Artists Bring Kids’ Imaginary Friends to Life

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Having an imaginary friend is a beautiful part of childhood as they can be anything kids want them to be. In the minds of imaginative tykes, a living, breathing, eight-foot dinosaur and a three-eyed girl named Chloe aren’t anything out of the ordinary.

In a recent workshop, 60 kids were asked to draw detailed illustrations of their imaginary friends. Communications agency AMV BBDO then brought the drawings to model makers to turn them into a reality.

“Children create many amazing things. Take their imaginary friends for instance,” said Arvid Harnqvist and Amar Marwaha, the creative team behind the project. “They are talked about all the time and often become part of the family. But when the child gets older, these marvelous creations fade away. This project aims to immortalize them.”

Becky Sloan and Joseph Pelling (creators of Don’t Hug Me I’m Scared), along with creatives like Aardman and Psyop, created beautiful life-size models of five of the illustrated imaginary friends. You can see a very tall dino, a striped cat, and a tennis-playing monster all at London’s Museum of Childhood. The designs are so fun and imaginative, they give Inside Out‘s Bing Bong a run for his money.

“This was a really fun project to be involved in and it’s such a great idea,” Sloan and Pelling said of the collaboration. “Hopefully bringing the imaginary friends to life won’t give the children nightmares … we’re not sure we would want to hang out with Chloe ourselves!”

Jamie the fox by Lily Whitby, model by dwarf

Lily the cat by Ruth Fekade, model by Psyop

Monster, the imaginary friend of Leo Georgiou. Model by Aardman.

Swerl the Lion by Eva Wood, model by Picasso

[h/t: Creative Review]

All images via Rankin.

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