Search Results for tardis

Almost every week for the past couple of years I receive emails asking about the downloadable TARDIS. People were having issues downloading the file and printing it properly. I *finally* went back and revamped the project, so now it should be a breeze to work with.

Click either the image above or HERE to view the “Make Your Own Doctor Who TARDIS” entry. The file is formatted to print on 11×17″ cardstock, but you can print a smaller version on regular letter paper.

The project is free for personal use (so *no* commercial projects or reselling), but other than that, have fun! Be sure to send me any pics of your completed piece. I’d love to check them out!

As always, I would be grateful for any feedback you might have!

The TARDIS is adapted from the “Build your own TARDIS” project as featured in the Doctor Who Technical Manual. I did the entire coloring and texturing, but it’s based on their design.

Note: As with any ICP download, these files are not to be resold under any conditions.

MATERIALS NEEDED:
-Bristol board
-Foam Core
-Hot glue (optional)
-Tape
-X-acto knife with lots and lots of blades
-Kneadatite or modeling putty. See our FAQ section for details on Kneadatite.

NOTE: This project is a bit time-consuming. It’s really easy to assemble, but you’ll need to cut out a lot of pieces.

INSTRUCTIONS (updated July 2009!):

Here’s what I suggest you do:

1. Download all the PDF by clicking on the image below.

2. The downloadable TARDIS is formatted for 11 x 17″ paper, but you can print it at any size you like. Printing it on coated cardstock is preferred.

3. Make sure all those little rectangle slots are totally removed. Don’t just cut a slit. Remove the little opening altogether.

4. At this point it gets into a bit of trial and error. I’d test fit everything, and then tape/glue all the pieces together. Before you seal the top or bottom, add some pieces of foam core to the inside walls. This will really strengthen the whole TARDIS.

5. For the siren: You can use the rectangle siren that’s here, or create a more on-model one. I basically used stuff I found in my studio. I sliced up a Bic Pen for the top light assembly. This was surrounded by a slightly thicker piece of plastic for the base. Two pieces of styrene were glued to the sides of the light support. The rounded top was a wooden half-sphere glued to a washer.

***If you make your own siren, then have all the tabs overlap on top. The visual picture shows a hole on top. Don’t do that. Keep it flat, and you can just glue the siren on top.

6. Once the piece is all assembled, you’ll note some gaps here and there. Use any sort of putty (I suggest Kneadatite) to plug the holes. Paint the putty to match and you’re done!

7. PLEASE DO NOT REPOST THESE FILES ANYWHERE ELSE. Instead, simply direct people back here to https://www.ironcowprod.com/the-tardis/. And, if you do use these files, be sure to email me some photos! I’d love to see how it turned out.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE PDF TARDIS.

If you run into any problems, or my instructions got confusing, don’t hesitate to e-mail me.

Good luck, and enjoy!

Created Spring 2002

Featured in CustomCon 6

Rose Tyler, a young shop assistant in a London department store, lives a humdrum and profoundly average life – until the night the shop dummies where she works wake up and try to kill her. Her life is saved by a strange man who only calls himself The Doctor, and intrigued by him, she finds herself thrown headlong into a hectic battle to stop an alien presence from invading Earth and annihilating the human race.

She comes to learn that her new friend is even stranger than she thought – in fact, the Doctor’s an alien adventurer called a ‘Time Lord’, seemingly the last of his race, who travels through time and space in his TARDIS battling evil where he finds it. And if she travels with him, she’ll find herself witnessing the heat-death of the Earth five billion years in the future, meeting Charles Dickens in the past, and encountering lifeforms and invaders stranger than she’d ever thought possible. Only one thing is certain – it’ll be the ride of a lifetime…

-Scott Nisbet.

The Billie Piper ROSE TYLER action figure sports a variety of parts. She began as a Vampire Spike from the Buffy/Angel figure line. I replaced Spike’s torso and hip region with parts from a Kill Bill UMA THURMAN figure. The lower legs are from the Texas Chainsaw Massacre ERIN figure, while the head is reworked from a Shrek PRINCESS FIONA figure. Magic Sculpt was used extensively to reshape the body and create other surface elements.

The Billie Piper ROSE TYLER action figure stands 6″ tall and features 10 points of articulation.

Created Summer 2005

Featured in CustomCon 13