Beautiful work - will fit in nicely with a Christmas display of tinplate or postwar trains. Nice use of (I assume) scrubbing pads for the shrubbery. Would enjoy seeing some details regarding materials and finishing techniques.
Thanks very much. I wanted to make a few of these that were closer to O-scale in size, as most of the ones I made earlier were much smaller, similar in size to the ones made shortly before and immediately after WWII. Construction was pretty straight forward using matt board. I took a picture of a house in the neighborhood and used that as inspiration. Working out the roof dimensions and angles was a bit of a trick, but once I got that to work, it got easier.
Basically built and painted in three pieces - the roof(s), the wall structure, and the base, completed in that order. I attached the main roof to the wall structure using some 'L' shaped strips, the porch roof with a piece of matt board across the back. Porch posts are basswood and matt board.
Windows were designed using MS Excel, then printed on vellum paper using my HP inkjet printer. I glued the roof(s) to the house, then glittered the the combination using Mod Podge and coarse glitter. When that was dry, I cemented in the windows. The vellum paper is a bit wonky when you glue it down, but it shrinks and grows taut after thirty minutes or so. It works well.
The base is made from a USPS Priority Mail corrugated box. I ship and receive a fair amount of stuff, so there's always some of that laying about. USPS corrugated is highly recommended; it's thin, yet very strong. I just cut out a section, bent tabs along the edges, than glued them down in the form of a box lid. I used another, thicker, piece of non-USPS corrugated as the form for the bottom of the house. The fence columns are cut from 1/2-inch square basswood strips topped with a piece of matt board. The hedge, as you guessed, is doubled-up scouring pads. After painting the base white, I then glued the house onto the base. I scenic'd the base using more glitter, then let the whole thing sit for a few hours to cure.
Here's a few other pics in process:






That's about it...let me know if you have any other questions. Always a fun project (although it takes forever).
PD