Stormtrooper(s)
Why
Ever since first seeing them on Star Wars, I thought the Stormtroopers looked different, awesome and menacing. Between these guys and the Tusken Raiders, they were probably my favourite things from the films. I even fantasised about owning a costume one day. I didn’t think it would be possible, but the internet and eBay came around, so in 2005 I shelled out nearly £500 for a kit to be sent over from the US. I never assembled it and didn’t even properly start making my own sets until four years later in 2009.
Although Stormtroopers look great, I preferred the dirty battered look that Sandtroopers had. There are some physical differences to the armour but I didn’t care enough to be screen accurate. Besides, I’m sure there would have been some mucky Stormtroopers that weren’t Sandtroopers somewhere. The weathered look would also hide a multitude of poor construction issues.
When
Summer 2009
Elements
Undersuit, helmet, blaster, shoulder guards, optional pauldron, bicep parts, forearm parts, hand guards, chest and back plate, abdomen and lumbar plates, thigh parts, calf parts, boots, gloves, detonator (cylinder on back of belt), belt.
Amount of Work
Absolutely loads. A spring and summer of work in 2009. I made parts for 6 sets and completed 4. My friends that we went to Creamfields with bought theirs and my ex-girlfriend kept hers. In around 2018 I completed a further “spare” set.
Level of use
Loads of times. It was the best costume I had for over a decade. (Now ceded to the Toy Suit).
Notes
There’s some level of discomfort with wearing it , but it’s always been worth it. Except for one time when an inner-thigh edge trim had come loose and the metal in the part injured me enough to have to visit a medical centre a few days later.
Future use
Absolutely.
Making it
I bought a set of armour in 2005 but didn’t assemble it. Instead, I filled all the parts with concrete so I’d have forms to be able to make more than one set from. I made some parts in 2006, but it wasn’t until 2009 that I really ramped things up as I wanted to go to Creamfields as a group of Stormtroopers.
44 parts per suit had to be heat formed in a range of different frame sizes.
I built an extension to my kitchen oven (that would sit on the open door) from the remnants of a failed attempt at making a vacuum forming table.