Realistic male 12-inch figures (male action figures) --- We’d like to see real
men in work clothes, standard business dress --- jackets and suits, with ties --- and other every-day street clothes. Unless you're committed to fighting World War II all over again --- an action that we would not recommend --- stay away from GI Joes in uniform, glorified Nazi soldiers, bombed-out ruins of invaded countries, and so on. It's like taking your best girl to a high school prom while wearing your grandfather's cast-off schmattes .
Realistic female 11½-inch figures ! They're often called fashion dolls, but
we'd rather see the everyday housewife or working woman . Can anyone get this right? Not everyone looks like Anorexic Barbie with the impossibly thin Goose Neck at a fashion show . The key word is "realistic" .
Vehicles : die-cast cars, in 1:6 size, are admittedly not easy to obtain ; you might take this opportunity to try Forced Perspective by placing foreground figures at varying distances from the viewers' eyes in such a way on the Viewscape as to suggest decreasing distances from us full-size humans. Set designers for Broadway plays and Hollywood movies do this all the time. Position the smaller scale autos as background in a forced-perspective diorama. More
on forced perspective in later posts .
Buildings: An excellent opportunity for some artisan or manufacturer to make
and sell stores, offices, apartment buildings, and all the other structures
found in the average hometown. We can recommend starting with false front background
flats like those that are available in O Gauge and smaller for model railroads,
often very nicely done. That would be another utilization of forced perspective, as
in a stage setting or many film backgrounds .
Houses: Finally, some excellent (doll) houses are being sold in 1:6 (2 inches to
the foot) scale; with those sizes placed in the foreground and other sizes (1/2 " scale and 1/4" inch scale - O gauge ) even further from the viewing eye; the viewscaper then starts to really build depth and distance into the scene.
Clothing appropriate to the era --- what your parents and grandparents wore
every day to go out into the street. The difficulty here is that fabrics are very difficult to scale down, is that they look like wool rugs grabbed off the floor and hastily wrapped around the
figure. The problem with so many figurines is that they are dressed using fabric that doesn't scale down. We have found that the most realistic figures in a viewscape are the ones that are cast and the clothing skillfully painted on . Examples to follow in future Miniature Universe BLOGS .
Furniture: "Shrunken Treasures" seems to be featuring some good looking wooden
and upholstered furniture that look like they belong in those great houses. Picture
Bespaq's line of outstanding furniture in this larger two-inch-to-the-foot scale !
Basically, we need all the many different accessories for daily living that are available in other scales --- a real opportunity for artisans using this new Forced Perspective approach to develop and market a whole new line of miniatures . Suddenly, your day is populated with interesting and meaningful research and creation ... a nice change from current activities . P.S. Research can include appropriate --- of that era --- Sears catalogues, Ladies Home Journal, news magazines like Time and Life, and, of course, illustrated books on clothing .
Basically, we need all the many different accessories for daily living that are available in other scales --- a real opportunity for artisans using this new Forced Perspective approach to develop and market a whole new line of miniatures . Suddenly, your day is populated with interesting and meaningful research and creation ... a nice change from current activities . P.S. Research can include appropriate --- of that era --- Sears catalogues, Ladies Home Journal, news magazines like Time and Life, and, of course, illustrated books on clothing .
Our hope is that these street scenes can provide the right scenery for , say, an entire line of dioramas, including streetcars .