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So I'm about $100 into a prop build for my carnival theme. And it's going to take quite a bit more time and money and tinkering to make it work, and I'm not an expert in mechanical props, so I was looking at a very frustrating bunch of days ahead.
The problem is that I just thought of something perfectly simple that is going to work probably even better, only require about $20 more investment and be pretty simple to produce. But it means I wasted about $70 on parts that are non returnable.
So here's the details:
Making a scareosel. Found and purchased three toy bouncy horses and it involved driving all over the city to collect them one day. They are going to need painting with special paint that sticks to plastic, and while they are light, they are not going to work with the motor and armature arrangement I have since they are too heavy to hang suspended, so I'll have to try to rig up a wheeled support structure on the bottom of each horse so they can spin properly (I'm using an x-mas tree motorized stand, and a support pole with branches about 4 foot up the pole, and the horses bend the pole right now when hung on there to test their weight).
The brain wave I just had: packing tape horses. They would be super light, able to throw some small lights inside for an eerie glow, and look ghostly - AWESOME for a scareosel. The thing is, what on earth do I do with the horses I have now? I can find a use for one of them (using it as the model for the packing tape) but I feel dumb for not thinking of this before and saving myself from driving all over town and the money and gas and just could have picked up ONE horse to use.
SO part of me thinks I should suck it up and go on with the horses I have and deal with the issues, but a bigger part of me thinks screw that noise, packing tape horses will be easier and look better!! But the money and time already invested!!
So I need some ideas of what to do with the other horses to incorporate them into the theme (scary carnival/circus) and also some "there-there" pats on the head that I'm not an idiot for not thinking of this alternative sooner and commiseration about spending money unnecessarily on props that don't work out like you planned.
The problem is that I just thought of something perfectly simple that is going to work probably even better, only require about $20 more investment and be pretty simple to produce. But it means I wasted about $70 on parts that are non returnable.
So here's the details:
Making a scareosel. Found and purchased three toy bouncy horses and it involved driving all over the city to collect them one day. They are going to need painting with special paint that sticks to plastic, and while they are light, they are not going to work with the motor and armature arrangement I have since they are too heavy to hang suspended, so I'll have to try to rig up a wheeled support structure on the bottom of each horse so they can spin properly (I'm using an x-mas tree motorized stand, and a support pole with branches about 4 foot up the pole, and the horses bend the pole right now when hung on there to test their weight).
The brain wave I just had: packing tape horses. They would be super light, able to throw some small lights inside for an eerie glow, and look ghostly - AWESOME for a scareosel. The thing is, what on earth do I do with the horses I have now? I can find a use for one of them (using it as the model for the packing tape) but I feel dumb for not thinking of this before and saving myself from driving all over town and the money and gas and just could have picked up ONE horse to use.
SO part of me thinks I should suck it up and go on with the horses I have and deal with the issues, but a bigger part of me thinks screw that noise, packing tape horses will be easier and look better!! But the money and time already invested!!
So I need some ideas of what to do with the other horses to incorporate them into the theme (scary carnival/circus) and also some "there-there" pats on the head that I'm not an idiot for not thinking of this alternative sooner and commiseration about spending money unnecessarily on props that don't work out like you planned.