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.


A Tiny Edwardian Bathroom Vanity Miniature, Where Marble Whispers and Brass Brags
You know that feeling when you walk into a fancy old house and immediately start acting like you belong there? Shoulders back. Chin up. Pinky slightly more judgmental than usual.
That’s what this Edwardian bathroom vanity miniature does to me.
Right away, it hits you with the big three: carved wood drama, cool marble calm, and brass fixtures that clearly believe they’re the main character. And then—because it’s extra—there’s that ornate mirror crown sitting above the sink

Brandon
Feb 169 min read


A Paper-Origami Miniature House in Bloom: The Folded Fern Cottage and Its Tiny, Unreasonably Dramatic Garden
Locals call it Folded Fern Cottage, but that wasn’t the original name. According to the very serious (and definitely not gossipy) records of the Paperbark Township Historical Society, the cottage was founded in 1891 by a retired stationery magnate named Myrtle Quill, who believed two things with absolute certainty: Tea tastes better when served on a balcony. If you fold something precisely enough, it becomes morally superior.

Brandon
Feb 59 min read


Bohemian Fantasy Miniature Entryway Diorama: A Tiny Foyer Tour (Plus DIY Tips for Your Own Magical Miniature)
Step into the space and the first thing you feel is warm light—that golden glow that makes everything look kinder, cozier, and slightly more expensive than it probably is. The lantern overhead is doing heroic work, casting gentle highlights on metallic accents and turning the whole room into a tiny sunset...

Brandon
Jan 189 min read


Courbet Comes Home: A Realist’s Miniature Cottage & Garden Diorama
Gustave Courbet famously championed a radical idea for his time: paint only what you can see. No angels, no allegories—only the truthful textures of life. In miniature form, that philosophy becomes a discipline of proportion, restraint, and observation. You aren’t inventing a fairy cottage; you’re modeling the way wood cups with age, the way vines colonize mortar, the amber radius of a kerosene lamp at dusk.

Brandon
Aug 20, 20258 min read
bottom of page
