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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.


Starburst on Fifth: A Fantasy 1930s Art Deco Miniature You Can Practically Hear Swing
Welcome to The Starburst Pavilion, opened in 1933 on a fantastical Fifth Avenue that lives two streets over from reality and one elevator ride above it. Commissioned by heiress and amateur astronomer Vera Lyric Fontaine, the Pavilion was her love letter to wireless dreams and late-night swing. Legend says Vera demanded “a building that looks like it can hear the future,” so the architect crowned the entry with a radiant fan crest—a stylized radio antenna wrapped in Art Deco g

Brandon
5 days ago8 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 59 min read


Sunlit Secrets: A Spanish Colonial Miniature Cottage & Garden
Welcome to Casa Pequeña de los Vientos, founded (legend says) in 1919, when a retired tile-maker named Isidro Ventana followed a stray cat into a courtyard and decided the sunlight there was unusually well-behaved. He built the cottage in stages, bartering clay pots for cedar planks and trading stories for wrought iron...

Brandon
Sep 311 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 18 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 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


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


Hotel Tassel, Pocket-Sized: An Art Nouveau Staircase in Miniature
First Impressions in Miniature If Art Nouveau is nature’s handwriting, Hotel Tassel is the love letter—and I’m extra sappy about it...

Brandon
Aug 239 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 208 min read


Brick by Brick: A Guide to Crafting Tiny Masonry Walls (Running Bond to Herringbone)
This miniature brick wall tutorial lives where texture meets patience: fine mortar lines, chipped arrises, soft lime bloom, and color variation from rusty orange to soot-dark umber. If you’ve been itching to add a dollhouse brick pattern to a 1:12 garden wall, an HO-scale factory, or even an Art Deco dollhouse fireplace surround, this is your field guide.

Brandon
Aug 176 min read


Edelweiss & Blue Shutters: A Fantasy Austrian Chalet Diorama That Smells Like Fresh Strudel (If Only Screens Had Smell-o-Vision)
Locals know this place as Hühnergasse 7, Café Plätzl, in the hamlet of Kleinschnitzel—founded in 173¾

Brandon
Aug 147 min read


Edelweiss & Onion Domes: A Fantasy Austrian Church in Miniature
Locals call it St. Edelweiss of Lillenthal, founded in 1899¾ when a wandering bell-maker misread a map and decided the view was too good to correct. The village council—consisting of Mayor Greta von Schnitzel, her perpetually late cousin Otto “The Clock”, and a marmot of disputed citizenship—commissioned the church with a clear brief: “Make it shine, but keep room for picnics.”

Brandon
Aug 116 min read


Copper Curves & Clockwork Dreams: A Steampunk-Futurist Forest Villa (Miniature Model)
If Mother Nature and a steampunk inventor ever decided to collaborate over tea and biscuits, the result might look suspiciously like this: a copper-clad, greenery-draped wonder straight out of the year 2150. This sustainable futuristic home model fuses the warmth of the forest with the precision of robotics, creating a design so harmonious you can almost hear the leaves sigh with contentment. The exterior looks like it could roll away at any moment on some mysterious planetar

Brandon
Aug 97 min read


Butterfly Wings, Metro Dreams: An Art Nouveau Miniature Pavilion You Can Practically Smell the Petunias In
At first glance, this structure practically screams (politely, in a French accent), “Hector Guimard was here!” The iconic Art Nouveau curves, plant-like wrought iron, and ornate stained glass are all signatures of Guimard’s style — particularly his entrances to the Paris Métro in the early 1900s. The flowing, organic lines feel alive, like the building itself is preparing to take flight.

Brandon
Aug 63 min read


Enchanted Cliffside Palace in LEGO: A Miniature Masterpiece of Royal Proportions
Legend has it that the "Goldenridge Keep" was commissioned by Queen Brickella the Bold, a ruler known for her unyielding demand for views...

Brandon
Dec 29, 20243 min read


A Rococo Fantasy Elf Cottage at the North Pole: Miniature Magic in a Winter Wonderland
This miniature marvel draws from the luxurious whimsy of the Rococo style. Originating in 18th-century France, Rococo was all about...

Brandon
Dec 27, 20243 min read


A Pastel Rococo Christmas Dream: A Miniature Wonderland
Legend has it, this manor belongs to the mysterious Duchess of Frosting—a confectioner turned aristocrat whose talent for sculpting...

Brandon
Dec 25, 20243 min read


A Christmas Delight: Victorian Gingerbread Village in Mint, Pastels, and Champagne Gold
Legend has it that this gingerbread village was once a magical holiday retreat for Victorian confectioners. In the 1800s, a mischievous...

Brandon
Dec 6, 20243 min read


Cozy Autumn Shop in Boston Miniature Diorama: A Fall-Inspired Delight
Nestled on a quaint street in the fictional neighborhood of Chestnut Hollow, the shop is known as "Vera's Harvest Boutique."

Brandon
Nov 4, 20243 min read
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