| A con attendee dressed as one of the Orion slave girls from the original "Star Trek" show poses with a young fan. Puberty will arriving for this young man at warp speed. | 
| Zombies play an XBox Kinect game. Nothing is more disturbing than the dancing undead. | 
| Steampunk as a sci-fi/fantasy genre was alive and well at WyvaCon. | 
| This young man made his own Steampunk gear. | 
| This Nosferatu-style vampire was an example of some of the impressive makeup effects on display. | 
| Some of the 501st Legion's replica weapons. | 
| A clonetrooper helmet replica | 
| More Steampunk cosplay | 
| Paul Crockett's steampunk mask. | 
| Warhammer 40K tabletop game players were well represented, with players from the Galax area and the New River Valley. | 
| So a Ghostbuster and an Elf walk into a bar... | 
| A fan dressed as scary (but heroic) vigilante Casey Jones, an ally of the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles." | 
| Doesn't get much geekier than this — homemade Cthulhu throw pillows. | 
| Before you embrace the madness, maybe a nap. | 
| Another example of a full-face prosthetic makeup appliance. | 
| Comedy trio "Straight Outta Comic-Con" | 
| One of the organizes of Roanoke's long-running sci-fi convention, MystiCon, held each February. | 
| A large Warhammer 40K game piece. | 
| Many gamers who play Warhammer 40K are true artists, customizing and painting their small-scale pieces with intricate detailing. These figures are about 2 inches tall. | 
 
Great post! You really captured the spirit of the Con. Thanks for including pics of my pillows! I'd love a copy of me with the big gun. It would make an awesome profile pic :)
ReplyDeleteBe glad to send you a copy tomorrow. Enjoyed meeting you guys!
ReplyDeleteThanks Brian! BTW, my email is arethusa{at}fastermac{dot}net
ReplyDeleteI've been enjoying your posts - keep em coming!
Ah, sweet, I see my Adventure Time wreath! Thank you for including my creation. <3
ReplyDelete