![]() ![]() Want something a little more obscure? Here’s the Ziggy Handlink Communicator from Quantum Leap. Some other ideas include a Starfleet communicator from Star Trek, a Multipass from The Fifth Element (there’s also a version that you can slip your actual ID into). There are other things as well: Link’s Hylian and Guardian + shields (although those might be a bit too large to print up on short notice). One of the coolest things that I’ve had printed up was a Sheikah slate from Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, which my son carried around last year with his costume. Maybe you have your costume squared away, but want something to carry around to complement it. Options include The One Ring from The Lord of the Rings necklaces for Game of Thrones’ Melisandre, Daenerys, or Margaery Tyrell Hermione’s timeturner from Harry Potter and Zelda’s bracelet from Breath of the Wild. Jewelry is also something that you can easily replicate pretty quickly with a printer. If the far-flung future isn’t your thing, maybe something from Game of Thrones will be more your style, and you can easily print up the pin for the Hand of the King. If you want a really deep-cut costume, try out the Psi Corps badge from Babylon 5. There are ones from the original series, Star Trek Voyager, Star Trek: The Next Generation, and Star Trek Discovery. If you’re going with a costume from Star Trek, there’s the classic combadges that you can add to your shirt. A good place to start is with a badge or rank indicator. The easiest type of costume to throw together is one pulled together from things you already have, with some additional things included. But you’ve got time, and we’ve rounded up a couple of ideas to help make your last-minute costume stand out. You’ll need sandpaper to smooth the surface, and paint to make it look like a finished thing. Printing up something will still require a bit of additional effort: anything that comes off the printer bed won’t look like a finished prop. Many local libraries or makerspaces have them. If you don’t happen to own a printer, don’t fret - it’s entirely possible that you could find one nearby. But even for those casual costumes, a detail piece can turn an outfit that you clearly threw together at the last minute into something memorable and cool - or even turn a non-costume ensemble into a costume.īut what if you can’t find or figure out how to make the item you need to complete the look? 3D printing is an ideal way to produce any number of costume details to make the whole thing stand out. Costuming is a hobby into which, in the pursuit of perfection, you can dump endless time and money, but for something like Halloween, not as much effort is required for something like a party or trick-or-treating. Over the years I’ve been building costumes, I’ve found one thing that really makes or breaks a costume: attention to detail. Halloween is just a couple of days away, and if you’re celebrating the evening, you’re probably throwing together some sort of costume for a party, or getting something squared away for your child.
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