A big passion for little things: After 42 years, the Moncton Miniature and Doll Club closes its tiny doors - Action News
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New Brunswick

A big passion for little things: After 42 years, the Moncton Miniature and Doll Club closes its tiny doors

Doreen Johnson is renovating her living room to become a Victorian ballroom. It will have polished hardwood floors, antique furnishings, a chandelier and, in one corner, musical instruments. But Johnson isnt thinking big with these plans. Shes thinking small.

Club was one of the longest running hobby clubs across Atlantic Canada

A woman, left, standing next to a dollhouse that is taller than her. Seven open-face rooms are filled with tiny pieces of furniture.
Doreen Johnson with her electrified Victorian dollhouse. (Mariam Mesbah/CBC)

Doreen Johnson is renovating her living room to become a Victorian ballroom. It will have polished hardwood floors, antique furnishings, a chandelier and, in one corner, musical instruments.

But Johnson isn't thinking big with these plans.

She's thinking small.

"If you can't have it in real life, make it in miniature," she said in an interview.

For the last 40 years, Johnson has been doing exactly that. Her basement craft room is a tribute to all things measured in 1:12 scale.

Among her extensive collection a display of tiny tea sets, a lady's dressing room complete with handcrafted gowns and perfume bottles, and her pice de rsistance, a three-foot-high, fully electrified Victorian dollhouse.

"You know you're never going to be able to afford it in real life, but you can create it in miniature," she said. "It gives you great satisfaction."

A woman, right, holding tiny knit projects. On the left, a box holding a doll and miniature furniture.
Charlotte Vardy created a replica of her real-life craft room. Each mini ball of yarn was handmade by wrapping coloured thread around a straw, and adding labels made on the computer. (Mariam Mesbah/CBC)

Sharing the hobby with others has been another point of satisfaction for Johnson. She's one of the longest serving members of the 42-year-old Moncton Miniature and Doll Club. It's there that she's also made lifelong friendship with people in New Brunswick and beyond who understood her passion.

"You have that common interest," she said. "You also share those ups and downs in life, too."

Now, Johnson and other members are saying goodbye to aclub that has enriched their lives for decades.

At 76, she's the youngest

If a passion for dollhouses was the reason to keep the club going, Charlotte Vardy, who served as its last president, says it could go on forever.

However, an aging and dwindling membership and the work involved in organizing its annual show are why they decided the time was right to dissolve it.

A glass house rimmed in brass holding tiny tea sets in each of its 10 rooms.
Doreen Johnson's collection of tiny tea sets. (Mariam Mesbah/CBC)

"I'm 76 and I'm the youngest," she said. "We'd look at each other in the middle of a show and say, 'We're too old to be doing this!'"

The MonctonMiniature and DollClub was one of the longest-running hobby clubs inAtlantic Canada. Its most popular event has been its annual miniature show, which attractedvendors and hobbyists from across Atlantic Canada.

Last weekend, club members hosted one final show at the Dan Bohan Family Centre in Riverview, N.B.. It was the chance to say goodbye to the collectors and enthusiasts who have supported them over the years.

The final show also paid tribute to the club's history. The back of the hall featured hundreds of photos from past shows, and collages remembering members who have since passed away.

A doll wearing a blue gown in front of an open book box with a miniature vanity on the right and hanging dresses on the left.
Doreen Johnson used a decorative book box to create an elegant lady's dressing room. (Mariam Mesbah/CBC)

Shelley Acker owns Freedom Miniatures shop in Kentville, Nova Scotia. She called it a bittersweet day as she's going to miss coming to the annual show.

"It's really sad," she said. "I've been getting a lot of inquiries about what we can do to keep it going and if there's going to be anything in Nova Scotia. So we will see what comes out of it in the end."

Carolyn Landry is a finescale miniaturist who uses clay and paint to craft realistic looking food. She brought a large collection of tiny items to sell at the final show. Her handcrafted fruit, vegetables and flowers have been popular items with collectors.

Tiny wooden boxes filled with miniature produce
A display of finescale miniaturist Carolyn Landry's work. She uses clay and paint to recreate the produce in 1/12 inch scale. (Mariam Mesbah/CBC)

"I've been coming here since 2004," she said. "I'm going to miss the girls and the customers and the camaraderie."

A growing interest in small things

Although the Moncton Miniature and Doll Club has closed its tiny doors, there appears to be a renewed interest in the hobby.

Since the pandemic, posts on YouTube, TikTok and Instagram have gotten millions of views. They often feature tutorials on how to build a dollhouse or to craft miniature items, such as furniture, linens and other housewares.

A doll sitting on a miniature couch on the right. A miniature dining room table on the left on top of a rug, with a chandelier hanging above it.
The dining room in Doreen Johnson's Victorian home. (Mariam Mesbah/CBC)

CBC Gem, the network's online streaming service, has also gotten into the act. The CBC original program, Best in Miniature, features 10 hobbyists who compete in a series of contests that test their crafting skills.

Best in Miniature is one of the top-watchedlifestyle programs since the network launched its second season.

It's this renewed interest in miniatures that leaves Johnson hopeful.

Three miniature buildings on a table covered in a green tablecloth. A poster board with newspaper clippings and photos leans on the wall behind the replicas.
In 1990, the Club celebrated Moncton's Centennial birthday celebrations by building replicas of some of the city's historic buildings. (Mariam Mesbah/CBC)

She'd like to see a younger generation form a new club and make it their own.

"It would be nice if some other people would come along and take an interest in it," she said.

"We can share our expertise and we're also interested in their ideas because once you start thinking about what you can create in miniature, the sky's the limit."

A poster board rimmed with photographs with text in the centre.
The club's final show featured photos of projects and events from the past 40 years. (Mariam Mesbah/CBC)

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