
First attempt at Spike the Balloon Dog.

First attempt at Spike the Balloon Dog.
Recently performed part of my new balloon show at a school in Ashington
The first part of the show is based on The Old Woman Who Swallowed a Fly.
In my version, the old woman becomes an old monster. The monster is a giant mouth with pink gums and white hearts for teeth.
The fly is around 3′ 6″ long with a similar wingspan.
The rest of the cast is a spider, bird, witch, alien, werewolf and zombie.
All the participating kids get to keep their balloon.
Lots of laughter, audience participation, and oohs and aahs.
Hoping to get this into libraries and schools.
If you’re interested go to http://www.balloondeliveries.net for contact details.
Just completed my first, and very likely my last, show for a Polish family. They didn’t understand a word I said; I didn’t understand a word they said. I’m determined not to say we were poles apart.
Discovered one thing; Polish kids and English kids have the same sense of humour: Neither of them laugh at my jokes!
I took my new There was an old woman who swallowed a fly balloon routine, but, as virtually no-one spoke English, I didn’t bother doing it.
I knew I was in trouble when I said, Sit down, and no-one took any notice – mostly because they didn’t understand a word.
Birthday boy, Piotr, kept calling me Man. Perhaps he’s a Polish hippie. Man was the only word he said that I understood.
Read my latest column at http://www.balloonhq.com/column/ilowe/oct11/
BalloonHQ is the major web-based resource for both balloon twisters and balloon decor. There are columns to help you create a show; teach you to twist; and interviews with balloon artists.
If you are a member, you can have an on-line portfolio of your work, and post pictures where other members can add comments to encourage you.
Probably all of the top artists worldwide are members of BalloonHQ.
You can find my portfolio at http://lowemagic.balloonhq.comlowemagic.balloonhq.com
Additionally, you can go to my balloon deliveries website.
Probably the best things you can make when starting out as a balloon modeller, is hats.
Give a kid a poodle and she’ll hold it down by her side, a foot off the ground, and no-one sees it.
Give her a big, wild, colourful hat, and she sticks it on her head, and it’s where everyone can see it.
If people can see it, they know there’s a twister somewhere nearby and they’re looking for you.
Hats attract attention, and that’s what you want. Get the people to come and look for you.
Once you have a couple of dozen people wandering around wearing your hats, you can switch to other stuff. Just remember to make another hat every now and again to attract a crowd.

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One piece of good advice that Paul Daniels gives is, when asked to do a free show for charity, make sure they put your name and contact details on their programme.
I’ve just arranged this for an event at the Gateshead International Stadium which is sure to gain a good bit of press coverage.
‘Haven’t you,’ she asked, ‘any tops that even remotely match those trousers?’
No, I don’t. I don’t have tops; I have shirts. I have t-shirts, polo shirts, and sweatshirts. I have shirts with holes in them; shirts with unexplained stains down their fronts, and shirts that no-one else would be seen dead in. What I don’t have is tops.
Why do women call them tops? Can’t they recall which end things fit on without resorting to these obvious mnemonic devices? What happened to blouses and sweaters; cardigans and t-shirts?
And then, they expect things to match. Colour co-ordinated seems to be the ‘in’ thing – if ‘in’ thing is still the ‘in’ expression, which I doubt.
‘Will you,’ she asked, ‘take me to football training?’
‘Yes, of course. Get your things.’
‘You’re not going like that, are you?’ Well, yes, I was, but I realise “You’re not going like that means You’re NOT going like that.
‘Of course not,’ I replied. ‘I was just going up to change.’
And when I get upstairs I find she’s already been through my wardrobe and, laid out on the bed, is what she expects me to wear. She’s fourteen, and I dread to think what she’ll be like when she grows up.
Naturally, she likes those two awful women on television who go around telling people what they should and shouldn’t wear. Trini and someone? That’s what I imagine she’ll become. She’s half way there right now.
So I’m all ready to drive her to the football; all dressed up and colour co-ordinated in shades of brown, and I don’t even intend to get out of the car. Just drop her off and pick her up an hour and a half later.
On the way back, I remember we’re out of bourbon biscuits – not the supermarket’s own brand but the Peak Freans – and I have to stop at SavaCentre to pick some up.
I used to keep an old oil-stained jacket in the boot to slip on if I had to change a wheel, but she found it and, after telling me, ‘You’re never wearing that again,’ threw it out. Pity. I could have put it on over my co-ordinated outfit and have felt perfectly normal as I walked nonchalantly into the store.
Instead, of course, I have to sneak in; hoping no-one I know will see me.
‘Hello, Ian,’ he says. ‘Going to a fancy dress?’
It is perfectly possible, I’ve done it a thousand times, to go shopping and never see anyone you know. Today I meet everyone I’ve ever met, and they all remark on my clothes.
‘I would never have recognised you,’ they say, and, ‘My, what an improvement. You’ve obviously got a woman in your life.’ and such insane babblings.
What they really mean is, for the past forty years they’ve never liked my dress sense and now is the time for them to tell me. And they do. At great length.
So, by the time I get home, I’ve just a few minutes to swallow a cup of coffee and a bourbon biscuit and I have to go back and pick her up.
‘I see,’ she says, looking at the crumbs down my front, ‘you remembered the Peak Freans.’
Ah, yes. But at least the crumbs and my top are beautifully colour co-ordinated. And that, as we know, is all that matters.
We entertainers are in the wrong business.
Yes, I realise I’m telling you this just when you’ve made a fortune in the run-up to Christmas, but you should have been selling coffee. That’s where the real money’s at.
Did you know Starbucks opens four new outlets somewhere in the world every working day?
That probably surprises you.
Every working day.
Of course, if you only work part-time it’s not so surprising.
And if you don’t work at all it’s not the least bit surprising; nor interesting. You couldn’t afford to drink coffee there anyway.
I only mention this because I’m exhausted through all the shows I’ve just done, and coffee is said to keep you awake. I tried it leading up to Christmas and it didn’t help.
It also probably doesn’t help that I hate December. Why can’t they have Christmas another month when I’m not so busy?
Three weeks booked solid. Sometimes I can’t even remember which day it is. It’s bad enough that I have to do lots of Christmas shows, but there’s the nurseries, too, and kids are still having birthdays! In December!
Take it from one whose birthday is on New Year’s Eve, December is not the time to have a birthday. People give you one present and tell you it’s for Christmas and your birthday combined. One lousy present for both! It’s Jesus I feel sorry for, he was born right on Christmas Day. I bet he only got the one present, too.
I lie awake at night worrying I’m going to turn up the next day with the wrong show. What would I do with a birthday card trick at a Christmas party? Tell them it’s Jesus’ birthday and the card’s for him?
I’m so tired when I wake up I feel sure this time I’ll fall asleep during my show, instead of the audience.
That’s why I decided to turn to coffee.
People often drink coffee to help them stay awake. The next day, of course, they’re tired because they stayed awake the day before. So they drink coffee. Otherwise they’d fall asleep at work. And the next day, they’re even more tired because, for the last two days they’ve drunk coffee to help them stay awake.
So what do they do?
Drink coffee. Right!
I tell you, we’re in the wrong business.
No wonder Starbucks is opening four new stores every working day.