My name's Joker! I'm gunna show you MY ideas on how to make some pretty sick costumes! Also, I'm poor. So all my stuff is made on a budget. Still better than a lot of others I've seen though.
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
A word on painting.
Hey, I just wanted to give a few pointers on painting real quick. First of all if your doing armor like I am and it need to be real dirty and blackened looking, then you don't really need much. I used acrylic paint from walmart. I got a few bottles of silver, brown, and black. Even though the armor is supposed to be a very dark brown, it's still armor, right? at one point it would have been silver. So I started out by doing 2 coats of silver (AT LEAST 2 coats; since your working with foam, it absorbs paint pretty good). then I put a little brown on there to make it look dirty. I mixed some black and brown together to make a really dark brown and used that for the cracks and crevices that would be hard to clean out if it were real armor. finally, I took some more silver and VERY gently put a thin THIN amount right on all the edges to make it look as if the dirt and rust were scuffed off when he fell. Anyway, I just wanted to give this little pointed on how I did the painting so far. You may have a better way but this is just how I did it. Have fun!
First things first...
well, as I mentioned before, this year I am doing a cosplay in Mage armor from Dragon Age 2 as seen below. I started with the right shoulder pad thingy and then for some reason skipped to the boots :)
first of all, I just went out and bought some of these foam sheets from Michael's Craft Store for 99 cents each. I suggest starting with the color thats closest to your final color cuz it makes the painting easier later on.then the first thing you need to do is pick a place to start. as I said, I started with the shoulder plate. next, look at all the flat surfaces individually and decide how many there are. for the shoulder alone, I counted 8 so I drew and cut out 2 differently shaped triangles to use as a stencil. then I traced and cut out 4 of each and taped them all together. now that I have a paper model that I know works, I traced the patterns onto the foam and cut it out.
One thing you DEFINITELY want to keep in mind is that this foam is easy to bend if you heat it. I personally just use my stove top to heat it for just a few seconds and then bend it the way I want. It cools off and hardens in like, less than a second or 2.
next, you got to put it all together! I used just a simple hot-glue gun. they are about 2 dollars at walmart and I suggest getting one.as you can see, I sort of got carried away and didn't take many pictures here. I sort of jumped straight to the painting.
the picture below is the little neck piece that the armor has on it. as you can see, I changed it a little just cuz I didn't like how big the regular one was. I used the same method I described above. just get a piece of foam thats the right size, hold it over heat, bend it, and repeat until you have it the shape that you want it. and then paint it to look all dirty and stuff :)
below is a picture of the little spiky thing that sticks out from the right elbow and doesn't really serve any purpose. but this thing, I made entirely from scraps I cut off from other pieces so SAVE YOUR SCRAPS!
now, the boots were fun. obviously, it would have been hard to find knee-high brown leather boots for men, so I went to goodwill and bought 2 things: the first thing I bought were these brown dress shoes that were in my size for 2 dollars (and put some brown paint on them to make them look older and more dirty). then I cut out some armor for them, molded them how I wanted, painted them, and glued them on (I also added a few random bits to the back to make them less boring).
the second were knee-high WOMENS boots that I just cut the shoe off of and kept the part that goes from my ankle to my knee. the plan is to hot-glue these two together to make armored boots.
the boots were my favorite part. I just cut out a few armor pieces (paper pattern first, then foam, then heat, then mold), and painted 2 coats of silver as a base. I added them to the boots using brass-colored craft brads that I got from my local craft store. same with the little spikes on the back of the boots and everything (the spikes, I made 4 total: 2 for each foot, so that I could glue them together to make it thicker and more durable).
well thats all I have so far, I'll update again soon with more progress!
Just for starters...
Hello everyone! just starting out on the new costume. I am currently working on the Mage Champion armor from Dragon Age 2 for Xbox 360... and I guess for PS3 as well, but Playstation is retarded.
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