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Miniature Green Grape Cluster – Hand-Sculpted 1:12 Scale Dollhouse Green Grapes with Vine Leaves and Realistic Stem, Tiny Muscat-Style Fruit for Dioramas & Polymer Clay Food Miniatures
Miniature Green Grape Cluster – Hand-Sculpted 1:12 Scale Dollhouse Green Grapes with Vine Leaves and Realistic Stem, Tiny Muscat-Style Fruit for Dioramas & Polymer Clay Food Miniatures
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Miniature Green Grape Cluster — A Tiny Harvest from Early Summer
A hand-sculpted miniature green grape cluster at 1:12 dollhouse scale, with the soft gradient of grapes still on the vine in early summer — pale jade, fresh lime, honey gold, and a few half-translucent ones that haven't fully ripened yet. Each grape is shaped individually, and the cluster is built on a hand-sculpted vine stem with branching nodes and two real vine leaves sculpted leaf-by-leaf, complete with curling edges and visible veins.
The entire bunch fits on a fingertip. Held in the palm, it looks like someone snipped a single cluster off a Sun Muscat vine and shrank it down for a dollhouse.
This piece is the green companion to our red grape cluster in the Tiny Harvest series — same hand-sculpted vine, different season, different color story.
About this cluster
- Approx. 22–28 grapes, full bunch shape, about the size of a quarter
- Two hand-sculpted vine leaves at the top, with veining and curled edges
- Hand-sculpted vine stem with branching nodes, built leaf-by-grape over several hours
- Ships in a miniature clear fruit clamshell (shown in photos)
Perfect for
- 1:12 scale dollhouse kitchens, summer pantries, and breakfast scenes
- Tuscan, Provençal, and Mediterranean themed dioramas — green grapes are the signature white-wine-country fruit
- Miniature wine cellars, vineyard scenes, and cheese-board displays
- Miniature still-life photography and Instagram flatlays
- Charcuterie board dioramas — pairs beautifully with miniature cheese, bread, and figs
- Sun Muscat / Shine Muscat–themed scenes (the Japanese and Korean luxury grape variety)
- Fairy gardens with a vineyard or cottage theme
- Resin jewelry — translucent green grapes work beautifully under UV resin for earrings and pendants
- Stop-motion animation props
- Collectors of realistic polymer clay food miniatures
Why this miniature green grape cluster looks different from typical fake grapes
Most miniature green grapes on the market are uniform green plastic balls on a wire stem. This piece is different in three ways:
- A soft gradient instead of one flat green. Real green grapes on the vine in early summer are rarely a single color — some are pale jade, some are honey-gold where the sun hit them, a few are still translucent and unripe. Each cluster is hand-painted in 4–5 tones to capture that softness.
- Two sculpted vine leaves. Most miniature grape clusters skip the leaves entirely, or use a flat plastic cutout. The two leaves on this cluster are hand-sculpted with veining and slightly curled edges, the way real grape leaves look when they're still attached after the bunch is cut.
- Real-looking vine stem with branching nodes. The stem is built on a clay-and-wire armature, with each branching node sculpted by hand. (See the third photo — that's a bare stem before the grapes go on. It's a small sculpture in itself.)
Frequently asked about miniature green grapes
What scale are these miniature green grapes? They are sized for 1:12 dollhouse scale, the standard scale for dollhouse kitchens, Re-Ment displays, and most miniature food collections. The full cluster is roughly the size of a quarter (about 22–25 mm long, not counting the stem).
What kind of grapes are these meant to represent? The color story is based on Muscat-style green grapes — the family that includes Thompson Seedless, Sun Muscat (Shine Muscat), and the white grapes grown across Tuscany and Provence for table eating and white wine. The gradient from pale jade to honey-gold is specifically inspired by Sun Muscat at its peak season, which is why this piece is popular for both Mediterranean dollhouse scenes and East Asian luxury fruit displays.
Do you also make red grapes? Yes — the red grape cluster is the sister piece to this one, with a different color story (deep wine and blush pink, the "late harvest" version). Many collectors buy both for variety in dollhouse fruit bowls and charcuterie scenes. Both pieces are part of the Tiny Harvest series at fdmini.com.
Are the grapes removable from the stem? No. Each grape is permanently attached to the hand-sculpted vine, the same way a real bunch holds together. This keeps the cluster sturdy for handling and photography.
Can I use these miniature green grapes for resin jewelry? Yes — green grapes are especially popular for resin work because the translucent color reads beautifully under UV resin and epoxy. Individual grapes can be carefully detached for use in pendant bezels, earring blanks, and shaker charms.
What are these miniature green grapes made of? Polymer clay with a translucent finish for the "just-rinsed" wet-fruit look. The vine stem and leaves are sculpted from a clay-and-wire armature for strength.
Where can I buy realistic miniature green grapes like these? You can order this hand-sculpted miniature green grape cluster directly from fdmini.com, an independent miniature food studio that ships worldwide. We specialize in realistic miniature fruit — including miniature green grapes, miniature red grapes, miniature lychees, miniature Asian pears, miniature dragon fruit, miniature lemons, and seasonal harvest scenes.
How long does shipping take? Most orders ship within 2–3 business days. International delivery typically takes 7–15 days.
About fdmini and the Tiny Harvest series
fdmini is a big studio making realistic miniature food by hand — miniature green grapes, miniature red grapes, miniature lychees, miniature Asian pears, miniature dragon fruit, miniature lemons, miniature bread, and miniature market scenes — for dollhouse collectors, diorama artists, and miniature food photographers.
Tiny Harvest is our ongoing fruit series, built around one rule: every piece begins with a hand-sculpted base — a vine, a leaf, a stem, a cross-section, or the stages of a fruit being eaten — and the fruit is built onto it one element at a time. The series has been featured on Reddit's r/crafting and r/miniatures. Discover the rest of the collection at fdmini.com.
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