great job. I hightly recommend speaker mesh fabric for the eye pieces, slightly denser fabric so your eyes will be hidden more, but still fine to look through. I use it for my kylo ren cosplay
What a beautiful piece you have created here. As others have already asked before me, do you sell reproductions of your mask? The attention to detail is spot on and I think this would look lovely as a centerpiece for a sith collection.
Well done this is excellent and you went the extra mile to make it out of aluminium, people are asking you to sell these but they would at least be looking at spending 800 dollars of one of these
very cool Video. How to see more soon :) 1 Question: is it a CTC or a Wanhao Printer? I own a diy MendelMax but I´m not very satisfied with it and I will buy a a new (ready to print) printer. But there are so many of them :)
That is exactly it. OffsetSurface. Rhino goes a little nuts when offsetting complex polysurfaces, so I had to spend several hours touching them up manually.
dont cook the accetone on a gasfire...........i wonder if you can do the accethone trick using a vacuum chamber , in a vacuum the cookingpoint goes down and in a vacuum chamber you dont loose the accethone once the atmosfere returns the accetone condences on the chamber wall
I find it's nearly impossible to get a glossy finish in a mold, and it IS impossible if you use a mold release. it's best to spray your pulls with a crystal clear gloss finish afterward.
+CaptainZapperz you can sculpt it with clay, just make absolutely sure there is absolutely no sulfur in the clay that you purchase. After the clay hardens and you are happy with the sculpt, you'll be at the stage where he had finished assembling the 3D printed components into the first version of the mask and you can proceed to mold just as he did.
In my experience, the quality and durability of the final casting is always much better than that of a treated 3D print. Molding allows you to cast the object in a more durable material, which you can also infuse with metallic powders to create realistic surface metal effects without the need to paint. For smaller costume accessories I sometimes use original sanded or acetone treated 3D printed parts, but for large items such as masks and helmets I always mold and cast..
+WhatYouWantToSee A digital model is no different than a physical mold sculpted by hand. Most artists that spend dozens of hours on their sculpts (be they digital files or physical molds) do not give them away. Some offer high quality files for sale, yes, but in my experience, most don't just share them.
+Blackluc if you are interested in a cast or a completed mask, send me an email through my site. Since this video was made, I have adapted this mask into a fully enclosed two-part helmet. You can see more on my website.
The character first appeared in the SWTOR game trailer "Hope" created by Blur Studio, and was titled the "Sith Acolyte". What you call "the Eradicator" mask was added as a wearable item to the actual game much later and was based on the variation of the "Sith Acolyte" mask as seen in the game trailer "Deceived". I made my mask based on the Sith Acolyte mask from the trailers, and not the "Eradicator" version you see in the game.
Litterly the coolest Mask i have seen in my life, seeing it in RL is just mindblowing
great step-by-step vid. thanks for showing your technique
I have seen you on Etsy and sent a message about the full helmet version. This thing is awesome, hope to hear from you soon.
great stuff here, I see passion I see craftsmanship..all the best Mynock's Den
That is some phenomenal work right there.
this is awesome really cool to see someone so dedicated
great job. I hightly recommend speaker mesh fabric for the eye pieces, slightly denser fabric so your eyes will be hidden more, but still fine to look through. I use it for my kylo ren cosplay
That looks sweet! Very crisp.
Holy crap dude. That is awesome. Well done.
Speechless, amazing work
Just fantastic! Great work.
Man... outstanding work
wow that looks badass great job
yeah man, this is way cool, you should make them so that some people (like me )would buy
That looks so amazing! Awesome man!
This is very great
What a beautiful piece you have created here. As others have already asked before me, do you sell reproductions of your mask? The attention to detail is spot on and I think this would look lovely as a centerpiece for a sith collection.
Great video!
amazing, looks 3d printed
Well done this is excellent and you went the extra mile to make it out of aluminium, people are asking you to sell these but they would at least be looking at spending 800 dollars of one of these
Benendes C you can buy a decent replica 60$ at xcoser.com
Do u sell then I would like to buy one.
Awesome work! love the video :)
really cool man, i want to learn 3D molding so hard XD
Wow. I have been looking for a mask tuturial and this is the best mask I have seen so far. Is there a way to download the 3d Model?
ive yet to see any 1 do a legit infinity gauntlet...nice mask
very cool Video. How to see more soon :) 1 Question: is it a CTC or a Wanhao Printer? I own a diy MendelMax but I´m not very satisfied with it and I will buy a a new (ready to print) printer. But there are so many of them :)
Hello my friend I was wondering what did you use to shade out the eyes in your mask?
Looks sick m8
awesome mask
Rhino for the win. Im assuming you used curve projection for all the raised areas?
That is exactly it. OffsetSurface. Rhino goes a little nuts when offsetting complex polysurfaces, so I had to spend several hours touching them up manually.
MynocksDen Props curve projection, then split, then offset surface.
2 thumbs up bro! wicked!
dont cook the accetone on a gasfire...........i wonder if you can do the accethone trick using a vacuum chamber , in a vacuum the cookingpoint goes down and in a vacuum chamber you dont loose the accethone once the atmosfere returns the accetone condences on the chamber wall
Awesome Job ! Really Impressed 👍👍👍
Subbed to your Channel 😎
Amazing🤟😁
I am wondering, how hard it is to craft one of the Dread master's masks?
this is like 4 years too late, but with a little thinners those paints in the little square jars are completely useable as airbrush paints
Could you polish the master in-order to get a mould with glossy finish?
How would you accomplish that with 3D-printed materials?
I find it's nearly impossible to get a glossy finish in a mold, and it IS impossible if you use a mold release. it's best to spray your pulls with a crystal clear gloss finish afterward.
how much for a sith acolyte full helmet and the shoulder armor?
I'd like to make a mask similar to this but a 3D printer is way to expensive for me, so how would I be able to do it?
+CaptainZapperz you can sculpt it with clay, just make absolutely sure there is absolutely no sulfur in the clay that you purchase. After the clay hardens and you are happy with the sculpt, you'll be at the stage where he had finished assembling the 3D printed components into the first version of the mask and you can proceed to mold just as he did.
good job man
would this process be possible with brass casting or with steel? just curious..
wow.. do you sell these??
I would pay so much for this
Tell me you've made Mandalorian Armour
not the best way? got the results man... bravo
how much would it cost me to have one made and mailed to me?
Can i buy 3d models or something?
Do you sell them id be willing to buy one
I want to buy this.... I don't own a 3d printer
Do you sell these by chance? If so I would like to buy a couple if you could let me know. Or at least buy one off you please get back to me sir.
do you buy this on ebay?
where can i buy this
could I buy an unpainted cast?
Do you sell these helmets?
please sir sell these but dont go crazy on the prices tho
Bro can u give me the cad u did
It would really help me make one
epic
if you already have the 3d print, why bother making a mold and casting, especially if its possible to smooth the lines off the print?
In my experience, the quality and durability of the final casting is always much better than that of a treated 3D print. Molding allows you to cast the object in a more durable material, which you can also infuse with metallic powders to create realistic surface metal effects without the need to paint. For smaller costume accessories I sometimes use original sanded or acetone treated 3D printed parts, but for large items such as masks and helmets I always mold and cast..
just do the smoothing process out side.
I want it
is there anywhere i can download the model
Unfortunately, I don't distribute my 3D files. Sorry!
+nicholas fotou
Theirs much better masks available to download from people who share them just look around.
+WhatYouWantToSee I can't find any
+WhatYouWantToSee A digital model is no different than a physical mold sculpted by hand. Most artists that spend dozens of hours on their sculpts (be they digital files or physical molds) do not give them away. Some offer high quality files for sale, yes, but in my experience, most don't just share them.
+Blackluc if you are interested in a cast or a completed mask, send me an email through my site. Since this video was made, I have adapted this mask into a fully enclosed two-part helmet. You can see more on my website.
Can you email me the CAD file?
It is eradicator's mask, not acolyte's
The character first appeared in the SWTOR game trailer "Hope" created by Blur Studio, and was titled the "Sith Acolyte". What you call "the Eradicator" mask was added as a wearable item to the actual game much later and was based on the variation of the "Sith Acolyte" mask as seen in the game trailer "Deceived". I made my mask based on the Sith Acolyte mask from the trailers, and not the "Eradicator" version you see in the game.
MynocksDen Props Ok, i see.
how the hell do you afford that printer thing?
There are companies that do the 3D-printing for you. "i.materialise" is probably the most known one.
Or you can buy one from xcoser and do the same method in the video and duplicate it
#faint #thud
GIVE IT TO ME.
You should try selling some of these since you have the mold already