About Us
We are a micro family business, a Mother and two-Daughter team who make intricate and original magical moving miniatures! Our ethos is sustainable, imaginative and innovative design with a deep passion for nature and the protection of our beautiful planet. You can find out more and see our work in motion via Instagram @pennythomsonworks
Penny has been working for over 40 years as an artist and designer, inspiring her three wonderful children to pursue their passions and, in the process, employing her daughters Briony and Maud. Briony is handling the marketing and admin tasks while Maud assists in the workshop and dispatch. With more time to experiment with new materials and methods, Penny’s work is flourishing into a frenzy of mechanical magic.
Over the past few years our work has grown in exposure, reaching viral status on several occasions that have changed everything for us. Ever since then we’ve been working on turning out our stunning works as fast as possible, without losing the signature flare of Penny’s own hand. Everything we sell, from start to finish, is handmade and completely unique. We are dedicated to using recycled, reused and repurposed materials - you wouldn’t believe how our treasures started out! (as trash...)
Penny
Founder, Creative Director & Artist
Born in 1959 in Sheffield, I lived outside Bakewell in Derbyshire for my first few years and spent the latter part of my childhood living in the historic village of Selborne in Hampshire, a time and place that has had a profound effect throughout my life.
I studied painting and sculpture at The West Surrey College of Art & Design and enjoyed my first art history lessons there and access to a wonderful art and craft library. Then working as a freelance illustrator and designer in publishing, advertising and design, also writing and illustrating two books for children which were published in 1989 by Campbell Blackie.
I started experimenting again with paper maché when my children were young, and through play with them, reignited my interest in the medium. Using pulp, laminated and household waste paper and cardboard, I made a 7 foot giraffe and conducted a workshop in my son’s school which involved all the pupils in making a 14 foot Diplodocus from heavy duty cardboard tubes, corrugated card and newspaper.
Because of my work in book illustration, I had developed an interest in industrial and vernacular architecture. Britain has an amazingly varied architectural heritage, stemming from the diversity of its geology and therefore building materials. I started making buildings using card and paper pulp which is so able to impersonate materials from wood to stone, and because it can be carved when dry I realised it can be used also to sculpt human and animal forms in great detail. Due to my discovering the world of miniatures, I found these techniques had endless potential for sculpture in miniature.
In 1995 I attended the London Dollshouse Festival for the first time and continued to exhibit there every year finishing in 2019. I have also exhibited with Miniatura at the NEC and Glasgow, The British Toymakers Guild annual show: The Art of Play, Tom Bishop's fairs in the UK and Chicago, with IGMA in the USA, The Royal Society of Miniature Painters, Sculptors and Gravers at the Mall Galleries in London, and also Philadelphia Miniaturia. In 2010, one of my sculptures of William Shakespeare was included in an exhibition of miniature designer bindings, from the collection of Neale M Albert at The Headley-Whitney Museum in Kentucky, entitled Brush Up Your Shakespeare.
As a member of The British Toymakers Guild, I was winner of The Doll House Award in 1997 and 1999, the BTG Cup, the Bryntor Award in 1998 and Miniaturist of the Year in 1999. More recently, I received the Kensington Dollshouse Festival Cup in 2006.
I also collaborated in the mid 2000’s with the celebrated Illusionist, Simon Drake, to make an automated diorama for his venue in South London, The House of Magic. This subsequently led to my happy collaboration with Laurence St.Leger in the making of my first automata.
From there I started making my own mechanisms and developing techniques to create fluid movement and characteristics of birds, bats and sea life. This came together with my refined skills and knowledge of anatomy, painting and using paper mache.
I have enjoyed teaching the techniques that I have learned and developed, in workshops and schools in the UK, USA and The Netherlands over many years.