Sarah Miriam Peale - Little Princess Series
Sarah Miriam Peale - Little Princess Series
makeCNC
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Little Princess Dollhouses 

Sarah Miriam Peale
 
This Dollhouse is Included in Volume Three of the Little Princess Series of Dollhouses!

A makeCNC Original 3D Puzzle

This is a Very Amazing Puzzle with Some Finely detailed work in it! 

ALL DOWNLOADABLE PRODUCTS ARE AVAILABLE INSTANTLY AFTER PAYMENT!

Ready to cut downloadable Patterns and Projects for your CNC Router, Milling Machine, Plasma Cutter or Laser Machine and Scroll Saw in both Imperial Inch format as well as Metric size for the Global CNC Hobbyist.

Files include a Full Color Assembly Manual Copyright makeCNC!

Buy one: Collect them All!  Impress your friends and family or make some extra cash with your CNC machine with your own product line at flea markets and craft shows!

Sarah Miriam Peale

Sarah Peale (1800-1885)
After first exhibiting at age 18, Sarah Miriam Peale went on to independent financial success.
Sarah Miriam Peale was born on May 19, 1800 in Philadelphia, the daughter of Mary and James Peale, a famous early American artist.  Painting was very important to both her maternal and paternal family, including her older sister, Anna Claypoole Peale.  Sarah, who was called Sally, started painting during her early childhood. 
When she was eighteen, she drew a self-portrait, which was a tradition in the family.  If the portrait was successfully done, the tradition was that her family would consider her as an artist instead of a student.  She would also become an assistant in her father’s studio.  Her father wasn’t pleased enough with her self-portrait, so Sarah decided to do something different from the rest of her family. In 1818, she moved to Baltimore where she learned more techniques from her cousin Rembrandt Peale.  She studied with him for three years and Rembrandt became an influential person for her early work, along with her and her father and her uncle, Charles Willston Peale.  Also in 1818, she displayed her first full-size portrait at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.  Six years later, in 1824, she and her sister Anna became the first two women admitted at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, which was America’s most prestigious institute.
In 1831, Peale opened her studio in Baltimore and established herself as one of Baltimore’s most capable portraitists. In a time prior to photography, there was a wide market for painted portraits, and she drew some of the best customers.  For example, in her studios in Baltimore and later in St. Louis, many diplomats, congressmen, and other well-known individuals sought to be drawn by her or to buy her oil paintings.  Some men she painted include Massachusetts Senator Daniel Webster, Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton, and -- on his late-life tour of America -- French General Marquis de Lafayette.  It’s been proven that she received more portrait commissions than some famous male painters such as Thomas Sully, John Jarvis, Jacob Eichholtz, and John Vanderlyn. 
She was persuaded to move to St. Louis in 1846 by Senator Trusten Polk and other patrons, where she lived for 30 years.  She returned to Philadelphia in 1877, where she spent the remainder of her life.  She never married and died February 4, 1885.  Not only did Sarah Miriam Peale win numerous awards throughout her life, she was also the most commercially successful female artist in America.  She was able to maintain a career for about sixty years and support herself without marrying, which was almost unheard of in the 1800s.
 
Collect your Sarah Miriam Peale Little Princess Dollhouse Today!

Patterns may be scaled to the size you require for your material thickness using our Scale Calculator

CNC Routers Users ! Please See our Tutorial for information on dealing with Inside Corners and Dogbone Fillets

Each Zip File Includes:

2 or 4 CDR Files - Sizes you receive Depend on individual Product - usually in 1-8 and 3 mm and/or 1-4 and 6 mm Versions (Corel Draw Format for Laser)
 
2 or 4 DXF's - Sizes you receive Depend on individual Product -  usually in 1-8 and 3 mm and/or 1-4 and 6 mm Versions (For Most CAD Programs)
 
2 or 4 SVG - Sizes you receive Depend on individual Product - usually in 1-8 and 3 mm and/or 1-4 and 6 mm Versions  (Opens in Many CAD & Drawing Programs) 

Printable PDF Pattern  (For Scroll Saw Use)

1 X  Clear and Concise Color Assembly Manual.

1 X  Number Guide DXF (Also called Coded DXF - NOT in all Products - Only in Certain Products)

1 x Readme File and Copyright Information

1 X Product Notes -  Letting you know an Approximate Height, Length and Width of your finished product and giving the Approximate Size of the Largest Part.  These Approximations are given in Imperial and Metric. Remember, These are Approximate Sizes. 

Approximate Size at 3mm
L= 351
W = 241
H = 490
 
 
Approximate Size at 1/8 inch
L = 13.8
W = 9.5
H = 19.3
 
Approximate Size of Largest Part
14.3 X 12 inches
363 X 305 mm
 
Approximate Part Number: 100

NOTE: Our 3D Puzzles can be built in different thicknesses.
Example: 1/8" uses 1/8" Plywood...1/4" uses 1/4" Plywood, etc.
As a rule, although the slots are set to fit the same sized tool, most
people will use a smaller bit size when cutting.

All the hard work is done!

Makecnc is excited to bring to the CNC hobbyist a new and ever-expanding library of art and projects made ready-to-cut on your CNC machine!

You can either sell the cut out projects as your own product or assemble them for your own enjoyment and to give as gifts to your family and friends.

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