About A wonderful pair of hand crafted puppets by John Car, depicting Pierrot (little Peter) a clown character from European pantomime and his female equivalent Pierette. John was a fine wood carver and his wife Eva costumed the puppets, the marionettes where made around 1935/1945 and performed into the early 70's by John, Eva and their four children Marjorie, Nancy, Barbara and John (Junior) The puppets are not strung to be used, only for decorative purposes. Age related wear, fading and deterioration to the silk costumes, elderly repairs but complete with their original painted paper mache heads, carved pine bodies and cast lead feet. Size: 39cm in height.
Sota Sakuma is a Japanese puppet maker who lives in Prague. He studied textile at the Tokyo Art and Design University and puppet de...
Not what you were looking for? See Puppet (disambiguation). Or were you looking for Lefty, the animatronic that was designed to contain the Puppet? The Puppet is an animatronic puppet, a major antagonist, and one of the main characters in the Five Nights at Freddy's series. It first appeared in Five Nights at Freddy's 2, but minigames from the second game and afterwards show the Puppet's tragic and heroic side. It possibly serves as the prize vendor of the newly refurbished Freddy Fazbear's Pizz
As a part of my ongoing exploration of puppets and puppet-makers here at the Artlog, today I offer an interview with the Czech-born puppet-maker Jan Zalud. Above: heads and hands of villagers carve…
Create a large psi ball and charge it Then mold it into a person or a special puppet design of your own. Now if you want you can add weapons or shields to it. Maybe a secrect blade that comes out the mouth or arm. Now when done with that, then program it to not disperse. Now to control any puppet you need strings, so make long strings of psi come out your finger tips and attach them to a body part of the puppet. Try moving it around a little to get a feel for it. Once you have the hang of it try
Custom puppets made in New York City. Services: Puppet making, character design, art direction.
Make No-sew felt puppets in just a few minutes using the provided templates. Just cut out the shapes and secure with hot glue to make cute animal puppets!
These Hand Puppet Knitting Patterns are perfect for children and will help them create their own custom hand puppets to play with.
40 Artworks by Sara Riches, Saatchi Art Artist
This is a PDF File digital download. ( It is not a product that you will receive in your mail, it is a file that you need to download. Then you need to print it yourself. ) **This is not a project for children. It involves working with contact cement glue, which is toxic and not recommended for children to use without the supervision of an adult** Round Head Foam + Fleece Puppet Pattern. Pattern developed by The Circus Cottage This Download includes: - Printable foam pattern for a 6 inch tall and 6 inch wide head (15 cm /15 cm). - Printable mouth plates pattern -Step by step instructions with description and photos - Printable fleece pattern for a 44 cm /17.3 inch tall puppet -Step by step instructions with description and photos -two options to Print on: -for E.U. - A4 paper 8-1/4 x 11-3/4 inch - for U.S. - Letter paper This pattern has everything you need to build a ''base'' puppet, with ears and nose but it doesn't have instructions for the eyes No refunds on digital downloads
Here at Bored Panda, we're avid crafters! All you have to do is take one look at Crafty Panda, and you’ll know that we love to keep our paws busy by crafting, creating and embarking upon DIY projects galore. But we’re not the only ones who love a great art project. The Craft Projects subreddit has over 2 million members and is full of some of the most impressive and brilliant creations the internet has ever seen.
Hello. Sorry for the lack of action recently, and thank you for all the marvellous comments from everyone relating to the last post. You're all ace. Back to business. What do we do in the school summer holidays? We make puppets! This recent find (by A.R. Philpott, pub. Evans Brothers London 1972) shows us how to go about it. But like the hasty child I am, I've ignored the 'Let's Make' parts and skipped to the 'Puppets' bit. The young man on the cover seems to be a little ... apprehensive about the relic on his arm. He doesn't seem to be able to ... stop looking at it. It's all pupaphobia you know (yes there is an official label for fear of puppets, although as my father would probably say "Whats the Latin for 'For God's sake pull yourself together?'") Maybe for a primary school production of 'The Fog'? I refer the Right Honourable Readers to my comments on Found Objects. I remember that glue. It ate into polystyrene and left a wonderful gummy cap over the nozzle when left for a while. It could also cause blindness and hallucinations. Be careful, little girl! Yeah yeah, nice puppet. It's the background I'm interested in; slatted wooden benches, smooth pebbledashing on concrete surfaces, hardy shrubs in containers, plastic-coated wire fences with gaps just big enough to fit the toe of your Clarks in ... Ladies & Gentlemen I give you the Seventies School Playground! The title of Janis Joplin's posthumous unreleased live album. Barely able to function after being parted from his puppet-master, the young boy sits slumped on a bench in the playground. I'd be catatonic as well if I had to untangle the wires of 'the metal tape creature' whilst Miss Goody Two Shoes gets to swoop about with the ace 'Let's Pretend'-style cat. Look at his knees. Pre-five pound jeans, these haven't been patched for the sake of fashion! 'The thing that stuck in young Jenkins' mind was the hands. As the apparition bobbed silently behind the chair towards him, he noticed that the hands, ostensibly shaped rosewood, had a peculiarly sinuous and lifelike quality. Indeed, Jenkins was almost convinced that he could see the tiny veins rising and falling slowly and miniature beads of moisture glistening among the folds of skin. The effect was as if some person unknown had replaced the puppet's hands with those of a large frog.' 'The Imp' by M.R. James from 'Ghost Stories of an Antiquary', 1904. I don't really fancy making puppets any more. Back soon with more handicraft, markets and shopping centres. And music. Check behind the sofa before you turn the light out tonight.
artes escénicas
A glimpse into the workshop of Britain's puppet powerhouse as it prepares to restage its acclaimed production of A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings