top of page
All Miniature Models
Small World Miniatures uses AI-generated visuals; if that approach isn’t your preference, this may not be the site for you.


Temple Trails: An Indiana Jones–Inspired LEGO miniature that Turns a Jungle into a Story
You can’t say “fedora + satchel + temple” without summoning the charisma of Indiana Jones. This scene could be an echo of Raiders of the Lost Ark’s Peruvian opening or the jungly interludes sprinkled across the series. The build cleverly avoids any direct trademarked symbols while still nodding to the franchise’s visual cues: aged stone, lurking idols, and a hero who looks perpetually dusty.

Brandon
Sep 23, 20257 min read


Sail, Scale, Repeat: A LEGO Wind Waker miniature that splashes off the shelf
Every MOC like this has a heartbeat that starts long before the first plate clicks. The creator channeled the emotional memory of Wind Waker—the first time the camera whips back and you realize the sea is your playground. That memory often translates into design decisions: exaggerate the figurehead because that’s how it felt, push the sail oversized because wonder needs big shapes, keep the deck tidy because the hero deserves a clear stage. And then there’s the tactile joy...

Brandon
Sep 22, 20256 min read


Build a Hyrule Ranch Miniature (Zelda Model Tutorial)
Step onto the base and your shoes (imaginary, tiny) crunch on packed path dust, edged with mousse-soft grass. The entry gable leans in like an eager host; those timbers look carved by a craftsman with forearms like barrels. The roof is a warm terracotta red, scuffed where weather and boots have scolded the shingles....

Brandon
Sep 19, 20259 min read


A Tiny Red-Cap Retreat: A Smurfs-Inspired Miniature Mushroom House
I grew up on Saturday mornings with The Smurfs, and I’m convinced that peeking into their adorable world is what kick-started my lifelong obsession with miniatures—and my need to build outdoorsy, living-landscape scenes that feel like someone blue might be home.

Brandon
Sep 18, 20259 min read


The Miniature Maker’s Concrete Bible: Molds, Textures, and 15 Projects to Cast Today
Today I’m giving you a definitive guide to casting miniature concrete with balsa, foam, and other easy-to-shape mold materials, plus practical techniques for wood-grain board-formed finishes, stone textures, smooth architectural surfaces, and more. And because I know you’re here for the goods, there’s a 15-project build guide you can use right away—from foundations and stairs to bridge arches, culverts, and fences. No tiny tale, no inspiration detour—just the real stuff you c

Brandon
Sep 17, 20259 min read


Nook’s Cranny, Reimagined in Miniature: A Cheerful Storefront Diorama for Cozy-Scale Worlds
Nook’s Cranny began life as the island’s first general store, the place where possibility sells by the handful. Legend says a kindly entrepreneur with a leaf-shaped logo set two enthusiastic assistants—Timmy and Tommy—loose upon retail destiny. They greeted every traveler, traded every odd trinket, and paid a suspiciously fair price for your seashell collection. Everything smelled faintly of cedar and optimism.

Brandon
Sep 16, 20259 min read


The Ultimate Miniature Flower Guide: From Petal to Pot (and Every Tiny Garden in Between)
Let’s turn your desk into Petalborough-in-progress. Use this guide as creative fuel, not a GPS—your results will vary (that’s the fun part), and we’re not replicating one exact build so much as mastering techniques you can mix and match across scenes.

Brandon
Sep 15, 202511 min read


Peacock Court in Miniature: Mrs. Slocombe’s 1970s Living Room Diorama (Are You Being Served? Inspired)
Welcome to Peacock Court, Flat 4A, where Mrs. Betty Slocombe returns after a victorious day at Grace Brothers. The building was “modernized” in 1974 (meaning someone added a dado rail and called it a lifestyle), and Betty has curated her lounge as if Harrods, a charity shop, and a holiday in Blackpool had a tea party and never left. She sips from a fancy china set she insists is “proper porcelain” and talks to her beloved cat about the scandalous price of nylons...

Brandon
Sep 12, 20258 min read


Hearth & Home: A Traditional Mexican Kitchen Miniature Diorama That Warms the Soul
Welcome to La Cocina de la Cometa, founded in 1906 (give or take a few centuries) when a comet allegedly swooped over an adobe village and set everyone’s hair briefly on end—and all the ovens perfectly to 375°F. The kitchen’s keeper is Doña Lumbre Pepita, a spice-slinging legend known for her “Seven Winds Salsa,” so named because she claims it’s best stirred while seven different breezes pass through the room. “Open all the windows,” she says, “and let the gossip season the s

Brandon
Sep 11, 20259 min read


Haunted Beacon Hill Miniature Makeover: turning a classic dollhouse kit into a cinematic Victorian Spookhouse
The Beacon Hill kit is the rom-com lead of dollhouses: pretty, pink, and ready for polite tea. I looked at that sweet façade and thought, “What if we cast you in a gothic thriller instead?” Same bones, new wardrobe. For this build I kept the kit’s iconic Second Empire silhouette—mansard roof, bay windows, and carriage-porch vibes—but I steered the palette from cupcake pink to desaturated mint that feels like it’s been rained on since 1888. Add some Victorian-meets-Rococo orna

Brandon
Sep 10, 20258 min read


Playful Painted-Lady: Carl's House from the Pixar Movie "Up"
This miniature beauty is inspired by Carl’s place from Up—not a replica, but the same “pack your snacks, we might float away” energy. The palette cranks joy to eleven: tangerine shingles, mint siding, pink window frames, and that scalloped fish-scale gable that looks like a school of sherbet-flavored mermaids.

Brandon
Sep 9, 20258 min read


La Cuisine de Verre: A French Country Conservatory Kitchen in Miniature
Welcome to La Cuisine de Verre (“The Glass Kitchen”), a pocket-size conservatory built in 1898 by Madame Colette Mirabelle, retired pastry poet and alleged basil whisperer. When her husband, Étienne, decided the proper place for a kitchen was “where the tomatoes are,” he refitted their cottage’s old greenhouse into this airy, plant-forward culinary lab.

Brandon
Sep 8, 20258 min read


The Rosy Studio: A Vigée-Le-Brun–Inspired Artist’s Studio Miniature Diorama
If Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun had a weekend cottage where she painted portraits, drank scandalously delicate tea, and hid a cache of secret macarons, it would look exactly like this miniature studio. You’re greeted by a facade that swans between Rococo romance and Second-Empire swagger: a mansard roof flirting with filigreed cresting, carved corbels winking under arched windows, and—be still my heart—that glowing circular window like a sugared medallion...

Brandon
Sep 5, 20259 min read


Gilded Sips: An Art Deco Miniature Café
Welcome to Gilded Sips, established in 1928 by two unlikely co-conspirators: Aurelia Finch, a botanical illustrator with a weakness for espresso, and Otto Beaumont, a machinist who moonlighted as a stage-lighting tech. They met arguing over whether a café should be lit like a greenhouse or a theater. Compromise? Art Deco verdure.

Brandon
Sep 4, 202510 min read


The Clockwork Canteen: A Steampunk Miniature Food Truck with Big Flavor in a Tiny World
Aurelia’s truck runs on a secret blend of clock-spring tension and the last polite puff of steam from each brew. If you look closely, there’s a tiny teaspoon welded near the front grill—a gift from the Arborists after Aurelia rescued a runaway teapot on a windy Tuesday. Easter egg hunters, you’ve been notified.

Brandon
Sep 2, 20259 min read


Privet Drive, Pocket-Sized: A Harry Potter Miniature Tour & How-To
Hey fellow muggles! I’m not saying I’ve read the Harry Potter books a few times—I’m saying my paperbacks look like they’ve survived a Quidditch season in the rain. I’ve also visited most of the theme parks around the world (I’m that friend), and my favorite pilgrimage is Warner Bros. Studio Tour London, where I turn into a kid with a camera and a butterbeer mustache. So when a meticulously crafted, Privet Drive–inspired house lands on my desk, my heart does a small Hippogriff

Brandon
Sep 1, 20258 min read


Sunlit Stucco & Turquoise Dreams: A Gerudo Town Home Miniature Diorama
Full disclosure: I’m a Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom lifer—I’ve logged an embarrassing number of hours wandering the Gerudo desert and getting destroyed by a molduga, and yes, I even played it on on of my gaming YouTube channels. So this little scene is basically my love letter to Gerudo Town, distilled into a miniature Gerudo Town house diorama that sits proudly on a walnut base and glows like late-afternoon Hyrule.

Brandon
Aug 31, 20259 min read


Jetsons-Style Dreams in Miniature: A Retro-Futuristic Apartment Tour
You’re looking at my favorite kind of time travel: the kind that fits on a bookshelf. This whole apartment diorama suite is inspired by the Jetsons’ optimistic 1960s future—rounded windows, brass pendants, sky-high views, and furniture that looks like it might hover if you just wink at it. From the glassy transport tube to the turquoise flying car in the garage, every scene leans into retro-futuristic, mid-century “Googie” charm.

Brandon
Aug 30, 20258 min read


Palm-Sized Glamour: A Kelly Wearstler–Inspired Miniature Living Room & Kitchen Diorama
Once upon a time, Mara lived in a studio where beige went to retire. Every day, she longed for contrast, character, and a couch that could host a tiny trivia night. One day, she found this loft with a view of the pebble quarry and a kitchen island dramatic enough to have its own SAG card. Because of that, she swapped all chrome for brass, installed a floor inspired by the zig and zag of a bass line, and commissioned a chandelier that looks like a coral reef in gala attire. Un

Brandon
Aug 28, 20258 min read


Larkspur Lantern House: A Pastel Fantasy Victorian–Art Nouveau Miniature (and How You Can Build One)
Welcome to Larkspur Lantern House, founded in the year 1898¾ (time runs differently in Verdigris Hollow—blame the tea). The home was commissioned by Aurelia Larkspur, a horticultural cartographer who mapped gardens by scent. She insisted on a staircase that “turns like ivy” and windows tall enough for moonbeams to step through without ducking. Her neighbor, Mr. Percival Matchwick, a chimney cap enthusiast (niche hobby, enormous hat), designed the elaborate stack that crowns t

Brandon
Aug 26, 20259 min read
bottom of page


