Hey Brad if someone who had an Ollie Suit gave you a sample of the Lycra Material, would you be able to tell the methods he used to create one like that? I herd that since the colors on a suit are so rich some how he gets either the ink from a different country like Italy or Germany from what I herd.My molds, printing methods and general suit construction techniques are most likely different to Ollie's methods. I've never seen an Ollie suit in real life, only in pictures so no I cant make a suit the same as his.
Hey Brad if someone who had an Ollie Suit gave you a sample of the Lycra Material, would you be able to tell the methods he used to create one like that? I herd that since the colors on a suit are so rich some how he gets either the ink from a different country like Italy or Germany from what I herd.
A shame indeed if that is the case. I know there are people out making suits purely to make money from it, but there are definitely some others here that are just genuine spidey fanatics and are just into making suits for other enthusiasts (and only take money to cover the hours of toil and materials they put into making suits)
Hopefully there are still a few of the latter still reading and posting here. Just hoping for the same starting point as some of the folks with a few years experience on me!
please i need Olie's suit help me
As someone else said, this has become more display than information sharing. Sure there are some tips given here and there, but no one's going to summarize all 800 pages.
I'm tempted to do it just for giggles. either a summary or a "what do we know so far" thread.
I spent two days last week hand drawing a mask pattern on red lycra and sewing it. That's how desperate I have become to make my own suit.
I hope you'll take this the right way... seems like that's the way it should be done. Peter Parker didn't use vacuum forming, CNC milling or dye-sub. He constructed the entire costume in secrecy in his room. There's got to be SOME pride in creating something from scratch. Not to say that there isn't room for the "perfect" Spider-Man movie suit replica. 20,000 posts & 8 years later says there's PLENTY of room. You're just on the path less travelled. I designed made my 7-piece Spidey suit completely from scratch with no outside help. It was a challenge & certainly took a while (I'm still fine tuning the design), but the payoff was huge! Granted, I only wear it 2-3 times a year (comic-cons & Halloween), but it's a one of a kind, comic authentic suit. I guess what I'm saying is it CAN be done if you're up to it. If you are, you'll have something to be proud of at the end.
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That is one of the most simple and beautiful costumes in the whole thread. If I were at the helm I might make the eyes look a bit bigger/more movie-esque and i might add the muscle-printing technique...I hope you'll take this the right way... seems like that's the way it should be done. Peter Parker didn't use vacuum forming, CNC milling or dye-sub. He constructed the entire costume in secrecy in his room. There's got to be SOME pride in creating something from scratch. Not to say that there isn't room for the "perfect" Spider-Man movie suit replica. 20,000 posts & 8 years later says there's PLENTY of room. You're just on the path less travelled. I designed made my 7-piece Spidey suit completely from scratch with no outside help. It was a challenge & certainly took a while (I'm still fine tuning the design), but the payoff was huge! Granted, I only wear it 2-3 times a year (comic-cons & Halloween), but it's a one of a kind, comic authentic suit. I guess what I'm saying is it CAN be done if you're up to it. If you are, you'll have something to be proud of at the end.
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Feel to elaborate a bit further on how you made it?
Spidermilk, looking good! I should have a faceshell here in the next day or so from Yetter... can't wait!