What is the easiest puppet to make?
While there’s no real answer to this question - it depends on your building skills and previous puppetry experience - there are some puppets that are easier to make than others. If you’re new to making puppets, the following can help you work your way from easy to hard. You may also want to know if it’s hard to make puppets in general.
Easy
- Finger puppets - all you need is some sewing skills!
- Rod puppets - easy controls mean easy learning
- Object manipulation - make things out of items at home or work… nothing could be easier!
- Glove puppets - whether you sew, use clay, or do papier mache, glove puppets are very simple to learn
- Simple mouth puppets and sock puppets - usually rod and strings, or a sock, simple mouth puppets are easy to create. Read below for more info on how muppet-types are harder…
Medium
- Blacklight puppetry - while these puppets can be as simple as UV signs and flourescent gloves, to create a really good and unique performance, you’ll want to gain more experience as you learn about blacklights, flourescent materials, and other necessary concepts.
- Shadow puppets - while the making of shadow puppets can be anywhere between simple and hard, they’re still worth putting in the ‘easy’ section.
- Toy theatre - although toy theatre is incredibly easy to use, there are various methods to making them; from print-out and fold patterns to highly detailed models or dioramas
Hard
- Animatronics - generally requires some understanding of robotics, mechanics, and wire controls
- Bunraku - traditional Japanese puppeteers spend 30 years learning the craft before they can be ‘masters’. Rod puppets may be easy to use, but bunraku is highly skilled
- Caricature puppets - requiring some skill at making puppets look like real people, caricature puppets are objects you should learn later on in your building career
- Costume puppets - while they can be very simple, and often mean no more than wearing an item on one’s body or head, costume puppets can be tricky to learn in terms of design and building
- Marionettes - along with animatronics, this would be one of the toughest types of puppets to both make and use
- Muppet-types/ventriloquist - I lump these two together, because they are pretty much the same in terms of building difficulty (although muppets may be easier to operate than vents.). Muppet-types are harder to learn to build than simple mouth puppets, as their construction is much more laborious.
- Water puppetry - I don’t know much about water puppetry but what I do know of them is that they are a highly crafted type of puppet
This post AKA how to make simple puppets, AKA simple puppet designs, AKA how to make an easy puppet, AKA the most basic puppet, AKA hard to make puppets, AKA how to make a hard puppet, AKA what’s a good puppet to start with







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Thanks John for the info. Actually, from the looks of Puppeteria's site, they are a children's/family performing group and venue. And though they might hire out or make puppets for special commissions, I personally wouldn't count them as an official puppet seller. I would actually list them as a puppet company, as their main business would be in performing, not selling puppets. - So I'm going to list them on my site as such, and will be the first puppet company I blog about (outside of my own of course!).
... School of Puppetry on Where to buy puppets in Australia?