The wands that didn't change Though Harry's and Hermione's wands have a new look, they are canonically the same Holly and Vine wands as they were before. * The master copy of each wand was created in wood, but copies for filming were made with resin, or rubber for stunt work. Natural, organic textures (handle of Harry's and Ron's wands).Handles take on new shapes (Ron's and Lupin's bulb-like handles).New wands have carved details (Hermione's vines, Sirius's runes) that break the symmetry. The only exceptions are Professor McGongall's wand, which has a very subtle glass tip on the handle, and Professor Flitwick's wand, which was discussed above. Rowling's preference for plain, simple sticks of wood. The redesigned wands of Prisoner and their predecessors have a few things in common, and several notable differences: These wands saw a slight departure from J.K. Highly detailed carvings and plain sticks The third film represents the transition point between the simple sticks of Stone and Chamber, and the highly detailed, conceptual designs that followed Goblet of Fire and beyond. unless Pierre or Hattie decide to spill the beans, that is. Rowling's insistence on simple wands, we won't know for sure. If you watch the Wingardium Leviosa scene, you can see him holding it! Whether it was indeed a prototype, or created afterwards in spite of J.K. It was wood and it had a kind of pearlescent handle and then a kind of brass tip, and the brass tip connected with your hand.” In the first two films, when I played the older looking Flitwick, I had quite an intricate wand that consisted of many different materials. “I have two different wands in Harry Potter. In an interview with HelloGiggles, Professor Flitwick actor Warwick Davis describes the first wand he was given: Is it possible that one of the intricate prototype wands found their way into the films anyway? Photo source: The National Museum of American History. In fact, these wands greatly resemble orchestra conducting batons of the 19th and 20th centuries (a fact that will come back into play later, when we look at the wands of Fantastic Beasts). Take a look at these batons used by the great conductor Arturo Toscanini (1867-1957). So we tried to keep them simple." - Hattie Storey, Art Director " was adamant that a wand was just like an old stick.
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