Ms. Phuc built many houses in the memories of the West, the difficult times when living with her parents and grandparents - Photo: THANH HUYEN
The model Ms. Nguyen Hong Phuc created has a wooden stilt house with a thatched roof, a house built with red bricks, and a house precariously located on the water, surrounded by duckweed, lotus, water lilies, and a rickety bamboo bridge.
Tiny houses, only the size of a student's notebook, yet evoke a whole range of childhood memories in the West.
Some newspapers, radios, handbags, tables and chairs are all scaled down - Photo: THANH HUYEN
Western model of a sky of memories
"These houses are my childhood memories, the place where I was born and raised, the place where my parents and grandparents lived their whole lives. Each model I make is a time to relive that old countryside," Ms. Hong Phuc shared.
Ms. Phuc meticulously pays attention to every detail: the roof is covered with shredded cardboard to create the feeling of an old corrugated iron roof, the frame is made of small bamboo toothpicks, the tables and chairs are made from tongue depressors, and sometimes the whole tray of food with bowls, bowls, and pots are miniature to look real.
The houses she built are not just model houses, but a miniature living world : there is an altar, a wood stove, a dining table, a yard to dry clothes, a stone mill to grind flour, and below is a small pond with colorful fish swimming around.
All evoke a typical old Southern space, where each generation of people lived, loved and grew up.
Ms. Phuc meticulously takes care of her house with simple but cozy furniture - Photo: THANH HUYEN
At first, Ms. Phuc only made models for fun, to remind her of her hometown. But then, the images she shared on social networks received a lot of attention, especially from children far from home. They came to order with the desire to preserve a part of their childhood memories in each of those small models.
"People sent pictures of old houses, some only vaguely remembered them, then told me about them. I had to imagine them, then sketch them out to get the right proportions, in the right style of Western country house architecture. Some took nearly a month to complete," she shared.
With her skillful hands, Ms. Phuc has made many small products using needles, hair, and beans - Photo: THANH HUYEN
Depending on the complexity, each model costs from 500,000 to more than 1 million VND: "Doing this is very hard, sometimes my eyes get tired sticking to every small detail, sometimes I have to spend all night. But every time I finish a house, I feel lighter, like I've just returned home after a long trip."
Currently, Ms. Phuc has dozens of different house models, from traditional wooden houses, tiled roof houses, river stilt houses, to houses combined with miniature landscapes such as lakes, duckweed, banana bushes, etc. All have a genuine, rustic look and are full of countryside love.
Ms. Phuc makes and arranges objects neatly and tidily by herself to educate her children - Photo: THANH HUYEN
Teach children to love their hometown from paper houses
Not only does she make models to sell or display, Ms. Phuc also sees this as a way to teach her children about their homeland. She said: "I built a house and told my children about how I lived there in the past, how I went to school, and how my grandparents lived a difficult but warm life. The children liked it and asked many questions."
Small houses are therefore not only decorative objects or art models, but also bridges between generations, where parents' memories are told, where children's childhood is instilled with genuine love for their homeland.
Despite not having formal training, what Ms. Hong Phuc has done has touched the hearts of many people. From simple materials such as bamboo toothpicks, cardboard, ice cream sticks, wire, etc., she has created a "miniature West".
"As long as I remember my hometown and my childhood spent by the fire and the river, I will continue to build these small houses," she said, her eyes sparkling with joy.
A classroom around 2000 recreated by Ms. Phuc - Photo: THANH HUYEN
A small cabinet the size of a cigarette pack but fully functional, has drawers and contains necessary items for family life in the 8X era - Photo: THANH HUYEN
The simple stilt house with pigsty, dog pen, gourd trellis, and chicken coop on the roof is recreated exactly as it is - Photo: THANH HUYEN
Small tray of food with full dishes created by Ms. Phuc herself - Photo: THANH HUYEN
The marble-sized flour mill can be "operated" - Photo: THANH HUYEN
Source: https://tuoitre.vn/ngam-mien-tay-thu-nho-ngam-ca-thoi-gian-kho-khan-song-voi-ong-ba-20250723152254859.htm
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