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Over-the-Top Despicable Me Family Costumes – Entirely Homemade!

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different. After much discussion we decided to do a family theme with Despicable Me.  Dad (me) would be Gru, my wife would be the super cool Dr. Nefario, and the kids, of course, my Minions.  I know, Minions were very popular this year, good in that our costumes were very popular at all the events, but bad for costume contests, given the number of Minions I’ve seen on these pages.  However, I haven’t seen too many Gru heads, and even fewer Dr. Nefarios, so here it goes….

We started thinking about costumes before Despicable Me 2 came out in July, hence no Lucy. Everyone asked why my wife didn’t dress up as Lucy. I think Dr. Nefario is way more funny anyway. Actual designing and building started in August.  We usually have events up to 3 weeks before Halloween, so we need to start early.

In the past, I have built a lot of costumes with relatively stiff foam board. It’s great to work with, but it is not too comfortable to wear and doesn’t do curves well, and these costumes were going to have a lot of compound curves. So I opted to make them out of flexible EVA closed cell foam. I did a Bumblebee mask for my son last year out of heavy duty thick EVA foam (gym floor mat material), this year I stocked up on 1/4 “ thick sheets from a supplier in California.

It took me a while to get the hang of it, but EVA foam is really cool stuff. It cuts easily, creates strong joints with hot glue, and you can heat it up with a hot air gun and form it into shapes.  A little caulk and white glue plastered on the surface then allows you to spray paint it nicely. The hardest part is getting it into just the right shape.  Just in case I ran out of time, I started with the Minions (also the easiest shapes), and then worked my way up to Nefario’s funky shaped head (which was a challenge).

The costume foam elements were:  the Minions, Gru’s head, Gru’s body (so I would look hunch-backed), Nefario’s head, the Shrink Ray, and the Freeze Ray. Each went through the same basic process. Now, I’m an engineer, so measurements and drawings came first. First I sketched out 2D drawings in Visio, pulling images from the web and tracing contours to get the right proportions. I then scaled the 2D sketches to fit my kids, or my head, or my wife’s head. Once I was happy with the sizing, I went to create 3D models in CAD (remember, I’m an engineer….).  That let me create 3D surfaces which I could import into Pepakura Designer paper folding software.

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different.  After much discussion we decided to do a family theme

Pepakura is software that takes complex 3D surfaces and creates 2-D cut templates that when printed on card stock, folded and taped up, recreate the 3D shapes.

I prototyped most of the costume elements in paper first, which was fast, which also allowed me to test fit the elements on the subject; especially the Gru and Nefario masks.

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different.  After much discussion we decided to do a family theme
Nefario Paper Model

 

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different.  After much discussion we decided to do a family theme
Gru In Progress

 

Then I went about shaping the EVA foam into rough shapes and cut it to size using the paper templates as a guide. I glued all the foam pieces together with hot glue, and then slathered caulk and white glue to protect the foam from the spray paint.  Simple, right?

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different.  After much discussion we decided to do a family theme
The Finished Heads

 

For the Minions, I used painted window screens for the eyeballs, so the kids could see out of the costumes. Sewed denim fabric was used for the overalls. Purchased long sleeved yellow shirts and black gloves completed the Minions.

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different.  After much discussion we decided to do a family theme
Minion Test Fit

 

For Gru, window screens were also used for the eyeballs, and fabric fur for the eyebrows. I got an oversize black jacket from a thrift shop for Gru’s body, and cut out Gru’s zipper medallion out of balsa wood.

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different.  After much discussion we decided to do a family theme
Gru Body

 

Dr. Nefario used purchased welding goggles (tinted glass removed). My wife already had a lab coat and the rubber boots, and we painted the Gru emblem on purchased heavy duty black rubber gloves. She also had to buy the crazy pajama pants…

The Freeze Ray and Shrink Ray were also embellished with LED flashlights from the dollar store so they would light up at night.  Note that the Freeze Ray is pretty true to the movie design, but I had to truncate the Shrink Ray so my Minions could wield it.

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different.  After much discussion we decided to do a family theme
Freeze Ray Paper Model

 

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different.  After much discussion we decided to do a family theme
The Finished Weapons

 

After more hours than I would like to admit (easily 80+), we were ready for our first Halloween events. Despite starting early, I was still up painting into the wee hours the night before.  We had several private Halloween parties to go to, and our favorite event, Boo at the Zoo. The hard work paid off. The response was awesome. We won a couple contests and we had people lined up 6 deep to get pictures with us at the zoo. Kids loved them, and my kids (and us old folks) had a blast. We did have a brief Minion meltdown with my 6 year old on Halloween night. My poor daughter was upset that she couldn’t run ahead with her friends. It was really hard not to laugh while she stomped around waving her arms madly… in Minion costume.

Every year we go pretty overboard on Halloween costumes.  2013 one was no different.  After much discussion we decided to do a family theme

 

For all you costume nerds, here’s a video that shows more of the modeling and costume detail:

http://youtu.be/wK_jQ77rNfs

8 thoughts on “Over-the-Top Despicable Me Family Costumes – Entirely Homemade!”

  1. I was one of those that got pics with you at Boo at the Zoo! (We totally thought you guys were getting paid to be there; so congrats on the awesome costume!) We were the OTHER family dressed up as Gru, purple and yellow minions and Lucy. We were so jealous. :)

    Reply
  2. I wanted to know if I can purchase the costumes, especially dr nefario and Gru. I just finished making mine out of paper mâché and it came out horrible. Unfortunately I don’t have time to make another one and we are dressing up this Friday as a family and I would have to disappoint my kids.
    You can email me at yaelzev@aol.com

    Reply
  3. I wanted to know if I can purchase the costumes, especially dr nefario and Gru. I just finished making mine out of paper mâché and it came out horrible. Unfortunately I don’t have time to make another one and we are dressing up this Friday as a family and I would have to disappoint my kids.
    You can email me at yaelzev@aol.com

    Reply
  4. I would love to make, or probably better yet, purchase a Marlene Gru mask like this. Do you or can you make or sell one before this Halloween, or at least sell the Pepekura pattern for it ( I could probably handle it from there. Please let me know ASAP

    Reply

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