Building the Puppets:
Once the set was complete, I had to begin building the puppets. As I'd already created my maquette before I'd built the set, I already knew that the scale for my characters was correct and I could immediately start constructing them.
This was my second attempt at creating a puppet, as on the previous one I had sewed the jeans on too tight and couldn't move the legs well enough to get any movement from it as a puppet.
(Jeans sewed on too tight)
I started with the Goldilocks character, I began experimenting with the size of the aluminium tubing, I wanted something that would withhold a lot of movement. This is mainly because I had broken 2 Armatures when I'd been experimenting with the weekly tasks. Therefore, I decided to wrap two sets of wire with the drill to create a robust puppet.
Once I'd added the tubing to the non-movable parts of the puppet, I used a heat shrink to make sure they stayed on for the movement I was going to be doing with it in the studio. This was also mixed with the two part proxy glue and left the puppet stiff but still flexible for a lot of movement.
I then began to make the hands for the puppet. I wanted them to be quite long and thin. Therefore, I twisted two wires together, but left the fingers with only one wire. This gave way for the sculpey to slide onto the fingers and remain 'thin' in size.
I attached these to the body and then began working on the clothes for the puppet. I wanted to make sure I was adhering to my original design and maquette as much as possible and created a shirt, leather jacket, jeans and bear shoes.
Once the shirt, jeans and shoes were attached I began sizing up the puppet for the leather jacket. This was probably the hardest item of clothing to make for the puppet due to the complicated nature of the sleeve and the seams.
I wanted the jacket to look 'crisp' and shiny like a leather jacket would look, therefore, I researched into how leather jackets look and found images of them so I would be able to base mine off them.
I managed to paint the material I had sewed together with black acrylic paint, this enabled me to scrunch the material up and add some texture to it.
I felt as though I was happy with the outcome of this jacket, but I did want to add some more detail to it. For example, a collar on the shoulders and some detail onto the jacket itself. However, I didn't want to over-complicate it too much and eventually kept it to a bare minimum with fluffy cuffs on the arms and a collar.
I had to then sew the arms onto the main part of the jacket, I did find this difficult because the material had hardened a considerable amount since I'd painted it.
Making the Head:
I'd finished with the body and then began to build the head for Goldilocks. This process was relatively easy as I'd already designed two for the maquette I had previously built.
I began with a ball of sculpey and made sure it was rolled out into a head shape with tin foil underneath. This allowed me to have a heat absorbing material in the oven and sped up the process of cooking the heads.
I started by just outlining the shape and the nose placing that I wanted into the sculpey. This made it easier to add in the eyes and the mouth structure.
I'd placed the head onto a pencil which allowed me to manoeuvre around the head a lot better as I didn't want to keep indenting it with finger marks as I was trying to build it.
I then began to add finer details such as the cupids bow on the mouth and the eyebrows. This really brought the whole face together and allowed me to carve back into the sculpey to define the jawline and the arch in the brows.
After I'd completed all of the necessary requirements for a face, I needed to mark the space for the eyeballs. I rolled two small balls of sculpey and placed them into the eye sockets to make sure they fitted perfectly and then took them out so that if I wanted to do eye replacements I would be able to.
Once I'd put the face into the oven I began to paint it. I'd used acrylic paint for the maquette before and the glossy effect it made really worked well with the look I wanted to achieve. Therefore, I followed the same technique again and added more definition to the face with colour.
When the paint had dried, I was then able to add in the neck with sculpey, I had to make the head detachable for the 'killing' scene with the bear, so I kept the sculpey uncooked on the neck. This allowed the head to tilt sidewards/up and down which is something I had considered before building the puppet.
Once the face had been completed, I made sure the detail on the collar and the image on the t-shirt were painted on and this referred back to my original drawings of Goldilocks.
(Image of her in the set - contrasting colours for Goldilocks makes her stand out)
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