Life-Sized Croissant Cookie's Goggles! [Cookie Run]

by Shakhinas Creations in Craft > Costumes & Cosplay

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Life-Sized Croissant Cookie's Goggles! [Cookie Run]

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Time travel! WOOT!

Croissant Cookie is one of my favorite character from the game Cookie Run: Ovenbreak. She uses her goggles to navigate through time, and I've always loved its design.

That's why I decided to upsize her goggles from cookie-size so that I could actually wear them.

Let's get started!

Make the Gear Part 1:

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I made the gear shape by drawing a circle on a piece of cardboard and dividing it into 5 parts twice. I shaded out the parts I wouldn't need and kept the gear's teeth.

I cut two gear shapes out and cut out a hole in each. One is to see through, and the other hole is for the red berry decoration to come in later.

I'll be using a small flashlight lens part to raise the berry up a bit and make it look a bit more puffy later on.

Make the Gear Part 2:

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Next, I bent 2 golden wires in the shape of a belt loop so that we can attach the goggles to the strap later. The wire with the longer leg is for the gear (since the gear is irregularly shaped) and the other wire is what we'll use for the regularly shaped goggle part.

I glued the longer-legged wire to the inside of one gear shape. I then cut out a long strip of cardboard for the gear's walls and connected both gear parts together with it.

Paint the Lenses

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I cut out two circular pieces of plastic (the smaller one for the berry and the larger one for the regular goggle's lens) and tinted these with some clear glue and red paint. The picture makes it look really, really dark, but it's more translucent in reality.

If you added too much acrylic and it doesn't see through, that's fine since it's mainly meant to be a prop rather than an actual pair of goggles that prevent you from getting lost in the complex fabrics of space and time.

Add the Lenses to the Gear

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I put the flashlight part in, and since it was slightly taller than the gear itself, it stuck out a bit. Then, I bent one of the red lenses over the flashlight and glued the edges in place so that the shape is kept.

Make the Second Goggle

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For the second goggle, I cut out larger and smaller ring from cardboard and used two small bits of cardboard to hold up the smaller ring to the height I wanted the goggle to be.

Then, I glued the second wire loop from earlier to the top of the larger ring.

The slanted wall was a little tricky, but I did it in the end. I just cut out a long strip of cardboard the length of the larger ring's circumference. I cut a slit into the cardboard every 2 cm.

Then to attach the wall to the two rings, I just glued a 2 cm section to both rings, bent the wall, then continued with the next 2 cm long section.

Prime the Goggles

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Time to prime!

I just covered the whole thing and hung them up by their loops beside a little fan so that I could get the priming over with quickly.

Paint the Goggles and the Middle Strap

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Quite conveniently, this "Yellow Ochre" colored acrylic paint I had seemed to match Croissant's goggle color pretty accurately.

Slightly inconveniently (though still bearable), I didn't have the exact blue-grey color of the strap that connects the goggle parts together. But I just mixed a blue-green, white, and kept mixing in some black little by little until I got what I needed.

After painting, I varnished both the goggle parts.

Add the Straps

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Using superglue, I stuck each end of the middle strap onto the two goggles.

For the actual strap used to wear the goggles, I used an old, black belt that I had lying around. I cut the buckle side of the strap so that it reaches from the goggle side to the middle of the back of my head. I kept the side of the belt with the adjusting holes and cut it a bit longer so that I would keep some of the adjustability.

Add the Cream

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Next, I brought out some white "Angel Clay" and divided into 5 small parts. I rolled each up into a lemon shape.

I lightly squished one lemon shape over the edge of the berry on the cog shape, then I did the same with another, overlapping the corner of the shape onto the previous. Then, I repeated the process until I used up all 5 parts and turned it into the iconic cream flower shape.

Done!

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WOOT!

It's time to time travel!

Hope you guys enjoyed this Instructable! And if you did, please vote for me in the Big vs Small Contest - it would be greatly appreciated!