| Main
Floor Den Snow Village (ceramic) U-Shaped Village As
one walked into the "U" shaped display, Snow Village was divided into three segments;
on the right was the residential area, straight ahead was the commercial district,
and to the left were the forested recreational and farm districts. This exhibit
had the most "action." View YouTube
for the Main Floor Den | |
|
| Christmas
in the City, circa 1900, New York City As above, several
of Claradell's gift wraps incorporating music and lights.. |
|
| |
Snow Village
Harry built tables over our furniture and fireplace. |
Snow Village
Holes drilled to accommodate power strips. |
| | Schematic
needed for village layout and power strips. | Power
needed for each building, automated features. | | |
Snow Village
Music buttons to activate along tour. |
Snow Village Personalized
sandwich boards along tour. |
| | Two
hours for complete tour. |
Snow Village North
High School in corner (with polar bear). |
|
|
Snow Village North High School
Polar Bear on top of the High School (arrow) |
|
| | Left:
rural; Right: commercial | Automated
ski slope, sled run, and carousel | | | Sahalee
Golf and CC | Waterfall, Recycled
water. |
|
| | Log
Cabin quilt using fabric used in drapes and wallpaper
| Shooting
Stars Detail | This
quilt as done in a quilting marathon. You start the quilt around 6:00PM and continue
cutting and sewing until you drop. By about 7:00AM, you have pretty much pieced
most of the top of the quilt. |
|
Every
tour was customized for that specific group.The nutcraker at the front door bore
a welcoming sign with the names of the individuals visiting in that group. Inside
within the various villages were placed customized sandwich boards acknowledging
the specific interests of the visitors. Examples: a young girl who played the
piano, a woman who gardened, a man who fished... The names have been changed to
protect the privacy of the specific visitor, but the sandwich boards created interest
for every group, because immediately the guests realized they were indeed a part
of this experience. We served refreshments to each group. After the tour, all
guests were given their customized sandwich boards and a summary of what they
had seen on all three floors of the house. The largest single tour consisted of
two chartered buses. Harry took one group and started on the lower level; Claradell
and the other group began on the upper level. They met on the middle or entry
level and exchanged groups. On the day of the chartered bus visit, we gave tickets
to each person. At the end of the tour, we drew tickets for gift wrapped doorrizes.
The door prizes often included a "village" building. Some sandwich boards
shown below. I had to allocate at least three hours of computer design work in
preparation for each group. Reservations "by word of mouth" began in
July for display times from Thanksgiving through the middle of January. We scheduled
two tours of two hours each per night and three per day on Saturdays and Sundays.
It took about one-half hour to put up the new signs and light the candles again
for each incoming group. We totaled about 500 visiting per holiday season, and
we did this for twelve years. There was no charge. We had displays in each and
every room of the house. Some of the displays are still up in areas not disrupting
our normal traffic flow (but covered by black plastic to reduce the accumulating
of dust). It takes forever to dust these minute figures and buildings. Dusting
is done with an artist's soft brush. I usually take each piece outside, one by
one, to dust them. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
|
Music:
"Over The Rainbow" |
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