Friday, July 10, 2015

Sword 2.0

When I decided to rebuild the sword I put a post on Cosplay Utah and the amazing Fitz from Caliston Armory responded. http://www.calistonarmory.com . Fitz is amazing and so helpful. I visited his shop and left with a Carbon Fiber center post, a sheet of EVA foam and clear instructions so I could make good progress before needing him again. 

 Cut out your foam pieces. The center one seen above has the center section cut out so the main post could be placed to secure the whole thing and provide hilt space. I used the packing tape that has  strings layered in, to secure it but I cut the tape too long. I ended up fighting some of those ends once I was sanding the blade angles in. Using a steel brush, rough up the smooth foam underside. The next step is getting the layers bound together using Weldwood Contact Cement. (hit it with a heat gun before laying down on next piece)







Once they are all in it is time for shaping and sanding. This foam sanded down nicely but leaves a pretty good mess of dust. Once all the pieces were sanded we placed them on the center post. I thickened up the handle by wrapping leather over a layer of mounting tape wrapped over a PVC tube then sliding that in place. 




Back to see Fitz and have him help secure all the parts and spray Plastidip over the whole thing. 


Looks nice huh?


Some Hammered Steel spray paint.  Followed by the Blue my son chose. 


We ended up with a HUGE sword that is light weight with clean lines. We were SO much happier with these end results. 


Much to work on before September. Some of it might even get finished. ;-)

Sword 1.0

My son decided he needed a sword for his cosplay then drew this picture for me.  My first thought was "How it the world am I going to do this?" 

I started looking online and found the awesome Kamui Cosplay http://www.kamuicosplay.com .  She makes some amazing things and she is fun to watch. I followed her spray foam tutorial. but I didn't quite get her results. 

You start with a basic cardboard form

Cover it in Spray Foam (WEAR GLOVES)




Once dry you shape it out with a blade 






At this point I was quite proud. It was looking Sword like and my son was happy with it. But the foam had so many large holes in it. I filled holes with more spray, then shaped those new bubbles back down to the shape. 


I used glue to try to fill and smooth. I even went to a prop shop and bought something specific to fill and never was happy with the texture. Figuring I had done all I could, I moved on to the Paper Mach'e


Basic Paper Mach'e.  No big deal. 


There, a sword.  Some spray paint and we had...


A heavy sword with a strange angle and a rough texture that we couldn't sand down. I wasn't happy with it. Then the whole outer shell started cracking. I'd refill the crack and that would crack. Eventually an entire blue tip pealed right off. At that point I decided my spray foam days were over. We were going to start over We needed a new plan. 


Sword 2.0 to come soon.