Dollhouse ceramic dishes are perfect for miniature food projects, because you can bake the polymer clay pieces right on the ceramic. This makes it easy to dribble sauces on plates, create soups or frostings in bowls, and sculpt other projects that would be more difficult, if not impossible, with non-oven-safe dishes.
I’ve just added brand new ceramic dishes to my shop, and here’s a tiny tour of the latest offerings…
In addition to rectangular casserole dishes, I now carry square dollhouse casserole dishes. These are great for, well, casseroles 😉 but also bar cookies and brownies, cobblers, etc. (Learn how to make these desserts in How to Sculpt Miniature Bakery Treats.)
Ceramic plates are indispensable for numerous projects, and I’ve added a new small plate size, which is perfect for serving cake slices, appetizers, and other smaller portions. Get the plates here.
I’m really excited about these extra tiny bowls. I have a number of bowls in varying sizes in my shop, and these are the smallest. They’re perfect for serving little cups of sauce and condiments, or if you’re making a cookie or cupcake decorating scene, you could fill these bowls with sprinkles, colored sugars, and other pretty toppings.
For your holiday meals, this lidded casserole dish would be perfect for green bean casserole, sweet potato casserole, etc. (Learn how to make holiday meals in How to Sculpt Miniature Holiday Foods.)
I absolutely love these dollhouse mixing bowls. They have a nice, satisfying weight to them, and they remind me of the hefty stoneware mixing bowls my grandma used to use for her holiday baking.
If you’re ready to start sculpting your own miniature food, be sure to check out my dollhouse food tutorials. You can now get all seven books in The Ultimate Collection, which will give you hundreds of adorable projects to keep you busy this winter–everything from Bundt cake and fruit salad to holiday ham and French toast!
December 3, 2013 at 2:30 am
The ultimate collection would have been on my holiday drool list when I was a kid. 🙂
December 3, 2013 at 10:55 am
OMG, you and me both! It’s funny, but until you said that I never really thought of the fact that I’m basically making all the things I wanted, but that didn’t exist, when I was younger. Is this the Unfinished Childhood Business Model? 😉
December 3, 2013 at 6:22 pm
Heh. Sounds like a totally sustainable business model to me. 😉 And I bet the world would be a way happier place if more people followed it. 😉
December 4, 2013 at 3:56 am
I would have to agree with you there! 🙂