• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • Kitchens
  • Bathrooms
  • Blog
  • Exterior
  • Other Rooms
  • Decorate
  • The “Museum”
  • Be Safe/Renovate Safe
Retro Renovation
Retro Renovation

Retro Renovation

Remodel & decorate in Mid Century Style

  • Home
  • Kitchens
  • Bathrooms
  • Blog
  • Exterior
  • Other Rooms
  • Decorate
  • The “Museum”
  • Be Safe/Renovate Safe
Home / The Museum of Mid Century Material Culture / postwar culture

Kate builds a 1955 Betsy McCall Do-It-Yourself Dollhouse

Kate - January 12, 2015, Updated: November 4, 2020

Midcentury DollhouseKate-Builds-a-DIY-DollhouseI’m super excited to start 2015 with a new “mini-series” — literally. Over the course of the next few months, I’ll be documenting the process of building, decorating and furnishing a 1:12 scale, split level, wooden dollhouse — made from an original 1955 Betsy McCall Do-It-Yourself Dollhouse pattern. Is anyone else as pumped as I am about this? I love my job!

building-the-playhouse
Kate helps her Dad build a playhouse, circa 1984.

Before we get into the details about the build, let me explain (a) why I am so excited and (b) what made me want to build a dollhouse in the first place. Let’s take a flash back to the early 1980s when I was a kid. My Dad has always been handy — a skill he began sharing with me at an early age — (above) just look at 18-month-old Kate wielding that hammer –watch out world! He had this great idea to make me a little playhouse using some leftover siding and supplies from the 1980 ranch house that he and my Mom built just before I was born. Needless to say, I loved the idea.

vintage playhouseBy Christmas, the playhouse was complete, and Dad set it up in our basement so I could play in it all winter before moving it out into the back yard in the spring. I absolutely loved that house, and spent many hours of my childhood hanging out in there hosting pretend tea parties and playing peek-a-boo through the shutters at my Mom. Thus began my love of miniature houses.

DIY DollhouseFast forward a few more years, and yet another tiny house –built by my Dad — found its way under the Christmas tree. To say I was thrilled is an understatement.

DIY DollhouseDad designed and built the dollhouse himself out of 1/2-inch thick plywood. It was furnished with all of my Mom’s childhood doll furniture and various tiny decor items she had collected for me to play with. Mom even sewed me some tiny curtains for the windows. I spent so many hours rearranging furniture, dreaming up imaginative story lines about the Barbie family that lived in the house, and loved every minute of it.

ranch-house-shelvesMy obsession with miniature houses continued into adulthood, when I found a way to incorporate tiny houses and furniture into my “grown up” decor by building midcentury house shelves for my living room wall to display my miniature chair collection.

midcentury-putz-houseAnd of course you are all familiar with the midcentury Christmas Putz houses that I’ve been making for the last three years here on Retro Renovation — yet another manifestation of my miniature house infatuation.

Midcentury DollhouseDIY Betsy McCall dollhouse seems to have had a few versions

So then, it should come as no surprise that I became obsessed with the midcentury split level dollhouse I spotted in the bedroom of a stunning 1960 Toronto time capsule home we featured late last year. The moment I saw that dollhouse, I knew I had to build one. Thanks to a few of Retro Renovation’s readers, Pam and I learned that the time capsule dollhouse was likely made from a 1950s Besty McCall dollhouse pattern. The dollhouse in the photo above (from the Toronto time capsule) is slightly different than the pattern we found. Are there any dollhouse experts out there who know the model year of this groovy-yet-scary-staired version above?

Midcentury DollhouseMere minutes after discovering the existence of the pattern, Pam went into search-and-acquire mode and spotted an original pattern on Etsy. To my delight, she bought it and had it sent to me with the promise that I would build the house and chronicle it on the blog — a task this handy, mini-house loving gal was more than happy to take on. Yes, it is now “my job” to build this dollhouse, documenting the process all along the way.

Making a dollhouse on a budget

Before I began, Pam gave me a few guidelines for building, decorating and furnishing the dollhouse:

  • No using any ready-made, new dollhouse parts or furniture in the construction and decoration of the dollhouse — meaning I cannot buy roofing shingles, siding, flooring, etc. that is specified for use in a dollhouse. All such things must be made from materials I can find at the home improvement or craft store.
  • All furniture must either be vintage or homemade.
  • I have a $100 budget to furnish the house — a real challenge if you know the price of vintage doll house furniture these days.
  • Pam sent me a few boxes of goodies from her hoard to help with covering floors and walls.

These rules ensure that I’ll have to be creative and also keep the project true to its humble, homemade retro roots, by repurposing items and using scraps that are already around the house with the goal of spending very little extra money to get the job done. Sounds like a fun challenge to me.

What do you think readers —
do you think I can complete this 1955 dollhouse challenge?
What are you most looking forward to seeing?

CATEGORIES:
postwar culture The Museum of Mid Century Material Culture

Reader Interactions

Comments are closed. 

128 comments

Comments

  1. Helene Henkel says

    June 20, 2018 at 1:01 pm

    Hi, I came across a video of yours when I was doing a search for mid century dollhouses. I was unaware of these dollhouses until then. After I complete the mid century bungalow I was given, I will be searching for Betsy McCall dollhouse plans or a completed dollhouse. Do you know if there were dolls for these houses? Thank you.
    Helene

  2. Rebecca says

    June 19, 2017 at 9:22 pm

    It was so exciting to find this series! In college, one of my professors had our class meet at her house where we saw her collection of dollhouses. That night, before heading home from my daily babysitting job, I gushed over the dollhouses. One day, just before my college graduation, the mom I babysat for called me to the garage…she had seen this dollhouse in the window of an antique store on her way home from work & bought it for me as a graduation gift! That was 15 years ago, and I never knew much or worked much on the dollhouse, as I moved overseas shortly after college. My dad just brought the dollhouse–which needs a lot of work–to my daughter (and me!) I am so glad that I now know what “model” it is, and I am really looking forward to referring to this series as I work on my–er, our–dollhouse!!!

  3. Amber says

    June 28, 2015 at 2:11 pm

    My mother built the 1955 dollhouse in 1955 as my major Santa Claus present. She worked on it in our basement only while I was in school, so I had no idea this was happening. That Christmas morning still stands out in my memory as spectacular. I was six and I was the envy of all the girls in my first grade class. I played with it for years.

    I still have my dollhouse 60 years later and I am planning to renovate it: small repairs where a few of the window dividers broke off, fresh paint, and perhaps some new furniture.

  4. Susan Sykes says

    June 12, 2015 at 1:53 am

    I have a Besty McCall dollhouse. It was built by a friend of my parents and given to me for my 5th birthday in 1958. My father made wood block furniture and my mother decorated it in MCM colors and style (lots of orange). It has been renovated twice since then; once for my daughter in 1983, and again in 2003 for my granddaughters. I still have the McCall’s magazine advertisement for it. I also have a lot of the original furniture. I love all thing MCM and I suppose my dollhouse is where it started. Best of luck with your project!

« Older Comments

Primary Sidebar


Footer

Follow Along

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RENOVATE SAFE
  • About
  • Blog
  • The “Museum”
  • Kitchens
  • Bathrooms
  • Exterior
  • Other Rooms
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Notice
  • Disclosures
  • Contact

© 2023 Retro Renovation® • All Rights Reserved • Website by Anchored Design
Please do not use any materials without prior permission. Portrait by Keith Talley Photography