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Make Your Own Vacuum-Formed Storm Trooper Armor

toybuilder writes: "Do you want to make it to the next Star Wars opening dressed as a Star Wars character? How about a custom-fit Storm Trooper outfit? This page shows you how to make body casts, prepare the molds, and vacuum-form melted plastic to make your very own armor. Very impressive." Also, very obsessive -- this project is not for the faint of heart or shy of time. (Start now to be ready for the next prequel, or maybe the DVD release of episode IV.) Please note that this stuff requires more disclaimers than will fit on this page, and adds new meaning to the phrase "get plastered." Danger Will Robinson Danger.

30 of 68 comments (clear)

  1. As if we didn't the atmosphere enough by typical+geek · · Score: 2

    This is a pretty irresponsible web page. Do you realize just how many volatile and dangerous chemicals are released when plastics are created?

    Now, a plastic company will have filters and scrubbers and such to contain the outgassing and keep the amount of released chemicals low, to help save the atmosphere, and stay with EPA guidelines. Do you think Joe Sixpack in a garage will do this?

    Unless we want the whole of the Earth to turn into a smog filled hellhole like Los Angeles, we should really discourage this reckless behavior.

    1. Re:As if we didn't the atmosphere enough by Nerds · · Score: 2

      See, most of the people on this page in my opinion are above average intelligent people

      Damn, there are just so many good replies to this that my brain fried and now I can't even pick one...

      By the way, is it just Konqueror or is the title of this thread "As if we didn't the atmosphere enough"? What the heck does that mean? The only thing I could get from it was that "the atmosphere" is some kind of new verb which I would guess means doing an imitation of that commercial for the Discovery channel with the meteors going "ahhh, the atmosphere." Come to think of it, I haven't the atmosphered in a while...

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    2. Re:As if we didn't the atmosphere enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      Lighten up. If you use orthotic grade polypropylene/copolymer, the emissions are negligible. It's also much easier if you use the copolymer. More emissions probably come from your obviously methane-filled post than using the right plastic. Even ABS isn't that bad, unless you catch it on fire. If that happens, well, it only happens once. LOL

    3. Re:As if we didn't the atmosphere enough by nuggz · · Score: 2

      Uh you aren't creating plastics, you are just forming it.
      As long as you don't overheat it nothing is being released.

    4. Re:As if we didn't the atmosphere enough by DrXym · · Score: 2

      The chances of a person making themselves a storm trooper outfit of having a sixpack are neglible.

    5. Re:As if we didn't the atmosphere enough by Alatar · · Score: 2

      Aren't you a little short for a Storm Trooper?

    6. Re:As if we didn't the atmosphere enough by LancerAdvanced · · Score: 2

      Right.. now I consider my self pretty green, but I'm also a long time modelbuilder. and have some appreciation of the issues involved. I think the enviromental effects of making a suit of storm troope armor coud prob be offset by some carefull consideration when grocery shhoping in choosing your packaging and then recycling it afterward. not to mention that vacuforming doesn't require the maker to atually -make- any plastic.. As for being environetally irresoponsible, let us consider /. itself, it encourgase people to use computers, the manufactue of which creates a host of toxic by-products for just the computer itself, not to mention the packaging, and the software, and it's packaging, and the associated manuals and how to books. And now that we're done with the manufacture let us consider the operation, the electricity and where it comes from. All in all just arguing over this point here prob does more eco-damage than making one vacuform costume.. Well I must be off now to make a compensatory donation to the NRDC through www.greatergood.com

  2. I wish the staff would read Slashdot themselves by florin · · Score: 3

    Once again this has already been featured on Slashdot. Last time it only seemed to merit quickie status though.

    http://slashdot.org/articles/99/01/21/2136201.sh tm l

  3. So this explains why... by siesta+at+uni · · Score: 2

    The RIAA has ordered 440kg of Plastic, white, thermosetting....

    1. Re:So this explains why... by sharkey · · Score: 2

      Don't forget the guns. The standard issue Stomtrooper blaster rifle is a Sterling submachine gun. The long rifles, seen on Tattoine and carried by Chewbacca on the Death Star, are German MG-42 machine guns.

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      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  4. Thanks, but Slashdot is a tough crowd by typical+geek · · Score: 2

    I'm as much a fan of technology as the next geek, but just because you can do something doesn't mean you should. There should be some limits to what can be done.

    I imagine that is /. was around 150 years ago, there would be all sorts of articles like

    New strip mining technic allows greater recover of metals for telegraph industry.

    1. Re:Thanks, but Slashdot is a tough crowd by Alien54 · · Score: 2
      I'm as much a fan of technology as the next geek, but just because you can do something doesn't mean you should. There should be some limits to what can be done.I imagine that if /. was around 150 years ago, there would be all sorts of articles like "New strip mining technic allows greater recover of metals for telegraph industry."

      And since that was the beginning of the "gilded age" I can see enviromental types, other people with politcal concerns, etc being moderated down as trolls.

      maybe not. Since these are the guys that inspire Bill Gates.

      In any case, this is stretching the analogy a little bit. As I see it there are three elements:

      1) Strip mining is enviromental destruction for corporate profit on a massive scale.
      2) Making a body mold from fiberglass is personally dangerous, requires talent, and requires assistants who you trust, and who are not prone to very bad timing in practical jokes.
      3) Environmental damage is limited in magnitude, and is probably less that the damage caused by average use of an automobile for a year.

      The comparison is of things that are only slightly similar. Not similar enough for my taste. I can see this as something that someone brain damaged by Starwars might do for conventions.

      hmmm

      bet we'll see thousands over the next year

      --
      "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    2. Re:Thanks, but Slashdot is a tough crowd by dasunt · · Score: 2

      Just a quibble, but is strip mining the most destructive way to mine? After all, its possible to preserve the topsoil and then restore the area after strip mining. Strip mining is more efficient, which means less energy consumed, and most energy in this country is generated by methods that cause some pollution.

      Then again, my view point may be colored. I come from an area known as the Mesabi Range in Minnesota, which is known for its iron production. The mesabi range is about 90 miles west of Duluth and runs northeasterly for a good 50 miles or so. On a map, it would stretch from Grand Rapids, MN to around Virginia, MN. All along its distance are old abandoned mines. Now iron ore is mined by digging a nice large pit into the earth and dumping the earth and waste materials into another large pile. Both of this is on a decent scale, a small pit can easily be the size of a few city blocks, and the piles of waste earth are about the same size, and have a few stories stories worth of height (and red. Very red from the iron It will stain pants if you try to climb them.) These are old mines, and a lot of them shut down in the 70's. One would imagine that the abandoned mines would be big scars on the landscape of the mesabi range. Its not that simple. The pits fill with water, making nice clear deep lakes, unfortunately, they don't tend to be well stocked with fish unless connected to another body of water, I think it might be a problem with the lack of decayed vegetation in the water, the lakes aren't that resource rich for fish atm, but wait 100 years or so. The tailing hills are covered with trees growing on them. Its amazing to think that a tree can grow on waste rock dug up from 50 feet below ground, but obviously, they can. Right now, the old mines don't seem to be causing any great environmental harm, and in a few hundred years, I guess they will be hard to distinguish from the surrounding environment.

      Of course, any bad mining practices will be bad for the environment. If there is contamination from hazardous byproducts or leaking of harmful chemicals/minerals into the water, there will be a problem. But that can happen with any type of mining.

  5. Just when you thought things couldn't get worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Not only is that chick you've been talking to on irc a guy, that person is also wearing a deformed homeade storm-trooper uniform.

  6. NEW! Huberts' Nanoassembled StarTrooper suit! by CarrotLord · · Score: 2
    MMM... sub-microscopic stormtrooper suits... :)

    rr

    --
    Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur.
  7. Is this armor effective? by fence · · Score: 5

    Oh, it is made of plastic, so it should be at least as effective as the armor that the storm troopers wear.

    One blaster shot to the chest. Down.

    While their armor may not have effective protection against blasters, at least it didn't limit their vision or hearing.

    Oh, that's right....nevermind.

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    1. Re:Is this armor effective? by Fruan · · Score: 2

      The armour may not have been to good against hi-tech weapons like blasters, but managed to protect the wearer from impact weapons like rocks and sticks...

      Wait, no it didn't...

      --
      Shawn Poulsen (Fruan)

      "On Slashdot, many obvious things are insightful." - Annonymous Coward, 2000/7/9

    2. Re:Is this armor effective? by thue · · Score: 2

      I guess the reason why they wore them at at was that they needed to make the enemy "inhuman" so they could kill them. ie, make the film acceptable for the censors.

  8. I can't do this... by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 2
    I recommend that you have 5 people present for the plastering of the model. 1 as the model, 2 as the Plasterbandage Wetters and 2 more to lay the bandages on the subject.

    Not only would I be very leery of casting a human being in plaster, or working with toxic, smelly thermosetting resins, I don't think I know 4 (or even 2) other people who would even think of helping me with such a project. This is why the Stormtroopers will forever be the costume-geek-elite at SF conventions. There are lots of other interesting costumes the rest of us can do instead. Anyone with some decent sewing skills (or a friend with same) and the willingness to spend a little money can become a Fremen, Dana Scully, Mad Max, Kyle Katarn, a Sandperson, Rebel Endor commando or the ever elusive "Slave Leia" ;-) With all the possibilities, why be a 'trooper?

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    Freedom: "I won't!"
  9. eek by gtx · · Score: 4

    i don't know about you, and i'm not going to make any stereotypical 'lazy out of shape geek' jokes...

    but i know that I for one have no business in a form fitted anything.


    "I hope I don't make a mistake and manage to remain a virgin." - Britney Spears

    --


    "I hope I don't make a mistake and manage to remain a virgin." - Britney Spears
  10. In related news.... by Daemosthenes · · Score: 2

    Reports are streaming in that Bill Gates has ordered a large quantity of black cloth and a "Do-it-Yourself Dark Emperor of the Sith Make-up Kit".

    Steve Ballmer was also said to have purchased a black cape and a foreboding black helmet...


    47.5% Slashdot Pure(52.5% Corrupt)

  11. How about 1:1 scale slot cars? by unitron · · Score: 2

    I always felt that one of the great deprivations (not depravations) of my childhood was never getting a Mattel Vacu-Form. When I think of what I could have done with one that big...

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    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  12. Same technology for a Tux costume? by NineNine · · Score: 2

    Is there a web page where this company shows how to use the same technology to create a realistic looking penguin costume?

  13. Re:Don't like the Fascist undertones of this. by drix · · Score: 2
    I think you have the IQ of a trout if you can't distinguish between fact and fiction. What's next - are you going to contend that Lucas is Leni Riefenstahl, back from the grave?

    It's a MOVIE.

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    I think there is a world market for maybe five personal web logs.
  14. tough costume to wear by ruebarb · · Score: 2

    My friend had constructed one of these for the Episode one opening and they are HARD to keep together. He used Velcro, and you kind of have to watch out that the pieces don't slip or fall off, but the snaps look cool. (lamo disclaimer, the Mall of America wouldn't let him use a stormtrooper rifle - no toy guns allowed)

    Our Boba Fett, on the other hand, had all the pieces stitched into a burlap type shirt and pants, so they stayed on a lot better.

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    ah honey, we're all resplendent - Bill Mallonee
  15. Body Cast? by Life+Blood · · Score: 2

    Ummm, ok I can understand the whole vacuum forming thing. Its cheap as industrial processes go and give you a good surface finish on one side, but why do you have to build a body cast of yourself? A simple manniquin (sp?) of similar approximate size should do. I'm betting the movie suits don't require the actors to undergo this. In fact I'm sure of it since they used the same suits on two sets of actors, one set for the Original ANH and another set for the extra scenes in the Special Edition. A full plaster body cast seems pretty unnecessary to me.

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    So far I've gotten all my Karma from telling people they are wrong... :)

  16. Re:Imagine these on bikes... by studiocreations · · Score: 2

    As the writer of the HOW TO website I cannot advise one to wear the stormtrooper costume on a motorcycle. Very dangerous. The stormtrooper suit is not aerodynamic and the plastic acts more as tupperware airbrakes than a high performance fuselage. One good gust of wind , and your flying, bud! (grin)

  17. ---- Reply from Studio Creations --- by studiocreations · · Score: 2

    Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!! Please, Slashdot readers, do not think that we at Studio Creations are conservative fascists with Neo-Nazi tendancies. We are actually liberal sci-fi fans who want nothing more than to disperse information to the public about basic propmaking techniques that the film and propmaking industry do not give away freely. We made the stormtrooper costumes because we liked the design. In the 20 some-odd years that Star Wars has been around, the Imperial costumes have not aged a bit, unlike some of the other artistic elements that was in the movies (i.e. Leia's lip gloss and Lukes feathered hair). Thanks for the support of the website. Fans like slashdot readers help keep me going with updating the website. -jeff allen

  18. My Favorite Line by ReadParse · · Score: 2

    Right out of the gate, and I'm cracking up:

    "In this section I will show you how to pull a bodycast of a human figure. The process is relatively simple yet very dangerous. "

    I'm trying to think of something else relatively simple yet very dangerous. Jumping off a bridge? No, I wouldn't call that simple. How about accidentally falling on a hatchet? Yeah, that sounds simple.... and dangerous.

    RP

  19. My rubber cement & Jello(TM) Jabba Suit! by tenzig_112 · · Score: 2
    1) Spraypaint a Hefty bags lime green- unevenly.

    2) Tape the bags together on the sides- don't forget the shoulder reinforcements.

    3) Fill said bag with semi-set Jello(TM)

    4) Cover the while thing with globs of rubber cement.

    Alternative method: watch the first three movies 400 times while eating pork rinds and taking no exercise.

    ...everything Lucas is good...everything Lucas is good...