooden houses are shared on her Instagram account and sold […]

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When Marina Paredes was a child, she used to collect miniature toys. “I had a whole shelf of them,” she recalled in an interview with The Daily Mini. “My favorites were the Polly Pockets.”

Now a model maker and a creator of miniatures herself, her miniature wooden houses are shared on her Instagram account and sold online. “The first miniature I made was when I was around 10 years old,” she says. “I made it with toothpicks and it was a little house with small furniture. I remember that in order to open and close the door, I used a piece of cloth. I still keep it with much affection.”

Based in Spain, she incorporates in her work various types of wood, which include softwood like balsa or hardwood like linden, to which she adds detail in clay. The finished product is then painted using acrylic paint.

“One thing that I enjoy very much is making miniature versions of people’s houses,” she says. “It is very exciting for them and I have a good time.” She adds that she especially enjoys making small furniture, and adding details like plants, carpets, paintings, and televisions. “When you put them together they are like a small town,” she says.

“For me, the most difficult thing is to make very small objects without losing too many details,” she added. Step into her small (and quite delightful!) town:

The post Marina Paredes Creates Miniature Wooden Houses appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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These Miniatures Will Remind You of the Beauty In the Ordinary https://playjunkie.com/these-miniatures-will-remind-you-of-the-beauty-in-the-ordinary/ Tue, 17 Dec 2019 16:05:46 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=31815 Tatsuya Tanaka is a unique artist. His art is beautiful, colorful and full of life – but what really makes it special is its size. For the past nine years, Tanaka has been making miniature dioramas. Tanak’s dioramas don’t depict grand events or remarkable people. His focus is on everyday life. He uses his medium […]

The post These Miniatures Will Remind You of the Beauty In the Ordinary appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Tatsuya Tanaka is a unique artist. His art is beautiful, colorful and full of life – but what really makes it special is its size. For the past nine years, Tanaka has been making miniature dioramas.

Tanak’s dioramas don’t depict grand events or remarkable people. His focus is on everyday life. He uses his medium to showcase people swimming in the pool, competing in sport, dancing. He will sometimes dabble with the fantastical, and create a miniature version of Aladdin on his magical carpet – but mostly, he likes to focus on the magic of the mundane.

It’s not just Tanaka’s medium or his subjects that are unusual. Even the materials he uses to create his dioramas are untraditional. Instead of using clay, metal, paper, or any other raw material that is usually used to create dioramas and sculptures of any size, Tanaka uses everyday materials. A blue icicle can be an ocean, and a yellow one can be a beach; An old CD becomes a skating rink.

Tanaka’s miniatures are charming not only because they are meticulously made, but because they focus on all the moments we’re used to ignoring on a daily basis, the simple materials that surround us and we discard so easily, and the moments that can be awe-inspiring is we only pay attention.

The post These Miniatures Will Remind You of the Beauty In the Ordinary appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Check out These Cool Urban Miniatures Covered in Street Art https://playjunkie.com/check-out-these-cool-urban-miniatures-covered-in-street-art/ Wed, 27 Nov 2019 10:12:24 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=30582 Curatorial duo PaxtonGlew, consisting out of artists Emily Paxton and Pam Glew, recently presented their newest project through which they showcased slightly different take on miniature art. The pair curated an exhibition Urban Miniatures, which had the artists create miniatures of buildings and other objects covered in street art. The project ended up featuring works […]

The post Check out These Cool Urban Miniatures Covered in Street Art appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Curatorial duo PaxtonGlew, consisting out of artists Emily Paxton and Pam Glew, recently presented their newest project through which they showcased slightly different take on miniature art.

The pair curated an exhibition Urban Miniatures, which had the artists create miniatures of buildings and other objects covered in street art. The project ended up featuring works of 40 contemporary artists from all parts of the world. This included a series of graffiti-covered trains, colorful windmills and a cabin featuring messages of activism.

All of the miniatures will be exhibited as a model village at the Brighton’s Artists Open Houses Christmas Festival. Check out some of them below.

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DomestiKate Revives the Art of Miniature Making https://playjunkie.com/domestikate-revives-the-art-of-miniature-making/ Sat, 23 Nov 2019 14:17:55 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=30372 Miniature artist, known online as DomestiKate, works to revive and protect tiny art from extinction. Describing herself as “a creative heart, maker, and a joyful curator,” for over 20 years DomestiKate has worked in interior design and couture when she came to the surprising realizing that her work was simply too big. “My work had […]

The post DomestiKate Revives the Art of Miniature Making appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Miniature artist, known online as DomestiKate, works to revive and protect tiny art from extinction. Describing herself as “a creative heart, maker, and a joyful curator,” for over 20 years DomestiKate has worked in interior design and couture when she came to the surprising realizing that her work was simply too big.

“My work had become too big!” she explains on her personal website. “I was making massive design decisions for clients, yet I wasn’t feeling that same big joy I was helping them to create.”

Within days of this realization, a dear friend gifted her distressed and abandoned childhood dollhouse. “I decided to renovate this gifted dollhouse as a design piece for my office and I GOT LOST IN CREATIVITY,” recalled DomestiKate. “I had fallen out of practice of actually MAKING. THIS is what I had been missing.”

The work itself, as it turned out was just as inspiring and joyous as the finished products. “For me, joy comes from the craft,” she writes. “I like having paint under my fingernails and had forgotten how awesome it feels to stare at piles of assorted materials that are just waiting for me to morph them into something new, something different.”

Indeed, working in a 1:12 scale proves to be quite the challenge. But Kate is well prepared to take it – head-on! Take a look at some of her miniature works of art:

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This Miniature Ceramic Art is Mind-Boggling https://playjunkie.com/this-miniature-ceramic-art-is-mind-boggling/ Thu, 14 Nov 2019 12:53:27 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=29885 Here at PlayJunkie, we’ve written about many ceramic artists as well as miniature artists, but this is the first time we’ve encountered an actual miniature ceramic artist. Based in Oahu, Hawaii, Jon Almeda’s motto is “size does matter,” as his art clearly demonstrates. A self-taught artist, for many years Almeda assigned to the notion that […]

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Here at PlayJunkie, we’ve written about many ceramic artists as well as miniature artists, but this is the first time we’ve encountered an actual miniature ceramic artist. Based in Oahu, Hawaii, Jon Almeda’s motto is “size does matter,” as his art clearly demonstrates.

A self-taught artist, for many years Almeda assigned to the notion that “the bigger the better.” But after coming across a book called Creating Ceramic Miniatures he dramatically changed his approach. He soon discovered that working small was much harder then he imagined, requiring him to test different clay bodies, make his own tools, and trying out new techniques.

Now, after 17 years of creating miniatures, Almeda has amassed more than 250k fans on Instagram. Pushing himself to improve all the time, he’s trying out new techniques with each of his creations. Scrolling through his Instagram page, you can’t but be impressed. No matter the scale, his ceramics are perfect, his glazes – varied and rich, with each piece truly a one of kind.

Talking about his inspiration with The Potters Cast, he says: “there are so many different things that I am interested in, music, photography, just all different arts. There would be too many to list just one. I pull inspiration from all different places.”

Follow his Instagram page for more:

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Step Inside Rachel Growden’s Miniature Kitchen https://playjunkie.com/step-inside-rachel-growdens-miniature-kitchen/ Tue, 05 Nov 2019 16:23:58 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=29354 Nashville-based artist, Rachel Growden, has a passion for miniatures (“I like making minis and other things,” reads her Instagram bio). Amongst her tiny creations, you can find a miniature sink, a pink bathroom scale, and a delightful plant collection – all highly realistic and undeniably cute. But it’s her miniature food items that really caught […]

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Nashville-based artist, Rachel Growden, has a passion for miniatures (“I like making minis and other things,” reads her Instagram bio). Amongst her tiny creations, you can find a miniature sink, a pink bathroom scale, and a delightful plant collection – all highly realistic and undeniably cute.

View this post on Instagram

Miniature lemon bundt cake

A post shared by Rachel (@flea_garden) on

But it’s her miniature food items that really caught our attention. “My interest in miniatures really stems from my love of fake food and the realization that minis could be a relatively easy way to reproduce all kinds of food,” admitted Growden in an interview with Daily Mini. Indeed, her food looks good enough to eat (or, more likely, devour completely).

According to Growden, she began experimenting with miniature making after coming across videos on YouTube of a girl making miniature pastries, fast food, and candy. “I was working at an art supply store, so I just bought the supplies I needed there and went home to try making some mini food myself,” she recalled. It quickly took off from there.

“I generally draw inspiration for miniatures from whatever I wish I had in real life but, for whatever reason, don’t,” she says. “That may be a particular food, a vintage stove, or some antique painting I can’t afford. At least I can have a miniature version.”

Here are some of our favorite pieces by her:

View this post on Instagram

Valentine’s treats

A post shared by Rachel (@flea_garden) on

View this post on Instagram

Hot dogs and tater tots

A post shared by Rachel (@flea_garden) on

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These Artists Recreate Our World in Miniature Scale https://playjunkie.com/these-artists-recreate-our-world-in-miniature-scale/ Thu, 31 Oct 2019 10:53:58 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=29041 Miniature art dates back to the scribes of the medieval ages. But as time passed so has this traditional art evolved. These days, miniature artists go way beyond your cutesy dollhouse, recreating urban environments in their entirety and shedding light on less attractive aspects of human behavior. Here are three miniature artists taking this form of […]

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Miniature art dates back to the scribes of the medieval ages. But as time passed so has this traditional art evolved. These days, miniature artists go way beyond your cutesy dollhouse, recreating urban environments in their entirety and shedding light on less attractive aspects of human behavior. Here are three miniature artists taking this form of art to a whole other level.

Drew Leshko

Drew Leshko’s miniatures serve as a critique about the ways in which society constantly disposes of its past. His carefully made sculptures recreate the architecture of his neighborhood at a 1:12 scale. Combined, they form a sort of three-dimensional archive of buildings that are in transitional periods. These recreations include things like dumpsters and pallets. A somber reflection about the cost of modern-day living.

Joshua Smith

Much like Leshko, Joshua Smith also focuses his work on the overlooked aspects of urban environments, creating miniatures in 1:20 scale of what he calls “urban decay”. Based in Norwood, South Australia, Smith recreates anything from grime and rust to discarded cigarettes and graffiti. “The interest stems from building model kits when I was a kid and I have always been fascinated with miniature scenes from model railroads,” he explained in an interview with The Daily Miniature.

Susete Saraiva

But sometimes, a grimy environment is simply the backdrop of a work of fiction. Such is the inspiration for Susete Saraiva’s horror movie miniatures. Recreating movie settings from iconic horror films like It and Psycho, her miniatures are just as unsettling as they are remarkable. “I love the idea of taking some of my favorite homes and bringing them to life in miniature form to display,” said Saraiva in an interview with The Daily Mini. “They are also my most challenging pieces, which in the end gives me the most satisfaction when finally complete.”

View this post on Instagram

Well house coming together 🎈

A post shared by monstresss (@monstresss) on

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This Clay Kitchen on Instagram Features Miniature Meals https://playjunkie.com/this-clay-kitchen-on-instagram-features-miniature-meals/ Fri, 25 Oct 2019 11:23:11 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=28611 Miniature artist, known online as “Clay Girl,” makes tiny dishes and meals using polymer clay. At only 15, her “Clay Kitchen” on Instagram has already gathered hundreds of followers. Living in NYC, her creations are made in the tiniest corner of her grandma’s kitchen. “I love making food the most,” said Clay Girl in an […]

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Miniature artist, known online as “Clay Girl,” makes tiny dishes and meals using polymer clay. At only 15, her “Clay Kitchen” on Instagram has already gathered hundreds of followers. Living in NYC, her creations are made in the tiniest corner of her grandma’s kitchen.

View this post on Instagram

Rustic blueberry pie. Swipe for scale.

A post shared by Clay Girl (@theclaykitchen) on

“I love making food the most,” said Clay Girl in an interview with The Daily Mini. “I enjoy it because with each try I challenge myself to see how realistic I can make it. I also enjoy it because I spend a lot of time with my grandma, who loves to cook. I often try to make what she is making and she gets a kick out of it. After all, my clay station is in her kitchen next to the fridge.”

According to her, she first started making miniature food after going to occupational therapy in order to strengthen her muscles. “They made me knead a type of putty to build strength in my hands,” she recalled. “That was really boring, so I started making little ‘meals’ out of the putty. I’ve since left the putty behind. Hey, polymer clay keeps me toned!”

Her first miniature was a slice of watermelon, but she’s since moved to more complicated dishes. “I find making meat, like steaks, the most challenging,” she admits. “I just can’t seem to capture the texture. Maybe it’s because I’m a vegetarian.” Inspired by “Donuts and nice people,” her polymer creations are sure to put a smile on your face. Here are some of our favorites.

View this post on Instagram

Oatmeal raisin cookies.

A post shared by Clay Girl (@theclaykitchen) on

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ersion="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> miniatures Archives - PlayJunkie PlayJunkie Wed, 05 Feb 2020 13:40:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 The Tiny, Incredible Dioramas of Mar Cerdà https://playjunkie.com/the-tiny-incredible-dioramas-of-mar-cerda/ Sun, 09 Feb 2020 06:00:00 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=35167 Illustrator Mar Cerdà is known for her miniature dioramas, made of cut paper and watercolors. Displayed in galleries around the world, her creations are adored for their whimsicality, as well as their unbelievable attention to details (from floor tiles to tiny stamps on handwritten letters). With a background in cinema and audiovisuals and a fascination […]

The post The Tiny, Incredible Dioramas of Mar Cerdà appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Illustrator Mar Cerdà is known for her miniature dioramas, made of cut paper and watercolors. Displayed in galleries around the world, her creations are adored for their whimsicality, as well as their unbelievable attention to details (from floor tiles to tiny stamps on handwritten letters).

With a background in cinema and audiovisuals and a fascination with scenography and the treatment of space, Cerdà is a firm believer that characters can be defined by a space, even if they are not present at all. “I studied cinema in ESCAC, specializing in art direction, and when I had the opportunity to illustrate a children’s book suddenly 2D wasn’t enough for me,” she relayed in an interview with We Heart.

View this post on Instagram

Finally, I will update my online shop this weekend!!! Stay tuned! ✨

A post shared by Mar (@marillustrations) on

“I started cutting paper and creating little houses in 3D for the main characters in my first book, and I got hooked,” she says, adding that studying cinema had a great influence on the way she illustrates, not only taking influence from movies but also by the craft of making movies: the light, the mise-en-scène and, above all, the space.

Each piece begins with a sketch of what Cerdà has in mind, after which she hunts for reference images. “I like to find just the right tile designs or the best plants to go with the piece,” she explains. The whole process varies and can take between one or two days to more than three weeks.

Based in Barcelona, Cerdà is particularly inspired by the ceramic tiles that are a common feature in the city. “One thing that is repeated in my illustrations (and I think is totally influenced by my city) are the ceramic tiles,” she says. “Here in Barcelona tiles were very popular at the end of the 19th century; nowadays a lot of houses still have them. I’m also influenced by all the cities I’ve visited. Traveling is so inspiring.”

Take a look at some of her intricate designs in the gallery below:

The post The Tiny, Incredible Dioramas of Mar Cerdà appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Miniature Artist Recreates Historic Interiors at a 1:12 Scale https://playjunkie.com/miniature-artist-recreates-historic-interiors-at-a-112-scale/ Mon, 27 Jan 2020 18:39:20 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=34682 Chris Toledo is a miniature artist who crafts adorable and very detailed historic building interiors. His impressive miniature rooms are a perfect recreation of historic architecture at an impressive 1:12 scale. Toledo’s love for art and architecture dates back to his childhood, and he claims he always loved to create. When he discovered miniatures it […]

The post Miniature Artist Recreates Historic Interiors at a 1:12 Scale appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Chris Toledo is a miniature artist who crafts adorable and very detailed historic building interiors. His impressive miniature rooms are a perfect recreation of historic architecture at an impressive 1:12 scale.

Toledo’s love for art and architecture dates back to his childhood, and he claims he always loved to create. When he discovered miniatures it was love at first sight, because this art form is the perfect mix of every medium he’s ever loved.

“When creating my miniature pieces, the process can take from one month to almost two years to create a single piece,” the artist said in an interview with Bored Panda. “Each model I create starts with extensive research of the era and time period I’m trying to recreate,” Chris said. He goes through his collection of home plans and building guides from the early 20th century to make sure his pieces are 100% accurate.

Check out Chris’ miniature pieces in the photos below and make sure to follow this amazing artist on Instagram.

View this post on Instagram

Some detail shots of the finished kitchen.

A post shared by Chris Toledo (@ibuildsmallthings) on

The post Miniature Artist Recreates Historic Interiors at a 1:12 Scale appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Marina Paredes Creates Miniature Wooden Houses https://playjunkie.com/marina-paredes-creates-miniature-wooden-houses/ Tue, 07 Jan 2020 14:30:51 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=33083 When Marina Paredes was a child, she used to collect miniature toys. “I had a whole shelf of them,” she recalled in an interview with The Daily Mini. “My favorites were the Polly Pockets.” Now a model maker and a creator of miniatures herself, her miniature wooden houses are shared on her Instagram account and sold […]

The post Marina Paredes Creates Miniature Wooden Houses appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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When Marina Paredes was a child, she used to collect miniature toys. “I had a whole shelf of them,” she recalled in an interview with The Daily Mini. “My favorites were the Polly Pockets.”

Now a model maker and a creator of miniatures herself, her miniature wooden houses are shared on her Instagram account and sold online. “The first miniature I made was when I was around 10 years old,” she says. “I made it with toothpicks and it was a little house with small furniture. I remember that in order to open and close the door, I used a piece of cloth. I still keep it with much affection.”

Based in Spain, she incorporates in her work various types of wood, which include softwood like balsa or hardwood like linden, to which she adds detail in clay. The finished product is then painted using acrylic paint.

“One thing that I enjoy very much is making miniature versions of people’s houses,” she says. “It is very exciting for them and I have a good time.” She adds that she especially enjoys making small furniture, and adding details like plants, carpets, paintings, and televisions. “When you put them together they are like a small town,” she says.

“For me, the most difficult thing is to make very small objects without losing too many details,” she added. Step into her small (and quite delightful!) town:

The post Marina Paredes Creates Miniature Wooden Houses appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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These Miniatures Will Remind You of the Beauty In the Ordinary https://playjunkie.com/these-miniatures-will-remind-you-of-the-beauty-in-the-ordinary/ Tue, 17 Dec 2019 16:05:46 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=31815 Tatsuya Tanaka is a unique artist. His art is beautiful, colorful and full of life – but what really makes it special is its size. For the past nine years, Tanaka has been making miniature dioramas. Tanak’s dioramas don’t depict grand events or remarkable people. His focus is on everyday life. He uses his medium […]

The post These Miniatures Will Remind You of the Beauty In the Ordinary appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Tatsuya Tanaka is a unique artist. His art is beautiful, colorful and full of life – but what really makes it special is its size. For the past nine years, Tanaka has been making miniature dioramas.

Tanak’s dioramas don’t depict grand events or remarkable people. His focus is on everyday life. He uses his medium to showcase people swimming in the pool, competing in sport, dancing. He will sometimes dabble with the fantastical, and create a miniature version of Aladdin on his magical carpet – but mostly, he likes to focus on the magic of the mundane.

It’s not just Tanaka’s medium or his subjects that are unusual. Even the materials he uses to create his dioramas are untraditional. Instead of using clay, metal, paper, or any other raw material that is usually used to create dioramas and sculptures of any size, Tanaka uses everyday materials. A blue icicle can be an ocean, and a yellow one can be a beach; An old CD becomes a skating rink.

Tanaka’s miniatures are charming not only because they are meticulously made, but because they focus on all the moments we’re used to ignoring on a daily basis, the simple materials that surround us and we discard so easily, and the moments that can be awe-inspiring is we only pay attention.

The post These Miniatures Will Remind You of the Beauty In the Ordinary appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Check out These Cool Urban Miniatures Covered in Street Art https://playjunkie.com/check-out-these-cool-urban-miniatures-covered-in-street-art/ Wed, 27 Nov 2019 10:12:24 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=30582 Curatorial duo PaxtonGlew, consisting out of artists Emily Paxton and Pam Glew, recently presented their newest project through which they showcased slightly different take on miniature art. The pair curated an exhibition Urban Miniatures, which had the artists create miniatures of buildings and other objects covered in street art. The project ended up featuring works […]

The post Check out These Cool Urban Miniatures Covered in Street Art appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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Curatorial duo PaxtonGlew, consisting out of artists Emily Paxton and Pam Glew, recently presented their newest project through which they showcased slightly different take on miniature art.

The pair curated an exhibition Urban Miniatures, which had the artists create miniatures of buildings and other objects covered in street art. The project ended up featuring works of 40 contemporary artists from all parts of the world. This included a series of graffiti-covered trains, colorful windmills and a cabin featuring messages of activism.

All of the miniatures will be exhibited as a model village at the Brighton’s Artists Open Houses Christmas Festival. Check out some of them below.

The post Check out These Cool Urban Miniatures Covered in Street Art appeared first on PlayJunkie.

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DomestiKate Revives the Art of Miniature Making https://playjunkie.com/domestikate-revives-the-art-of-miniature-making/ Sat, 23 Nov 2019 14:17:55 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=30372 Miniature artist, known online as DomestiKate, works to revive and protect tiny art from extinction. Describing herself as “a creative heart, maker, and a joyful curator,” for over 20 years DomestiKate has worked in interior design and couture when she came to the surprising realizing that her work was simply too big. “My work had […]

The post DomestiKate Revives the Art of Miniature Making appeared first on PlayJunkie.

]]>
Miniature artist, known online as DomestiKate, works to revive and protect tiny art from extinction. Describing herself as “a creative heart, maker, and a joyful curator,” for over 20 years DomestiKate has worked in interior design and couture when she came to the surprising realizing that her work was simply too big.

“My work had become too big!” she explains on her personal website. “I was making massive design decisions for clients, yet I wasn’t feeling that same big joy I was helping them to create.”

Within days of this realization, a dear friend gifted her distressed and abandoned childhood dollhouse. “I decided to renovate this gifted dollhouse as a design piece for my office and I GOT LOST IN CREATIVITY,” recalled DomestiKate. “I had fallen out of practice of actually MAKING. THIS is what I had been missing.”

The work itself, as it turned out was just as inspiring and joyous as the finished products. “For me, joy comes from the craft,” she writes. “I like having paint under my fingernails and had forgotten how awesome it feels to stare at piles of assorted materials that are just waiting for me to morph them into something new, something different.”

Indeed, working in a 1:12 scale proves to be quite the challenge. But Kate is well prepared to take it – head-on! Take a look at some of her miniature works of art:

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This Miniature Ceramic Art is Mind-Boggling https://playjunkie.com/this-miniature-ceramic-art-is-mind-boggling/ Thu, 14 Nov 2019 12:53:27 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=29885 Here at PlayJunkie, we’ve written about many ceramic artists as well as miniature artists, but this is the first time we’ve encountered an actual miniature ceramic artist. Based in Oahu, Hawaii, Jon Almeda’s motto is “size does matter,” as his art clearly demonstrates. A self-taught artist, for many years Almeda assigned to the notion that […]

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Here at PlayJunkie, we’ve written about many ceramic artists as well as miniature artists, but this is the first time we’ve encountered an actual miniature ceramic artist. Based in Oahu, Hawaii, Jon Almeda’s motto is “size does matter,” as his art clearly demonstrates.

A self-taught artist, for many years Almeda assigned to the notion that “the bigger the better.” But after coming across a book called Creating Ceramic Miniatures he dramatically changed his approach. He soon discovered that working small was much harder then he imagined, requiring him to test different clay bodies, make his own tools, and trying out new techniques.

Now, after 17 years of creating miniatures, Almeda has amassed more than 250k fans on Instagram. Pushing himself to improve all the time, he’s trying out new techniques with each of his creations. Scrolling through his Instagram page, you can’t but be impressed. No matter the scale, his ceramics are perfect, his glazes – varied and rich, with each piece truly a one of kind.

Talking about his inspiration with The Potters Cast, he says: “there are so many different things that I am interested in, music, photography, just all different arts. There would be too many to list just one. I pull inspiration from all different places.”

Follow his Instagram page for more:

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Step Inside Rachel Growden’s Miniature Kitchen https://playjunkie.com/step-inside-rachel-growdens-miniature-kitchen/ Tue, 05 Nov 2019 16:23:58 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=29354 Nashville-based artist, Rachel Growden, has a passion for miniatures (“I like making minis and other things,” reads her Instagram bio). Amongst her tiny creations, you can find a miniature sink, a pink bathroom scale, and a delightful plant collection – all highly realistic and undeniably cute. But it’s her miniature food items that really caught […]

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Nashville-based artist, Rachel Growden, has a passion for miniatures (“I like making minis and other things,” reads her Instagram bio). Amongst her tiny creations, you can find a miniature sink, a pink bathroom scale, and a delightful plant collection – all highly realistic and undeniably cute.

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Miniature lemon bundt cake

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But it’s her miniature food items that really caught our attention. “My interest in miniatures really stems from my love of fake food and the realization that minis could be a relatively easy way to reproduce all kinds of food,” admitted Growden in an interview with Daily Mini. Indeed, her food looks good enough to eat (or, more likely, devour completely).

According to Growden, she began experimenting with miniature making after coming across videos on YouTube of a girl making miniature pastries, fast food, and candy. “I was working at an art supply store, so I just bought the supplies I needed there and went home to try making some mini food myself,” she recalled. It quickly took off from there.

“I generally draw inspiration for miniatures from whatever I wish I had in real life but, for whatever reason, don’t,” she says. “That may be a particular food, a vintage stove, or some antique painting I can’t afford. At least I can have a miniature version.”

Here are some of our favorite pieces by her:

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Valentine’s treats

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Hot dogs and tater tots

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These Artists Recreate Our World in Miniature Scale https://playjunkie.com/these-artists-recreate-our-world-in-miniature-scale/ Thu, 31 Oct 2019 10:53:58 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=29041 Miniature art dates back to the scribes of the medieval ages. But as time passed so has this traditional art evolved. These days, miniature artists go way beyond your cutesy dollhouse, recreating urban environments in their entirety and shedding light on less attractive aspects of human behavior. Here are three miniature artists taking this form of […]

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Miniature art dates back to the scribes of the medieval ages. But as time passed so has this traditional art evolved. These days, miniature artists go way beyond your cutesy dollhouse, recreating urban environments in their entirety and shedding light on less attractive aspects of human behavior. Here are three miniature artists taking this form of art to a whole other level.

Drew Leshko

Drew Leshko’s miniatures serve as a critique about the ways in which society constantly disposes of its past. His carefully made sculptures recreate the architecture of his neighborhood at a 1:12 scale. Combined, they form a sort of three-dimensional archive of buildings that are in transitional periods. These recreations include things like dumpsters and pallets. A somber reflection about the cost of modern-day living.

Joshua Smith

Much like Leshko, Joshua Smith also focuses his work on the overlooked aspects of urban environments, creating miniatures in 1:20 scale of what he calls “urban decay”. Based in Norwood, South Australia, Smith recreates anything from grime and rust to discarded cigarettes and graffiti. “The interest stems from building model kits when I was a kid and I have always been fascinated with miniature scenes from model railroads,” he explained in an interview with The Daily Miniature.

Susete Saraiva

But sometimes, a grimy environment is simply the backdrop of a work of fiction. Such is the inspiration for Susete Saraiva’s horror movie miniatures. Recreating movie settings from iconic horror films like It and Psycho, her miniatures are just as unsettling as they are remarkable. “I love the idea of taking some of my favorite homes and bringing them to life in miniature form to display,” said Saraiva in an interview with The Daily Mini. “They are also my most challenging pieces, which in the end gives me the most satisfaction when finally complete.”

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Well house coming together 🎈

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This Clay Kitchen on Instagram Features Miniature Meals https://playjunkie.com/this-clay-kitchen-on-instagram-features-miniature-meals/ Fri, 25 Oct 2019 11:23:11 +0000 https://playjunkie.com/?p=28611 Miniature artist, known online as “Clay Girl,” makes tiny dishes and meals using polymer clay. At only 15, her “Clay Kitchen” on Instagram has already gathered hundreds of followers. Living in NYC, her creations are made in the tiniest corner of her grandma’s kitchen. “I love making food the most,” said Clay Girl in an […]

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Miniature artist, known online as “Clay Girl,” makes tiny dishes and meals using polymer clay. At only 15, her “Clay Kitchen” on Instagram has already gathered hundreds of followers. Living in NYC, her creations are made in the tiniest corner of her grandma’s kitchen.

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Rustic blueberry pie. Swipe for scale.

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“I love making food the most,” said Clay Girl in an interview with The Daily Mini. “I enjoy it because with each try I challenge myself to see how realistic I can make it. I also enjoy it because I spend a lot of time with my grandma, who loves to cook. I often try to make what she is making and she gets a kick out of it. After all, my clay station is in her kitchen next to the fridge.”

According to her, she first started making miniature food after going to occupational therapy in order to strengthen her muscles. “They made me knead a type of putty to build strength in my hands,” she recalled. “That was really boring, so I started making little ‘meals’ out of the putty. I’ve since left the putty behind. Hey, polymer clay keeps me toned!”

Her first miniature was a slice of watermelon, but she’s since moved to more complicated dishes. “I find making meat, like steaks, the most challenging,” she admits. “I just can’t seem to capture the texture. Maybe it’s because I’m a vegetarian.” Inspired by “Donuts and nice people,” her polymer creations are sure to put a smile on your face. Here are some of our favorites.

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Oatmeal raisin cookies.

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