Tuesday 1 May 2012

My Puppet Experiments!

Here are a few examples of my own puppet experiments...

Finger Puppets

I've kept the puppets simple, making them out of felt that I stiched together. Using felt creates a softness that is appealing to the younger viewer, as well as adults. To incorporate the finger puppets into my story so they can be used for interaction and enjoyment, I would either: use them as an aid to go along side my orginial book, or use them in a staged theatre in which a participant can tell the story themselves.

All the characters of my book presented as finger puppets








Part of a stage/theatre that I made


Part of a stage/theatre that I made


My second experiment using finger sized puppets was to sew the puppets into book pages to incorporate them directly into the story - in a similar mannor to that of the 'Baby Lamb' book that I posted about earlier.


Hedgehog character that will be the consistant throughout the book

The underneath of the Hedgehog character - how it's attached to the page




Below is the Squirrel finger puppet attached to a page. The hole at the bottom of the page is for the Hedgehog character to fit through.








Below is the Badger finger puppet attached to a page.








Below is the Hare finger puppet attached to a page.







By creating these dummy pages of the puppets incorporated into a book page, I can gage that by using this method the audience participation feels limited and akward by the set poses of the puppets and how they can only move backwards and forwards. I think the enjoyment factor of this method would wear thin (especially for a young child) because of this limitation and akwardness when handling the pages.


 Below is a larger and more malleable version of of the Hedgehog puppet. This time I'm going to use just the one Hedgehog puppet, and put him into illustrations from the original book







The Hedgehog peeping out the log



The Hedgehog finding a pile of leaves to hibernate in


Using the just the Hedgehog puppet felt like I was limiting the variety, and therefore the enjoyment of an audience interaction - just having one puppet can get quite boring for a child to concentrate on.




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