The goal of this project was to make a self-illuminated boat for the opening of the Tempest. It needs to be sturdy enough to tour, but also needed to match the materials in the rest of the design, which were fairly industrial. We first made patterns of stiff paper to find the shape of the boat.
Here, I’m cutting out the base of the boat in a stiff white plastic. The brown paper keeps it from getting scuffed in transit and also provides a handy thing on which to draw the pattern.
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Peeling the paper back you can see the nice glossy surface.
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The plastic for the rest of the boat is a matte polycarbonate, so it handles bending beautifully. To get sharp creases, I used my vise like a metal brake, which worked pretty well.
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Once I had the basic hull, I started testing light sources. Originally, we were going to use an incandescent bulb, which would also have served as a practical light on stage, but the director decided to free up the actor manipulating the boat and so we had to figure out how to light the boat without the benefit of a power cord.
I’d done another show with self illuminated puppets and had discovered then that a florescent closet light provided the best light. This photo has much more of a hotspot than in real life.
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In an effort to get more light and more diffusion, I tested out a piece of mirrored polycarbonate instead of the white plastic.
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Oooo! Ghost boat.
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The original light was six inches, and here I’m testing out a twelve inch light.
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I tried a backing mirror to bounce the light forward. Putting a V of mirror in there really brightened up the boat. Alas, when I got to the final construction, the smokestacks, and observation deck kept the V from being practical.
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For the final assembly, I pop riveted the boat together. This is a view of the bottom of the boat as it’s being held in the vise.
Because I was stupid, I didn’t take a picture of the finished boat. Sorry. I’ll get one later.
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I was never good with crafts so even without the finished boat, it looks like it’ll turn out great.
The secret to crafts is to do patterns, measure carefully, and to not be afraid to throw something out if you miscut it.
For instance, there’s a piece on this boat that I cut wrong two times and folded wrong twice. It was maddening. But the fifth times the charm, eh?
Done right or done over, as my dad says