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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.


A Riot of Rugs and Rhinestones: An Iris Apfel–Inspired Miniature Sofa Diorama That Refuses to Whisper
This miniature feels like it belongs in the family tree of bold, joyful design—where personality is the main structural beam. Iris Apfel is the obvious guiding constellation here: fearless color, textile layering, and the “why choose one pattern when you can adopt twelve” philosophy. The sofa’s patchwork energy and accessory-heavy styling mirrors that unapologetic, curated chaos—where every piece looks like it has a story, even if that story is “I was fabulous at a flea marke

Brandon
Feb 99 min read


Moss, Lantern Light, and Wallpaper Dreams: A William Morris Arts & Crafts Cottage in Miniature
Let me introduce you to Brackenmore Cottage. Brackenmore was “built” in 1893 (in tiny-world years) by eccentric textile designer Elsbeth Willowfen, a devoted fan of William Morris who firmly believed that no flat surface should be left unpatterned. She moved out of London when people started gently suggesting that maybe not every window frame needed hand-painted acanthus scrolls.

Brandon
Feb 411 min read


Potion Vendor Miniature: A Tim Burton-esque Claymation Night Market with Wicked Potions
Two weeks out from Halloween (aka our Superbowl), this piece hits exactly the right mood: teetering cottages, lanterns that look like they gossip, and—cue drumroll—the hero piece on the left: a towering, skeletal figure with elegant crow-like posture, part ringmaster, part “I definitely didn’t put frog in that elixir.” The colors are Burton-bright where it matters (those bottles!) and desaturated everywhere else, which makes the stand hum like a tiny neon sign in an old black

Brandon
Oct 13, 20257 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
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