charlie bird
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2010
- Messages
- 240
- Reaction score
- 2
omg!amazing thats exactly how I have so many pairs of those glasses !I love the eyes and I am so happy I could help and exited to see what youve done and how it turns outI never understood why my mom always insisted on keeping the 3-D glasses whenever we see movies, even though the theater staff always tells us to recycle them when we're through... but I guess it's a good thing she did keep all those pairs, because I took initiative from Charlie and used a pair of them for puppet glasses. It's such an ingenius idea that saves me the work of having to construct a pair myself, and the shape of the 3-D glasses is close to what I wanted.
I experimented with three different pairs to see how good of results I could get; I really wanted to paint them a certainly color as according to the sketch art/puppet design, but the surface of the glasses didn't allow for a good paint job, as it keep chipping off after it was dry, and made for a bit of a mess. So the last pair, I left as is, and for the eyes, I did similar to Charlie, only I applied the eyes directly to the front of the lenses (low budget puppets call for simpler materials, but it's all about the character and personality, because all my puppets have paper-covered cardboard eyes, I wouldn't even know where to look for the plastic used for eyes). I'm really pleased with the results, and sometime within the next two weeks or so, I'm going to start working on the last two puppets I've been meaning to build for quite sometime, including the character I call Easter Egg, whom the glasses are for.
Jeepers creepers, where'd I get those bespectacled puppet peepers?
also you can get plastic from every day things I used plastic from some type of panelling from the harware store.People also use butter lids and plastic boxes...anything!However youres look just as good as the next thing!
thank you sooo much for the picture looks amazing!