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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.


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 319 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 308 min read


Gumdrop Eaves & Garden Dreams: A Polymer-Clay Cottage Miniature You Can Practically Smell the Cookies From
Confession: I love a house that looks like it bakes its own cookies. This polymer-clay cottage has gumdrop roof tiles, a petite picket fence, and window boxes spilling over like confetti at a parade. The style leans storybook-meets-cottagecore, with a few nods to a miniature Victorian bay window and those scalloped miniature terracotta roof tiles that make you want to boop the shingles. Every corner says, “Welcome! Please pet the topiary.”

Brandon
Aug 2910 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 288 min read


Anker Stone (Anchor Blocks) Palace: a miniature neo-Romanesque exterior (and how to cast your own blocks)
Anker (Anchor) stones began life in the late 19th century with the Lilienthal brothers—yes, the glider-flying Lilienthals—who experimented with stone building blocks to teach structure and form. Businessman Friedrich A. Richter saw the potential, refined the material into a durable, precisely molded composite, and launched the Anker Steinbaukasten system from Rudolstadt, Germany. The magic was (and still is) the module: pieces follow an exact grid so arches, lintels...

Brandon
Aug 277 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 269 min read
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