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Your Position: Home - Outdoor Toys & Structures - 5 Reasons To Do Dinosaur Costume Rental Business With Only ...

5 Reasons To Do Dinosaur Costume Rental Business With Only ...

Author: Harry

Jun. 05, 2025

5 Reasons To Do Dinosaur Costume Rental Business With Only ...

For all sorts of convenience, people tend to make dinosaur costume rental for their events or parties. If you want to engage in dinosaur rental services, but lack a qualified dinosaur costume supplier, we can solve this problem for you. 

Dino walk are exported all over the world and different industries with quality first. Our belief is to provide our customers with more and better high value-added products. Let's create a better future together.

Only Dinosaurs, a leading realistic dinosaur costume manufacturer in China, has cooperated with a lot of companies who offer the service to hire a dinosaur costume.

A sneak peek at the article you’re about to read:

  • Where will dinosaur costume rental appear?

Dinosaur costume rental is a must at a dinosaur-themed birthday party. Where else can you bring the thrill of prehistoric dinosaurs to life? Parks, playgrounds, museums, educational institutions, shopping malls, and many other business places will need dinosaur costume rental. Those raptors will be helpful because they are able to reach the greatest point of activity. Young and old alike will be attracted by realistic dinosaur costumes, so hiring a dinosaur costume becomes necessary.

Keep browsing, we’ll give you some useful information about dinosaur costume rental.

  • What did Only Dinosaurs bring to the dinosaur costume rental business?

  1. Supplying durable dinosaur costumes
  2. Allowing you to unravel the mysteries of Jurassic World
  3. Ensuring you highly restored customization
  4. Immersing you in the world of dinosaurs
  5. Designing a top influencer to promote your business

Most clients who are engaged in the dinosaur costume rental business might care about the lifespan of our dinosaur costumes. We would like to tell you that If maintained properly, our realistic dinosaur costumes work for at least 5 years.

For this question, we believe one of our clients, Jurassic Extreme, who has forged a strong bond with Only Dinosaurs will give you a better answer.

Jurassic Extreme is a large-scale dinosaur costume rental company. They rent dinsoaur costumes made by Only Dinosaurs to local clients for a variety of large-scale events.

Jurassic Extreme requires different sorts of dinosaur costumes for different occasions each week, and the dinosaur performers have to wear the costumes frequently. Therefore, the degree of wear and durability of dinosaur costumes has become a source of concern for them.

We are experts in this area, providing you with durable dinosaur costumes for repeat dinosaur rental. This realistic triceratops costume in the picture is one of the dinosaur costumes we made for Jurassic Extreme. Look how amazing it is!

For our durable dinosaur costumes, we have established a close relationship. See the pictures below, and you will know how close we are.

We have been able to successfully conduct a number of projects together for people to rent a dinosaur, and have become good partners and friends. We look forward to working together in the future as well.

Only Dinosaurs would be your finest pick if you are like Jurassic Extreme who wants sturdy dinosaur costumes for your dinosaur suit rental services.

Do you want your dinosaur hirer to feel like they are in Jurassic Park? You must know how to build a Jurassic world.

Hiring a dinosaur costume is key to creating a Jurassic world, and Prehistoric Events knows this point deeply. In this case, they ordered a realistic animatronic T-Rex head for building decoration from Only Dinosaurs.

Only Dinosaurs made a customized product with colorful embellishments for Prehistoric Events. We paid special attention to its eyes and fangs to give it a lifelike appearance, much like a live dinosaur putting its head out the window. 

These big, ancient animals may easily produce exciting dinosaur encounters, transporting visitors to Jurassic World and allowing them to engage closely with these mimicked dinosaurs.

Only Dinosaurs’ Animatronic T-Rex Head for building decoration can be hung in coffee shops, restaurants, cinemas, museums, etc. In these settings, the Animatronic T-Rex Head may heighten the sense of adventure. You may even make your own Jurassic Garden with them.

Do you also want your dinosaur suit rental to appear in these places? Come to Only Dinosaurs to find the most suitable dinosaur decoration for your business.

Dinosaur costume rental from Dinosaur Party is frequently seen in heavily populated areas, capturing the attention of every passerby and allowing everyone to take selfies. They wanted the custom dinosaur costumes to look as close to the Jurassic Velociraptor as possible, and we’re glad we finally got to meet their expectations.

The most convincing proof is the following positive response from Dinosaur Party.

The unique design of the realistic velociraptor costume required is quite similar to the appearance of the raptor in Jurassic Park, and it allows performers to actually move around like the real velociraptor. So, as it moves among the people, it is certain to create something spectacular.

Not only can performers wear this amazing dinosaur costume with ease, but they can also enjoy hours of chasing and pretending to eat tourists, leaving a deep and novel experience for everyone.

This raptor costume is able to handle any situation, whether it’s a museum, a themed party, or a business occasion. Isn’t it exciting to catch a customer’s attention with this lifelike costume? It can also move, run, shake its head quickly, and yell brutally at the spectators.

Almost every dinosaur costume of Only Dinosaurs is tailored for customers, so we have rich experience in making them. If you want to customize your own unique, realistic dinosaur costume, please feel free to contact Only Dinosaurs.

Because Only Dinosaurs’ triceratops dinosaur costume for show is so enormous, it requires two people to control it inside. In this case, this triceratops dinosaur costume can more accurately mimic the scale of true dinosaurs in Jurassic World. The audience may be able to stand with these gigantic triceratops, which may frighten the children in the crowd to tears.

Most importantly, do you hope your dinosaurs greatly increase the interactive experience of the audience? This two-person triceratops dinosaur costume enables two performers to control the triceratops’ actions, such as walking, sprinting, raising and lowering their heads, and even opening their mouths to yell. So putting it for a street performance will result in a very exciting experience.

Beaux the Tyrannosaurus Rex has extremely high standards for dinosaur design, and we are delighted to be able to meet them.  Only Dinosaurs not only provide with them realistic dinosaur costumes but also dinosaur puppets. Take a look at what they’ve said about our products.

Floridadinosaur gave our dinosaur a new name, Priscilla. For an extremely interesting coffee mate advertisement, Priscilla becomes a hot influencer to obtain a significant amount of online traffic.

In the advertisement, Priscilla enters a café and just wants a cup of coffee with a coffee mate, and everyone in the café freaks out. We are wondering if Priscilla receives advertising money as an internet star.

In the picture below, you can find a cute T-Rex who is obsessed with coffee.

The company is the world’s best Medium Size Animatronic Dinosaurs supplier. We are your one-stop shop for all needs. Our staff are highly-specialized and will help you find the product you need.

In fact, dinosaurs in advertising are more likely to make people remember and desire to buy. Dinosaur is also a hot commodity in the cinema and television industries, appearing in a wide range of prehistoric, adventure, and technological films.

If you are a prop rental company for realistic dinosaur costumes, and you want to dominate this market, place your order for your dinosaur star as soon as possible. Most importantly, if someone wants to hire a dinosaur costume for a film or advertising prop, this fantastic dinosaur will help you stand out.

If you want to know more about lifelike dinosaur costumes, you are welcome to contact us at any time.

Who Do You Call When Your 15-Foot Dinosaur Needs a Doctor?

Researchers at Saint Louis University and the Taylor Geospatial Institute are answering the call to ensure that future generations of visitors to the Saint Louis Science Center will be amazed by their robotic Tyrannosaurus rex.

If you’re more than 67 million years old — or in the case of the Saint Louis Science Center’s animatronic Tyrannosaurus rex, on daily display since the facility opened in — your parts may not move as swiftly as they had in the past, and you may need the occasional checkup. But, when the time comes for the science center to take steps to ensure the future of their guest favorite, a dilemma ensues: “Who can we call for help?” especially when the company that originally made the dinosaur went out of business long ago.

A Kink in the Neck

The summer of was like many summers before it at the science center. For months, throngs of guests filed through the building’s atrium, excited to be delivered from the jaws of vernal heat and humidity into an inviting space filled with wonder and discovery — and cool, conditioned air. As the crowds proceeded downstairs into the lower level, they were dwarfed — like countless visitors before them — by a 15-foot, rubber-skinned Tyrannosaurus rex that commands that space. The animatronic dinosaur would periodically swivel its massive head, bear its fearsome jaws, and bellow out a piercing roar. At its giant feet lay a vanquished Triceratops, side slashed open and bleeding.

But that June, the mighty head of the T. rex slumped forward, its animatronic machinery grinding to a halt and its internal steel skeleton hanging by a broken bolt just beneath its latex skin. The science center team quickly cordoned off the exhibit to keep guests from approaching the robotic reptile. Black plastic sheeting was draped over the head, which was eventually disarticulated and placed at the foot of the beast.

Chris Lucas, exhibit designer at the Saint Louis Science Center, and a crew of five or six team members who are responsible for the upkeep of exhibits were familiar with this particular problem. In , the T. rex had malfunctioned in a similar way, its animatronic machinery breaking further back on the dinosaur’s neck. The science center team repaired the broken exhibit back then, patching together the internal metal armature, latex skin, and underlying foam to the best of their ability. To fix this more recent issue, the team worked with outside vendors throughout the summer and fall of to fabricate a new housing for the pneumatic parts that move the head, and they returned this fan favorite to the floor in time for the winter holidays.

Making the Old New Again

To prepare for future problems and to advance the model into a long-lived future, Lucas had been talking for months with Andy Hall, D.Sc., director of Saint Louis University’s Center for Additive Manufacturing (SLU CAM). The science center was interested in tapping into SLU CAM’s 3D-printing capabilities to create full-scale models of artifacts, such as fossils, that would give guests a chance to physically interact with such objects while avoiding harm or damage to the genuine articles.  

“[The science center has] a lot of things that are behind glass, and things they don’t even show because they’re that valuable,” Hall said. “We had had many on-and-off conversations with them.”  

This most recent T. rex breakdown provided a perfect opportunity for the science center to see what SLU CAM could do for its exhibits on a dino-sized scale.

“Once I heard about the idea that [skin] molds could be created from a 3D scan,” Lucas said, “then I thought, ‘Maybe this is a good proof of concept for us working together.’”

Scanning for Collaboration

Lucas invited the SLU CAM team to come and test some of their 3D-scanning technology on exhibits at the science center, with a special focus on the broken-down T. rex. Hall and his colleague Michael Borovik, SLU CAM lead engineer, used one of SLU CAM’s handheld scanners to capture a detailed image of one of the dinosaur’s legs.

“In real time, it reconstructs the surface, including color, of whatever it is you’re scanning,” Hall said.

The pair also scanned a fossilized Triceratops skull that sits near the dinosaur diorama, eventually 3D-printing a model of the fossilized relic.  

Hall said that he and his SLU CAM colleagues quickly realized that their equipment was not up to the task of scanning the entire surface of the animatronic T. rex. Handheld scanners, he noted, are best at scanning things the size of a breadbox or perhaps a little bigger. While it was technically possible to scan the whole T. rex, doing so would be challenging, and extremely time-consuming.  

Given these limitations, Hall’s thoughts went to the Taylor Geospatial Institute (TGI), which houses a data services team that is stocked with the latest sensors and geospatial tools that are adapted to imaging large areas, such as agricultural fields or urban landscapes.

“We took our hand scanner over there and scanned a leg,” Hall said. “After that, we thought [the job] was better suited for the TGI technology.”  

So Hall reached out to the TGI data services team, which includes Justin Vilbig, a geospatial data scientist. Hall knew that Vilbig might be able to apply advanced imaging technology, such as laser imaging, detection and ranging (LiDAR), to mapping the 3D surface of the T. rex’s latex skin. TGI could also map the diorama in which the dinosaur stands so that the whole display could potentially be replaced or repaired in the future. LiDAR works by bouncing light off a surface — usually the surface of the Earth — to determine its precise features and contours.

“Andy reached out to us saying that there seems like there’s a need for a pretty detailed 3D model of the T. rex,” Vilbig said. “The underlying purpose of this is to get centimeter-level accuracy on the whole diorama, because they will eventually need to replace all the skin pieces of the dinosaurs there. They want to have accurate measurements of them, so they don’t have to redo it every time they have to order a new part for it.”  

Vilbig planned to approach the project from two angles, using backpack-mounted LiDAR scanners to image the T. rex from the ground and optical sensors affixed to a small drone that would fly around the exhibit and capture detailed 3D images. These two methods, working in tandem, would capture the surface of the dinosaurs in unprecedented detail.

“When you’re dealing with a target like this T. rex, if you’re off by 5 to 10 centimeters, you’re going to have an error, and if you’re trying to recreate measurements for this latex skin, you won’t have your seams match up,” Vilbig said. “The LiDAR scanner allows us to get really precise measurements.”

Vilbig and his team of geospatial data scientists typically use drone-mounted LiDAR above agricultural fields or archaeological sites to characterize plant growth or to search for subtle features on the ground. But they jumped at the chance to apply the technology in a unique setting.

“It’s not a huge lift for us, because it’s using the tech we use all the time. Just applying it in a unique environment,” Vilbig said. “For us, it was an opportunity to test the limits of the equipment we use all the time.”

Fix Now, Scan for Later

As the T. rex’s complex recovery continued, Lucas and the team at the science center made the decision to fix the dinosaur as they had in the past one last time. In mid-November, they installed new metal and pneumatic components that control the dino’s movements. And they used plenty of elbow grease to manually scrape away layers of paint and latex on the deteriorating skin so that they could apply fresh layers.

“We’re grinding away the old paint that’s on there,” he said, “so we can get the new skin to adhere to the old skin underneath.”

But as it grows ever older, the animatronic dinosaur is almost sure to suffer the effects of its advanced age again. So Lucas said that once the T. rex is back up and running, he’ll invite the SLU and TGI teams back to the science center to complete comprehensive scans of the beast. That way, the next time it breaks, science center team members can have a detailed replacement skin 3D-printed using the TGI team’s scans.

“In the future that skin is going to break down eventually,” Lucas said. “Once we get the repair done, we want them to scan it, so that we know that’s where it’s at in the future.”  

Taking this proactive approach will free the science center from patching up the aging reptile in the future and will relieve stress placed upon the T. rex from successive attempts to patch up its skin.

“If we got a new fresh skin put on, we would probably lose hundreds of pounds of material,” Lucas explained.

That would hopefully also extend the lifespan of the internal components, which can operate more freely if the additional weight of repairs past is not stressing the entire structure.  

Vilbig said the collaboration with the science center allows him and the TGI data services team to test and develop their equipment and scientific processes in a nontraditional environment and with a unique target. Vilbig and his TGI colleagues will return there to scan the T. rex and its surrounding exhibit mates in the nearby diorama to ensure a pathway to a quick fix in the event of future problems with the iconic exhibit.

“It’s cool data for us to be able to test some of the new algorithms and new modeling approaches for photogrammetry where we try to see how this unique object can be reconstructed,” he said. This new forum for geospatial science and technology could instruct future projects at the science center or other spaces outside of the agricultural fields and archaeological sites on which the TGI team frequently works.  

Lucas agreed that a collaboration with SLU and TGI could bear fruit beyond a new, 3D-printed dinosaur skin.

“We look forward to continuing this relationship for sure,” he said.

Vilbig added that he’s thrilled to work at a venerated St. Louis institution such as the science center.

Contact us to discuss your requirements of Animatronic T-Rex Costume. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.

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