Build Your Own Bobcat Loader Halloween Costume | Bobcat Blog | Bobcat Blog

If your kids want to dress like a real superhero this Halloween, build this custom loader outfit so they can bring Bobcat Tough to the streets of your neighborhood. Bonus: the costume’s bucket makes it easy for them to load up on candy!

Supply List

Large cardboard box (ours was 25″ (l) x 14″ (w) x 18″ (h))
Large cutting board
Craft knife
Ruler
Black duct tape
Drop cloth
White spray paint
Orange spray paint
Pencil
Scissors
Hot glue gun with hot glue sticks
25-inch poster tubes (4)
Jigsaw
Black spray paint
Bobcat taillights and decals
Packing tape

Supplies you'll need to build a Bobcat skid-steer loader Halloween costume.

Step One:

First collapse your cardboard box and place it onto a cutting board. Use the craft knife and the ruler to remove all but one of the box’s width flaps. Cut off all of the length flaps. Set severed flaps aside for later use.
Step One: Cut all box flaps but one.

Step Two:

Reassemble the box so it can stand upright. Fold the remaining flap inward so it’s level with the top of the box. Use duct tape to secure the flap in place, taping it to the sides of the box. Cover the entire top of the flap in duct tape.
Step One: Secure remaining flap with duct tape.

Step Three:

Place the box and cut-off flaps on a drop cloth. Spray-paint the front and sides of the box white and the back of the box (the side with the taped flap) orange. Coat two of the long flaps with white spray paint. Let the box and flaps dry for one hour.
Step Three: Spray-paint the box.

Step Four:

Once the paint has dried, use a pencil to draw a loader arm onto one of the white flaps. Cut out the arm with scissors, then use it to trace a second loader arm onto the other white flap. Cut out the second arm and use a hot glue gun to attach each arm to the sides of the box, placing the thicker end of the arm about six inches away from the backside edge of the box and two inches down from the top of the box.
Step Four: Build and attach loader arms.

Step Five:

Cut each of the poster tubes down to 20 inches in length using the jigsaw, then spray-paint the tubes black. Let dry for one hour.
Step Five: Cut and paint poster tubes.

Step Six:

Place one tube in each corner inside the box and secure with hot glue. Reinforce with strips of duct tape.
Step Six: Glue and stick poster tubes to box.

Step Seven:

Take two of the leftover small flaps from Step One and place them side by side so their long edges are touching. Connect the flaps with a long strip of duct tape.
Step Seven: Connect two leftover flaps with duct tape.

Step Eight:

Place a strip of duct tape horizontally across the bottom of the connected flaps. Continue adding strips, working your way up the cardboard, until 75 percent of the cardboard is covered. Cut off the uncovered cardboard.
Step Eight (a): Cover flaps with duct tape.

Step Eight (b): Cut excess cardboard.

Step Nine:

Lay the duct-taped cardboard on top of the tubes and hot glue in place to create the roof of the cab. Reinforce the roof with duct tape.
Step Nine: Attach cab roof.

Step Ten:

To create the loader’s wheels, take two small leftover flaps from Step One and use a pencil and the outside of the duct tape roll to trace three circles on one of the flaps and a fourth circle on the other flap. Then create four smaller circles on the second flap by tracing the inside of the duct tape roll. Cut out the circles with your craft knife, and spray-paint the large circles black and the small circles orange. Let dry for one hour.
Step Ten: Draw and cut the wheels.

Step Eleven:

Once the circles are dry, place an orange circle in the middle of a black circle and secure with hot glue. Repeat with remaining circles to create the loader’s wheels.
Step Eleven: Glue loader wheels.

Step Twelve:

Wrap the remaining leftover box flap completely in duct tape. Set the flap at a 45-degree angle to the bottom of the box’s front. Form the loader’s bucket by securing the flap to the box with duct tape, making sure to maintain the 45-degree angle.
Step Twelve: Build the bucket.

Step Thirteen:

Use the craft knife to cut out all of the loader templates, including two taillights, two Bobcat head logos, the S590 text, the tailgate Bobcat logo (cut this one out to form a stencil), and two Bobcat S590 side decals.
Step Thirteen: Cut the decals.

Step Fourteen:

Using hot glue, attach a Bobcat head logo on each of the loader arms, the two taillights and the S590 text to the back of the tailgate, and the Bobcat S590 side decals on each side of the box under the top of the loader arms.
Step Fourteen (a): Glue on the taillights.

Step Fourteen (b): Attach the side decals.

Step Fifteen:

Center the Bobcat logo stencil on the tailgate (back of the box), about three quarters of the way down from the top of the box. Secure in place with packing tape, making sure not to cover up any of the cut-out portions of the stencil. Spray-paint white and let dry for one hour.
Step Fifteen: Spray-paint the Bobcat logo on the tailgate.

Step Sixteen:

Using hot glue, attach the wheels to the side of the loader costume so that the bottom half of the wheel hangs off the edge of the box.
Step Sixteen: Glue the wheels on the box.

Step Seventeen:

Create two shoulder straps by sticking two long pieces of duct tape together for each strap. Attach one end of the straps inside the front of the box using duct tape and size the straps so that the roof of the loader is just above the child’s head, then secure the other end of the straps inside the back of the box using duct tape. Cut off any excess with scissors.
Step Seventeen: Make the straps.

Child in Bobcat skid-steer loader Halloween costume

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