Make a Muppet for $15

by wonderspark in Craft > Sewing

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Make a Muppet for $15

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Do you know how to sew and have $15?  Then you too can make your very own Muppet-style puppet!

There is an amazing TV station inside Mount Sinai Kravis Children's Hospital in Manhattan, and they do live programming twice a day where patients can call in!  There are cool celebrity guests, musicians, clowns, and puppet game shows.

I am performing there on Halloween and wanted to bring an original character that can just be for hospital shows.  Plus I have a 7-month old baby and am home alone with him for most weekdays.  Building a puppet at home sounded like fun.

DISCLAIMER: I am not a professional puppet builder!  I have been making small props and watching others build over the years.  I learned how to sew from the Puppet Kitchen (highly recommend their workshops) and decided to work off a stuffed animal instead of a Muppety pattern.

Fat Cat

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I bought this cat pillow for $7 at my local discount clothing store in Astoria.  They even gave me a $1 discount because he was a little banged up.

He's a fat kitty!  (but not for long)

Total Cost so far: $7

Step One

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Removed the Polyfil from the inside of the cat.

So Much Polyfill!

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There was so much stuffing that it filled an entire shopping bag.

The Opening

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Most of the torso / limbs were two big pieces of fabric, but the head was its own formation - and this is what the neck looks like from the inside.  I widened the hole so my hand could fit inside.

Sleeve

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I was going to throw this old shirt out - instead I harvested it to make a sleeve.

Sleeve

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The sleeve goes inside the puppet (this will be Muppet-style) and protects my arm against the rough inside of the fabric.

Razor Blades

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I asked the local hardware store if they had bigger razors.  They gave me a look like "HUH" and I tried to explain that cutting shaggy fabric is best with razor blades.

$1 for the razor blades.

Total Cost so far: $8

Cutting the Seams

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Cutting the seams was hard and took time with scissors.  The sharp razor blade made short work of it.

Separated

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The white underbelly of the pillow was now separated from the tiger-striped top.

Sewing Is Handy

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I attached the sleeve to the cat's neck.  Pin, sew, pull pins as you go.

Sleeve Now Attached

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Here's what the inside of the puppet will look like.  My arm will go inside the sleeve and my hand will go into the puppet's head.

Sewing the Body

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I folded the tiger-striped fabric over this poster mailing tube (about the same dimensions as my arm) and sewed it together.

Torso Complete

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The head and body are done, now begins the hard part...

Arms

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This was the most difficult and time-consuming part.  I had no idea how to do the arms so I sewed together strips from the white fur.

Paws

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This took brainstorming.  I folded some fur over itself to make square paws and pinned it all together.

Dollar Store, Y'all

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Arms need arm rods, and thanks to a wonderful suggestion from Eric Wright from the Puppet Kitchen (he came over to pick up our old microwave) I scoured the local Dollar Stores for wire clothes hangers to turn into arm rods.

I couldn't find thick, black wire hangers, so I went with pink to match the puppet's fur.  This will definitely make this puppet stand out (nobody uses colored arm rods, except for green-screening).

The toy package on the right is for the bottom of the rods, to give me a grip.

Toy: $2
Hangers: $3
Current Total: $13

Fixed the Ears

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The ears were too floppy, so I cut a piece of thin, white coat hanger and crammed it into each ear.  Then I bent them into a triangular cat ear shape.

Arm Coverings

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I cut some fur off the bottom of the puppet and grabbed the scraps from the torso fold.  There was just barely enough to cover the arms.

Shoulder

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This is where the puppet's arm will attach to its body.  I had just enough to make it work.

Arms Attached

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i pinned the arms into place, tried it out in front of a mirror, adjusted the pins, tried again, and finally sewed the arms on.  Phew!

The cat finally looks like something - but we're not done.

Arm Rods

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I bent the ends of the clothes hangers into circles and hot-glued some white fabric to them (the same stuff that the paws are made of).  I straightened out the hangers and clipped them to the proper height.

Finally I stuffed the rods into the paws (I had left openings in the bottoms) and sewed them in.

A Meow-th?

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Some quick inspiration led me to stick my thumb out and form a crude mouth out of the cat's neck.  This is it!  No more will this puppet be a non-moving mouth character!  It gets a mouth after all.

Plastic Ends

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I disassembled the plastic toys and prepped the hot glue gun.

Arm Rod Bottoms

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These plastic bottoms are light weight, fun colors, and the perfect size for my hands.  I used a mixture of hot glue and gaff tape to fuse it all together.

The Mouth

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What makes a good mouth?  A good throat shape, apparently.  It's just a patch of black felt that I hot glued onto the neck.

Button Eyes

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My wife commented that the original eyes were creepy - and it's true.  They were angry and yellow.  I bought new eyes from our local fabric shop (awesome guy - with a whole wall of buttons in boxes) and sewed them on with some difficulty.  I also hot glued them into place to ensure they would not wobble.

I also removed the pink thread that made the old mouth.  Now its just a nose and the top of his mouth.

Button Cost: $1.50
Total Cost so far: $14.50

Cat in Motion!

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I finally get to test the finished cat.

Hello!

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All puppet characters need a good name and a proper voice!  Any suggestions?

The Finished Product

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Total Cost: $14.50

One custom Muppet-style puppet, made from thread, a white t-shirt and a fat animal pillow.  I am pretty proud of how it turned out!  I stuffed some Polyfill into the chest to get rid of some fabric wrinkles.

Side View

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So that's it!  The cat will debut on Halloween on a live TV gameshow and spread joy and laughter to sick kids and their parents in the hospital.  I hope this series inspired you to create your own puppets - it was a brand new experience for me and my confidence with building puppets is growing.

For all you professional puppet builders out there, much respect and I hope to learn more as I create more characters.

Check out our shows at http://www.wondersparkpuppets.com