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Projects done for Little Canada
Little Canada is a miniature exhibition of Canada built in miniature form. It has all the provinces and territories in the country and showcases the well known buildings, hidden gems, and unique locations from every province. The project started over ten years ago and is still in development.
Miniature Sculptures and Details
Miniature sculptures and other details made to enhance the story telling in the exhibit.
Glooscap Statue
This indigenous statue is located in Millbrook, Nova Scotia. A miniature version of it was created to stand in miniature East Coast, by the Millbrook Cultural and Heritage Centre. Materials used include: a small super hero toy as a base, no more nails for sculpting, string, cinefoil and acrylic paint.



Vimy Ridge
This is a separate display that was created to bring more awareness to Canadian history. This building was designed and 3d printed, assembled, sanded, spray painted, and weathered by hand. Every sculpture was created from stratch. For the base I used O scale figures, toothpicks for arms, cinefoil for the drapery, and clay for other body parts.
For more information on this display click the link below:
Structures
Created structures for the miniature exhibition. This process included designing the buildings in AutoCAD, laser cutting pieces out of different materials, spray painting them, assembling them into a 3D structures and then weathering them.
West Coast Little Scene
Little scenes are small miniature dioramas that are sold at Little Canada's gift shop. Each one is designed and mass produced. This scenes was designed to represent the West Coast. It has a few 3D printed trees that I designed in Blender.
Trees and Terrain
This process consists of creating trees from mostly sponge and wire, painting them, carving styrofoam, treating it and then planting trees into the carved terrain. Those are usually collaborative projects due to their size.
Miniature Murals
I designed and hand painted a number of murals on miniature buildings including larger structures like the Grandville Island Silos.
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