For March, we are asking you to share pictures of a miniature laundry room or clothes washing scene. For full instructions, look here.
Here are the beautiful submissions.
Please be patient with the Create team (we are all volunteers) as it may take a few days for your pictures to be posted. You WILL receive a gift but it might take a few weeks.
__________________________________
__________________________________
From Beth Grabau:
3 sided NAME Day project


__________________________________
From Beth Grabau:
Scrubby Holder


__________________________________
From Melody Petlock:
I was trying to finish an early Victorian laundry scene but became overwhelmed, so this little fairy volunteered her scene hanging out her laundry, including all of the little wings, in her secret garden.

__________________________________
From Fern Rouleau:
Here is my laundry room in a laundry soap dispenser.

__________________________________
From Preble McDaniel:
Back in early 90’s I saw the ultra detergent come out. I waited until my brand had one and then I cut open the back. I knew I would be making a 1:12 scale laundry room inside.
I made most things used except the vacuum, iron, washtub, basket and the bottles.
My uncle saw it and wanted me to make one for him to give to his boss. He worked a factory that made a different brand.
I have been saving the scoops from the same ultra powder detergent I used for years. I have wanted to make a 1:48 scale scene in one and was always intimidated by the sizing of pieces. Using my scanner, Silhouette software and my new xtool laser, I finally did it. With exception to the 3d printed items, I made nearly everything using my laser.


__________________________________
From Jean Smith (Rusty):
The mangle in the laundry area of the !:48 scale bunny house was based on a kit from Petite Properties with additions. The enamelled bowl beside it is a pill blister with detail from Sharpies. More modern is the 1:24 scale "House of Cards" built and furnished almost exclusively from matt board; offcuts purchased from a picture framer's.


__________________________________
From Debbie Colombo:

__________________________________
From Dori Allard:
Attached is a picture of my laundry room.
I have been collecting items for several years and finally put it all together. It's 12th scale and I put it in a wine box!

__________________________________
From Debby Albert:
I bought this years ago. It’s quarter scale. It was fun to make and I added some extras.

__________________________________
From Elizabeth Lubera:
My challenge submission is one small corner of a larger project called “Veggie Ville,” created as part of a Pam Junk class held during the NAME convention in Alexandria, VA in 1996. “Veggie Ville” is a ¼ scale vegetable village, comprising cabbage, onion, romaine lettuce and carrot “houses,” complete with furnishings and interior décor made from Pam Junk kits.
My larger view gives a peek into the fully-furnished cabbage house and the onion kitchen (can you see the mini stove?) and an overview of the village, which also includes vegetable plantings, a village store, and even a flower pot turned upside-down (with windows) to create a vegetable “doll house”!
My detail photo shows a corner of “Veggie Ville,” shaded by two towering daisies. There we see a clothes line including a quilt on the line, some veggie-style “laundry”, recently dug-up carrots washed and hung out to dry. You can see the cleaned and dried carrots in a basket, ready to sell at the store.
There is also a tea party going on, with a table and tea cart. There I added my own touches, including (on the tea cart) a lettuce leaf-style cream and sugar bowl and (on the table) a lettuce leaf-style tea pot with two tea cups and a dish with cake slice), all made by an artisan specializing in miniatures.


__________________________________
From Carol Silberman:
Quarter scale laundry room in a laundry soap scoop.

__________________________________
From Liz Maglievaz:
My Chinese laundry built from photo of an actual laundry in a western town during the age of cowboys and railroad expansion.

__________________________________
From Linda Patterson:
I worked for a company that operated coin-operated laundry machines in apartment buildings, nursing homes, laundromats, etc.
For our office, I decorated a snowing Christmas tree with laundry items used in the business.
Ornaments included: tokens; picture from company advertising; washers with clothes; money bag full of quarters;
Dryers full of clothes; Christmas bulbs full of snow, laundry soap, and basket of clothes; boxes of fabric softener and laundry soap.


__________________________________
From Ann Silverman:
Here is my laundry project. It's several years old, but it has been in my laundry room ever since I made it.

__________________________________
From Marilyn Ferkinhoff:
I went to a Fun Day in Massachusetts a few years ago. The project was a She Shed. I made mine a laundry room because I had this washer and dryer that I wanted to use in something.

__________________________________
From Alexis Sharif:
Here are some pictures of “Granny’s Back Porch Laundry Room” for the March 2025 Challenge, Your Dirty Secrets.
It is 1” scale. Screened in porch, laundry room, landscaped backyard with clothes line!


__________________________________
From Sam Murray:
Quarter inch scale laundry day scene in a tide box. Created around 1995. Notice that the clothes line has snapped and the clothes have fallen into the mud.


__________________________________
From Tammy Witthaus:
This is my laundry room in my quarter scale Debbie Young Chicago Bungalow.

__________________________________
From Vicki Scidmore:
Ol’ Jed does his washin’ up over by the outhouse every month whether it’s needed or not. Just watch out for the rattlesnake on the roof!

__________________________________
From Martha Bates:
I made this 1:24 scale laundry room in an 8-inch tall wood iron purchased from the craft store. When the lid flips up to close the iron, it displays the iron handle and the clothes on the line decor I added.
Hope you can turn the pictures to show it as it is hung on the wall.


__________________________________
From Stephanie Cooley:
Here is my mini laundry in a bottle - ALL to get the laundry done. The little kitty in the basket is enjoying the warm towels just out of the dryer. Another load waits to be folded.

__________________________________
From Carol Shea:
This was a class taken from Kate Hubran. It's one of the first I had ever done in quarter scale. This container is one used in public laundries.


__________________________________
From Julie Stuckmeyer:
This was the first "It's an Open Book" from Robin Betterley's Miniatures entitled "Mama Ladybug's Laundry Day". It is still my favorite ... although I've done three more. I just love the baby ladybugs!

__________________________________
From Diane Fisher:

__________________________________
From Laurie Sisson:
Quarter inch scale framed.

