Legacy Era Armor Templates (Rokeim Gekla’s Legacy Style Mandalorian Plate Templates)
PEPAKURA TUTORIAL PDF
Legacy Era Armor Templates (Ohl’d Vart’s Legacy Templates PDF File) Legacy Era Armor Templates (The Legacy Project PDF File – Various Contributers)
Legacy Era Armor Templates (Drake’s Legacy Templates PDF File) Galaxies Templates (Ithica’s Star Wars: Galaxies Style Mandalorian Plate Templates) Gauntlet Templates (Skip’s Gauntlet Pepakura Templates) (The Dented Helmet Provided WizardOfFlight Rangefinder Templates)īoba Fett Right Gauntlet Pattern (WizardOfFlight Right Gauntlet PDF File)īoba Fett Left Gauntlet Pattern (WizardOfFlight Left Gauntlet PDF File)īoba Fett Flat Dome Pattern (WizardOfFlight Right Gauntlet PDF File)Ĭomplete Template List (TheDentedHelmet Master Template List)īoba Helmet Template (Skip’s Boba Fett Pepakura Template) (The Dented Helmet Provided WizardOfFlight Templates)īoba Fett Helmet Pattern. (Wizard of Flight Jango style Mandalorian plates in multiple sizes -Downloadable) Please consult the boards and your local membership on how you size up! Measure twice, cut once!Ĭomplete Boba Fett Templates (WizardOfFlight Boba style Mandalorian plates – Downloadable)Ĭomplete Jango Fett Templates (WizardOfFlight Jango style Mandalorian Plates -Downloadable) It’s usually best to trace them out on posterboard or paper first in order to make sure they fit your body/frame properly before transferring to plastic. The templates listed below can be printed out on almost any printer, pieced together, and then traced onto plastic. This is where to begin in order to cut out your own armor parts. Welcome to the Mandalorian Mercs Costuming Club library of Costume and Template Tutorials! We have a wide selection of tutorials to get you started on your costuming journey. I probably could put it on a scale inbetween, see how much it weights.BEFORE READING, PLEASE CREATE A FORUM ACCOUNT AND USE THE CLAN LOCATOR TO FIND YOUR CLAN! NOTHING IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN FINDING YOUR LOCAL MEMBERS AND SHARING YOUR PROGRESS WITH THEM! It's currently waiting for a second layer of wood glue to dry (you can use wood glue instead of gesso to smooth out the texture of the Worbla so you don't need to sand) and I am planing on priming it this weekend if the weather holds up. I mailed this one to Zombie as a gift for all the work he is doing unfolding the files - but I re-build it by now.
I think a sqaure meter of Worbla is roughly 1 kg - and I used a lot less than a square meter in materials. Not as light as just paper maché of course. But that's the only complain I do have about it - but I learned that priming properly and using a quality acrylic finish + giving each layer adequate time to dry helps protect the paint job. It's the main weakness that the color sits on top and doesn't get soaked into the material. However, all that happened was a scratch in an arm bracer - but then this being an all black armor, I had brought a black permanent marker and could fix it right away. (So much for agility and stealth - and armore + heels.)
In fact the first thing I did when I put on my Nightingale armor was stumble and fall down because the shoes had no profile and the asphalt was wet and slippery. Tripping and falling of the object or of myself? I wouldn't be worried about damaging the object itself, it doesn't break, but I would worry about ruining the paint job if it scratched over the ground. The total weight of the finished staff (Wooden broom handle, paper maché, Worbla, Paint, plumber's putty to join the two parts, clear finish, and a rubber cap at the bottom of the staff is 680 g - about 1.5 lb. So where Zombiegrimm's has scales, mine has spikes. I didn't like the idea of having copies of the same staff I wanted each to have a personal touch. The decoration is different from the one shown here but again free-style. I built the second one specifically for myself at only 90% of the original file's size - so it's a little smaller than the one in the tutorial but more proportionate for myself. But I rebuilt the staff for myself by now: /baste… The original from this tutorial was given to Zombiegrimm as a thank you for his work with the files.
PEPAKURA TUTORIAL FREE
This is a foam free build of a Skyrim Dragonpriest Staff - all I'd need to do is heat the bottom so it's soft enough to take on a shape and insert a staff. I was asked to explain my method of using a Pepakura Model as a base for Worbla.