A while back I was working on my girlfriend's Captain Phasma costume and decided I'd like to have something appropriate to wear alongside her. Since we'd probably be going around without another person to act as handler, it was important to make sure that I'd be able to use my hands and be more mobile in order to help her with any issues she might have in her very movement restricting outfit. It would also be good to have pockets.
Somewhere along the way I settled on this guy:
This is Baron Elrik Vonreg, a First Order TIE Fighter Pilot during the era of the New Republic with the rank of Major. He was a regular character in the animated series "the Resistance." In the show he reported to Captain Phasma. Apparently the rank structure of the First Order is very different from what I'm used to in the US military.
At a glance, he looks like a somewhat modified version of the standard First Order TIE pilot with a different helmet and chest box. I'd made a lot of TIE pilots, so this should be a piece of cake. I'd just need a new red flight suit and I'd be off to the races.
As is usually the case, shortly after a shiny new character appears on screen for the first time, the Star Wars costuming crowd swings into action. Dissecting every detail of the costume and poring over every shot from every imaginable angle, it's only a matter of time before someone starts offering casts of the helmet and armor parts.
So in no time at all, I'd ordered a tailored red flight suit from Gio at crowprops.com and a raw cast helmet from the very talented Jsin Dieron, of Jsinprops.com. Shortly after the helmet arrived, I had it trimmed and prepped for paint:
About that same time, I got the digital models for the remaining custom parts from my friend Danny Chen. The chest box and belt boxes were printed pretty quickly:
Then I commenced to goofing around. As I do:
With the helmet trimmed, the least I could do is give it a coat of primer:
Then paint it red:
Major Vonreg's outfit has three different shades of red (if you don't count the red glowing buttons on his back). The red pictured above turns out to be none of them. This was a red I had left over from the Makey Robot build that was way too orange to match the logo he was based on. It was also way too orange for Major Vonreg. One of these years I'll find a use for this red.
In any case, that's as far as I got with this project before it was sidelined by some other more important project.
That was in 2019.
Then this project was sat on the backburner waiting for a reason for me to finish it. Since then, the character died in the series, the world took a two year break from doing cool stuff, and I've been busy with every manner of other thing.
Fast forward to 2022. We were gearing up to go to Star Wars Celebration in Anaheim. The convention had been postponed for two consecutive years due to the COVID19 pandemic and I was really excited to go out and play dress-up again. To prevent myself from getting carried away and making everything stressful for no good reason, I had resolved that I wouldn't build anything new for this convention. I could get away with just dusting off finished things and make the trip nothing but fun and easy.
I failed to keep that particular promise to myself. The compromise I reached was, rather than building anything new, I would just finish some of the works in progress that were tucked away in and around the shop. So I pulled out the old First Order TIE Pilot molds, laid up a fiberglass chest, back, and shoulders, and got to work modifying them to work as Major Vonreg's armor. Step one was grafting the chest box onto the chest:
There was also a raised section on the back:
Just to gauge proportions, I went ahead and set the shoulders in place:
So far so good:
Once I'd smoothed out the border area around the chest box, I gave it all a couple of coats of red filler primer:
The results, with a tiny bit of cleanup the parts were ready for paint:
The forearms were a pair of my standard First Order TIE Pilot forearms with the top edge trimmed down and a pair of triangular details added on the backside of the wrist end:
The shins and knees were basically just 3D printed parts that I smoothed out and used as-is:
Once everything was sanded and primed, I laid out all of the parts that would be painted the darkest shade of red:
They came out pretty great:
You'd never guess that the chest was a kludged together collection of three different materials:
Once that red was dry, I went ahead and sprayed the lighter red:
The lighter red parts were basically just the helmet the top of the shoulders for some reason:
Why the production decided this section of the armor should be a brighter red, I have no idea:
The last thing I had to do was put the circle decals on the shoulders and strap everything together:
Of course, at this stage we were getting close to time to rush off to the convention. So I didn't get any slick photos of that stage of the process:
What I did get was a few glorious photos of our arrival at the convention center:
As usual, Doctor Girlfriend looks a lot better than I do. But that didn't stop me from having fun with all of the photo op sets they had scattered around the convention center:
Some were much less serious than others:
I also found at least one person dressed as a similarly obscure but still recognizable character:
It was nice to meet some very lovely fans:
Including the guy who made my helmet kit:
Jsin himself:
The total build time for this costume was about two weeks. There just happened to be a three year pause in between those two weeks. I hate when that happens.
Stay tuned...