Craftsman David Edwards, who once played for the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, gave up his career as a professional cellist to make miniatures for doll's houses. He says he has made dozens of his 1/12 size £1,000 violins, based on a Stradivarius. “Being a musician has helped me,” he says. "Musicians have a lot of concentration, not just for normal concerts but for something like Wagner’s Meistersingers - five hours or whatever it is – there’s a lot of concentration involved."

“The flow and line in making miniatures is rather like musical phrasing, it’s very similar. And then there’s the working on your own. If you play an instrument you have to spend thousands and thousands of hours practising, so you’re used to being solitary which is very important. It takes a few months to make each violin, partly because I’m a bit old-fashioned with the finishes I put on.”

“There’s no use putting gloss polyurethane on the violin, it just looks like a toy. I represent Italian varnish on it and it’s a thing that I invented myself... it’s got a lovely colour and you can see right down into the grain of the wood. Varnish was very, very important to the Italians and to replicate that is very difficult. Drying time is at least two weeks per coat. Don’t forget you’ve got to handle it and it can be sticky – it can’t be just touch dry."

“Making the violin is intricate but basically it’s got a body and it’s got a front and it’s got a back. You’ve got the neck, which includes the pegbox, which is very, very difficult to carve in miniature - it’s difficult enough to carve in full size. You have to carve very finely and I use pear wood for that. Then there’s the fingerboard which is the black thing down the front of the fiddle. The tail piece and the finger board are both made in ebony and then you’ve got to string it up. I use real sheep gut.”

“My order book for my miniatures, in general, stretched up to seven years ahead but I got to the age of 75 the other day and I thought enough’s enough. Not the making - but the people at the end of the order book clearly are not going to get it because something will happen one day. I scrapped all the orders and now I sell only from stock. Having said that, I wouldn’t cancel the orders from the people who ordered the violins because they’ve been waiting expectantly for a long time.”