Time Travel in Plastic: How Miniatures Suggest Time
What makes a miniature feel like it exists beyond a single moment?
In this episode of Her Shrink Ray Eye, I look at how miniature art, scale modeling, and diorama scenes can suggest time without ever moving. A tool left out, a drawer not quite closed, or a worn patch on the floor can make a scene feel like it existed before we arrived and will continue after we leave.
This is not story in the usual sense. It is about perception: how wear, repetition, unfinished action, and small traces allow the viewer to reconstruct time inside a still scene.
Some miniatures feel arranged. Others feel interrupted. The difference matters at the bench, because a piece can feel flat not because it lacks detail, but because it lacks time.
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