Haunted Mansion Homage - Medusa Headpiece 1
Alright, let's recap some progress on the start of the costume making by talking about the Medusa headpiece. As a reminder, I used this pattern from cults3D (
link). Let's start with the 3D printer. I'm using a Bambu Labs P2S. The first choice I had to make was filament. I went with this Elegoo PETG transparent olive (
link). The thought process was I wanted green for the main base of the medusa head, and then I wanted it to be transparent to leave me the option of LED under-lighting. Additionally, PETG is strong and more resilient than PLA and thus it'll hold up better when the gears interact with each other. So that's what I printed the base piece, the gears, the bearing caps, and motor holder with.
Next up were the snakes. Since we're doing half in live snakes and half in stone snakes, I printed some in Bambu PLA white and the others in a Bambu Lab Silk Mystic Magenta (
link) that shimmers in purple and green.
The PLA Silk multicolor prints both colors at the same time, where as some of the other multicolors are gradients. Meaning they'll print blue, then green, then purple, then orange all in the same filament. So that means as the object moves from bottom to top it changes color. But for this print, I wanted the snakes to change colors as they rotate. So sometimes they look green and sometimes purple.
The instructions that came with the 3d pattern called for several other non-3D printed items. I needed some 6800ZZ Bearings (
link) and 3M x 10mm conical head screws with a pointed end. Although I couldn't find any 3M x 10mm screws with a pointed end at my local Ace, so instead used #4s which are very close in size. You screw the bearing (ordered) into the gear (printed) by using the bearing holder (3d printed) with the conical screws. This allows the gears to turn easily. Then you place all of the gears onto the base, and you can test their ability to spin.
Once I confirmed the gears were working as expected, then I painted the "stone" half in white. I used my airbrush set up and Alclad II White Primer #306 (
link). You can see in the first image I used green painter tape along the base headpiece to keep the white paint from the areas I didn't wanted painted. I painted it very lightly in white so that if I did LED under-lighting it would still show through.
Once all the necessary pieces were appropriately painted, then it was time to assemble everything with the 3M x 10mm conical head screws. The gear goes down, then a cap piece goes over the base piece and you screw the gear to the base. Be mindful not to screw this too tightly as it can't spin if you do.
Then you screw the snakes to the middle and corner gears. I paid attention to the color and direction of the snakes to make sure there was some variety. So sometimes I had to remove a gear and rotate it 20 degrees to get the direction to change, or to rotate the snake piece to get a slightly different look.
So the instructions call for a helmet liner to attach the headpiece to. This actually took a really long time to find. I ended up finding something similar to what the instructions had in their image on
Amazon (
link).
The instructions called for 3M x 30mm conical head screws with a flat end. But I found 35mm screws were needed based on the depth needed to go through the base plate and the liner. To help protect G's head we're going to use the same swim cap from the Anne from Amphibia costume, and it actually has a little snake like look to it (
link).
So far, I've not really made any edits to the 3d pattern, but now is where I deviated. I'll recap that in the next post.
Next post -