Sunday 13 January 2013

How to make Skyrim armor: Nightingale set with bow and sword










Hi, thank you for taking the time to read my post. This is how I made my Nightingale Armor and prop weapons. There are many ways to make this armor set, this is how I did it. I believe in sharing skills and abilities so I complied this set of photos with as much of a description as possible. I just learned how to sew and I don't know a lot of proper sewing lingo, so forgive me as I try to explain what I did as best I can.

Why I chose the Nightingale Armor from Skyrim: I love this armor set. I play Skyrim and when I got the armor as a quest reward I nearly peed my pants. "I'm Batman!" I yelled. I had not cosplayed in about a year so I decided late last summer to start planning and buying materials.

Materials I used:

Costume:
3 metres of black linen
3 metres of stretchy pleather/faux leather
1 metre of hard vinyl (I bought cheap white and blue materials because they were on sale. Do yourself a favor and just buy the black material that you need.)
4 spools of black thread
2 packs of hot glue
2 tubs of black acrylic paint
1 can of silver spray paint
Model Magic
6 buttons
1 "liquid leather" body suit
black gloves
countless small snaps and hook and eye sets

Bow
1 adult sized bamboo halloween costume bow
duct tape
cardboard
paper mache
craft foam
1 pack of Model Magic
1 can of verathane spray wood laquer
1 can of silver spray paint

Sword
1 halloween costume sword
1 pack of Model Magic
1 can of verathane spray wood laquer
1 can of silver spray paint

Arrows
wood doweling
Model Magic
black feathers
hot glue
black paint


Tools I used:
sewing machine
sewing pins, scissors and such
hot glue gun
paintbrushes
wood saw

Making the Armor

Reference Images

Screenshot I found online of the Nightingale Armor
The Nightingale Symbol

This appears to be a modified version of the armor which adds golden details. These details are black in the original vanilla game.


I bought all my materials and asked my mom to help me figure out how to compose the pattern for the top. She used to make a lot of costumes for me as a kid. Mentally I broke down the top part of the torso armor into 2 pieces, a collar and a corset style bodice. They would be connected by a series of straps that snapped on. Then scales would be individually added in a symmetrical layered formation.

 Mom suggested making a tube for the base of the bodice and then making each scale individually and sewing them on the tube top. I cut out each scale in paper first giving it a half inch extra width for the seams. I cut out 2 pieces of each scale from the stretchy pleather and sewed them front to front down 3 sides. Then I turned them right side out and tailored the edges. Every scale was mirrored so that I would end up with a symmetrical pattern on the other side.

Me wearing the body suit with my costume progress over top.



 The collar is really just 2 half circle shapes that I joined at their straight edges with a hole in the middle for my head. I added 12 straps and an additional scale to the collar to connect it to the now scaled bodice. White chalk was handy in marking sewing spots on the dark pleather.

The top after I sewed all the scales onto it. Here I was marking where the straps would be snapped into place.



I sewed the straps to the collar and then marked where to put little black snaps. I hid them under the point of each strap that attaches to the bodice. The straps were just two pieces of pleather sewn front to front like the scales and then turned right side out and tailored along the edges.


The skirt panels were sewn the same way as the scales of the bodice. Once I had them pinned in their correct order around my waist I just ran them under the sewing machine along the top.


To cover up the stitch lines on the collar I cut out the Nightingale symbol out of the hard vinyl and hand stitched it on.

The mask, arm, shoulder, and leg pieces were also cut from the stiffer white vinyl. I used little d-rings to be able to tighten the straps and make them adjustable.

Testing one of the leg pieces. They fit! 


The leg pieces being laid out for sewing.

This mask ending up being too small. I have since made a new one more akin to the original design.



The mask was super easy. I want to make more! I cut out a birdlike shape from the vinyl and slit it halfway down the middle. Then I overlapped the sides so the mask bent and fit my face. A little triangle was hand sewn to the top of the bridge to make it W shaped.

Once all the sewing was done I used hot glue to outline and create raised details all over the armor. I
used white chalk or markers to help with my lines.

**A note about the hot glue: It stuck to the vinyl and the pleather. But when I made a new mask out of a new black vinyl, the glue constantly peeled off. Test this technique out before you buy 3 metres of expensive vinyl. 





Without a body suit this armor looks pretty cool.
It's so versatile. I'm looking forward to photo shoots with
 different versions of the costume. 

I had to paint EVERYTHING black when the I was finished with the hot glue. Once I realized it all needed 3 coats on the front and back I regretted not buying black vinyl and pleather. But it was so cheap, I got it on a super discount!



After the black paint finally dried it was time to spray paint. In our garage I laid all the armor out and  sprayed silver spray paint onto a piece of paper towel and immediately rubbed it onto the armor. This gave the armor a tarnished look. The darkest black was in the recesses and any protruding details had a polished look to them. I also went back over the silver with more black paint to tone it town a little.

**Something I should mention: The chemical combo of painting vinyl with spray paint and acrylic never actually dries. It remains sticky forever. I dusted my armor with powdered cornstarch to fix the issue but it slightly alters the look of the armor. It becomes less glossy and more matte.

After some touch ups the costume was complete. Naturally I wore it around the house for hours and played Skyrim while wearing it :D

A rare photo of what the back actually looks like. 


Making the Bow



The bow took me months! Is was so big I had to clear off my whole work table to be able to work on it which couldn't happen very often as I had numerous other projects going on.

I had no idea what to make the base of the bow out of so I waited for halloween and bought an adult toy bamboo bow. I cut out pieces of cardboard to shape it onto the Nightingale bow and used duct tape to adhere them on. 

I used a small cardboard tube for the handle.


Then I made a batch of paper mache mix and applied newspaper strips all over. This was a very long process. It needed 3 overall coats but couldn't do the whole bow at once or it would stick to whatever was holding it up. Cracks started appearing about 4 days after it was placed somewhere to dry. These had to be patched with more paper mache and in waiting for the patched areas to dry more cracks would appear! Drove me crazy! I put Elmer's Glue in my paper mache mix and that seemed to have stopped the cracking.

My paper mache recipe: 1 cup of all purpose flour and just a little bit of water. You want the consistency be of a thick pancake mix. Less water the better. I put a lot of Elmer's Glue in the mix to make it stronger


Once the paper mache madness was over and the bow had been drying for about 2 weeks I drew all the detail lines on with marker. I then applied strips of Model Magic to the lines to raise them up. The little nightingale symbol was cut out of craft foam and adhered with Elmer's Glue.
Model Magic doesn't need any glue, its like playdough that self adheres to anything! Super handy. Its also very lightweight once dried.




After 2 days the Model Magic dried and I sprayed a coating of Verathane wood sealer onto it. Once this had also dried it had sealed and glossed the Model Magic so that it wouldn't be porous anymore and the spray paint would sit better on it. I'm not sure if I am explaining this correctly but without a sealer the Model Magic absorbs the spray paint and it still looks like foam. I wanted it to look like metal.

The spraypaint took a few days to dry. Once it was done I painted everything black except the Model Magic parts.

For some reason I decided to braid 3 lengths of stretchy rainbow bracelet cord for the bow string. I don't know why I didn't just get a black stretchy cord. I wanted to make things harder for myself I guess. After stringing the bow it was done.


The Sword

Reference Picture

The Nightingale Blade



Compared to the bow I'm glad the blade was so easy. I bought an adult sized halloween sword and hacked off it's hilt with a saw. Then I simply formed Model Magic around the pommel in the shape of the Nightingale symbol. I used hot glue for a few details on it. Verathane and silver spray paint were used on it as well. 


I made a Daedric quiver using the crappy quiver I got with my bow when I bought it. The added details are made from craft foam, Model Magic and hot glue. The quiver was treated in the same way as the armor; black paint, and silver spray paint. Arrows were made from hot gluing black feathers to doweling and painting them black. I made one really big epic arrow for photos. The tip is made of fired porcelain. I tried making the arrow heads out of Model Magic but they all broke off. 

For all the work I put into this costume I will enjoy cosplaying as a Nightingale for the next few years.

Wow if you read all the way to here THANK YOU for your time and I hope this blog was informative. Thanks you and keep on cosplaying!