Sunday, March 31, 2013

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Make Puppets with Jim Henson (1969)


This video is 15 full minutes of amazing. And the best part of watching is that these puppet activities will no doubt inspire kids of all ages to create their own muppet-like characters. Watch Jim Henson and muppet designer and builder Don Sahlin demonstrate how to make puppets from socks, tennis balls, cloth, wooden spoons, potatoes, and other things you can find around the house.
This pre-Sesame Street video aired on Public Television on Iowa Public Television’s Volume See kids’ show in 1969.
jim henson makes puppets
More about Sahlin’s work on Muppet Fandom:
He is “the inventor” of the Muppet look, from a design point of view. As discussed in the book Jim Henson’s Designs and Doodles, many of the Muppets began as Henson’s rough sketches, which Sahlin then built and modified as needed… Sahlin was known to refer to himself as the “guardian of the essence” of the Muppets.
Beyond building specific characters, Sahlin contributed two significant concepts to the Muppet aesthetic, “the Magic Triangle” and “the Henson stitch.” The former was a simple but effective approach to positioning eyes, creating a triangle in relation to the nose and mouth. Jim Henson explained the importance of eye placement: “It would be the last thing [Sahlin] would do, and he always wanted me there, to make sure it was right for both of us — making sure the eyes had a point of focus, because without that you had no character.”
The stitch is a specific method of sewing cloth as tightly as possible so the seams would be “nearly invisible,” thus aiding the illusion of stylized “reality” when characters were filmed in close-up. This technique, dubbed the “Henson stitch” by Sahlin, does not in fact create a truly invisible seam, but worked sufficiently for television purposes (hiding, for example, the seam down the middle of Kermit the Frog’s snout).

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

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The Meaning of Zero: A Love Poem - Amy Uyematsu

The Meaning of Zero: A Love Poem
by Amy Uyematsu

--Is where space ends called death or infinity?
Pablo Neruda, The Book of Questions

A mere eyelid's distance between you and me.

It took us a long time to discover the number zero.

John's brother is afraid to go outside.
He claims he knows
the meaning of zero.

I want to kiss you.

A mathematician once told me you can add infinity
to infinity.

There is a zero vector, which starts and ends
at the same place, its force
and movement impossible
to record with
rays or maps or words.
It intersects yet runs parallel
with all others.

A young man I know
wants me to prove
the zero vector exists.
I tell him I can't,
but nothing in my world
makes sense without it.