Second image presents same form after advanced surface treatment. Base structure is now coated with textured paint and sculpted detailing to resemble baked bread crust. Overall coloration has transitioned into mottled golden-brown, tan, and ochre tones with darkened shading in recesses, imitating scorched flour surface. Distinctive protruding nose, wide open mouth cavity, and rounded cheeks are clearly defined, with embedded lighter crust fragments adhered across surface to simulate cracked loaf pattern. Fine brushing emphasizes porous qualities, giving illusion of crumb-like cavities breaking through outer crust. Placement in workshop remains similar, though additional reference photographs of bread textures are visible pinned nearby, alongside tools and foam padding.
Together, the two stages reveal sculptural process from rough structural armature to fully painted and textured surface simulating bread-human hybrid head, emphasizing techniques of papier-mâché layering, surface coating, paint stratification, and texture embedding. The completed object visually merges anthropomorphic facial morphology with artisanal baked bread characteristics, serving as practical effect prop within broader conceptual framework of hybridized bread-creature worldbuilding.
The composition presents a frontal view of a grayscale mannequin-like bust with a digitally collaged facial structure overlaid by a pretzel motif and geometric line arrangements. The underlying form is a neutral, smooth, three-dimensional bust rendered in gray values, lacking individual features such as hair or skin texture. At the center of the forehead, a black line drawing of the Aries astrological glyph is visible, resembling two upward curving horns connected by a stem, with a dot slightly offset above the right arc.
This photograph captures a rainy outdoor setting in front of the National Film Board of Canada (Office national du film du Canada) building. The large beige-brick façade prominently displays the institution’s bilingual signage at the top right, marking its identity in both French and English. Workers on elevated lift platforms are in the process of adjusting or installing the signage: one lift positions a technician at the letterforms, while another lift and utility truck remain stationed nearby, with equipment deployed for the operation.
The image shows a section of an animation stand or similar registration device configured for traditional compositing techniques. The central component is a rectangular glass plate mounted within a fixed metal frame that is supported by two horizontal cylindrical bars at the top and bottom. These bars are fitted with rolling mechanisms to allow for secure alignment of layered artwork during shooting or scanning. The blackened streak visible across the glass indicates either an area of shading or an experimental marking, suggesting active use in testing or compositional setup.
This image captures a large-scale sculptural prototype in progress for Walking Bread, mounted on a black stand inside a studio environment. The central object is a bread-inspired head form, roughly spherical and volumetric, constructed from brown-toned materials and partially encased in transparent plastic wrapping for structural support, protection, or shaping purposes. Suspended within the main cavity is a smaller orb wrapped in cling film, resembling an internal core or placeholder structure. The translucent wrapping reveals layers of the underlying texture, combining crumpled paper, adhesive tape, and possible bread-textured components. This hybrid construction embodies an experimental stage in puppet or prop development, aligning with the project’s focus on integrating bread materiality into character and set design.
This photograph documents a mechanical prototype designed for experimental puppet animation in Walking Bread. At the center is a compact animatronic assembly, built around a lightweight aluminum frame with electronic circuitry and servo motors mounted at the top. Two large spherical eyeballs, encased in yellow-green holders, are positioned symmetrically at the lower portion of the structure, evoking a cartoonish or creature-like expression. The mechanism includes thin wires extending outward, suggesting potential control inputs for blinking or directional motion. Above the structure, a bent metallic wire forms the recognizable “fork glyph” motif, a recurring design marker throughout the Walking Bread project, symbolically placed here as both antenna and identity marker.
This composite image assembles several sequential views and reference shots documenting the physical construction process of a Walking Bread puppet character. The upper left panel shows an early sculptural head form, covered in a neutral fabric base, with penciled guidelines sketched directly on the surface: two eyes, a vertical centerline, and the distinctive fork-like forehead motif. The head is topped with short brown synthetic hair, indicating a test phase for costume and surface treatment.
Panoramic image captures a group of participants standing in a line in front of black fabric drapery within a convention or exhibition setting. Each individual is wearing a costume or headpiece associated with bread or baking motifs, producing a collective theme. At the far left, a person wears a large sculpted headpiece resembling a textured bread roll, extending outward with irregular crust-like surface. Adjacent participant displays a rectangular slice-of-bread mask featuring a sketched human face drawn onto its surface. Another individual kneels forward holding a prop shaped like packaged baked goods.