Thaumatrope: a 19th Century Optical Toy

by kkyser1 in Craft > Art

2322 Views, 8 Favorites, 0 Comments

Thaumatrope: a 19th Century Optical Toy

bird.jpg
IMG_4288.jpg
IMG_4289.jpg
IMG_4290.jpg

Use a light weight piece of paper....81/2"x 11"

Fold it vertically.

Fold the paper into thirds.

Then cut it along the folds.

IMG_4291.jpg
IMG_4292.jpg

Roll one piece into a paper stick and glue it so that it will stay rolled.

This is the reason for the light weight paper. Rolling card stock would be difficult.

Card stock could be used for the disks in the next step.

Thaumatrope....Optical Toy

IMG_4294.jpg
IMG_4293.jpg
IMG_4295.jpg

With the two remaining pieces of paper trace a circle and cut it out of both pieces.

IMG_4317.jpg
IMG_4319.jpg

Think of an image...pictures as well as words work.

Draw one part of the image on one circle.

Complete the image on the other circle.

To get them to line up draw them against a window so you can see both images.

IMG_4320.jpg
IMG_4327.jpg

When the images are complete, "Sandwich" them together with the paper stick in the middle.

Let it dry.

Then spin it in your fingers to see the animated image.

"A thaumatrope
is an optical toy that was popular in the 19th century. A disk with a picture on each side is attached to two pieces of string. When the strings are twirled quickly between the fingers the two pictures appear to blend into one due to the persistence of vision. Thaumatrope

Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thaumatrope"