How to Make Masks! Easy New Way to Make a Mask for Masquerade, Halloween and Dress-Up Fun, With Just Two Layers of Fast-Setting Paper Mache


Book Description

This book teaches new techniques that anyone can use to create fabulous masks easily and quickly. Make one of the 12 popular mask styles in the book with detailed instructions and over 300 step-by-step photos - or use these easy new methods to create your own unique designs. Jonni shows you exactly how to sculpt the features of your masks so they truly represent the character and expression you're looking for. Then capture that look permanently with just two layers of super-strong, fast-setting paper mache, using the recipes included in the book. Your finished masks can look like they were made from fur or feathers, antique gold, ancient bone, rusted iron, glazed porcelain, and even carved and highly polished African wood. The innovative methods in this book are easy, the materials cost just pennies per mask, and your new creations will be even more fun to make than they are to wear. This book takes the art of paper mache masks to a whole new level.




My Mask


Book Description

With colorful illustrations and simple, rhyming text, this book helps young children understand the importance of wearing a face mask when public safety depends on it. It also serves to make children more comfortable with the idea of wearing a mask. Other uses for the book include: color recognition, sight word recognition, rhyming words, number recognition, counting, and teaching children about kindness and caring for others.




And Yet My Mask is Powerful


Book Description

"And Yet My Mask is Powerful" emerges from an exhibition by multimedia artists Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme, held at Carroll / Fletcher in London in 2016. Carrying on from their earlier project The Incidental Insurgents (2012-2015), the artists address the apocalyptic logic of perpetual crisis that characterizes the contemporary moment. The project takes its title from Adrienne Rich's poem "Diving Into the Wreck," and like that of the poem, its mise-en-scène is a field of wreckage. Here, the artists visit destroyed villages in occupied Palestine, documenting groups of Palestinian youths wearing copies of Neolithic masks. These masks, some of the oldest in the world, were originally found in the West Bank and are now stored in private Israeli collections; they have been copied and 3D-printed by the artists from online exhibition photographs. The book uses computer screenshots of images framed in software windows, layering them across the pages along with scans and typographic interventions. The work suggests a sense of collapse and return, but one oriented toward futurity, reworking the Arab world's apocalyptic imaginary into another, parallel, unrealized time. --Printed Matter website, viewed on January 2, 2018.




Behind the Mask


Book Description

A gay umpire offers a candid inside view of professional baseball, discussing his career and relating anecdotes about incidents on and off the field




The Pain Behind My Smile


Book Description

Early in Life, Adrienne learned how to masquerade her pain and harbor her secrets. Entering into early adulthood, Adrienne meets Tyrell and shortly after he pops the question. Ignoring some of the warning signs presented to her, Adrienne continued with the wedding planning. Despite her mixed feelings she felt, and not wanting to disappoint the guest, Adrienne proceeded with the wedding ceremony and unknowingly entered into a union of abuse, deceit, and pain. While contemplating her escape, Adrienne receives an unexpected phone call from a bald, sexy, and tattooed gentleman by the name of "Satin". Adrienne's and "Satin's" friendship took flight. "Satin" showed her the most memorable moments, leading Adrienne on some of the highest escapades ever. But as we all know, scientifically what goes up must come down. Suddenly, Adrienne's world is turned upside down when she is blind sided by a 3 punch combo that changes her life forever. She then search to find a way to put her life back together.




Mommy Where's My Mask


Book Description

Children's book written to help children learn about the importance of wearing a face mask during the Coronavirus Pandemic.




Lucy's Mask


Book Description

Masks are everywhere. What do kids think about that? When Lucy finds out her mom is making her a special mask she's excited. Lucy loves masks! She dives into her toy box full of costumes and opens a world of imagination and make-believe adventure, far beyond the walls of her room. Of course, she doesn't realize that the mask her mom is making is not part of a costume but one that will keep her safe and make her a real-life superhero. This book is not a science lesson about germs and protection. It's a simple fun story that helps make mask-wearing more relatable and less scary. Parents and educators have found it to be a wonderful tool to start a conversation about germs, viruses, the pandemic, and what families have to do to keep themselves and others safe. For children heading to schools that will require them to wear masks, and for parents, grandparents and teachers looking for stories that give comfort and reassurance to kids about the changes around them, Lucy's Mask is a welcome addition to reading time. Lucy's Mask was a Finalist in the 2021 Next Generation Indie Book Awards.




My Mask


Book Description

A delightfully simple and light story that encourages children to both appreciate and take good care of their face mask. Whether wearing a mask due to allergies, pollution, or a viral epidemic, children can view wearing a safety mask as a special and memorable experience, not something scary or detestable. "A face mask like me, starts out with a special dream..." and so we are invited to learn about how face masks prepare to become champions and guardians. We anxiously hope for our little hero to be chosen by the right child and by the end of the story, might even feel the need to put our own crayons to work recording some special moment we spent wearing a safety mask. Written by a father whose own child refused to wear her mask during the peak of the corona virus epidemic, the gentle and humorous picture book is narrated from the perspective of a safety mask from beginning to heart warming end. The author believes that one of our roles are parents is to help "frame" experiences for our children in ways that comfort, encourage, strengthen and respect their journey to understanding both the beauty and the struggles of life. (Helping children understand the epidemic) (Child therapy during the epidemic) (Reducing child anxiety due to corona virus) (Children's book about corona virus) (Using picture books in child counseling) (Positive parenting perspectives) (wearing a mask)




My Mask


Book Description

"Quyuh needs a new face mask or khan to wear when she rides her bike to school"--Publisher's website.




When I Wear My Mask


Book Description

Little Abigail helps children understand why it is so important to wear a mask, and shows them that wearing a mask shouldn't have to stop anyone from being themselves... Just like countless children around the world, little Abigail misses her Grandma and Grandpa. She hasn't seen them for a long time because of social distancing, but she is willing to wait as long as it takes to keep them safe. Finally, her mom tells her the happy news: she can visit Grandma and Grandpa at last! But on one condition - she has to cover her face with a mask. Abigail has many masks and when she wears them, she can imagine herself to be anything she wants. In these unusual and uncertain times, children face many unfamiliar challenges. It is the parents' job to give them as much support as possible. When I Wear My Mask is a fun and simple book designed to explain this new situation to children in a non-threatening way, and show them that life under social distancing is not as scary as they might think. Children will feel more comfortable wearing their masks once they understand the importance of protecting their Grandparents, and the rest of the elderly population who are at greater risk than others.