Lucius Malfoy Impersonation Cosplay Costume Jason Isaacs Impersonation Cosplay Costume
Darrell Green
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I was initially working on a Denethor build when I found that I needed to be ultra blonde before becoming Denethor Gray. This led to beginning a Lucius Malfoy Impersonation disguise level cosplay.
In the following, I will share my props, process and special effects makeup steps to coming as close as I could to Lucius Malfoy from the first movie to the last and back again to my version of Lucius attending Hogwarts as a young man.

In the following, I will share my props, process and special effects makeup steps to coming as close as I could to Lucius Malfoy from the first movie to the last and back again to my version of Lucius attending Hogwarts as a young man.
This, of course, means that I aged, returned to my own age and then grew younger in several makeup effects stages to be Lucius across nearly 30 plus years.
After staring at your own project, for too long, you can be confused as to the quality of the outcome so I hope you also see Lucius in each stage.Continued below.
After staring at your own project, for too long, you can be confused as to the quality of the outcome so I hope you also see Lucius in each stage.Continued below.

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Again, caution, get advice, watch videos. Do NOT hold in one spot or it will melt your hair. As soon as you close this, begin pulling it down your hair. Do NOT clamp it tightly or you will pull out hair.
I did use bonding agent in my bleach, as well, for double protection.
Although I can grow some stubble, it was not in the pattern of Lucius. I used alcohol markers (cleans with alcohol wipes) as I did not have the ability to spackle myself with liquid paints and a stipple brush while looking in the mirror. In some scenes he has gray stubble and in other ages he has black. My marker set has many shades so I could do some lines (ultra fine tip), some dots and some overall coverage (put down first layer).
I used some standard beauty makeup tricks on my nose but to make it wider instead of thinner. Using a lighter shade (powder), I painted on a larger area of reflection on the edges of the bridge of my nose and under the tip to form a bulb. I then used a shadow shade of tan brown to eliminate the bottom 1/8 inch of my nostrils. Zoom in and it is noticeable but not at full 5 to 10 feet out. Lucius's nose seems to change shape with age so I am assuming that some shading tricks were done to Jason's nose in the earlier films. However, full 360 lighting can hide many contours but filling in creases with light.
For the aged scenes, in the last movie, I used a lighter foundation shade for my overall face and neck and used red on my under eye, lids and lips to match that done to Jason. The crew did an amazing job of making him look haggard and worn, dropping 20 years at the end of the day with the makeup cleaned off.
Brow - Jason has a full brow that often looks to extend even further due to its naturally blending into the curves of his eye socket. On the outer edge of his eye, his brow comes very close. For these areas I drew in the hairs with fine tip and then blended in a lighter shade of overall coverage matching his brow shape. I also darkened my own brown hairs to match (alcohol markers). You can use any product that you wish that is meant for safe use around eyes but do not attempt to use products you have never used before as you can easily get drips into your eye during and after application or as late as cleanup. I take classes at Stan Winston so am a bit more confident than most on using alcohol wipes to clean up after. You do NOT want that in your eye.
I am happy to say that at no point do his ears show as they are covered by his hair.
Because the hooded robe scene in the end of the last movie is so brief, I was able to use a no arms, shawl type that I had won for free in the Wish app years ago and just photograph it from angles not showing the armhole area.
Lucius has all custom clothing. Nothing he wears is common. Most of his great coats have no pockets and no buttons. His shirts has oddly shaped cuffs, always the cufflink type but not available unless custom cut. I avoided photographing the area of the cuff that was custom. Out of sight, out of mind. Around the collar, he has two buttons instead of one and uses cufflinks here as well.
I created a faux collar. A short piece of white table cloth, folded top and bottom, was used to make a band type tie. To this I attached elastic fasteners that attached at the back of the neck. On the white, open facing, section, I placed the two cufflink toppers that I had made (later described). I put this on like a tie and laid the collar over this.
For the black shirts (different scenes), I used my own black shirts that had black buttons and covered the exposed buttons with the vest and coat.
Both were only jacket length versus the movie coat being floor length. Again, I just cropped my photos to hide the missing portion.
I also owned a Labradorite natural stone ball. This, when pointed correctly at the light, reflected an inner blue light that I liked even better than the movie prop.
Often I front lit my backdrops to hide my cast shadow so the backdrop would look farther away. It was, at most times, inches from my back.
continued below
This last one was a quick test after my initial de-aging and was a mirror reflection shot on my cell phone. Not only a bad picture but I caught the bathroom lights as a second reflection back onto my face. But it is totally worth it to see how I jumped from one age to the next in about 30 hours.
Just for giggles... I woke up like this:
Changed to this:
and the next day to this:
And then doubled and test fit:
and then the ring of outer fur:
And then connected the two: