Assassin's Creed III- Tomahawk (re)build -image heavy

fevereon

Active Member
So, a good while back, I made a replica tomahawk from AC3, and though I was pretty happy with it, I wound up building it before the official announcement came out, and based it on a couple leaked images.
I really wanted to tackle it again

If interested in the old build. I blogged it up a while back
Fevereon Props: Ratohnhaké:ton / Connor's Tomahawk - Assassin's Creed III


Though I burned out the first one really fast to hopefully appease the inner fangirl between other work on the table (i think it was around about 15 hours or so, 8 of them due to hellacious beading), I wanted to sit down and put a bit more time into this remake, resize it correctly (the other one was too big for a traditional tomahawk) , and well as try out a different approach to the build :D


On to the wips! Please note that on these, you might see a couple different woods on the handle.. that was because I initially planned on just remaking one for myself, but then changed it up because I later decided to mold it. The technique is the same though,

Of course, first things first! I did the layout using Inkscape, and was much more picky about the shape of the handle. (The first one I pretty much banged out of an old stick of birch using a surform rasp in about a half hour) After doing the layout, and transferring it to the wood, I cut it out, and used the belt sander to shape it to the outline. I followed that up with rasps and files to achieve the desired rounded shape. I took into consideration the fact that the handle would be wrapped, so that area was shaped a little smaller than I normally would have. The diamonds were sketched on as well.

The axe end (bottom left end) was shaved down more since the photo was taken
ac3_tomahawk2_01.jpg



Once deciding on molding this, I wound up remaking the handle using poplar (softer & faster to shape), then woodburned a woodgrain texture into it to make the wood look more like wood once casting took place (or else it would look like a plain ol' stick)

ac3_tomahawk2_02.jpg


The diamonds were done in the same fashion, please excuse the shift back to the red oak stick, its the only photo I have of the diamonds.
ac3_tomahawk2_03.jpg


I had initially started to make the blade out of mdf again, and did the spike on the back first. I later cut this off and used it on the final piece.
ac3_tomahawk2_04.jpg


The rest of the head, I tried out a different approach. Since I have the laser cutter, I thought I'd try cutting the shape out (here I used acrylic). I used the contour of the acrylic to help with alignment and symmetry, sculpted one side out of Super Sculpey, and used a heat gun to cure it (to cut down on warpage that would result should i toss that hunk of acrylic in the oven. though some details I waspicky about when sculpting, I roughed out others since I'd be sandign it down evenly anyways.

The box was used to help circulate the hot air around the piece for a more even bake (it worked!)
ac3_tomahawk2_05.jpg


When it was hard enough to sand, I got to filing and sanding the half, down to 1000 grit sandpaper. I decided to keep the head fairly thick to keep it sturdy, obviously convention safe, and in case I wanted to try molding this thing on foam as a larp prop. It was designed so you won't notice unless you look at it edge on.

ac3_tomahawk2_06.jpg


A groove was cut into the poplar, and the head was slotted in. The pointed end was cut off, ad was replaced by the mdf one, since I thought it turned out well, and there as no point in remaking that AGAIN.. lots of bondo and sanding took place to make the sleeve (?). With more references, I thought I'd try the more angular approach, though I'm not sure if it was designed to be angular, or if it was due to games' polycount

(oop. just double checked, looks like deliberate design choice)

Though many spray paints eat Super sculpey over a shrt period of time, I've found that rustoleum's stainless steel pro paint doesn't, and also dries quickly, and can sand smooth without clogging up sandpaper. (also, tests with 0000 steel wool and buffing with a tshirt can produce really sexy results)

ac3_tomahawk2_07.jpg


Molding time! The last thing i molded (an ac1 short knife) leaked something godawful, so I tried out instead of just little locking channels and some keys, to put a groove around the whole danged thing. Non sulfur based clay, rebound 25, etclalalala. Also boxed it up with some of the tons of convention flyers that i used to horde after events were over to use to mix bondo and epoxies

(the little bit at the bottom is a sculpt for Connor's buttons, decided that he's on the eventual cosplay list)
ac3_tomahawk2_08.jpg


unclaying the first half. Yay! looks good so far!
ac3_tomahawk2_09.jpg


The other half was molded in Mold Max 30, cuz i ran out of rebound. The shrinkage is very slightly different (the molds wound up shrinking maybe about 1 mm more on the mold max half), but the grooves that were put in to align the halves make the difference between shrinkage rates inconsequential

ac3_tomahawk2_10.jpg


poured the first half, then once it set enough, I tacked some metal reinforcements down with crazy glue
ac3_tomahawk2_11.jpg


close er' up, pour, demold, yay! (also hella happy that i had added that "lip" in addition to the keys and grooves)
ac3_tomahawk2_12.jpg


demolding was fine, very little flashing to deal with, everything aligned right, good to go!. There's a bubble on one side though (oops!), so just plucked it off after demolding.
ac3_tomahawk2_13.jpg


did some refining sanding where needed, and theres a lil' undercut that i was able to easily putty up. (this image was one of the earlier tests that needed a lil more work)

ac3_tomahawk2_14.jpg


The handle was done by making a glove mold in a mailing tube that i cut in half (many dirty jokes were made during the molding process lol), and coated with packing tape on the inside. After demolding and pulling a cast (the mold is slid back into the tube and rubber banded to maintain alignment) , it too barely has seams to deal with. When casting it, I held a metal rod in until it set to reinforce the handle and provide a means of sturdily attaching the handle Here's photo of one after doing a test spray
ac3_tomahawk2_15.jpg


Some painting, leather wrapping, and weathering, and its complete! (sorry for the poor quality photos, good camera went AWOL :\ )
ac3_tomahawk2_done1.jpg


ac3_tomahawk2_done2.jpg


ac3_tomahawk2_done3.jpg


A quick comparison photo of the first tomahawk build, and the new one, once I got better references!
ac3_tomahawk2_donecompare.jpg


Looking forward to the rest of the costume, so many nifty new weapons to make!
 
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Re: Assassin's Creed III- Tomahawk (re)build

OliverqueenIND & Weaselhammer- thanks! I'm sorry I didn't cover the painting process mroe thoroughly, wound up in a work frenzy and I forgot. It was similar to the first build, but with some subsequent color washes.
 
oh man that is SIC!! I love these games so much and am super excited to play III. Simply immaculate work
 
Thanks superfreak & oculus! Super- You and me both, looking forward to Liberation as well, started a costume for that one a lil bit ago actually!

Bah, wound up ticked off with it, so I went back in and did more weathering, and killed that tan cord that was standing out too much.

tomahawkweathered.jpg


still want to poke at it, but think it would be best to stick a fork in this and call it done.
 
fevereon, I have long admired your Assassin costumes and masterful skills at prop making and leathercraft! Keep up the awesome, inspiring work!
 
Hi sonicfreak! when casting the handle, i held a threaded rod in it about an inch beyond the casting until the resin was set, then bored a hole into the axe head. It was then epoxied together. Hope that makes sense!
 
yes it did thanks. BTW I found this perfect stick for the tomahawk just need to work on the head and other decorative stuff thankfully my local blicks art supply has smooth cast.

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yes it did thanks. BTW I found this perfect stick for the tomahawk just need to work on the head and other decorative stuff thankfully my local blicks art supply has smooth on products.
 
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