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Contemporary yarn crafts by Heidi Gustad. Knitting, crochet, latch hook and macrame.

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How-to: Oz the Great and Powerful Thaumatrope

June 3, 2013 6 Comments

How-to: Oz the Great and Powerful Thaumatrope at HandsOccupied.com Explore the magical Land of Oz with this simple & kid-friendly thaumatrope project. Umm, what is a thaumatrope, you say? It takes two separate images and combines them into one when you spin it between your fingers. Since this post is sponsored by Oz the Great and Powerful, I watched it looking for crafty inspiration. What inspired me most was the movie’s portrayal of turn of the 20th century carnival magic. The opening credits are completely black and white and feature paper stick puppets moving about a puppet stage (I’m pretty sure they were CGI’d, but I loved ’em anyway). In the movie, James Franco plays the titular character, and – no spoilers here, I promise – his face spends chunks of the movie projected in black and white onto a cloud of smoke. I knew I wanted to make something that captured the 20th century black and white, steampunky spirit of the movie. So that’s where the thaumatrope idea came from! PS: You can get your copy of the Oz the Great and Powerful DVD starting June 11.

Supplies

pencil
coaster or other round object
scissors
glue stick
hole punch
2 ft. string
a picture of James Franco from Oz the Great and Powerful printed in grayscale on cardstock
a simple doodle of a billow of smoke printed out on some cardstock

How-to: Oz the Great and Powerful Thaumatrope at HandsOccupied.com

The above image is for personal use only.

Directions

Find a picture of a simple doodle of a smoke cloud online and copy and paste it into a blank document, aligning it near the middle of the page. Print it on a sheet of cardstock that is blank on both sides (I’m all for recycling, but for this project, you’ll want a totally clean sheet of cardstock). Find a picture of James Franco in his Oz the Great and Powerful getup, and print it using a grayscale setting.

Cut out James Franco’s handsome face really closely, as shown, and set aside.

How-to: Oz the Great & Powerful Thaumatrope at HandsOccupied.com

Using a coaster or other round object, trace a circle around the cloud of smoke and cut it out. Play around with Mr. Franco’s face (ha!) until you decide where in the could of smoke you’d like his face to appear.

How-to: Oz the Great & Powerful Thaumatrope at HandsOccupied.com

This is the trickiest part of the project. You’re going to glue Mr. Franco’s face on the back, blank side of your cardstock circle, but upside down, as well as in the position at which you’d like him to appear. I used my circle-shaped object (my coaster) to help visually demonstrate where on the back side of the smoke circle he’ll need to be. Scroll down to the second image below to see what the back side of the thaumatrope looks like. 

How-to: Oz the Great & Powerful Thaumatrope at HandsOccupied.com

Punch two holes straight across from each other on your circle and attach a string to each side of the circle. Then use a glue stick, ideally one that is reposition-able since figuring out where to put the head is challenging, to adhere James Franco’s head to the back of the circle.

How-to: Oz the Great & Powerful Thaumatrope at HandsOccupied.com

Next comes the fun part – test out your thaumatrope to see how it works! If James’s head doesn’t quite line up in the right place when you’re spinning the thaumatrope, carefully remove and reposition him until you’re satisfied. Here’s a glimpse of my completed thaumatrope in action:


Check out Oz the Great and Powerful online at #DisneyOzMovie or:
Facebook, Twitter or Pinterest. I wrote this post as part of a sponsored campaign with Disney and The Blueprint Social. The opinions in this post are my own.

Filed Under: Giveaways, Reviews & Sponsored, How-to Tagged With: crafts, diy, easy, kid-friendly, optical illusion, oz the great and powerful, thaumatrope

About Heidi

Heidi Gustad is a craft book author & content creator in love with primary colors & vintage vibes. She specializes in knitting, crochet, latch hook and macramé, and her first book, Latch Hook: 12 Projects for the Modern Maker, is out now!

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Comments

  1. Carolina

    June 3, 2013 at 11:59 am

    What a fun idea, and a great craft for kids (with a little help).
    Did you know that if you “wind up” the thaumatrope by spinning it in a circle with each string in one hand, and then pull tightly on the strings, you can get it to spin really fast? It’ll then wind itself back up with the recoil, and you can do it over and over, kinda like a yo-yo.

    Reply
    • Heidi

      June 3, 2013 at 1:42 pm

      Awesome tip, Carolina! Thanks!

      Reply
  2. Heidi @ Mom's Crafty Space

    June 3, 2013 at 1:10 pm

    This is so cool! My boys would love this!

    Reply
  3. Vanessa

    June 3, 2013 at 1:19 pm

    What a creative idea!

    Reply
  4. Natalie @ A Turtle's Life for Me

    June 3, 2013 at 2:49 pm

    Such a unique idea! I love it!

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Science Meets Crafts Program Kit: Thaumatropes | Library as Incubator Project says:
    December 19, 2013 at 7:00 am

    […] out my tutorial for how to make a thaumatrope, and whip up a couple of these for practice (and to have on hand as samples) before your program. […]

    Reply

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Heidi Gustad from Hands Occupied / Craft Book Author and Knitting, Crochet, Latch Hook and Macrame Designer

Hi! I’m Heidi, an author, yarn craft designer and content creator specializing in knitting, crochet, latch hook & macrame. My work unapologetically features primary colors and vintage-meets-modern style. My first book, Latch Hook: 12 Projects for the Modern Maker, is now available!

Professionally I’m most known for: advanced intarsia knitting design & modern latch hook design.

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