Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Don Post Sr. (March 14, 1902 - November 17, 1979) was an American mask maker and prop fabricator; in 1938, he founded the Halloween mask company Don Post Studios, creating the first commercially sold full Over-The-Head latex rubber masks.
Born in Oakland, California, Langdon was known in cult monster mask circles as the creative force behind the Don Post Studios "Calendar Masks" (1963 to 1968). He was also the creator of the most sought-after collector's mask, "The Zombie", and was creator-producer of the cult classic Decca LP An Evening With Boris Karloff And His Friends. [1]
In the 1970s, Don Post Studios created licensed masks for franchises such as Planet of the Apes, Star Wars and the Universal Classic Monsters. In the early 1960s, his son Don Post Jr. took over the company, allowing it to take focus on the Halloween/horror industry. [5] [6] In 2003, SPFX masks was founded, creating the first silicone masks. [7] [8]
Here in the U.S., we don’t manufacture KN95 masks, but we have American-made masks that are very similar, ... NY Post. Disney influencer Dominique Brown dead at 34 after allergic reaction during ...
Special effects artist Don Post of Post Studios designed the latex masks in the film which included a glow-in-the-dark skull, a lime-green witch and an orange Day-Glo jack-o'-lantern. [10] Hill told Aljean Harmetz , "We didn't exactly have a whole lot of money for things like props, so we asked Post, who had provided The Shape mask for the ...
Former Washington Post journalist Taylor Lorenz has claimed that people who don’t wear masks in public are “raw-dogging the air” in an expletive-laden social media rant. Lorenz — the ...
The $2,650 masks, made of resin and plastic by five employees at REAL-f Co., attempt to accurately duplicate an individual's face Face off: Realistic masks made in Japan find demand from tech, car ...
A latex mask based on Johnson's face, sculpted by Pat Newman for Don Post Studios, is described as "the best-selling Halloween horror mask of the late 1960s-early 1970s". [ 12 ] Filmography