How to Make a Recycled Cardboard Dollhouse
You don’t have to spend $200 on a dollhouse, and you can reuse those diaper boxes when you learn how to make a dollhouse yourself.
A cardboard box becomes the frame of your child’s new toy, and creating the house can be filed under “fun toddler activities. =-)
Toddlers become impatient. In your toddler’s point of view, this project will seem to take eons. If you want to do this project with them, I suggest you give them small tasks to complete. They can make wallpaper with white paper and crayons. If they are old enough, they can cut out shapes or help you put glue on the walls so you can paste on the wallpaper and photographs. They may wander off at some point if they have a short attention span. Eventually, they’ll probably come back and help you again.
Required Materials:
- Lots of catalogs with photos of living rooms, bedrooms, furniture, etc.;
- Cardboard box (one that holds a lot of diapers, a shoe box is too small)
- Glue — glue sticks or good old Elmer’s glue
- Stickers (optional)
- Scrapbooking paper (to use as wallpaper)
- Wrapping paper (to use wherever you fancy)
- Scissors
- Construction paper
- Crayons
Instructions
1. How big your dollhouse will be will depend on the size of your box. Using scissors, cut out the largest side of the box. This will become your central wall.
2. Cut out the two smaller sides. These will become the walls between the rooms.
You’re aiming for a long central wall with two smaller walls that bisect it. Imagine a lowercase “t” with two crosses instead of one cross, and that is the shape you want. The house has no walls or roof, which makes it easier for little hands to get into the rooms to play.
3. Now it’s time to decorate! Get your toddler busy with crayons or have them decorate a white sheet of paper that will become wallpaper for a room.
4. While your toddler is busy, you can decide which areas will become the kitchen, bedroom, living room, etc.
5. Then, start gluing the cut-out photos of beds, curtains and bookcases to the walls of the bedroom. If you end up with an ugly spot from catalog copy, you can cover that with a sticker or a bit of scrapbooking paper (or even wrapping paper!).
6. Keeping working on each room until you like how it looks. You can come up with a number of ideas and keep adding to them until you’re pleased with the results.
7. If you knit, you can use scrap yarn to make a little rug. I temporarily used two square coasters to make a floor in one room.
The total cost for my project was $5 for the scrapbooking paper. I had all the other materials on hand.







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