Catholic schoolgirl garners national attention for her dollhouse business
May 30, 2020 at 8:51 p.m.
Since Ella launched her commercial effort in August, Joanna Gaines of HGTV's "Fixer Upper" and Magnolia Market fame shared on Instagram Ella's miniature replica of Gaines' Silos Baking Co. in Magnolia Market at the Silos in Waco, Texas. Doyle has been featured in stories by The Wall Street Journal, CNBC, the Minneapolis Star Tribune and KSTP-TV in St. Paul.
At her website, lifeinadollhouseshop.com, Ella sells miniature kitchen walls complete with a stove, shelves and crockery for $325. She once sold a custom dollhouse interior for $700. Her 4-inch signature lemon trees – with oven-baked clay lemons attached to small leaves and branches snipped from decorative garlands – go for $30.
The business began with Ella's interests in all things miniature, combined with her flair for design and her parents' jobs as custom home builders in Mendota Heights, Minnesota. Her cardboard-box miniature rooms caught the eye of her grandfather, Will Kolesar, whose garage at his Eagan, Minnesota, home is a woodworking shop.
Soon, Kolesar was taking direction from Ella on size and type of dollhouse or dollhouse rooms and fashioning them for her. They often work side-by-side, but in this time of COVID-19 precautions, Kolesar drops the shells off at the Doyles' front steps.
As she and her grandfather worked on the dollhouses, Ella learned this wasn't his first go-around with miniatures.
"My mom and grandpa used to build dollhouses," she told The Catholic Spirit, newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. "I really didn't know it, until I learned it after I started building dollhouses with my grandpa. That's kind of how he knew how to do it."
Her grandmother, Nancy Kolesar, helps paint some of the dollhouses. And Ella's parents, Sean and Katie, help on the business side, signing papers that need signing ("since I'm 13 I can't do a lot"), and assisting with reinvestments in the business. A 3D printer is the latest big purchase, but there is a continuous need to restock supplies and meet other obligations.
"I'm more of the creative director," said Ella, who has two younger sisters. But "I've learned a lot about investing."
Katie Doyle said her daughter has always been creative, independent and passionate, even as a small child, and her success is not a surprise. The overnight attention and recognition, though, was a bit of a shock, she said.
"I think we've settled into it a little bit more now, and it is a kind of a new normal for her," Katie Doyle said.
Ella works about 20 hours a week at her business but still finds time for school and volleyball. Thus far, she has made about $9,000 selling dollhouses, rooms and accessories. She invests in the business, saves a large chunk for future needs such as college or a car, and recently donated $300 to a customer's GoFundMe effort to make COVID-19 face masks for "front-line" workers in the pandemic.
"I like donating to good causes," she said.
She has seen an uptick in business since the novel coronavirus outbreak, Ella said. She thinks it's driven by adults in their 30s and 40s who might not have a lot of money to build a home of their own, but want to let their imaginations run, do some of their own decorating with miniature accessories and have something nice to show off – a decorative dollhouse.
Ella said she wants to run a good business, with quick responses to emails and getting orders out on time. "I try to be honest with my prices," she said.
Catholic values drive her work, as well, said Ella, a parishioner with her family at St. Joseph Church in West St. Paul. She hopes to attend Cretin-Derham Hall Catholic High School in St. Paul.
"I've always felt I want to be the best person I can be," she said.
Ella Doyle's work can be seen at her website lifeinadollhouseshop.com and on Ruff is news editor at The Catholic Spirit, newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.
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Since Ella launched her commercial effort in August, Joanna Gaines of HGTV's "Fixer Upper" and Magnolia Market fame shared on Instagram Ella's miniature replica of Gaines' Silos Baking Co. in Magnolia Market at the Silos in Waco, Texas. Doyle has been featured in stories by The Wall Street Journal, CNBC, the Minneapolis Star Tribune and KSTP-TV in St. Paul.
At her website, lifeinadollhouseshop.com, Ella sells miniature kitchen walls complete with a stove, shelves and crockery for $325. She once sold a custom dollhouse interior for $700. Her 4-inch signature lemon trees – with oven-baked clay lemons attached to small leaves and branches snipped from decorative garlands – go for $30.
The business began with Ella's interests in all things miniature, combined with her flair for design and her parents' jobs as custom home builders in Mendota Heights, Minnesota. Her cardboard-box miniature rooms caught the eye of her grandfather, Will Kolesar, whose garage at his Eagan, Minnesota, home is a woodworking shop.
Soon, Kolesar was taking direction from Ella on size and type of dollhouse or dollhouse rooms and fashioning them for her. They often work side-by-side, but in this time of COVID-19 precautions, Kolesar drops the shells off at the Doyles' front steps.
As she and her grandfather worked on the dollhouses, Ella learned this wasn't his first go-around with miniatures.
"My mom and grandpa used to build dollhouses," she told The Catholic Spirit, newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. "I really didn't know it, until I learned it after I started building dollhouses with my grandpa. That's kind of how he knew how to do it."
Her grandmother, Nancy Kolesar, helps paint some of the dollhouses. And Ella's parents, Sean and Katie, help on the business side, signing papers that need signing ("since I'm 13 I can't do a lot"), and assisting with reinvestments in the business. A 3D printer is the latest big purchase, but there is a continuous need to restock supplies and meet other obligations.
"I'm more of the creative director," said Ella, who has two younger sisters. But "I've learned a lot about investing."
Katie Doyle said her daughter has always been creative, independent and passionate, even as a small child, and her success is not a surprise. The overnight attention and recognition, though, was a bit of a shock, she said.
"I think we've settled into it a little bit more now, and it is a kind of a new normal for her," Katie Doyle said.
Ella works about 20 hours a week at her business but still finds time for school and volleyball. Thus far, she has made about $9,000 selling dollhouses, rooms and accessories. She invests in the business, saves a large chunk for future needs such as college or a car, and recently donated $300 to a customer's GoFundMe effort to make COVID-19 face masks for "front-line" workers in the pandemic.
"I like donating to good causes," she said.
She has seen an uptick in business since the novel coronavirus outbreak, Ella said. She thinks it's driven by adults in their 30s and 40s who might not have a lot of money to build a home of their own, but want to let their imaginations run, do some of their own decorating with miniature accessories and have something nice to show off – a decorative dollhouse.
Ella said she wants to run a good business, with quick responses to emails and getting orders out on time. "I try to be honest with my prices," she said.
Catholic values drive her work, as well, said Ella, a parishioner with her family at St. Joseph Church in West St. Paul. She hopes to attend Cretin-Derham Hall Catholic High School in St. Paul.
"I've always felt I want to be the best person I can be," she said.
Ella Doyle's work can be seen at her website lifeinadollhouseshop.com and on Ruff is news editor at The Catholic Spirit, newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.