The first "extra" I made for the store was some little tote bags with the store's logo on them. I decided the bookstore should sell something other than used books and a tote bag seemed the logical choice. I printed the logo onto iron on transfer printer paper and then used some scraps of tan cotton that I already had to make the "canvas" bags.
I ironed the logos onto the fabric flat first, then cut out the bags and glued the side seems. For handles I cut a thin strip of the fabric's selvedge and glued the ends into the open top of the bags.
After the bags were done I decided that the store should also sell mugs with the logo on it. I ordered some 3D printed mugs (they were actually cups and saucers, but I just used the mugs by themselves) from Stewart Dollhouse Creations. Fortunately that coincided with when I wanted to take a break from the bookstore to work on June's door, and the timing worked out perfectly to work on that while I was waiting for the mugs to get here. I printed the logo, in a couple different colors as well as black, onto ink jet printable waterslide decal paper. (which I was wondering how that worked with ink jet printing since the ink is water soluble and you have to soak the waterlide decal to separate the decal from the backing, but it turns out you just spray it with clear top coat before soaking it, and that worked perfectly). Normally with a waterslide decal you just soak it until the backing slide off and stick it directly to your item and let it dry and then top coat it if you feel necessary, but because of the teeny tiny size, I just couldn't get it positioned properly and then get it to stay in place well enough to press it down to bond it/ press the excess water out, so I did actually put a very thin layer of glue under it to grip it a little better and that worked perfectly. Even though I did have to use glue, I would still use the waterslide decals if I did it again, because they are the thinnest thing I know of to use for something like this.
I, of course, then needed some way to display these mugs for sale. I did use two of them for a little display on a shelf I had left blank for that purpose on the bookcase unit for the downstairs of the store, but I wanted the rest of them on shelves behind/next to the desk/next to the stairs. I ended up using little pieces of the trim that I used for the crown molding/to hold the second floor. There was just enough room for the mugs to sit on the lip of that molding. I also knew I wanted to have some more tote bags hanging near the mugs and to have a bulletin board behind the desk with some info on it, so I ended up deciding to do one large bulletin board, and attached the shelves with the mugs and the hanging tote bags to one side of that and the other info I had planned on the other half.
The name The Librarian and The Bookworm comes from the name tha one of my friends and I had come up with for a book blog we had talked about starting (the blog was actually going to be The Librarian and The Bibliophile, but I thought Bookworm would be a little more whimsical for Whimsy street and also not be exactly the same if we ever actually do do the blog lol). I decided I wanted to have pictures of the "store owners" on the bulletin board with their "story", so of course I had to use our pictures for that. She is "The Librarian" because she works for our local library system and of course I am "The Bookworm". Of course at this scale you really can't see the pictures that well, but we know it's us, and you can't read the copy for "our Story", but this is what it says:
Our Story:
We are a bookworm and a librarian, who
have been friends for almost 15 years,
who both dreamed of one day owning a bookstore. When the opportunity arose
to open this store we decided to jump in with both feet. We hope that our store
is
a place that people turn to throughout
their lives whenever they are in need of
books of any kind and we firmly believe
that books can help us to understand the
world around us, learn, and grow, as well as providing entertainment when we
may need it the most.
I also added a sign about the store's Buy. Sell. Read. slogan, again you can''t really tell what the smaller type says on that so here is that as well:
Buy.
Browse our selection of hundreds of used books,
the selection is constantly changing…
Sell.
Sell us the books you are ready to part with,
we promise we’ll find them a good new home…
Read.
The most important part of all….
And when you’re done come see us again
to find your next great read
I had always planned on having reading themed artwork/ posters as decoration in the store and originally thought to find classical artwork involving books/reading for that, but then I decided the store should sell posters as well as the bags and mugs and ended up doing the artwork for them myself. I incorporated my other most bookish friend into the store with one of these posters. For the poster with the stack of books over a watercolor background I reused artwork I had done for the invitations to her baby shower for her youngest daughter (almost 6 years ago now). The shower was a book themed baby shower and the invitations were little books with a baby sitting next to a stack of books on the front cover and all the info for the shower and registry and everything on the pages inside, the stack of books in this poster is the outline of the stack of books I drew for that invitation. The READ READ READ poster uses images of letters I photographed from locations around my neighborhood, and especially from signs of places that are significant to me. The other two posters don't have quite as much personal meaning, although I did realize after working on it that the bookshelf/bookcase poster reminds me a little of the bookcase quilts I made for the only daughter and youngest daughter of my two already mentioned friends, (and that I'm supposed to be making, but haven't gotten done yet for the older daughter of the one friend), and the fourth poster is a quote I found ("Reading gives us somewhere to go when we have to stay where we are" - Mason Cooley) which I chose as a little nod to the quarantine/lockdown caused by the pandemic this year. As a reminder of that I put "Quarantine 2020" in really small type at the bottom of the poster. It's not something you'd probably really notice that it says just looking at it, but it is just readable if you know what you're looking for (or if you enlarge it).
The posters were framed in black and two of the posters are hung between the door and the bookcase on the first floor of the shop and the other two will be hung at the top of the stairs on the second story of the shop. I also printed out some extra copies of the posters and rolled them and glued them into little beads that I had bought to use as planters and such. I also added a little sign on the front of those that says "Posters $8".
I did make one other item with the store's logo on them, although these are not something the store sells, but hands out free..... bookmarks! These are probably the smallest bookmarks you will ever see, and yet they are really probably a bit larger than they technically should be to be in perfect scale.
Again, of course, at this size you really can't see what they say, but here is a picture of the full size version I printed out to check it out. (there's some "Easter eggs" in the info on here too, even though you can't read any of it on the ones actually in the store..... the first I guess actually isn't completely an Easter egg on here because I didn't put the entire address, but, all the stores have an address... the address number is just the order they will be on the street, but the zip code - which I didn't put on this apparently - is the Easter egg. The fictional town of Miniburg's zip code is 20170. Zip codes in Virginia start with 2 so when I was coming up with the addresses when I was first working on Whimsy Street I used 20170 because 2017 was the year I started (and originally expected to finish) the project. I did recently look it up to see if it was a real zip code and where it was and it is a real zip code in Farifax County, VA. The second Easter egg on here is the store's phone number. I feel like it's not as much of a thing anymore, but if you remember how each number on a phone's keypad also represents 3 or 4 letters, and a lot of businesses used to have their phone number spell something, well this phone number spells Buy Book. Granted now that I know that the zip code is actually a real zip in Fairfax the area code should probably be 703 not 540, which is the area code for my area, but oh well)I also made a little plastic holder for them out of the acetate sheets I used for "glass".
This one last set of accessories that I have to share with you today I apparently don't have any pictures of the process of making them, or even of them by themselves before being stuck in place on the floor, but they are a trio of antique/old rugs for the second floor of the bookstore. I printed the rugs out on iron on transfer paper, transferred them onto white cotton and folded the edges under the back to finish them off, you could also easily do fringe on the ends if, rather than folding the edges under you instead pulled out the threads going across the end until you got to the edge of the transfer, but I went for no fringe.
As I type this the stairs are (hopefully) setting in place against the edge of the second story floor as the glue cures, and the platform that will be in the back part of the first floor of the shop and under the stairs (the stairs were a little too short so I decided to do a platform and have the children's book section on the platform as well) is also sitting in place with glue under it and a weight on top of it. Once the glue has completely cured on both of those the next step will be to install the second floor and then finish making the books and finish off the display units for the children's book section, and then (ugh) all the books for the second floor and the bookcase for them, and then just finishing touches and it will be done!.... So hopefully soon!
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