Looks good! How did you do so well at hiding the seams? Specifically on his nose down the middle. Looks as though you may have not even had a seam there.....Did you do something differently than the usual Kermit pattern builds?
No nothing different. I took about four different patterns and mixed and matched various bits to come up with the one i used, but it still has the middle seam. I also used standard anti-pil polar fleece as i am waiting on new Antron fleece arriving (although i have found polar equally as good recently, especially with the range of colours available.)
The one thing i noticed on pretty much every tutorial done on the Henson stitch, even in the Stan Winston workshop by BJ Guyer, is that everyone stiches around four or five stitches, tighen then pick the seams. Instead i found it much better and more sensible to do the stitches, pull it to the point the thread becomes taught, and then start picking the seams while pulling it tighter. So you pull up more of the fleece than if you try to do it once the seam is tight. As you tighten the fleece you have picked is already outside the seam so never gets trapped and therefore is more natural to the fleece around it - you just need to make sure you don't pull it up too much or it goes the other way and you end up with clumps of clearly loose, roughed up fleece. It's a little more time consuming (takes about 90 seconds for every five stitches) but it's worth it when it works.
I keep meaning to do a short video, because it's something that is a lot easier to see than to explain.