© Kathy Duncan, 2022
This post is long overdue. I am going to focus this post on the interior of Beth Neal's Dunham's Cocoanut Doll House and on the original paper furniture.
Let's start with a peek at the kitchen, which is on the ground floor:
It does not look much like modern kitchens because kitchens in 1903 consisted of freestanding furniture rather than built-ins. The lithograph shelves on the left held little lithograph packages of Dunham's Cocoanut.
The second floor may have been intended as a dining room:
The sitting room has a much more feminine feel - from the upright piano to the frilly lace curtains.
The top floor was the bedroom:
The colors in this top-floor bedroom seem the most vibrant. The rug is especially well preserved as is the blue striped wallpaper and paintings on the wall. Notice that true to the time period, the paintings are suspended from the molding. It also looks like the upper portion of the bay window was stained glass.
The original set of paper furniture is the crowning jewel:
These pieces are in very good condition even though some bits have flaked off. Each piece of furniture bears a Dunham's Cocoanut medallion. The furniture is deserving of its own post, and I will try not to wait so long to post the next entry about them.
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