Get some neodymium magnets. You can get sets with several sizes. They hold things in place pretty well.
I just redid a major part of a project I'm working on too. They sit there and taunt you "This isn't 100% accurate..." until you have to fix it. :lol
I ended up sacrificing a bit of accuracy for comfort, sigh. It doesn't look that much different though.
Ok so I just made this account just to say this but
Your Femshep armor is AMAZING! It looks so legit and I just spent the last 2 hours reading everything in this thread!
I am (as my first cosplay or a convention) doing a femshep cosplay ad was looking for ways to do it seeing I have one year to make it. Your painting technics are so helpful and I hope it's ok that I am using some of your pictures as reference. Thanks again and keep up the good work!
~Skyyler
Of course, that's why I post them. :thumbsup
I have a rather exciting dilemma, which I probably wont even refer to as a decision anymore because I kind of made up my mind.
I ordered some more auto-vinyl (BECAUSE I CAN'T GET ENOUGH OF SHINY STICKERS), and planned to use this brushed-metal stuff on a few of the brighter metal accents on the suit (like the spine templates and gloves). One foot of it is like 4' wide, though, so I have a ton extra.
I was pretty happy with how it looked after a bit of weathering. Right off the roll its a little brighter than I wanted for the suit...
...but since I had extra, I began to wonder what it would look like on the rifle.
I just slapped it on there. This stuff is much more flexible than the carbon-fiber kind I used earlier. So excuse the shabby trim work, this was a test.
This is on the side where the resin-skin texture is not finished, and I haven't painted a whole lot of the stock piece. It has just one rolled coat of silver paint so if I ended up not liking it, there wasn't a huge loss of glaze painting that I began on the other side of the grip. Have to say I really like the way the brushed metal vinyl looks when it is weathered. Didn't spend a long time dirtying it up and it already looks like it belongs there (at least in my opinion). It takes glazes very well, and looks awesome from different angles. You could get something very close to this by using paint and steel wool or a coarse brush, but the nice thing about this is that the gloss/sheen is exactly as reflective as brushed metal. That's tricky to get, when you work subtractively.
The stock piece will be the first section I try to do next, because the curves on that half of the rifle will determine if this vinyl actually works as a believable surface.
Just looking at this part done though makes it look a lot heavier than it actually feels in my hand, which is definitely a quality I like.
Thoughts? Feel free to disagree with me. Most of the screen shot references you will see of this don't exactly have enough detail to determine if the main body sections are brushed metal, but since it has that bright aluminum appearance in contrast with the black, I think it's a safe design choice in terms of accuracy. (But I've said before, because I'm working from video game stuff, real-life details are more important to me than faithfullness to a render).
My soldering stuff came in the mail today, so I now can finally attempt to do some LED wiring for this thing.