staceyrebecca
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2007
- Messages
- 698
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Bezalel & RavageFrackle & Gordon brought up a lot of really good points in regards to pricing & art vs craft. I didn't want to completely hijack Mary Kate's thread in regards to copyrights, so I thought I'd post a new topic.
(just to be clear that we're all on the same page, http://forum.muppetcentral.com/showthread.php?t=35442&page=2 is the thread)
Awe dag nabbit, I had this big long series of questions and comments & things & now its missing. I'm a fool.
Ok I'll try to recap with fewer words.
I sell puppets cheaply in comparison. Partly due to the thought of myself as being inexperienced. At our theater the least experienced puppeteer has been doing this for more than 15 years, but on average, 30. Masters degrees in puppetry abound. I just simply don't have that training, and don't build in the traditional sense of covering a foam skeleton & have only been doing this for about 6 years. So I do feel that my work is *much* inferior (especially to a lot of the work I see here), however I'm not sure that I consider it a craft. Is it my frame of reference that allows me to charge more, or is it the product?
I use the same style of building that I sell as I do for performance puppets, however, to me, its so very simple. I don't *want* to be considered a crafter, but I'm afraid that pricing my puppets as low as I have been, I might have trapped myself into that label. Then again, I look at the construction and would feel that I'm misleading someone by saying they're professional puppets. Yes, *I* use them, but I do dirty shows for adults & teach kids in after-school puppetry programs. And yes, I make smaller puppets because I think kids *need* puppets, as an art and developmentally.
Also, they really don't take me all that long to make in the grand scheme of things. The goal to make a better puppet faster came from scripts coming to me 2 weeks before a performance date.
So any advice, consoling, scolding, etc. to make me a better puppeteer is warmly welcomed.
(And, to the more experienced builders, did you go through this in your career? is it a phase?)
-Stacey
(just to be clear that we're all on the same page, http://forum.muppetcentral.com/showthread.php?t=35442&page=2 is the thread)
Awe dag nabbit, I had this big long series of questions and comments & things & now its missing. I'm a fool.
Ok I'll try to recap with fewer words.
I sell puppets cheaply in comparison. Partly due to the thought of myself as being inexperienced. At our theater the least experienced puppeteer has been doing this for more than 15 years, but on average, 30. Masters degrees in puppetry abound. I just simply don't have that training, and don't build in the traditional sense of covering a foam skeleton & have only been doing this for about 6 years. So I do feel that my work is *much* inferior (especially to a lot of the work I see here), however I'm not sure that I consider it a craft. Is it my frame of reference that allows me to charge more, or is it the product?
I use the same style of building that I sell as I do for performance puppets, however, to me, its so very simple. I don't *want* to be considered a crafter, but I'm afraid that pricing my puppets as low as I have been, I might have trapped myself into that label. Then again, I look at the construction and would feel that I'm misleading someone by saying they're professional puppets. Yes, *I* use them, but I do dirty shows for adults & teach kids in after-school puppetry programs. And yes, I make smaller puppets because I think kids *need* puppets, as an art and developmentally.
Also, they really don't take me all that long to make in the grand scheme of things. The goal to make a better puppet faster came from scripts coming to me 2 weeks before a performance date.
So any advice, consoling, scolding, etc. to make me a better puppeteer is warmly welcomed.
(And, to the more experienced builders, did you go through this in your career? is it a phase?)
-Stacey