Paper bag puppets are great fun, and with just a few cutouts and a bit of drawing, you can make a puppet for just about any animal. In this project, make cat and owl puppets that open and close their eyes as you move the paper bag flap with your hand.
Make up a play that uses the cat and owl puppets, and maybe some other puppets of your own design. Of course, you could take Englishman Edward Lear's nonsense rhyme, "The Owl and the Pussy-Cat," and do a play based on it.
Related crafts: For puppet fun, play included, see the Paper Bag Hand Puppets craft project with printable patterns for three funny people. Make a couple of opera singer hand puppets from Tenor and Diva Paper Bag Puppets. Or check out Clip-Art Bag Puppets for how to make paper bag puppets using clip art!
For more puppet craft projects, many including plays, see the Puppets Around the World craft project index.
Choose the puppets that you want to make. These patterns are for cutouts to decorate the paper bags for each puppet. The cutouts are sized for use with lunch-size paper bags. Lunch-size bags are about 5¼" by 3¼" by 10½" in size. You can scale the patterns down to fit smaller bags. In the Adobe Reader Print window, select Page Scaling: Tile all pages, then enter a percentage in the Tile Scale: box.
Patterns are Adobe PDF files. The Adobe Reader is available for free.
All of Aunt Annie's project patterns are designed to be printed on standard letter-size paper (8.5"x11" or A4). When printing from Adobe Reader, you may need to select Auto-Rotate and Center or Choose paper source by PDF page size to ensure the best fit.
If you printed a black-and-white pattern, color the puppet cutouts any colors you like. Each pattern includes two sets of eyes—complete eyes and separate parts of eyes. Pick the type you prefer and color them. Colored paper cutouts are another choice. To make them, cut out the patterns, trace around them on colored paper, and cut.
Tip: Instead of using cutouts, you may color directly on the paper bag. You can also use a mix of cutouts and coloring: for example, use cutout eyes and a drawn nose.
Cut each of the puppet cutouts.
The Cat puppet cutouts include ears, nose, eyes, collar and bell. Also notice the drawing guide for the cat's face.
The Owl puppet cutouts include eyes, ear tufts, crest, beak and wings. Also notice the drawing guide for the owl's face.
Glue the cutouts to the bag as illustrated for each puppet. Pay careful attention to what is glued inside the crease and under the flap.
The cat's eyes open and close as you move your hand. Glue the eyes above the crease and under the flap. Draw closed eyes on the flap near the bottom. Draw the mouth, whiskers and chin on the bag centered on the nose cutout.
The owl's eyes open and close as you move your hand. Glue the eyes above the crease and under the flap. Draw the closed eyes near the bottom of the flap. Draw the chin on the bag centered on the beak cutout.
Add any additional decorations you might like to complete the puppets. Yarn or fake fur can be added for texture.
To operate a puppet, slip your hand into the bag and put four fingers in the flap. Open and close your hand to move the flap.
Have some make-believe fun with your cat and owl puppets. You could make a play based on Edward Lear's nonsense rhyme, "The Owl and the Pussy-Cat" (See the complete poem at the Poetry Foundation website).
The Owl and the Pussy-cat went to sea
In a beautiful pea-green boat,
They took some honey, and plenty of money,
Wrapped up in a five-pound note.
The Owl looked up to the stars above,
And sang to a small guitar,
'O lovely Pussy! O Pussy my love,
What a beautiful Pussy you are,
You are,
You are!
What a beautiful Pussy you are!'
That's it! The puppets are done!