Which materials where used to do a bubonic mask
The plague doctor mask used materials like leather, wood, glass, waxed or suet-coated fabric, and aromatic fillings such as herbs and spices. For DIY versions, people also used craft foam, faux leather, newspaper, glue, cardboard, coconut husk fiber, and papier-mâché.
Historical materials
The historical costume was usually described as having a long coat, leather mask, red glass eyes, and a bird-like beak. The beak was often filled with strong-smelling items such as lavender, mint, cloves, cinnamon, myrrh, juniper berries, vinegar-soaked sponges, and sometimes a complex medicinal mixture called theriac. Some descriptions also mention waxed or suet-coated outer clothing, which was meant to act as a barrier.
Common DIY materials
Modern reproductions often use:
- Craft foam and faux leather.
- Thin card, coconut husk fiber, and scraps of leather.
- Newspaper, school glue, string or elastic, and paint for papier-mâché versions.
- Sometimes just foam with no leather layer for a simpler build.
Important note
If you meant a real historical plague-doctor mask, it was mainly leather and protective clothing with aromatic stuffing in the beak. If you meant a costume or cosplay mask, the materials depend on the build style, but foam, leather, and papier-mâché are the most common choices.
| Type | Materials |
|---|---|
| Historical mask | Leather, glass, waxed/suet-coated clothing, herbs, spices, vinegar-soaked sponge, theriac |
| DIY foam version | Craft foam, faux leather, glue, paper templates |
| Papier-mâché version | Newspaper, school glue, string/elastic, paint |