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| Smaller version of guest check printable. |
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| Larger version of guest check printable. |
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| Smaller version of guest check printable. |
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| Larger version of guest check printable. |
Every doll Diner serves the traditional fried foods of the 1950s. These include paper trays of onion rings and french fries. Below you can see that I cut our doll's paper trays from recycled egg cartons.
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| Left, are the paper food containers cut from egg cartons. Right are the finished deep fried, single servings of popular, Diner fast foods served in the 1950s. |
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| Left, Coffee maker is shaped using cardboard, jar lids and masking tape. Center, coffee maker decoupaged with layer of black paper. Right, coffee maker painted and silver tape added. |
Step-by-Step Instructions:
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| 18" Doll Coffee Pot Diagram |
Step-by-Step Instructions:
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| Left, see coffee maker, pot and grinder in progress. Center, photo of coffee grinder before paint and tape. Right, coffee grinder from bottom. |
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| Left, finished grinder, coffee maker and coffee pot. Center and right, finished electric coffee grinder up close. |
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| A modern coffee maker for home use similar to the one we made for our dolls. |
Step-by-Step Instructions:
| Numbered ice-cream parlor desserts that correspond to the listing below. |
I ordered these 18" doll sized ice cream dishes online at Ebay. Then I filled them with faux syrup (puffy paint) before shaping and adding the ice cream (air dry clay) and cookies (Sculpey). The pirouettes (rolled cookies) and stroopwafel (waffle shaped cookies) are made using the oven-bake clay because it shows greater detail when manipulated than the air-dry clay. However, the air-dry clay is perfect for shaping the softer ice cream scoops.
Descriptions of Ice Cream Parlor Deserts Above:
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| I made dishes of ice cream using air dry clay and Sculpey too. The doll sized dishes were cut from paper egg cartons. |
| Students will have fun combining multiple colors of air dry clay with puff paints to create their own interpretations of these delicious, doll sized, malted milkshakes! |
This adorable craft is fun but a little pricey. The milkshake glasses are a must; and may be ordered online from many craft suppliers. Ours were purchased from ebay, but you can also find them easily at Amazon too. These are about 2 1/2 inches tall. You will also need colorful air dry clay, puff paints, foam mini-balls, cocktail straws, Mod Podge, Sculpey for the finer-detailed toppings and hot glue to apply these.
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| Left, the plastic milkshake glasses we ordered online. Right, here I have added puff paints inside of four examples to look like syrup. I left the remaining four without. |
I made a large menu to display our milkshakes above the counter of the Diner. You may wish to print it out and post it inside your dolls diner or ice cream shop too.
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| 8 Different milkshakes look so good; I want one right now! |
Watch how other crafters made similar shakes for doll diners:
French toast is a dish made of sliced bread soaked in beaten eggs and typically milk, then pan fried. Alternative names and variants include "eggy bread", "Bombay toast", "gypsy toast", and "poor knights" (of Windsor).
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| Above, I included strawberries, syrup and powdered sugar here to top our doll's French toast breakfast. |
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| Vintage advertising for Kix corn cereal, "It's taking America by Storm!" (Logos advertised in photographs here no longer exist. The ads are used for teaching students about historical content only.) Kix cereal is still popular today but it has a different logo. |
Children may download and print this clip art for their doll sized diners. The bottled Coca-Cola poster is an original ad from 1922 and both the Ice Cream 'n Cake Roll and the Hires Root Beer signs were originally printed onto enamel. All three very nostalgic and also typical of what you might have found decorating the walls of both a Diner or a Soda Fountain during the 1950s. Back the prints with cardboard and seal them with Mod Podge.
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| Text reads, "you'll Enjoy Ice Cream 'n Cake Roll Just slice and serve...Try some Today! Jack and Jill Ice Cream Cake Roll." |
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| Text reads, "It's High Time for Hires Root Beer" |
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| Text reads, "Sell Bottled Coca-Cola Delicious and Refreshing, Every day and every hour we are making sales for you!" |
Tour Diners Online:
| See the music selections up-close. These are a mix of tunes from the 70's and 80s. |
Song-popularity counters told the owner of the machine the number of times each record was played (A and B side were generally not distinguished), with the result that popular records remained, while lesser-played songs could be replaced.
Jukeboxes were most popular from the 1940s through the mid-1960s, particularly during the 1950s. By the middle of the 1940s, three-quarters of the records produced in America went into jukeboxes. Billboard published a record chart measuring jukebox play during the 1950s, which briefly became a component of the Hot 100; by 1959, the jukebox's popularity had waned to the point where Billboard ceased publishing the chart and stopped collecting jukebox play data.
The invention of the portable radio in the 1950s and the portable cassette tape deck in the 1960s were key factors in the decline of the jukebox. They enabled people to have their own selection of music with them, wherever they were. Jukeboxes became a dying industry during the 1970s, before being revived somewhat by compact disc jukeboxes during the 1980s and 1990s, followed by digital jukeboxes using the MP3 format. The greater selection and track length flexibility of digital jukeboxes offered more for the listener, with lower space requirements and operating costs making jukeboxes more attractive to establishment owners. While jukeboxes maintain popularity in bars, they have fallen out of favor with what were once their more lucrative locations—restaurants, diners, military barracks, video arcades, and laundromats.
Our soda fountain clip art/ Ice Cream Parlor pages are for little ones to decorate the shelves and counters of their doll's soda fountain, diner or ice cream parlor with. Neopolitan ice cream, Soda fountain colas, chocolate sundaes, egg creams, Sweet Peach Ice Teas, Phosphates, and many more delectable looking ice cream scoops are included in three pages of colorful clip art below!
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| Barbie would enjoy eating these breakfast cakes! |
| The finished canisters on top of our doll's diner shelf. You can cover your faux canisters in any scrapbooking paper you like. |
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| Four varieties of text for your doll's canister sets. Canisters may be marked: Flour, Sugar, Coffee, Tea, Rice, Salt Oats, Barley and or Cookies. |