JANUARY 12, 2018, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A7 MAGIC, continued from Page A1 The following year, Keaton wanted to be an elephant and Ryan and his wife Lana crafted a paper maché elephant that enshrouded the chair as well. The process continued and included crafting costumes for and another son, Bryce. Ke- aton and Bryce kept coming up with challenges and Ryan and Lana had to keep fi guring out how to meet them. A decade later, in 2015, Magic Wheelchair, an non- profi t creating some of the most elaborate costumes imag- inable for youth in wheel- chairs, came into existence. Many of the custom creations have made their way into the Keizer Iris Festival parade, but Magic Wheelchair is now a na- tionwide phenomenon. The costume that put Ryan and his family and their cre- ations into the bigger spotlight was Toothless, a dragon from the movie How to Train Your Dragon. It was Keaton’s wish for Halloween 2015. The prob- lem was it required Ryan to up his game yet again. He found the solution in the Stan Winston School of Character Arts, which offered online video lessons. Winston is the creator behind some of the most memorable character designs in Hollywood includ- ing for the fi lms Terminator, Alien, Predator, Edward Scis- sorhands and the dinosaurs of the early Jurassic Park fi lms. “I had signed up for their classes to get ideas for the cos- tumes and I saw a foam fabri- cator, Ted Haines, build a giant T-Rex head. I knew as soon as I saw it that was how I had to build Toothless,” Ryan said. At the same time Ryan was crafting the Toothless plans, he was getting help from a friend at his church, who was study- ing non-profi t law, to launch Magic Wheelchair as its own entity. Toothless was going to be the project used to launch a Kickstarter campaign to estab- lish the organization. There was only one, small problem. Ryan couldn’t fi gure out how to procure the foam to make Toothless. He sent an email to Winston’s school about what he hoped to do and Winston’s son and son-and- law, Matt and Eric, responded with a personal message. “It included a refund for all the courses I had already paid for and a lifetime membership in the future” as well as an of- fer to help him get the foam needed for Toothless. The Kickstarter campaign that launched Magic Wheel- chair asked for $15,000 and ended up amassing more than $25,000 in donations. As an organization, Magic Wheel- chair assembles the teams to make the costumes and takes in applications from both kids and volunteers via its website, www.magicwheelchair.org. The fi rst year, teams of vol- unteer builders constructed costumes for fi ve kids in Or- egon and two in Georgia, which were taken on by a high school class in Gwinnett, Ga. In 2016, Magic Wheelchair as- sembled 25 costumes. Last year, 50 costumes were created for free for families with youth in wheelchairs. “This year, I want to do 100, and the board thinks I’m crazy, but that’s what they’ve said ev- ery year,” said Ryan. A single costume can take anywhere between 200 and 400 hours to build and cost around $1,500. As the idea caught fi re, Ryan and others quickly real- ized that Halloween wasn’t the only time of year kids could go out and make their mark on the people they met. Comic book and pop culture conven- Ask Mr. Trash Q. Is it true that I can put all food waste into the big green Mixed Organics cart? ABOVE: A Star Wars speeder bike crafted by a Magic Wheel- chair team. RIGHT: Bryce Wiemer’s mining ship from the movie Guardians of the Galaxy. KEIZERTIMES/ Eric A. Howald tions, where many attendants dress up as their favorite char- acters, were a perfect place for Magic Wheelchair. In 2016, the group made one of their most important connections to date – Cassie Husdon. Cassie is a fan of the show Arrow, featuring the character Green Arrow, and wanted something that would fi t in with the look of the production. The builders as- sembled a trike costume that almost completely disguises Cassie’s wheelchair and in- cluded exhaust pipes and a working motor that rumbled the costume so she could get a feel for what it would be like in real life. They presented it to her at Rose City Comic Con in 2016. Ryan didn’t realize just how much the gift meant until he invited Cassie to be part of a panel at another convention later on. ©1986 A. It’s true! All food wastes may now be combined with yard debris! Include these: Meats, Dairy, Bones/Shells, Breads/Grains, Fruits, Vegetables, Coffee-Tea Bags/Filters, Food-Soiled Paper Napkins/Towels, Cardboard Pizza Boxes, Grass Clippings, Yard Prunings, Leaves, Pine Needles, Pumpkins and Christmas Trees. Layer the food waste with yard debris in the big green Mixed Organics cart for weekly collection in Keizer. 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The Arrow costume became an entrée into the larger fandom of the show.” Cassie and her mother now build her own costumes. Magic Wheelchair has gone on to become a highlight of some of the biggest pop cul- ture conventions in the world. Last year, the teams produced an entire set of Justice League costumes for San Diego Com- ic Con and, this year, a Star Wars-themed set of builds is already in the works. Last week, the organization won an online voting contest that will result in a 3D printer from Re:3D. Ryan hopes it will lead to building kits that can be shipped anywhere to kids in wheelchairs. “The cold reality is that some of the kids won’t be around as long as others and we want to cram as much epic- ness as we can into the time we have with them,” said Ryan, who is also a full-time nurse. While it’s easy to get swept up in all the hoopla Magic Wheelchair inspires, this story is still very much about Ryan and his family. “The boys still get really excited for Halloween,” said Lana. “And it’s a big deal that they’ve gotten to see other kids get costumes.” Bryce’s favorite costume so far is a mining ship from the movie Guardians of the Galaxy. For Keaton, it’s a tie between Toothless and a later creation known as Indominus Rex. Keaton also designed the char- acter Ryan is working on for next Halloween. “I feel more included in things (because of the cos- tumes),” said Keaton. “They are awesome to ride around in and it’s really awesome to see the expressions on other kids faces when they get their costumes.” Asked what he wanted oth- er people to know about Mag- ic Wheelchair, Keaton doesn’t miss a beat. “That it’s awesome,” he said. “It’s just awesome.”