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Post by old squirmydad on Mar 14, 2012 17:39:30 GMT -9
dl.dropbox.com/u/2320000/Freebies/Pavillions.pdfAnother old educational model project from my former theatre program. I cut out the copyrighted bits from the model so think of the white roofed pavilion as a canvas to place your own coat of arms. The green trimmed version is in 28mm scale and the blue one is in 15mm scale.
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Post by Vermin King on Mar 14, 2012 18:04:28 GMT -9
I didn't know you did theater work. Learn something new every day.
Thanks for the pavillions
Put it on a base and it would make a good knick-knack box.
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Post by old squirmydad on Mar 15, 2012 13:01:41 GMT -9
I didn't know you did theater work. Learn something new every day. Yup, almost twenty years now, it's what got me a trip to Australia. My theatre company was selected to tour with the torch-run for the Olympics so we bopped around in buses from Cowra to Newcastle and Sydney and performed in all kinds of little venues; churches, bars, schools, a garage, outdoors. We closed by singing in the opera house, good tour.
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Post by cowboyleland on Mar 15, 2012 16:59:16 GMT -9
Sounds awsome. I worked with an Artistic Director once who kept talking about a tour of Australia. Never panned out. Colour me envious.
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Post by dragnoz on Mar 16, 2012 1:12:55 GMT -9
Awesome! I'm from a Theatre background myself. Worked in the industry as a props maker, scenic painter and stage manager for a number of years till i made the jump to Digital and Web Media...
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Post by kiladecus on Mar 19, 2012 5:00:50 GMT -9
MANY of us here share the same interest for theatre as we do papercraft. I know CowboyLeland is BIG on theatre. Maybe that is why so many of us enjoy RPG's!
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Post by Vermin King on Mar 19, 2012 6:03:41 GMT -9
That's how I got into papercraft. Not exactly theater, but church programs, Bible School, etc. I learned years ago that you can find images, print on transparencies, project onto cardboard or newsprint, then paint them up. For years I was making almost a tatebanko type of setting. You know, the Japanese shadow boxes. Then I saw the papercraft models to do 3d things. Really works well.
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Post by old squirmydad on Mar 22, 2012 14:46:47 GMT -9
The pavillion model was originally made for a children's theatre program at the university. The Educational Director was always creating information packets for teachers to download prior to attending a production with their class and I thought it'd be nifty to occasionally include a downloadable activity with the teacher packets. And really, I wanted to design and build papermodels at work. ;D
I've been doing this for eighteen years now and during one five-year span with a local company I was designing and building twenty shows per year...I was pretty tired when I quit them, although they were the ones who sent me on the Australian Olympics tour. These days I only do four major shows per year, but dozens of events and minor productions. It's a much nicer pace.
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Post by Vermin King on Mar 22, 2012 15:46:41 GMT -9
I don't know how you did that much. I do the decorations for three churches' bible schools (I wish they were the same denomination or at least had similar themes), and do Christmas program backdrops and props for two (which usually have props that can be recycled from year to year).
Twenty would be a nightmare.
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