Meet the Yorkshire woman hand-crafting 200,000 doll's house miniatures after breaking her back in terrible crash
This is Pauline Millard's world of dolls' house treasures, where rows of cabinets line the walls with some 200,000 miniatures all perfectly sized to scale.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdThe grandmother's hobby, once a curative relief as she learned to walk again after a terrible accident, is now proving a balm to buyers worldwide.
Over recent months she has gone from hosting coach tours at the dolls' house museum to deliveries across North Yorkshire, and orders on a global scale.
As she this week pieced together the final jewels for a 1.5in high necklace bound for a buyer in Italy, she reflected on its journey ahead.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide Ad"I like to imagine it, on a jeweller's stand, in a doll-sized jewellery shop window," said Ms Millard.
"This is what I do, I send them off into another world. It has been a lifeline for so many people who are shielding."
Ms Millard, 59, broke her spine in a terrible car crash on the A64 a decade ago.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdAs she learned to walk again her husband Dennis Horsley built her a small shop at the side of their home, so she could practice her hobby.
"I had to do something, to keep me doing things, to keep my limbs working," she explained. "From then, I started to make things.
"I start at 11am every morning, and I'm often still doing it at midnight. When I'm doing it, I just don't realise how time flies, I become so engrossed."
Spectacular displays
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdAt Weaverthorpe Dolls House Miniatures, there are rows of cabinets lining the walls. Dozens of dolls houses, in all shapes and sizes, including one in an old clock face.
There is a gardener, molded from clay, ferreting in a tiny hut amid a smattering of pea-sized turnips. In a pint-sized Post Office, shoppers queue for tiny boxes of cornflakes.
Each is made from modelling clay, with limbs twisted from pipe cleaners before being baked in an oven. Most are around six inches tall, and clothed in hand-sewn garments.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdThere are miniature railways, alongside a replica petrol station from the television series Heartbeat filmed at nearby Goathland, complete with pumps and chains.
The vegetables are one-twelfth to scale. She can only mould when the real thing is in front of her, said Ms Millard, whether it's a carrot or a cauliflower or an apple the size of a bead.
Most popular is the confectionery. Tiny tins of beans sit in the shop alongside boxes of Campbell's soup, packets of Weetabix, Oxo cubes and miniature porridge sachets.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdThere are batteries, boxes of washing powder, and a surprising demand for tiny silver bottles of 'brasso' brass cleaner. Everything is handmade.
Hobby
Ms Millard, recalling the time she raised the price of a boat to £150 as she didn't want to let it go, said she tries not to have favourites but she does sometimes get attached.
"Sometimes when they're gone I miss them," she laughed. "My husband always tells me it's too late. So I sold my boat, someone will get joy from it."
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdThis is a hobby that is under-appreciated, she said, in terms of scale but also in its reach.
"A lot of people think dolls' house miniatures are for little girls," she said. "It's not. People start collecting in their 30s, and they keep them for years and years.
"A great many are for cakes. Some people make houses the same as their own homes, and then they redecorate it the way they wish they could afford to.
"Some people buy things to match what they had as a child.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide Ad"Everything you've got in the house, I've got in my shop in miniature. Every single thing you can imagine, I have it. And it's like a furniture shop, because I have it in different styles."
Painstaking process
It's a painstaking process to make miniatures, admits Ms Millard, insisting it's more about patience and perseverance than skill, to meet her own high expectations.
Over recent months, she added, they have brought a great many people a great joy, as she has delivered to surrounding towns and villages.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide Ad"People need something to do," she said. "They wait for my deliveries, and they tell me it's a lifesaver. It's creativity but I also think it's an escape. A lot of people are suffering."
One customer has 19 dolls' houses in her bedroom, another has filled an entire downstairs flat. Many people start with one, said Ms Millard, then it "seems to expand".
"To make something in miniature, that you really like, is a joy," she added. "I never had a doll's house when I was a child. I would have loved one I think."
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide Ad__________________________________________________________________________________________________
Support The Yorkshire Post and become a subscriber today. Your subscription will help us to continue to bring quality news to the people of Yorkshire. In return, you'll see fewer ads on site, get free access to our app and receive exclusive members-only offers. Click here to subscribe.