
Last Halloween my friend asked me to help her make an R2D2 costume for her five year old. What? Dress up? Costume? This was right up my alley and I was happy to dive in. I bought a large trash can in the right shape and planned to cut arm and leg openings in it. But my friend had a good point, it would make a heavy costume for a small kid. So she suggested using their wire and mesh laundry hamper for the shape. I drew out the design on posterboard and wrapped it around the hamper. For the head I spray painted a candy bowl from Target ($1 !!). I glued a shampoo cap for the protruding part of the head and taped the bowl to a bike helmet. The costume was a big hit, and was economical and lightweight to boot!
But then I was left with a trashcan that I couldn't return. I got a suggestion from another friend that I could turn it into an R2D2 laundry hamper, to replace the one sacrificed for the Halloween costume. I loved this idea. But months went by and the thing languished on my stair landing. Finally, FINALLY I got around to working on it and finished it the other week. Hallelujah!! I'm so happy to have this thing done and out of my house!! I hadn't realized how oppressed R2D2 was making me feel. Whooeee!
I liked how the trashcan/hamper turned out. It was a lot harder to draw on the cylindrical trashcan than I anticipated. Working on the posterboard version was easy because it laid flat and I could use my mayline and drafting triangles to quickly put down the lines. For the hamper, I used a downspout gutter scrap I picked up at Urban Ore along with some foam core to make the arms. A plumbing cap was the right size for the protrusion from the head. And for fun, I added casters on the bottom so the thing rolls. :) H

ere's a look.