Help us get to over 8,748 articles in 2024.

If you know of a magician not listed in MagicPedia, start a New Biography for them. Contact us at magicpediahelp@gmail.com

Difference between revisions of "Balloon Twisting"

From Magicpedia, the free online encyclopedia for magicians by magicians.
Jump to: navigation, search
m
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Balloon Twisting]] is the shaping of special modeling balloons into almost any given shape, often a balloon animal. People who create balloon animals and other twisted balloon sculptures are called Twisters. Twisters often work as busker, clowns, magicians or restaurant entertainers.
+
'''Balloon Twisting''' or '''Balloon Modelling''' is the shaping of special modeling balloons into almost any given shape, often a balloon animal. People who create balloon animals and other twisted balloon sculptures are called Twisters. Twisters often work as busker, clowns, magicians or restaurant entertainers.
  
The origins of balloon twisting are unknown. The 1975 book by "Jolly the Clown" Petri credits "Herman Bonnert from Pennsylvania at a magician's convention in 1939" as being the first balloon twister. [[Val Andrews]], in Manual of Balloon Modeling, Vol. 1, An Encyclopedic Series, credits H.J. Bonnert of Scranton, Pennsylvania as being the "daddy of them all."
+
== Styles==
 +
Two of the primary design styles are "single balloon modelling", which restricts itself to the use of one balloon per model, and "multiple balloon modelling", which uses more than one balloon.
 +
 
 +
Some twisters inflate their balloons with their own lungs, and for many years this was a standard and necessary part of the act. However, many now use a pump of some sort, whether it is a hand pump, an electric pump plugged in or run by a battery pack, or a compressed gas tank containing air or nitrogen. Twisters do not generally fill their creations with helium, as these designs will not usually float anyway. The balloons for twisting are too porous for helium and the designs are generally too heavy for their size for helium to lift.
 +
 
 +
== Origins ==
 +
The origins of balloon twisting are unknown. The 1975 book by "Jolly the Clown" Petri credits "[[Herman Bonnert]] from Pennsylvania at a magician's convention in 1939" as being the first balloon twister. [[Val Andrews]], in Manual of Balloon Modeling, Vol. 1, An Encyclopedic Series, credits H.J. Bonnert of Scranton, Pennsylvania as being the "daddy of them all."
  
 
In The Sphinx, Vol. 33, no. 1, March '''1934''', in his column entitled Squaks, Frazee writes:
 
In The Sphinx, Vol. 33, no. 1, March '''1934''', in his column entitled Squaks, Frazee writes:
Line 19: Line 25:
 
See also [[Balloon Modelling]]
 
See also [[Balloon Modelling]]
  
== References ==
+
== Publications ==
 
* TV's Original Balloonatic by Damon Dwight (1958)
 
* TV's Original Balloonatic by Damon Dwight (1958)
 
* Fun with Balloons by Roy Van Dyke (Roy Hobbs) (1959)
 
* Fun with Balloons by Roy Van Dyke (Roy Hobbs) (1959)
Line 25: Line 31:
 
* Balloonatrix by Damon Dwight (1962)
 
* Balloonatrix by Damon Dwight (1962)
  
 
+
{{References}}
{{wikipedia}}
+
{{wikipedia|Balloon modelling}}
 
[[Category:Allied Arts]]
 
[[Category:Allied Arts]]

Revision as of 21:03, 3 December 2014

Balloon Twisting or Balloon Modelling is the shaping of special modeling balloons into almost any given shape, often a balloon animal. People who create balloon animals and other twisted balloon sculptures are called Twisters. Twisters often work as busker, clowns, magicians or restaurant entertainers.

Styles

Two of the primary design styles are "single balloon modelling", which restricts itself to the use of one balloon per model, and "multiple balloon modelling", which uses more than one balloon.

Some twisters inflate their balloons with their own lungs, and for many years this was a standard and necessary part of the act. However, many now use a pump of some sort, whether it is a hand pump, an electric pump plugged in or run by a battery pack, or a compressed gas tank containing air or nitrogen. Twisters do not generally fill their creations with helium, as these designs will not usually float anyway. The balloons for twisting are too porous for helium and the designs are generally too heavy for their size for helium to lift.

Origins

The origins of balloon twisting are unknown. The 1975 book by "Jolly the Clown" Petri credits "Herman Bonnert from Pennsylvania at a magician's convention in 1939" as being the first balloon twister. Val Andrews, in Manual of Balloon Modeling, Vol. 1, An Encyclopedic Series, credits H.J. Bonnert of Scranton, Pennsylvania as being the "daddy of them all."

In The Sphinx, Vol. 33, no. 1, March 1934, in his column entitled Squaks, Frazee writes:

Magic and Magic galore in the past weeks. First the S.A.M, Ladies Night, then the Keystone State Federation of I. B. M. Rings came with a two day convention. Both were a huge success. Delegations from Baltimore, Lancaster, Scranton, Harrisburg, Allentown, New York and several other cities arrived altho the cold was extreme. Zero weather failed to keep the faithful away. The most novel performance was given by Herman Bonnert from Scranton, Pa. He makes all kinds of designs out of ordinary balloons.

In The Linking Ring, Vol. 14, no. 12, February 1935, we can read this :

"Black Diamond Ring No. 63 (Scranton, Pennsylvania) met at the store of Herman Bennert (well known in magic circles for his difficult balloon creations), his place of business known as The Keystone Novelty Shop."

John Cassidy is one of the premier comedy magician balloon twisters today.


See also Balloon Modelling

Publications

  • TV's Original Balloonatic by Damon Dwight (1958)
  • Fun with Balloons by Roy Van Dyke (Roy Hobbs) (1959)
  • Blow by Blow by Jim Sommers (1961)
  • Balloonatrix by Damon Dwight (1962)

References

Wikipedia-logo.png This page incorporated content from Balloon modelling,

a page hosted on Wikipedia. Please consult the history of the original page to see a list of its authors. Therefor, this article is also available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License