Draenei Death Knight (World of Warcraft) Build Thread

Anniemee

New Member
Hey folks!

This was my 2016 project for Dragon Con. I started in February and "finished" it in the hotel at the convention. I plan to fix a few things, use fewer safety pins and less duct tape, and add a lot of detail between now and the next outing. This was my first time attempting an armor build, first time making a large prop, and first time working with lights! Many regrets and much leveling up was accomplished. I live in a small town, so all the materials I used are things available from Lowes or Walmart.


1YCNVyM.jpg
The Death Knight starting zone has always been one of my favorite quest lines in WoW, so I thought it appropriate for my first stab at armor production. I picked a Draenei because A. I mained one once upon a time and B. I felt like making horns!



G7Zu5YQ.jpgEs3I3yA.jpg
I started with the horns. I made giant piles of expanding foam and carved them down to shape, then covered in a layer of masking tape. I had issues getting the foam down to even points so added some twisted, packed newspaper at the ends. This was heavy and is a bad idea.... I then followed up with a layer of detail work in paper clay. These are way heavier than I intended, about 1.4lbs each.

K3zxAHU.jpg
Unpainted horns and makeup test. The horns are attached to a wire head piece made out of some gardening wire I had sitting around - not sure what gauge. The wig hides the less-than-pretty attachment. I upsized the horns from the in game model a bit - felt more epic and balanced with the real life height I was aiming for.

Uv25blU.jpg

I wanted accurate space goat height of around 7ft, so used Stepping Up bucket stilts (thanks, Wookie costumers!) to which I added aluminum struts for stability, and EVA foam pads at the base for quiet movement. These plus horns put me around 7ft 3in.

shFiqQF.jpg09RGbPM.jpgfZcSgLj.jpg

The armor started out as EVA floor mats from Lowes. I freehanded paper templates then used those as patterns to trace on the foam. The foam was then cut with box blades. Many blades gave their lives for this project. These are the start of the hip plates. I attacked them with a heat gun and held them in place until they kept shape. Proper respiratory protection was worn at all times. Cause fumes. Cancer is bad yo. Underneath the armor on the right are parts of the skirt panels. I burned the edges with actual FIRE for that authentic singed hell flame look.

tugHtkN.jpgR6wrUxW.jpgQp0j52R.jpgELjGhSD.jpgpAoQMEm.jpg

Complex curves are a byatch. I made two mirrored pieces. The curves were achieved with a combination of heat gun stretching, seams glued with contact cement, and mild profanity. For the detail work, I traced out the basic designs I wanted, then added some rope I had lying around for the base. The skull was made from Sculpey and baked. I regretted using this due to the weight and brittle nature... Details were added with puffy paint.

TMux7rD.jpg

Details were added via heating cuts in the EVA foam, and adding edges with craft foam. Googly eyes for rivets was my favorite new trick I picked up from here. I had a piece of twine under the triangles on the edge for that ridged effect.

zPjkLLt.jpg
Trying out the balance on my dressmaker dummy, which was stacked on top of multiple books and a cat litter box for proper height. This was knocked over several times in the costume making process.

B3pJnL7.jpg
Here are a few early stage decorative skirt armor pieces.
2sR2rTX.jpgs7Vx1ew.jpg0iBGM8z.jpg

All foam received 2-3 layers of woodglue, which was sanded, then 2 layers of plastidip. I found that plastidip, while making things more durable, tended to show any imperfections underneath. Hence the woodglue.

C2pYLOs.jpg


I made 20 of these tiny foam pyramids and glued my fingers together in the process. Doing this next to your gaming keyboard is a most excellent idea.

NBb6FJj.jpgBgz5K14.jpg
Pauldrons! Craft foam and puffy paint over EVA foam. This also received the wood glue + sanding + plastidip treatment.

XLEfUve.jpght4Zhaw.jpg

Painting was definitely my favorite part of the entire process. I used about 5-6 different metallic spray paints.
 
Aannnddd image cap. Whoops.

EdLrAgT.jpg

The belt started with a sculpey skull and paper pattern.

B1YfFcu.jpg
EVA foam for the base.

QkQQZUn.jpg
Puffy paint detail and paint was added. The fabric base is stretched over craft foam. The leather straps are faux leather from an old sofa. The rings (not yet installed here) are from a cheap shower curtain set.

xAPfD1K.jpg

Belt drapey thing. This is the piece that hangs from the front center of the belt. Its made from interfaced fabric. The runes are puffy paint with embroidery thread sewn over the top. I hand sewed all that blasted chain to the edge.

SFncNkg.jpg

Fiddled with a few cardboard mockups to size the sword.

7krLyqG.jpg
The center of the sword is made from the white poster board stuff you use for school presentations. The core is a combination of an old shower curtain rod I had lying around and a pvc pipe.

2avulUp.jpgtGS2wu0.jpg

I filled in the main body with expanding foam, then sanded it down and filled in gaps with DAP paste.

KFIWIyt.jpg
The base for the decorative decapitations was tinfoil covered in masking tape. I ran out of paper clay half way through so used model magic to sculpt the rest of the details. Do not do this. It stays rather squishy. :p

D14Bqzx.jpg
This is after lots of sanding, and filling gaps in the expanding foam with DAP drywall paste. The runes in the center are cut from another piece of foam poster board. The skull is sitting on top for sizing.

n13XDh3.jpg
I ran around Walmart with a string of battery powered Christmas lights and held them behind every material I could find until I found something that diffused like I wanted. The winner was a combination of 2 layers of quilt batting, 1 layer of crumpled plastic wrap, and a cut up clear blue folder from the dollar store.
EiQ6p5c.jpg

It was around this time that I realized I had 2 days until the convention. There are fewer pictures as a result of me being in headless chicken mode. This is after I plastidipped the entire sanded sword, then covered in in a bunch of different metallic spray paints.

MOONSkp.jpg
Lighting test! You can see the battery packs for the led strings at the bottom. I used 6 in the sword total. Three for each side + skull.

nFcvPMI.jpg
I tried wiring the eyes in the belt and chestplate to glow as well. Unfortunately I was rushed, and they don't show up well in photographs. This will be fixed in the future.

uvkZxV8.jpg
I worked to finish the sword in the con hotel room. The other thing I didn't get a chance to finish properly was the hood. It's getting remade at the first opportunity. I loved these special effect contacts! I managed to lose one between the first and second days. :(
(Yes, that is a slave Leia on my bed.)

br2FSKA.jpg

This was moments after I tried everything on together for the first time! I do not recommend going without trial runs before a convention. I had a momentary crisis when I realized that the industrial strength velcro holding several armor pieces on has a glue backing that doesn't play well with sweat. My friends helped me head back up to the hotel room and we quickly sewed on the velcro instead. Due to a few things being held together with duct tape, safety pins, and dark arts I elected to not enter any contests this year. Will fix her up properly and enter next time round!

OGYRnBV.jpg
The sword weighs about 15 lbs. This is way more than intended. You can see the hooves I added to the stilts last minute in this pic. They're also made from plastidipped EVA foam over an expanding foam base.
9bP6Fcq.jpgl4Ze2VQ.jpg

All together, this was an uber fun project!

Here's a short clip of the costume in action:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hnUGu64BOo4#t=02m22s
 
Back
Top