Kyo62045

Kyo62045

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Things I've made for myself and others over the years, all in one convenient place. Also cosplay and miscellaneous pictures of interest. Lots of Pam...

09/29/2022

Looks like it's about that time again.

06/14/2022

Hey... Hey invisible zipper? EAT MY ENTIRE ASS!!

06/08/2022

Hey y'all! Remember when I thought 89 pins was a lot? 168 pins would like a word...

06/04/2022

89 pins later, and this s**t is ready to sew. Tomorrow.

06/03/2022

Me: "Howtf am I going to get everything done that's already on my plate?"

Also me: Decides to make something wholly unnecessary, spending multiple days on it, and fu***ng off all the other things I'm already supposed to be doing.

BUT IT'S GONNA BE CUTE!

06/01/2022

Serger is serviced.
Machines are oiled.
My machines are ready. My body? Not so much.

BRING ON CON SEASON πŸ™ƒπŸ₯΄πŸ”«

05/30/2022

My first...anything creative in a while. Added an extra level of security for my fiancΓ©'s cards before pool cons kick off for us again. Quickest, dirtiest zipper I've ever inserted.

10/02/2021

A little late, but looks like it's about time to fire up this template again.

08/03/2021

Overwatch can do a real 180 from wholesome sometimes. No, I do not have the ability to take steady video πŸ™ƒ

Photos from Kyo62045's post 05/26/2021

Hey guys. Remember when we used to think the pricing for the Kalahari Resorts was ridiculous?

$406.77 vs $999.99

What a difference five years can make.

01/28/2021
Ram Horns Pattern 10/02/2020

Can't pin the OG post (thanks, fb πŸ™„), so here's yet ANOTHER share.

The graph paper I used was 4 squares per inch.

Hey all. Here's that horn pattern I mentioned. Thanks so much for your patience. Steps are also in the description of relevant pics.

Kyo62045's Ram Horns!

What you'll need:

- craft foam
- maybe a ruler?
- pencil or pen
- your preferred cutting implement(s)
- craft glue gun (a full size glue gun is way too big for the fiddly bits)
- SO MUCH HOT GLUE
- 14 or 16 gauge wire (hit up a hardware store for this)
- wire cutters
- cardboard
- plastic hairband
- electrical tape
- paint (I used crap dollar store paint. If you do too, seal it. It might crack)

Steps:

1. Print and cut out the pattern, enlarging or shrinking it to your heart's content. I shrunk my personal set to 80%, and it worked out pretty ace.

2. Lay out on your foam. The curved lines make it a little easier to line up your pieces for a good twist in your completed horns. So either trace them lightly on your foam, or don't, and make the style your own. If you're using the curved line, make sure you cut out mirrored pieces for each side. The pattern itself is for a left horn.

3. Cut out your foam, cursing the craft foam gods for having to cut out so many goddamn rectangles.

4. Hot glue edges together to form rings, keeping the glue on the outside as clean as possible, so you don't have issues fitting the rings on each other. If it's messy, use your glue gun's tip to re-melt the glue a bit, and smear it around as flat as possible.

5. Cut 2 lengths of wire about 2' to 2-1/2', so you have a bunch left to use for mounting.

6. Fill piece #2 with hot glue, ignoring that there's no piece #1 (because I forgot to re-number my pieces at any point while making two sets of horns. smrt), and insert one end of a wire into it along the seam. Working on both horns at the same time is better, because you can tweak symmetry as you go.

7. Add piece #3 by sliding it down the wire and onto piece #2, lining up seams. If you're using the curved lines, the pieces are numbered in a "this side up" kinda way. Except for piece #17. Pointy side down.

8. Hot glue INSIDE the ring, along the edge where both pieces meet.

Hot glue the wire to the seam for stability. I put a bunch of glue under the wire, and wiggled it around until the wire was covered.

Repeat this step for all those goddamn pieces until you get to the end.

9. Try not to burn yourself. Burn yourself a lot.

10. Cut a piece of cardboard that fits against the edge of piece #16. This'll help with stability so your horns don't smoosh. Might take a bit of trial and error. I totally forgot to make a pattern piece for this step, oops.

11. Glue the cardboard piece to the edge of piece #16, inside piece #17. You might need to bend the wire a little creatively to get the cardboard to sit flush. Again, trial and hopefully no errors.

12. Use the wire that's left to attach your horns to a hairband. Run the wire along the top of the hairband once you've figured out how you want them to sit, bending when necessary. [no pics]

13. TIGHTLY electrical tape the ever living s**t out of the area the wire sits. Trim excess wire. [no pics]

14. Hot glue where horns meet hairband. [no pics]

15. Paint your horns however you want.

Any questions, or for higher res patterns, feel free to message me.

Hope this helps out with some spooky times :)

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