I made this in 2006 I think. It was for a contest at Haunt Forum. I cut theĀ stone piece from pink foam insulation board. The small skulls are from Bartell’s drug store. The large skull was cast in mache from a large Boomer skull from Anatomical chart company. The base isnt nearly deep [...]
This is a very early prop piece from 2005. I wanted to make horns from paper mache. It worked out OK. I used armature wire inside them and then covered them with twisted paper bags to get the twisted and curled appearance. I then covered them with strip mache and watered down glue. I [...]
I have blogged about Mr. Lo Pan a few times. But I have never posted about how I made him. I cannot draw so all of my pieces start in my head as concepts. I usually just start building, I don’t even make a sketch first.
He was made for a contest at Hauntforum.com
The contest was to use Monster Mud as the main component. Monster Mud is a mixture of latex paint and drywall mud. It was made famous by Terror Syndicate. The original recipe is here Monster Mud. Typically it is used on burlap. I find that burlap makes for very heavy props when used with MM and doesn’t allow for the true character of the fabric to show through so I like to use finer lightweight fabrics like muslin. I also like to dip my fabric in the MM and totally saturate it and then wring it out and squeegee all the excess MM off of it. Once I apply it to the piece I rarely add additional MM, unless it is between pieces of fabric as a glue.
I started by building a stack of crates from an old potting shelf and part of an old fence. I wanted then to look old and crooked.

Next I fashioned a body form from chicken wire and set it upon the crates. I measured my own body and subtracted a percentage from the arms and legs to make him seem dis-proportionate. I put a cast foam skull on a stick and put it in the body form. I bent it into the proper pose (or so I thought)

I then spent some time researching the proper position that flute players use when playing. I realized I was a bit off. My next task was to make an internal armature for the body form, I realize this may seem backwards but I wanted to make the body form and pose it properly first (I believe this makes for a more visually compelling body form). I marked the wire form and then unbent it. I attached a steel floor flange to the top crate and screwed an 18 inch piece of pipe into it. I then bent PVC with a heat gun and inserted it into the body form. I used wire and zip ties to attach the PVC to the steel pipe and body form.
Continue reading Props of the past Mr. Lo Pan
Nightmare is one of my and the Trick-or-Treater’s favorite props. This image I really like. We usually up light my entire house with red floods. on the other side of the cemetery fence is the walkway and a rose bush, under the rose bush is one of the red flood lights. I must have [...]