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'''Tree'''
'''Tree'''
The designer had requested from the first model box shown a tree which wraps around the pilar and goes to the height of the catwalk with branches coming from the top of it. The challenge was finding the tree, we now had to find a Tree with wide enough dimensions to wrap around the 200mm diameter of the pole in the chandler. The Technical Stage Manager then drew up a drawing of how we would need this tree to look. It would be smoothed at the back in order to allow fixing points onto it to refrain it from falling forwards.
[[File:Example.jpg]]

Revision as of 18:13, 7 December 2017


London Road

Stage Management

Hanging Baskets

One of the main challenges I found for the props on London Road was the 12 hanging baskets that had to be made for the final scene. First, we found hanging baskets online that included the lining needed to cut down on costs and then ordered oasis foam for fake flowers to put in the baskets to keep them stable when they were hanging.

It turns out hanging baskets need a lot more fake flowers than you would originally think. We cleared out the RCS props store of fake flowers as well as the props stores of both National Theatre of Scotland and The Tron Theatre.

Once the baskets and foam arrived I got to work arranging the flowers in the baskets. The designer originally asked for the same flowers to be put into each basket but after trying to do this for a while it didn’t look quite right and after emailing the designer we decided that it was best to put the same colour of flowers in each basket.

The designer wanted to have greenery flowing down from the baskets and pointed us towards a pub beside Queen Street Station as a reference for the exact type of basket she wanted. For this we would need a lot more flowers and foliage than we had so I managed to improvise and bend some flowers into a drooping shape and stick them in the foam at an angle that made it look like the hanging greenery that she wanted.

After completing 7 of the 12 baskets needed we found that we would need a lot more fake flowers than what we had. I found that the best place to buy this was the PoundShop on Sauchihall Street just down the street from the Conservatoire. They had the best value for money as they sold realistic small bunches of flowers for a pound each.

After going back and fore to the shop and spending a total of £42 on the flowers we were finally able to create the final baskets. What we found after this was that the metal chains and hook that the baskets hang from would get caught on the stems of the flowers and would lift the foam out of the basket, so we had to find a way to combat this.

We found that the best way to do this was to hang them off the props cage, so the actors could come and pick up their basket without having to fight with the chain and unhook it from whatever flower it had got caught on.


Electrics

Practicals

Technical Stage Management

Sooky Kabuki


Hanging Baskets

The hanging baskets used a complex dyneema rope flying system. Each basket was attached at the end of the rope, using a figure of eight knot. The line ran straight up, through a swing cheek pulley which rang horizontally to the gantry. The in-dead was tied to the bar using a clove hitch knot. A carabiner was fixed between the two bars on the gantry so that the rope could easily be clipped in using another figure of eight knot for its out dead and its basket dead. Out deads had to be set through the branches of the trees, or else the lines would get caught and fail to fly in.

One issue when flying the basket lines in was there was no weight on the line. We decided to use fish weights below the pulley, so when the line was unclipped from the bar, it would pull downwards to the in dead.


- In Dead - Clove Hitch (on bar)

- Basket Dead - Figure of 8 knot (matt pink tape)

- Out Dead - Figure of 8 knot (matt orange tape)

Flying Basket Effect - Video

Tree

The designer had requested from the first model box shown a tree which wraps around the pilar and goes to the height of the catwalk with branches coming from the top of it. The challenge was finding the tree, we now had to find a Tree with wide enough dimensions to wrap around the 200mm diameter of the pole in the chandler. The Technical Stage Manager then drew up a drawing of how we would need this tree to look. It would be smoothed at the back in order to allow fixing points onto it to refrain it from falling forwards.