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This is my version of the Loki puppet first knitted by mariannes_stuff and I thank you for telling me the idea of how to knit this insanely adorable puppet! And it's so fun to play with!
For Ella, a girl of 6 years, I made recently these puppets, the back is colored too. They look like Ella and her mother. Wearing the fashionable wide pants they had just bought. Immediately after receiving this small present Ella started to play with them and make more paper puppets. She wished to make friends for these puppets. And a house with furniture. She spent many quiet hours with this play.
When I was 6/10 years old I made hundreds of these small puppets to play with. Series. They had names.
Sometimes they were based on books I was reading.
Some young children like these puppets very much.They immediately start to play with them. It is easy for them to make more of these.
Later I added this link to a short text in Dutch about magical thinking of children.http://www.lettertempel.nl/gedicht?storyid=33843. I tried to translate this short text in my limited English:
The invisible bite.
The child placed all the dolls
in a circle on the bed.
A tablecloth in the middle.
And one cookie there.
Child went out of the room
for a while ...for it knew.
My dolls do not want me
to know...they are alife,
to see how they move
and talk and laugh.
Then the child returned
and picked up the cookie.
All my dolls took a bite.
Do not want me to know they did.
So it is an invisible bite.
The child ate what was left.
;
Every each puppet has a three rods: one is fixed to the body, while the other two fixed to each hand.
Access more resources about this media project on:
showwithmedia.com/puppet-video/
Icon attribution via the Noun Project (licensed):
thenounproject.com/search/?q=puppet&i=44228
and
Nitsana Lazarus brought her amazing show Puppet Commotion back to the library. The kids loved all of the different puppets and the audience participation.
Some of the 55 cookies made for and with Sarah and Michelle. These are further to some cookies I made a while back. these will be sold over the next few days to help raise funds to pay for the production of a DVD based upon the puppet. See this link for the puppet www.flickr.com/photos/lisas_cakes/3634030568/
Mark ‘Spoonman’ Petrakis and I are developing a shadow puppet show we call ‘Ubu’s Dreams’.
This short series of sketches stars Père Ubu, the hero of french poet Alfred Jarry’s surreal plays. In this show, Ubu is constantly dreaming, playing with archetypal characters from our collective unconscious.
For this project, we are creating a variety of wooden figures with a laser cutter: big faces, music notes, dancers, trees and graveyards, to name but a few. We then tape our puppets on wooden sticks, and wave them across the stage to bring them to life, with a projector over our heads.
We plan to continue this experiment through the summer and perform a first puppet show during our Dada exhibit at the Canessa Gallery in North Beach, from Nov. 3 to 12, 2016.
I also plan to use some of these techniques with our lower and middle school students, for the Maker Art courses I will be teaching this fall.
From shadow puppets to poetic robots, these interactive storytelling experiments have the potential to engage us at a deeper level and help us learn more about ourselves.
View more pictures of this Magic Theater project on Flickr:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157664637863884
Learn more about Ubu’s Dreams:
Learn more about the Magic Theater project (originally called Théâtre Mécanique):
Deity puppets on sale in Durbar Square, Kathmandu, Nepal
Copyright © Arti Agarwal
All Rights Reserved
Swazzle provided puppets and puppeteers for a short sketch at the beginning of Patton Oswalt's new comedy DVD, "My Weakness is Strong". The unrated DVD (not for kids) hits store shelves today.
The puppet was made by Bruce Rowland and dressed by me. The head was made from fibreglass and the hands, feet and legs carved from wood. The helmet, shield and lance were made on a 3D printer.
Moving arm shadow Bible puppet from a performance last summer. Free templates and tutorials to make your own shadow puppet show are posted on www.foxesridge.blogspot.com
Cepot is the name used in Sundanese (West Java - Indonesia), this puppet’s birthplace. Bagong is the more common name in the rest of Java. Originating in the Javanese culture, Cepot / Bagong, clown and servant, has been added to the great Hindu epics, including the Mahabharata.
According to Javanese legend, when the God Ismaya was ordered to go down to earth and become Semar, the guardian of the Knight, the great royal warrior class in Hinduism, Ismaya complained that he would be lonely and needed a friend. The gods caustically replied that he could have his shadow as a friend. When he reached the earth, Semar’s shadow transformed itself into a human form and took the name of Cepot or Bagong.
Almost identical in appearance to Semar, Cepot became one of the panakawan, clown-servants to the Knight. Noted for his impish, sassy jokes and ability to mimic others, using a loud, self-important voice, Cepot and his family of clowns add comic relief to the drama of the ancient Hindu stories. Outwardly stupid, the panakawan in reality are the common sense advisors of the more lofty knights and mask their wisdom with clumsy, lower-class behavior.
Grab the template at www.salazad.com/smile