Friday, September 29, 2017

PROJECT: Winnie the Pooh "Hunny" Pots


My childhood revolved around Winnie the Pooh. I had the toys, dolls, play-sets, and action figures, I watched ALL of the movies and TV shows (The Book of Pooh is still one of the best children's shows ever produced), and had TONS of the books (both the A. A. Milne originals and Disney's incarnations).

One of the things my childhood always wanted that wasn't actually a real thing (aside from a Mr. Spell from Toy Story) was one of Pooh's Hunny Pots to store my collection of Winnie the Pooh and Friends figures in.

And I had only the best kind of Pooh figures, the kinds that didn't move or talk, no points of articulation, just a figure that could take part in any imaginary scenario I could dream up. Though, I did mostly just re-create whatever episode of The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh I'd just watched...

My Great-Grandmother was some kind of Yard Sale Magician and, somehow, always found everything I wanted in somebody's front yard... Complete sets of Happy Meal toys, Beanie Babies (back when they were a hot commodity), and generally anything else I could have imagined...
BUT she could NOT find a Hunny Pot.

So, she had to make do with a plastic Ice Cream bucket with "HUNNY" written in puffy paint on one side.
And I LOVED it. I carried toys everywhere in that thing...

Fast forwarding now about 20 years, when I found this:


I stumbled on this $10 candy jar in Wal-Mart's party supply department, and knew INSTANTLY it would make the PERFECT Hunny Pot. I grabbed two of them, and some cans of spray paint, and the started painting the second I got back home.

A few coats of paint, some painters tape, and a Sharpie were all I needed to see that silly, insignificant childhood dream realized.

They sit on a shelf with the rest of my Disney prop collection, and every time I look at them I smile.
Sometimes it's the little things that make your heart the happiest.

More soon,
Avery

Vague Post of Vague Excitement

It's been an interesting week...
I'll (hopefully) be able to share all of the details soon! 


Friday, September 22, 2017

VIDEO: Alien Abduction Talk Show!


I keep a running list of YouTube video ideas on a cork board in my puppet workshop. Typically I just add to it and never mark anything off, but I FINALLY found something to check off the list! 

This one's been on the list for nearly 2 years and AT LAST it's free!

Sam and I both are striving to produce more comedy content, like last week's Brownstone Brothers, and this week it was my turn. As long as we've known each other we've NEVER made anything for my channel so I took full advantage of this opportunity!

I built the puppet, designed the graphics, filmed, edited, and uploaded this one in less than 48 hours!

I'm proud of me. 


More next week, I'm sure!
Avery

PROJECT: Tangled Pascal Prop


A fun little build from earlier this week!
He's not a puppet, so I guess he'd qualify as a prop.. but an adorable prop!

My gal and I have been talking about Cosplaying Rapunzel and Flynn Rider for well over a year now, and this guy has been in my mind almost as long. I've learned the joys of building Disney characters as puppets in the last few months so this guy was a no-brainer (lucky for me)!

I built his head around a plastic frog skeleton from Target's Halloween department, and fee-handed the rest of his body. He came together pretty quickly, in just under an hour, and I couldn't be happier!

More soon,
Avery Jones

Sunday, September 17, 2017

VIDEO: The Brownstone Brothers!

Our favorite, and pretty incompetent, DJs, Terry and Bobby Brownstone, are back! And this time they have their very own Public Access TV show! 


My buddy, Sam Beman and I created these guys in 2012 as part of Sam's Television show 'Light Talk' and did a handful of sketches centered them and their homemade radio station 77.7 FM. They would play the hits of their favorite 90's Christian group DC Talk, and absolutely nothing else...


We had the pleasure of featuring a small group of Christian comedians and actors from around the country in these sketches as "call in" guests to the show, to share their thoughts... though, usually not very positive ones... 

This past Friday we joined the forces of our creative minds to bring back the boys for (hopefully) another run of sketches! 


Another day, another video!
More soon!
Avery

Friday, September 8, 2017

PROJECT: Star Wars Helmets

Just over a year ago I fell into the bottomless PIT that is Movie Prop collecting.

For the 3+ years prior I was up to my eyeballs in Funko Pops... SHELVES AND SHELVES worth of Pops, I'm talking more than 300 of them.
I'll be the first to admit it... I had a bit of a problem.
I am a struggling completist... have been as far back as I can remember when I obsessed over collecting all the Happy Meal toys in every set. Pops were the same kind of thing... except there were HUNDREDS of them, and they were (at least) $10 a pop (HA, pun!)


Then along came Force Friday 2016, when all the new Star Wars and Rogue One toys were released...
Star Wars' "Black Series" line of action figures had branched out into full-scale replicas and as soon as I saw their new (and surprisingly affordable) classic Stormtrooper helmet I was hooked. In the next 2 weeks the Pops were hitting eBay and disappearing into boxes in the closet with helmets, blasters, and costume pieces were taking their place.

Once I started realizing how deep the replica community is, and how fun it could be to custom-built something from a movie to Tv series, I stumbled on Tested, the YouTube channel of my favorite Mythbuster, Adam Savage. Adam's "One Day Builds" videos are very inspiring and always make me want to build something. It could be something elaborate like a cosplay, prop, or even a puppet... Heck, even just watching him weather and paint a custom case for a microscope gets me excited to MAKE something unique of my own.

I say all of that to say this:
Last Halloween's batch of Star Wars costumes were the perfect opportunity to play around with some paint and inexpensive helmets and combine both of my newly discovered loves. These costume helmets weren't QUITE replicas, but I wanted to step outside of the Star Wars canon anyway. I was able to snag a handful of these guys on the day after Halloween for $10 each...


Steam Punk Trooper: 
This was my first attempt at a custom paint job, it only took me an afternoon, which in retrospect is pretty impressive...
I have TONS of screenshots saved of amazing Steam Punk Star Wars cosplays, and have thought about putting one together for myself one day. 16 different colors of spray and acrylic paint and a box of pushpins went into this one. I built a custom stand and weathered a wooden crate to display it like something from a museum... what a nerd...    


I have another one of these half done, I should probably pull it out of the box and get it up on the shelf soon...


Battle Worn Trooper:
I found this Clone Trooper helmet at a Goodwill years ago, it was covered in Red and Yellow crayon scribbles and very obviously went through a few playground Lightsaber battles in its day. Rather than take time to scrub and clean it, I decided to rough it up with the skills I learned from hours of watching Cosplayers and Prop Makers on YouTube.

One fateful night in January, I woke up at 3 in the morning and couldn't get back to sleep... the perfect time to get creative! I painted the whole thing with black and brown paint, then removed paint in layers with a dishrag, I rubbed handfuls of dirt into the corners and creases, took off more paint with sandpaper, and even hit it will a small hammer... my neighbors have to wonder about me... 


After about 5 hours I left it on the back porch to dry while I finally got some sleep...
And then it rained.
A lot.

I (foolishly) hadn't clear-coated so the results were not good, so I put in a closet for 3 months and could bring myself to look at it, until this week when I couldn't sleep again...


TAKE 2- Rogue Trooper:
I lost count of how many coats of white spray paint it took, but this time I invested a lot of time and sandpaper into getting the paint even and consistent only to rough it up with more sandpaper and paint. I free-handed the Rebel emblem and clear coated it IMMEDIATELY.

Lesson learned. 


I'll be building a display stand for this one, too. Not bad for a $2 Goodwill find! 

Yes, I still have a collecting problem... it's just a little cooler now!

More soon,
Avery