This simple costume uses air brushing, PVC pipes and Styrofoam in order to create an MIB agent character with big guns for Halloween just like the two guys in the image below. For their attire, black jacket is required as well as white shirt, black pants, black shoes, and black tie. Some MDF wood, sheet plastic, some wood screws, Bondo, epoxy, PVC cement, and a few lengths of PVC pipe are needed to create the blasters.

Two lengths of PVC pipe are glued and screwed together to produce the blaster body. As shown in the image below, the flat section between the two PVC pipes is created by gluing a piece of Sintra. The bottom section is notched out which holds the slide on the bottom of the blaster. A cut section of PVC pipe with ribs glued on makes the slide handle. The bearings for the slide are held by a piece of MDF glued inside.
The next image shows how the back section of the blaster was made. The grip is made from a piece of MDF with some Sintra sheet glued onto the side and the bottom piece of MDF needs to extend all the way to the grip section. Wood dowels are used to make the shells with rubber furniture bumpers screwed into them and the box section on the bottom of the blaster is made up of some Sintra sheet and is screwed onto the MDF section to hold the slide. A vertical section of PVC pipe is glued to make the top section of the blaster. Gluing some PVC rings onto a clear acrylic tube creates the back part. To finish the front, the front of the blaster is made by reversing a PVC pipe adapter with a triangular shaped section epoxied to the upper section as shown below.



The tri barrel blaster is made much the same way as the pulsar blaster. The image below shows that the main body is made from hollowed out section of MDF, glued together and sanded smooth on the outside. To accept the PVC barrels that are epoxied in place, 3 holes were bored into the front face of the blaster body. The slide is made by gluing a section of Sintra onto the bottom barrels and screwing it to the PVC pipe then attaching the slide to the Sintra sheet using screws as shown below. For the shoulder stock, a hole was drilled in the back of the main blaster body and another hole is bored into the bottom of the blaster and epoxied the grip.



As shown below, some details were added to the other side of the blaster body by cutting groves into the dowel. Also, a knob is epoxied along with a small piece of plastic sheet with drilled holes. Cut at an angle are the additional dowels which are glued onto the back of the blaster body using allen screws. The final stage is coating both blasters with primer followed by a coat of silver paint.



















