
3D-printed props for cosplay & display, as well as 2D designs~!
310 posts
More Epic Cosplayers At @animatemiami! (Part 2/3)










More epic cosplayers at @animatemiami! (Part 2/3)
-
creepycosplay liked this · 10 years ago
-
hotpieceofcandy reblogged this · 11 years ago
-
mutt-online reblogged this · 11 years ago
-
elsathelovingsister liked this · 11 years ago
-
pale-horchata liked this · 11 years ago
-
z-enobias liked this · 11 years ago
-
xlivingdeadxx liked this · 11 years ago
-
sayaloura liked this · 11 years ago
-
ladiablesse reblogged this · 11 years ago
-
sirensorisons liked this · 11 years ago
-
n3rdyg0ggles liked this · 11 years ago
-
hauntier liked this · 11 years ago
-
cloudypoudy-blog liked this · 11 years ago
-
beamthechao liked this · 11 years ago
-
lukellios liked this · 11 years ago
More Posts from Vaguelygenius
How to paint your 3D-printed Millennium Items (and maybe non-3D printed ones if you like)
This is a little (hopefully) informative post about how I painted my 3D-printed Millennium Items~!
I did a little research beforehand and what I found most commonly recommended was to do a coat of plastic primer, then glossy black (the chemicals that make the paint glossy force the paint to make a nice smooth surface, which is what is critical for getting a metallic gold look rather than a sparkly gold look), and then the metallic gold.

The Ring looks pretty sick in black too though, tbh.

There's no appreciable difference between the one that had the primer and the one that didn't, so I wouldn't bother. Note that these models are the White, Flexible and Strong Polished kind, I don't know how well this process would work on an unpolished piece.

Notice that these seem more glittery than actually metallic. They just have a coat of metallic gold. I didn't want to risk giving them too many coats of paint and accidentally filling in the tiny details.
I tried sealing one of my Millennium Eyes with glossy sealant, and it really dulled the paint, so I ended up painting over it. Some people swear by epoxy glaze, though I didn't have the budget to give it a try (plus I didn't want to risk getting the Ring's pointers stuck).
So, these are the paints I used: Rust-oleum Metallic Finish Spray (in Gold) Rust-oleum Ultra Cover x2 Glossy Black (it might be either the Painter's Touch brand or the American Accents brand, but definitely has to have the Ultra Cover x2 Glossy bit)
I got them at the local Walmart Supercenter. If there aren't any Walmart Supercenters in your area, Home Depot and other hardware/home repair and painting stores should have it. If you can't find these particular brands, then try looking under the Krylon brand, those were also highly recommended. I bought a can of the Krylon gold with the Rustoleum, though I forgot to do a comparison painting. Either should do the trick though!
Once you have your paint, give the item a coat of primer (if you want to), then a coat of the glossy black paint, then two coats of the metallic gold. Before painting, check the can to see how much time you'll need to wait between coatings, and follow it religiously! The best thing would be to only give it a coat of paint per day, to make sure everything is 100% dry.
If you're painting a tiny, doll-sized item and you're sure you can give it very thin coats, then try a coat of glossy black and one of gold. If you're not that confident or it has moving parts, like the Ring, one coat of gold should be fine, though you'll get the more of the glittery look.
Protips: The Eye is best painted by slipping a thin stick through the pupil so it is suspended like a lollipop. Hang the Ring on a line so you can spray from every angle- air movement should keep the pointers from sticking together, and if it doesn't, jingle the line a little periodically.
If you're a total newbie to spray-painting (like me), here are some helpful tips and a pair of tutorials~!
Hopefully, this is helpful, though I'm curious: do any cosplay veterans know of better ways to get a nice metallic sheen onto a prop?
Okay, so I’ll fess up- my first attempt at a Millennium Ring ended up with it disintegrating in the parking lot of the con and starting what would probably be called “The Mystery of the Golden Chili Peppers”.
So I decided to put my engineering education to good use and make a 3D model! And I took…

Painting up some millennium items~
EDIT: Head over here to get some for yourself~


Tried my hand at drawing ponies and I think they came out okay!
You can get this design on a t-shirt, hoodie, or sticker too~

Suddenly inspired to draw the Yu-gi-ohs as Pokemon! Please forgive the awful sketchiness! Might make a nicer version that has some actual effort put into it.
The breakdown is:
Mawile Mai, Simisage Tristan, Growlithe Joey, Kirlia Tea, Yamask Yami Yugi (without mask or memories of his past life), Dragonair Seto, Togetic Yugi, Malamar Marik, Pumpkaboo Ryou (oops, forgot his antenna!), Zoroark Bakura (with Odd Keystone instead of an orb on his ponytail), and Deino Mokuba.
I really like the idea of Yami Yugi being a Yamask missing his mask, so then his goal (and by extension, Yugi's) is to find his mask and recover his memories.
And I think Yugi'd be part of the Togepi line because he tends to bring happiness and optimism wherever he goes.
Pumpkaboo suits Ryou because they carry wandering spirits to where they belong, and I think it's pretty widely speculated that he has a pretty strong link to the Thief King.
Malamar are the Pokemon experts of mind control, perfect for manipulative Marik. Since Yami Marik is a split personality rather than a completely separate entity, his presence would probably be made clear by Marik flipping upside down.
And Bakura would be Zoroark, the master of illusions and deception. The Odd Keystone traps the 108 souls that make up a Spiritomb, so that would probably be the 99 villagers and Zorc + 8 others ??
Think it's fitting/interesting?