“Bring
Home the Magic.” One of Disney's many marketing slogans. It's
usually used in conjunction with their home video productions, but
people also take the expression a little more literally and decorate
their houses with their favorite Disney characters and motifs. And
sometimes with their favorite Disney theme park motifs, which Disney
finally cottoned onto a few years ago, so now you can get official
Disneyland attraction housewares. If you had about a grand to spare
and a more advanced case of Disneyland-mania than even I have, you
could go to Le Bat en Rouge and outfit your entire dining room with
Haunted Mansion plates, placemats, drinking glass coasters, and even
candlesticks.*
But what if more were possible?
What if you had basically unlimited funds and no sense of restraint
whatsoever?
What if you could make your entire house into a mini-Disneyland of
sorts? If you could, in fact, Make the Magic Your Home?
My sister and I had more-or-less this conversation the other day,
fantasizing all kinds of what-if, and we came up with a rough plan
for a Disneyland House, if only such a thing could be achieved. And
then...I couldn't stop thinking about it. More and more details
suggested themselves to my mind. And since it would be out of
character for me to keep my thoughts to myself, I'm happy to share
them with you here.
Read on, dear...readers, yes...and dream with me.
The
House Itself
In
an unassuming suburban neighborhood in Southern California, there is a
normal-seeming two-story dwelling on a quarter-acre lot. The exterior
decoration is a little more rustic than most, with split-log fencing
around the front yard and lots of earth tones on the house itself.
Just behind the fencing are beds planted with Floribunda
roses.
Closer to the house, the yard is well shaded with pines and
California live oaks, lined with redwood chips and a few patches of
drought-resistant ground plants, and could stand to be raked. A
flagstone path leads to a front porch made of varnished (not painted)
wood. And then there's the water feature...
Front
Yard: Critter Country
In
one corner of the yard is the most unique
recirculating fountain, about five feet tall and sculpted in the
shape of a muddy hill with a dead tree at the very peak, underneath
which the water spills out to course down a chute. The slopes of the
“hill” contain numerous small planters growing a variety of mossy
plants, while blackberry brambles coil around the bottom. (If the
owners aren't careful, those will take over the yard!)
The fountain is the most interesting feature in the front yard, but
there is plenty else to look at while you amble up the path. Tucked
at the bases of the trees are concrete figures of woodland
creatures—bears and raccoons and turtles—in a cute country style
that's just a little off from completely lifelike. There's a garden
shed made to look like a miniature log cabin, and a bench constructed
from split logs. There are birdhouses in the trees.
Buzzing can be heard from around the side of the house, where a
taller fence prevents people from going. There's an active beehive
over there—the owners keep bees. Another “beehive” is mounted
on the side of the house next to the front door, but a quick look
reveals that it's just the mailbox.
The welcome mat looks something like this:
Foyer:
Main Gate
The character of the house changes completely as you enter. The floor
of the foyer is done in faux-brick tile, while the walls are painted
a neutral cream. The walls are hardly visible, however, underneath
all the attraction posters. Between the two side walls, there's room
for six of them at standard poster size (not the full size of the
ones at the park), but the owners keep several more in storage and
swap them out about once a month, just to keep things interesting.
A silhouette of the Main Street Train Station is painted on the wall
above the door lintel.
Kitchen
and Dining Area: Main Street, USA
The kitchen is the most “businesslike” room in the average
residence, and so it and the attached dining area are themed to the
most businesslike part of Disneyland: Main Street. The appliances are
fully modern, of course, but the décor has an old-fashioned country
sensibility, with staple ingredients stored in canisters on
wall-mounted wooden shelves and a brick section of wall upon which
cast-iron skillets and copper biscuit tins are hung. Cupboards and
drawers with wrought-iron handles hold Art Nouveau style dishes and
silverware. There's a walk-in pantry, a small shelf of cookbooks, and
a window box in which an assortment of culinary herbs are grown.
The
dining room is a genteel place, with damask wallpaper and hardwood
flooring. The dining table and chairs are of Edwardian design,
matching a cabinet in which the fine china and crystal are kept. The
owners are casual types and don't
actually eat here unless they have guests, so it's easy to keep the
furnishings pristine.
Living
Room/Rec Room: Tomorrowland
This
theme was chosen for this room on account of all the electronics,
which would look pretty weird in almost any other Disneyland theme.
The Tomorrowland vibe is backed up by the ultramodern furnishings,
which include steel-and-glass shelving units and minimalist sofas
from IKEA. The flooring is tile, dominated by various shades of blue
and gray with the occasional splash of yellow or orange, the
individual pieces shaped and arranged in a way that suggests nothing
so much as planets and sweeping orbital lines, or perhaps circuitry.
The overhead lighting also resembles planetary orbs, especially when
the optional projectors are turned on to create a lively field of
stars and nebulae across the ceiling. With all that going on, wall
decoration might seem to be overkill, but the owners have found room
to display their framed Disney stock certificates, simply because
they are framed with
miniature attraction posters for the Autopia and Adventure Thru Inner
Space.
Besides the home theater, music, and computer options (the wi-fi is
stronger here than anywhere else in the house) you would expect from
any contemporary rec room, a sunken area on one side of the room is
used as a mini-gym. Most noteworthy is the stationary bike, which has
been accessorized so that it resembles a TRON lightcycle.
The owners do most of their entertaining in here. Folding tables,
usually stored against the walls, can be set up at a moment's notice
to accommodate board games and other group activities.
One of the house's two bathrooms is adjacent to this room.
Downstairs
Bathroom: Submarine Voyage
Nautical theming for bathrooms is fairly common due to the water
connection, and at first glance, this three-quarter bath looks like
one of those—blue walls with stencils of fish and bubbles, soap
dishes shaped like seashells, sand-colored linoleum, etc. However,
the bright yellow shower curtain dotted with transparent “portholes”
is pretty unusual, and the towels covered in a design of nautical
alphabet flags is even quirkier.
The
real clincher, however, is inside
the shower stall, where the famous sea serpent from the finale of the
old Submarine Voyage can be seen coiling across the wall tiles. The
owners have to touch him up every so often.
Downstairs
Bedroom/Craft Room/Children's Playroom: “it's a small world”
The
lone downstairs bedroom is on the sunny side of the house and is used
mainly as a sewing/craft room. The walls have been painstakingly
painted with a geometric amalgam mimicking the style, if not the
exact design, of the “it's a small world” façade.
The colors are white and pale gray with accents and pinwheel shapes
in metallic gold. This design stretches about two-thirds of the way
up the walls, with the rest of the space filled in with sky blue. The
carpet is also blue, with a shallow pile (to prevent small dropped
items from becoming lost) and a pattern like stylized waves of water.
Two broad white tables are placed against opposite walls so that the
owners can work simultaneously without getting in each other's way.
The craft supplies are kept in a large cabinet designed to replicate
the appearance of the Clock Tower as much as possible, even to the
point of having different compartments accessed by different sets of
doors. The door's inward-facing sides are painted with images of the
tower's familiar jesters, toy soldiers, and parading dolls. Extra
storage room can be found in a small closet (about which more in a
moment) and an open shelving unit. Besides overflow crafting
supplies, the shelving unit holds a few “it's a small world”
souvenirs and toys.
The closet is used to store a pair of collapsible futons and bedding
to fit them. The owners don't have any children of their own, but
they do occasionally have young relatives sleep over, and they can't
very well put them in the “official” guest bedroom, as you'll
see. Since this room was intended by the architect to be a child's
room, and since there is ample floor space even with the crafting
cabinets and tables, they get put in here.
As a final note, the exterior wall of this room contains a door
leading out to the play patio (below).
Play
Patio: Mickey's Toontown
The
play patio is a small outdoor area with a wooden deck and railings
and a canvas canopy, so that little tykes can play outside without
getting too
dirty or scattering their toys all over the yard. This is probably
the least
themed area of the property, taking on a Toontown motif more-or-less
by default due to the use of bright colors and a weather-resistant
Mickey Mouse branded toybox.
Upstairs
Bedroom #1: Fantasy Faire
One
of the owners is a massive fan of the movie Tangled.
The Fantasy Faire theming for her bedroom allows her to display her
impressive collection of toys, figurines, and other merchandise in an
appropriate setting.
The walls are painted white and cream with dark brown accents,
mimicking the half-timber construction evoked by the facades in the
Faire. Likewise, the windows have broad wooden frames, also painted
dark brown. Heavy purple and cornflower blue drapes shade the room
from direct sunlight. The floor is done in rough-textured tile that
imitates the appearance of variegated brickwork, but softened with a
series of round rugs in various bright colors. The furniture is made
of dark wood embellished by plenty of ornamental fretwork. The bed is
a canopied four-poster, with sheets and a bedspread patterned after
medieval embroidered cloth: flowering vine motifs in harvest gold on
a wine-red background. Fairy lights wrap around the posts and trail
through the canopy.
Rapunzel is definitely the star of the show here, but this occupant
of this room loves imaginative Princess art in general and much of
the available wall space is taken up by framed prints-esses.**
Upstairs
Bedroom #2: Fantasmic!
The other owner is more dispersed in her interests (okay, fine, it's
me), but if she has a favorite Disney character, it's Sorcerer
Mickey, making Fantasmic! the natural choice for theming her room.
Being a show rather than a themed area or environment, Fantasmic! is
not terribly easy to evoke with furnishings, so this room comes
across a bit more...fandom-y...than most other parts of the house.
There are lots of characters in evidence, and you have to be pretty
in-the-know to understand the specific Disneyland connection.***
So then. Since the show is all about good vs. evil (and
IMAGINATIIIOOOOONNNN!), this room uses a strong contrast between
light and dark. The walls are standard white, while the carpet is
dark green (like the Rivers of America, do you see), and most
of the furniture is either white or black—minimalist IKEA stuff
again, to provide flat surfaces for painting. Characters and other
images from the show are painted on dresser drawers and the side
supports of bookshelves in an airbrushed style that calls to mind
misty projections on water screens. The headboard of the bed features
the iconic image of Sorcerer Mickey facing off with dragon-form
Maleficent.
The window frames are dark green, to match the carpet, and the
curtains are made of this fabric:
Similar fabrics are used for the bedding.
Upstairs
Bathroom: Pirates of the Caribbean
This is a full bath, much larger and more opulently appointed than
the downstairs one. The overwhelming impression is of being in the
ride's famous caverns—the floor is lined with sand-colored tiles,
some with real sea shells embedded in them, and the walls are painted
a mottled dark blue-green. The tub is the same color, larger and
deeper than standard, and elevated above the floor in a
faux-rockscape setting. The taps are brass, cast in the shape of
skull-and-crossbones, and the shower curtain is striped like a sail.
The owners have added plastic baskets filled with fake gold coins and
jewels to the rocks for decoration. (The baskets are there to keep
the treasure from slipping into the tub, and to make cleaning easier.
Chests would have been ideal, but they couldn't find any plastic ones
that they liked and they didn't want to have wood in a damp
environment like a bathroom.)
The mirror over the sink has a wide frame covered in seashells and
more fake jewels and pearls. The cabinets are made of laminate
disguised as wood—again, to avoid having real wood in this
room—with knobs shaped like sea urchin shells. The overhead
lighting takes the form of a chandelier made from a ship's wheel,
complete with fabric “flames” that wave when it is turned on.
Piratey knick-knacks punctuate the countertop, and the towels and
bathmats are plush and dark red.
Upstairs
Bedroom #3 (Guest Bedroom): Haunted Mansion
This,
then, is the reason the owners are prepared to partially convert
their craft room back into a child's bedroom at need...you can't
expect children to sleep with ghosts. Truth be told, this room isn't
very
spooky—at least, not with the special effects turned off. Instead
of the gauche spooky-eyes wallpaper, it uses the foyer's
tiger-lily design, and the furniture is tasteful and Victorian.
Lighting is provided by wall-mounted lamps imitating antique oil
lamps, and the bedding draws inspiration from the attraction's Cast
Member costumes, with a green-and-black striped comforter, dark green
dust ruffle, and white lace pillowcases. The flooring is hardwood,
overlaid with Victorian area rugs.
Other
aspects are a bit more obvious. The owners of the house have a few
Haunted Mansion items in their collection of Disneyland swag, and
these are on display atop the bureau, along with things like a toy
crystal ball and a silver candelabra. But the real show occurs if you
turn out the lights and aim a blacklight (there's one stored in the
bureau) at the walls and ceiling—UV-reactive paint, invisible under
normal light, shows the shapes of ghosts and otherworldly phenomena.
Fun times!
Back
Patio: Frontierland
Immediately outside the house's back door (leading off the rec room)
is a patio covered with a wooden deck. The décor out here is
Southwestern styled, including a barbecue pit made of concrete mixed
to resemble orange sandstone. There are a lot of potted plants out
here—mostly cacti and succulents in Mexican glazed pots.
Mexican-style décor is easy to find in Southern California, so the
owners went with that angle instead of trying for a more general
Western frontier look.
Backyard:
Adventureland
The
rest of the backyard, on the other hand, is Adventureland—partly so
that the owners can let it run a bit wild (they hate yardwork), and
partly for the aesthetics and the shade. Near the center of the space
is a genuine Enchanted Tiki...Gazebo, constructed mostly of bamboo
and rattan, with a canvas roof bearing a print of giant tropical
leaves, and raffia fringe attached around the edge for good measure.
The gazebo contains deck chairs, artificial birds on hanging perches,
and a central fountain that is also a mini-fridge. (They only turn it
on for backyard parties.)
The
rest of the backyard is a semi-untamed jungle. Tropical and
semi-tropical plants grow very well in Southern California, and the
yard contains a few Washington palms, philodendrons, a magnolia tree,
and numerous hibiscus and bird-of-paradise plants, as well as plenty
of filler foliage. It's barely-organized chaos. A crescent-shaped
pond against the very back of the yard gives the impression that a
loop of jungle river passes through the property. There's a frog
living in it, and a concrete elephant statue sits on the “island”
that it encloses.
Garage:
Unthemed?
There's
not much to be done with this space; it's just where they keep the
car, the beach stuff, the camping gear. Is there even a Disneyland theme
that could be made out of that? ;)
In
Conclusion
It
sure would be nice to be rich, wouldn't it?
*
They need to stop.
** I
liked this pun too much not to use it. Sorry-not-sorry for any
inconvenience.
***
Pretty ironic for my room, isn't it?
Neat ideas! We're kind of doing something like that in our home... We didn't directly want to have Disney stuff all over the place, but we did want to have recollections and allusions to it. Thus our living room is sort of amorphously Victorian with some Gothic Revivalism as per the time period, and in that we've got artifacts that echo Disney and other fairy tales: a teacup sitting on a leather copy of Alice in Wonderland, a classic Pooh doll and a honey pot, a pair of ruby slippers, the Haunted Mansion bookends and gargoyle candlestick holder, an old timey broom and pail with a red cloak, a fairy figurine trapped in a lantern beside a Peter Pan hat, a framed poster of Waterhouse's Lady of Shalott, an Aladdin-style lamp, etc. The entryway has the posters of the Mark Twain Riverboat and Jeremy Fulton's DLRR prints. Our kitchen has the Adventureland, Tiki theme going on. Our upstairs bathroom used to have a Hollywood Tower Hotel theme, but with all the contention recently, we changed it to a more peaceable Japanese theme. I'm thinking at some point we should do a photo shoot, or series, for our own blog.
ReplyDeleteI really hope you do! I love photos of creatively themed homes!
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