Well built. The hand/arm movements are so responsive to the rods--and, the puppeteer is in graceful control. Thank you for this clip. I am learning much!
@Creaturiste6 ай бұрын
Thanks, and you're welcome. I learned a lot while working on this and the other two puppets for that show. Mostly: we didn't NEED to make the armature sturdy. I mean, it was still comfortable enough to perform, but a lot of the budget and weight were taken by both the welded and bolted aluminum backpack-style frame extension (mounted on a hunting rigid backpack system), and the cast resin head and arms. We could have built the same in lighter materials like PVC tubing, bamboo, and paper mache, but time was VERY short, and the budget was high, so we went with the Hollywood approach: throw money at it, hire some talents to speed things up. These tougher, pricier yet much faster approaches made it possible to deliver on time. Most of the time saved came from hiring a pro mold maker and caster who specialized in large public statues. Note the arm rods (extra long ski poles) are connected to the bottom of the wrists, as a pivot point. It helps a lot with raising the arms without having a weird angle and a need for overextending the arms. I wish I had more footage and images of the end results, but hey, sometimes too many obstacles, and too little time!
@VonSolo52 жыл бұрын
Sooo Good!!!! So well built!
@Creaturiste11 жыл бұрын
Thanks! We all worked hard on it.
@woodsarthobbies65159 жыл бұрын
Whoa! Passion.
@JZTB5 жыл бұрын
Wow, this is an excellent puppet!
@Creaturiste5 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@stargatefansg111 жыл бұрын
Wow! That's so cool!!
@douglaswitt11 жыл бұрын
Man that is awesome :)
@bigbroable10 жыл бұрын
are those all metal? im planning to make one but i wonder if a strong wood would be enough for the pole of the body reply please :) ty
@Creaturiste9 жыл бұрын
+bigbroable I'm sorry this comment escaped my notice for so long! The frame was mostly aluminum, the head and forearms were cast urethane resin. The black stuff is a lightweight foam called Plastazote. That approach worked, but in my opinion, it was much heavier than it could have been, and way more expensive. We were rushed by time, so these options were the best for that project. If I ever build giant puppets again, I'm going for paper mache, cardboard boxes, rope and bamboo poles. The hunting backpack frame would likely be the base, as it was very stable and comfortable.
@mingreece7 жыл бұрын
How are the arms connected to the torso? :)
@Creaturiste7 жыл бұрын
Rope is the trick to getting a lot of nice, quiet movement. The shoulders are blocks of hard wood connected (with nuts and bolts) to the top of the metal frame that's connected to the backpack. The shoulder blocks have holes just big enough for a very strong braided rope to fit through. A knot on the rope prevents it from falling off. So each arm is supported by that rope.