practicecactus
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2004
- Messages
- 396
- Reaction score
- 4
I generally don't come here much anymore cause it's made me a little jaded and synical.
When a newbie shows up with that same question you guys are probly sick of hearing, he or she is pointed to the search function.
And instead of giving out , what some think to be some big secret, a vague answer is given to a simple question.
Having said that, Ok, I'm no puppeteer or puppet maker, so think what you want.
But, I'm not one for keeping a thought to myself...and I just had this idea.
I'm interested in puppets with more character in the eyes.
I made a blinking puppet, and realised it needs a hard shell for the face for the areas around the eyes and generally something to go by in regards to eye positioning.
So an easy option would be Papier-Mache.
Paper + PVA glue is the way I remember making it from school but it needs something to be stuck onto, So I'm thinking just making a sculpt of the head or face with plasticine and going from there.
I started on a bunny puppet and made a 3D wire frame structure for the entire head.At the same time I made the blinking/up & down eye mech, and procrastinated on the whole thing. I was gonna cover the wire head with Papier-mache but I now realise, that's Un-nescesary. I did like the slight added weight it would bring to the head that would make it move more like a real head [as apossed to every puppet that moves and shakes like it's made of light weight foam...], and it would also be stronger, but using plasticine as the mold then ,when it dries, removing the plasticine, would be enough for a hard shell.
And if it needs some extra support so it doesn't flex , well, I could always make a wire support for it.
Then it'd be just a matter of incorporating it with the mouth plate , foam, covering etc,etc.
I know the idea of using plasticine and papier-mache to make a puppet heads is not new, but I just never thought of incorperating it with muppet style puppets.
Just an idea, so feel free to pick at it for weak spots.
When a newbie shows up with that same question you guys are probly sick of hearing, he or she is pointed to the search function.
And instead of giving out , what some think to be some big secret, a vague answer is given to a simple question.
Having said that, Ok, I'm no puppeteer or puppet maker, so think what you want.
But, I'm not one for keeping a thought to myself...and I just had this idea.
I'm interested in puppets with more character in the eyes.
I made a blinking puppet, and realised it needs a hard shell for the face for the areas around the eyes and generally something to go by in regards to eye positioning.
So an easy option would be Papier-Mache.
Paper + PVA glue is the way I remember making it from school but it needs something to be stuck onto, So I'm thinking just making a sculpt of the head or face with plasticine and going from there.
I started on a bunny puppet and made a 3D wire frame structure for the entire head.At the same time I made the blinking/up & down eye mech, and procrastinated on the whole thing. I was gonna cover the wire head with Papier-mache but I now realise, that's Un-nescesary. I did like the slight added weight it would bring to the head that would make it move more like a real head [as apossed to every puppet that moves and shakes like it's made of light weight foam...], and it would also be stronger, but using plasticine as the mold then ,when it dries, removing the plasticine, would be enough for a hard shell.
And if it needs some extra support so it doesn't flex , well, I could always make a wire support for it.
Then it'd be just a matter of incorporating it with the mouth plate , foam, covering etc,etc.
I know the idea of using plasticine and papier-mache to make a puppet heads is not new, but I just never thought of incorperating it with muppet style puppets.
Just an idea, so feel free to pick at it for weak spots.