13/01 2002
Bedroom Room Box
My newfound interest in miniatures lead me to create a room box from old video tapes. I decided to recreate my daughter's bedroom.
Materials
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- 3 worn-out video tapes
- popsicle sticks
- drywall compound
- duct tape
- double sided carpet tape
- saw, file and sandpaper
- cardboard
- small piece of styrofoam 1/2-inch thick
- fabric
- paper
- plastic stir sticks
- acrylic paint
- varnish
- glue gun
Construction
![]() underside of room |
I created the room from video tapes
- Cover each video tape with duct tape. The best way to do this is to cover the thickness of the tape in one continuous strip around the whole tape. Make a cut at each of the 4 corners on each side and push down the tape onto the face part of the tape. Then cover the face parts of the tape with 2 strips of tape just a tad shorter than the full width.
- Now attach the tapes to each other with double sided carpet tape and then cover the seams with duct tape.
- I had a box of durabond drywall compound left over from a job and decided to use that for the walls. I mixed it according to the directions on the box and applied it with a scraper. It didn't look very good, so I just waited a bit for it to harden and then used my hand moistened with water to smooth it out. This gave it an uneven an rustic look. I let it dry for a few hours. This gave me the time to create my furniture.
The Bed
![]() the bed |
- I had to make the bed to fit the dimensions of the room/video tape width. I used popsicle sticks with the ends cut of. I sawed them off and then used sand paper to smooth out the ends and then glued the pieces together.
- Next I cut out a piece of styrofoam for the mattress to fit into the frame and covered it with fabric that I attached with with the glue gun to the back side.
- Then I found some fabric that looked like a quilt and sewed a quilt by inserting some batting. In hindsight I should have left out the batting. I stitched around the design to make it look like a real quilt.
- Then I also made a small pillow.
- Next I painted the bedframe white and then varnished it.
- I glued all the pieces to the bedframe including the quilt and pillow.
The Desk, Computer and Chair
![]() desk | |
![]() chair |
- I measured my daughter's real desk and then used my graphics program to recreate the individual pieces. I found some woodlook graphic and used that to make the pieces look like wood. To give the desk stability I doubled up each piece.
- I printed them out on card board paper and cut them out and glued the desk together and then coated it with varnish.
- The Computer is from a pattern I found at Jim's Printable Minis . I had to print out the computer at about 75% of the 1/12-inch scale model to fit the room's dimensions.
- The Chair is from a pattern I found in one of my craft books. This time I cut the pattern out of plain cardboard and covered it with the wood pattern that I had printed out on plain paper and then varnished. This seems to work and look better than printing the pattern directly onto the card board.
- he legs are matches covered with my fake wood veneer
The Outside Walls and Window
![]() outside wall with window |
- Here it came in handy to have the drywall compound covered with the varnish. The brown paint became transparent and reacted almost like a wash that I could wipe of and create a very natural look.
- I made a window with some strips of balsa wood I found lying around.
- Printed a stained glass design on a transparency sheet, placed a sheet of white paper behind it. (I could have probably painted the design on white paper and varnished it). Then I glued it the the back of the frame and then glued the frame onto the wall.
The Inside Walls
- I sealed the drywall compound first with a coat of varnish.
- Then painted the walls on the inside with a few coats of blue. I should have left the walls uncoated, the blue would have covered them better.
- It is important to paint the walls before installing the floor so there are no paint drips on the floor
The Posters
![]() wall with posters |
- I took the pictures my daughter had collected on her computer and shrank them to fit the room size in a graphics program and printed them on plain white paper. I cut them out and varnished them. (I should have varnished them first and then cut out, would have been easier).
- Next I cut a plastic stir stick in half. Now I had a poster hanger. I could slide the cut out poster into the slit in the newly created poster hanger.
- Then I used a needle and threaded a piece of thread through the poster hanger tube and tied a knot that I then slid into the tube to hide it.
- I glue some seed bead to the wall. Hung the posters up on them and put a dab on glue on the back of the posters to make them stay put.
The Floor
![]() popsicle stick floor |
- I wanted realistic looking floor and used popsicle sticks glued to the video tape to create it.
- I cut the ends off the popsicle sticks and cut them into 3 different lengths and then arranged them like a real wood floor.
- Then I used watered down acrylic paint that I wiped off immediately to stain the floor and gave it a couple coats of varnish. By sanding between varnishing I removed also some of the paint and gave it a worn look.
- The Baseboards are just popsicle sticks painted white
- Now all I had to do was to glue the furniture into place and my room box was finished.
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