10 Attachment(s)
Forgotten Hero (lots of pics)
Hey all! When FJK made the contest posts, i knew i wanted to push myself and make an entry. I wasnt very confident in my original designs, and only owning a dremel and mouse sander, i wasnt sure what id be able to contribute. But there was this one saber from SWTOR that i was always fond of. Even if i couldnt replicate it, i could surely try make it my own.
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So i began drafting this saber, that i had yet to name. I drew up a few sketches for shroud design and overall hilt configuration.
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I finally settled on a design i liked, and sent an email to TCSS for a custom lathed blade holder and long choke. AND WOW, they turned out better than i had imagined. You can stare at a picture all day and think youre ready for that final product, but once it jumps off the page and into your hands, its a kind of awesome that is hard to describe. BIG BIG shout-out to Tim and the rest at TCSS for their amazing work!
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With custom work in hand, i had to start my shroud. I used a graflex template for the scale and curvature, so the shapes would appear familiar to the eye, without being a copper graflex (though i might make one of those someday, i like working with the copper). I also was heavily inspired by Qui-gons shroud, specifically the small cutouts on the back or spine of the saber.
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So during this whole build i had been racking my mind for what the "theme" of this saber would be. Flushing out a character for the weapon would help me decide if it would be weathered or polished, what color my blade would be, even what sound font id want to use. I was pretty sure i wanted to weather it. As anyone who recognized my forum pic and signature can guess, im a big fan of the Sith Warrior in SWTOR, and the mission to loot your first saber from a dead sith masters tomb is one of my favorite missions. But the saber you get in game is clean and pretty, and doesnt look like its been neglected for hundreds of years next to a rotting corpse. So i had to dirty this hilt. A lot.
I started with a salt and vinegar bath for my copper bits. I used just normal store bought stuff from target, and left my convertec, shroud and even my kill key to soak for about three hours. That gives the vinegar time to eat the outermost layer of the copper and infuse it with a little salt. It doesnt quite etch it away just yet. After letting the copper soak for a few hours, you have to let it dry, THIS is where the weathering happens. the drying copper and salt mixture reacts with air, and gives a crazy looking patina. I wrapped my shroud in a vinegar soaked and salt encrusted paper towel, and just let it cook itself for about two weeks, occasionally adding more vinegar so it could etch more deeply. It turned out perfect and my kill key, shroud, and convertec knob matched!
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Over the two weeks that my copper was cooking, i had an idea for my "theme". My favorite Tolkien character is Turin Turambar, the Black Blade of Nargathrond. His father Hurin led an army against the first dark lord, Melkor, Tolkiens version of Lucifer. Hurin was captured, and as punishment for his "defiance" Melkor cursed Hurins children to have horrible lives and magically forces Hurin to watch as they suffer. However, Hurins son, Turin, grows up to be an Aragorn level BEAST, killing everything Melkor throws at him. For those who havent read the Silmarillion, i wont give away the end of Turins story, but he has a speech to his sword (which is SUPER EVIL. Good guy with an evil weapon.) He says, "Hail Gurthang! No lord or loyalty dost thou know, save the hand that wieldeth thee. From no blood wilt thou shrink."
So i decided to etch that on my saber. "No Loyalty, save the hand that wields me." I used Tolkiens Dwarvish script because i liked it, I used a layer of nail polish as a resist, and carved the runes by hand with an etching tool. then to age it all i took a 9volt battery and salt water etched it further.
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Next step was to build my blade plug. Id wanted to make a razor head plug for a while, but all the ones id seen online were clean and new. My old razor was gross and aged... and PERFECT. I used by dremel to lightly remove the nubbins that stuck off the razor head, and to slightly sand the end of a few inches of blade stock until it could just pop on. I traced and cut out a bit of printer paper and glued it onto the back of the shaver head with a "dries clear" elmer gluestick. I then traced and cut out more printer paper and glued that onto the back of the whole blade plug. Now its double diffused and suitable for color mixing! (i hate it when my blade plug shows the two different LEDs.)
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