23 years
at the bench.
Every era of the Jason hockey mask, hand-laid in fiberglass. Part III through Jason X. Vs. Remake. Origin. The same shell Jacques Plante invented in 1959, the same way it's been made for sixty-plus years.
Hand-signed · numbered · shipped worldwide.
One shape. Twelve films. Sixty-plus years.
1959 — Jacques Plante invents the goalie mask. 1982 — Jason Voorhees pulls one out of a barn in Crystal Lake. From that moment on, the hockey mask isn't just hockey gear; it's the most photographed face in horror.
2003— the first fiberglass pull came off the bench. Twenty-plus years and every era of the mask later, the method hasn't moved. No 3D printing. No vacuum-forming. No resin knock-offs. Hand-laid fiberglass. Period.
Four steps. No shortcuts.
Every mask, whether a $75 blank or a $495 silicone, follows the same four steps.
- STEP 01
The Lay-up.
Fiberglass cloth is cut to pattern, laid into a plaster mold, and saturated with catalyzed resin by hand. No vacuum, no pressure assist — the cloth is worked into every contour with a brush and a roller.
- STEP 02
The Cure.
The shell sits for 24 hours or more, depending on temperature and resin mix. No short-cut catalysts. Heat accelerates nothing — the cure runs as slow as it needs to.
- STEP 03
The Trim.
Once cured, the shell is de-molded and the edges cleaned. Eye holes, breath holes, and strap slots are cut by hand — same placement every time, never lasered or templated.
- STEP 04
The Finish.
Sanding, sealing, strap fitting. Every blank leaves the bench hand-signed and numbered. Painted pulls get additional coats — primer, base, weathering, seal.
Built by hand.
Collected for life.
Free worldwide shipping. Hand-signed and numbered. Head straps available.
All masks are unofficial fan tributes for costume and display purposes only. Not affiliated with, endorsed by, or licensed by Paramount Pictures, New Line Cinema, or any rights holder of the Friday the 13th franchise. No claim or representation of protective ability.