Introduction: Star Killer Jedi Costume the Force Unleashed 2: Trailer Version
this fine Instructable i will be showing how to make Star Killer from The Force Unleashed 2: trailer version.
My build was fairly complicated. it had several layers of paint, weathering as well as forming, glueing, leather work, sewing and a large assortment of other materials.
I built this for fun, for the rebel legion and to test my costuming skills.
the total cost of this project was $800+ and was a labor of love for more then 11 months
the hard goods (Armor) were made from E.V.A Foam (a tutorial on that will be linked soon) the rest was made of either leather i order from online or like the soft goods such as the sweater, pants...etc can be modified from retail and joann fabrics.
what youll need:
Safety glasses
gloves
E.V.A foam
Athletic fit sweat pants. (american apparel)
V-neck Ribbed Sweater (calvin klein)
shoes (toms)
grey denim
black denim
hot glue gun (high temp)
spray paint (black, white primer, light blue, silver metallic)
black acrylic paint
Dremel
sand paper
sissors
xacto or heated knife
assorted buckles and clasps
vinyl tubing
brown vinyl
soldering iron
poster board
http://youtu.be/1o_ED1yKbx4
Step 1: Soft Goods (Shirt and Pants)
theres plenty of soft goods on this costume but not a lot of sewing is required, well start with the pants and shirt.
youll need a pair of fitted black athletic pants and a ribbed grey sweater (you can sew it into a V-Neck later)
i got my pants at American appeal. i made the pockets separate with a half yard of athletic fleece. the pockets are 5"x5" with a flap style top. you can sew the top shut but its nice to have pockets during conventions and the like. the loin cloth is denim due to it being a different texture in the reference picture. i measured this to fall right above the knee and wrap my entire waste. the front piece is slightly thinner then the rear piece measure it according to your body and waste, put it inside and sew it to the pants from the inside so give it a couple extra inches on the top. get a seam ripper or some scissors and hack at the pants and pockets a little bit then wash them and they will fray out to have the damaged look.
the loin cloth was weathered the same way.
i got the sweater at Calvin Klein during the fall months. this was a nightmare to find but i eventually found it at macy's. mine was a little big so i fitted it a little by sewing darts inside and fixing it to a vneck. poke some holes in it wash it then spray paint it here and there with some light blue and black paint. and wash it again. this will fade the paint and stress the tears.
Step 2: Soft Goods ( Wraps, Gloves and Shoes)
the wraps, gloves and shoes are fairly simple as well.
the arm wraps are 2 yards and the shin wraps are 3 yards. its a grey denim fabric with the smooth side out. i had sewn the edges of mine so they didn't fray apart in the wash. they vary in size from 2 to 3 inches wide. i wrapped them around my arms and painted them up with black a blue spray paint (same as the shirt and pants) then i cut some random holes in it and put that in the wash for the weathering effect.
the gloves i got were from a marching band website, drum core gloves specifically. they need to have leather like fingers and suede like palm and thumb. the wraps can be attached very simply by hot gluing the wraps to the wrist part of the gloves. it also has a small piece of armor on it but well get to that later.
the shoes are grey canvas toms. they are supposedly brown leather but i couldn't find any pictures to represent that. do the same thing with painting and tearing holes for the weathering.
Step 3: Hard Goods (making the Templates and Patterns)
this was a task in it self because no templates or patterns were made at the time and i had to convert the sizes from a 6' character to my height of 5'9" so there are not perfect.
from left to right its the shoulder pauldron bicep piece, shoulder top piece, hand guards, belt buckle: together and apart, back chest plate, and belt pieces.
making the templates out of poster board is a great way to see how they fit on you and you can easily alter them to how you see fit. its also a good idea to make the marks as i did where the level would change and detailing are.
Step 4: Hard Goods (cutting and Shaping)
this is where a steady hand and glorious soldering knife comes in.
this process is exactly the same for all the pieces and is very straight forward:
-put your template on the eva foam and out line it.
-against a hard surface or another piece of foam using your xacto knife or hot knife cut the foam out in the out lined shape, remember to keep the blade straight or your edges will have a slant to them.
-once you cut them all out take your dremmel and grind the edges flat with the low grit sand paper bit as well as the larger detailing specifically the bicep piece and hand guards.
-hot glue the piece that need to be attached.
-use a normal soldering iron attachment to make the detailing in the armor bits. (PRACTICE THIS BEFORE YOU ATTEMPT!)
-once the edges are even and the detailing is done take your finest grit bit or polish bit and smooth the edges of the foam out, you can also do this by running the soldering iron over it lightly and quickly and hand sanding works too. this will seal the foam so it doesn't burr with the paint.
-after all that take your heat gun and slowly work what you need into shape, to make certain shapes such as rounding use the soldering iron to make lines into the foam with out going through then heat up the foam and repeat till its the desired shape.
-be sure you use the heat gun to treat the top side of the armor so it seals and smooths the foam for paint
-cut slots on the sides and top of the back plate so the harness can be fitted inside.
shaping takes many attempts so don't stress and take a couple days to get the perfect shape. once thats done use your dremmel and let is grind and skip around the armor so it looks scraped, dinged, and damaged.
Step 5: Painting the Hard Goods
annoyingly enough i forgot to take pictures of this but its simple enough.
once the pieces are shaped get your paint. i used a black primer and a matte silver (both krylon) be sure to stick to the same paint if you want best results. i put a couple coats of the primer on let it set for a day then did the silver with the same process. after it was set i took some black acrylic craft paint globed it on there and took some paper towel and rubbed it over it took it got the look shown if you let it set for about 10 seconds and then wipe it again itll trap in the holes and edges you made earlier but stay shinny on the un damages parts (as shown).
Step 6: Leather Work
now this can be as difficult or easy as you make it im no leather worker that for sure.
i ordered a bunch of different size straps from a leather supply company in a chocolate brown. i went the easy way cause i dont have a sewing machine capable of sewing leather. start measuring your body: middle thigh, waist, chest shoulder to pectoral, and abdominal.
once you get the leather treat it with rubbing alcohol and lotion to cure it again. this will make it supple and easier to work with.
go to joanns or your craft store and get clasps, buckles and O rings depending on your size of the leather you got mine were mostly 2" and 2.5" label all your straps on the opposite side to keep track which is which. then based on the reference pictures start laying out what they look like its very straight forward and easy once you get into it. use duct tape to make a temp hold to make sure the harness fit right before glueing or sewing. i used E-6000 glue cause leather cement is rubbish, hot glue does work but doesn't hold the treated side very well. alternative to E-6 glue is show goo or a glue that is flexible in strength so stay away from super glue. hot glue worked great for attaching the buckles.
i used 2, 2" buckles for the leg rig and the center belt buckle hidden behind the eva foam buckle and the large pouch.
Step 7: Assembly
start putting all the pieces of the puzzle together
hot glue the back plate to the leather straps through the slots you made previously, then use elastic straps to attach the pauldrons to the leather harness with e-6 glue and attach all Velcro straps and foam pieces to the harness. pretty straight forward here just keep fitting it to your self and working it in a way that's easy for you to put on.
Step 8: Finished Product
this is the finished product! still haven't had to get some decent pictures but here's a picture of me with sam (the model of the character and voice actor) as well as a picture of 2012 dragon con!
hope you enjoyed reading and hope you give your star killer armor a try!
feel free to check Towering productions out at our other projects on our face book page and like me!
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Towering-Productions/264942270203718

Participated in the
Halloween Epic Costumes Contest
20 Comments
9 years ago on Introduction
This helps a lot I've been looking everywhere for a decent tutorial thanks man
Reply 9 years ago on Introduction
I'm gonna be updating it soon but in the mean time if you have any questions feel free to reach me anytime on my Facebook page. https://www.facebook.com/ToweringProps
Its much easier and quicker to get back to questions on there.
cheers.
7 years ago on Step 8
Just stumbled accross this dude, nice job, Im a HUGE starkiller fan and even better you got the pic with Sam Witwer AWESOME
Reply 7 years ago on Step 8
Haha thanks its been completely redone since this tutorial but thanks!
Cheers!
-Titus
Reply 7 years ago on Step 8
Wicked, deffo get some pics up
8 years ago on Introduction
Haha thanks for the reply. Patience is the thing I found is most necessary for the shoulder piece. It took 3 tries but I got it. Seems like I came to the same conclusion as you when shaping it, doing lots of heating and shaping sessions. I thought maybe you had a quick easy way that I was totally missing. Thanks again for the reply and all your instructions.
8 years ago on Introduction
i am working on this build as we speak and your guide has helped a lot. The only thing i was hoping for that it doesnt have is a how to on certain parts. For example. getting the shape on the shoulder piece has been a nightmare and i dont know how you were able to get in in "about an hour" a video or picture directional on how to shape it would have been amazing. Also for other parts like the weathering and damage. I hope you understand how much i truly appreciate this tutorial and how much it has helped me, i have just found there are parts of this "how to" that are missing that would be a huge help. Keep up the awesome work and thank you for everything
Reply 8 years ago on Introduction
Hello! Creating the shoulder piece was difficult cause the material doesnt want to actually make that shape. It is as described though you just have to keep heating it and bend it till it takes its shape. Start by making the crescent then trying to bend the other side upwards. Its hard but with patience itll take shape. Other wise I have another tutorial here that may explain the other parts better for you. https://www.instructables.com/id/Creating-a-CostumeCosplay-from-EVA-Foam/
9 years ago on Introduction
Hey man, great Job!!! I am currently making a Jedi trooper, and might use this as a good starting point!!! I have a similar build style, so this will help greatly!!! Again awesome Job!!!
Reply 9 years ago on Introduction
Thank you sir! feel free to contact me if you have any specific questions! https://www.facebook.com/ToweringProductions
10 years ago on Introduction
Thanks! And the con is during this coming August
Reply 10 years ago on Introduction
well great! i was planning to post the updates next month after the holidays. so check back soon. cheers!
10 years ago on Introduction
I've taken a look and it made me wanna watch the trailer over and over and know I'm planning on making it for Fan Expo that's being held in Toronto.
Great Instructable mate!
Reply 10 years ago on Introduction
thanks and best of luck! i've had a few changes to get it as close to screen accurate as i can (back plate is a leather brown with black weathering, loincloth is a dark grey, and the boots are dark brown/black leather i used "jungle boots". when is the con? just making sure i can post the fixes before you get to far. best of luck!
cheers
10 years ago on Introduction
This Instructable should have lots more views?
Reply 10 years ago on Introduction
luck of the draw i guess, im hoping since its in the epic costumes challenge itll get more hits from voters.
10 years ago on Introduction
Nice, did you make those lightsabers?
Reply 10 years ago on Introduction
i did really simple too, and thank you for reminding that i forgot a step. i had access to a metal lathe so it was pretty easy to do them.
10 years ago on Introduction
That is pretty awesome!
It would be very hard to make though.
Reply 10 years ago on Introduction
well thanks, yah it took about a year to put together.... im putting up a separate, detailed EVA foam tutorial so stay tuned for that!