• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
  • Contact Life with Heidi
  • About Me
  • Entertainment
  • Family
  • Gift Guides
Life With Heidi

Life With Heidi

Adventures in life with food and all things fun!

  • Home & Organization
    • Food & Recipes
    • DIY
  • Travel
  • Frugal living
    • Health & Beauty
    • Technology
Home | Family | Baymax Birthday Party Ideas

Baymax Birthday Party Ideas

Family

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • Baymax Birthday Party Ideas
  • Big Hero Fun Facts

Baymax Birthday Party Ideas

Baymax-Birthday Party

 

The old Pin the Tail on the donkey games comes to a whole new level with Pin the Mood on Baymax! This adorable fluffy character will be the center of the party!!

Big-Hero-6-Banner BH6_BirthdayGuide_Banner[1]-page-001 (1)

 

Every kid loves to have a birthday banner with their name on it! Print out your own personalized banners with the help of this Big Hero 6 Alphabet!

Baymax Birthday Party Ideas

No party is complete without a cake or even cookies!! Use this recipe to make Baymax Cookie Pops! If you still have a cake pop machine or pan that would make the perfect Baymax Cake Pops as well!

Baymax-Cookies

 

Big Hero 6 Birthday Party Invitations

Big-Hero-6-Birthday-Invitation

Baymax-Invitation

 

DOWNLOAD IT all here: Big-Hero-6-Birthday-Party-Kit

Big Hero Fun Facts

You could use these as a trivia game so to speak, or fun facts around the room. The possibilities are endless really!

SLAM DUNK – Baymax is 6 feet tall and 75 pounds—until Hiro mechs him out. Baymax, in his super suit, is more than 7 feet tall and can lift 1000 pounds. “He’s all air,” says head of animation Zach Parrish.

 

GO AHEAD – Artists looked at actors like John Wayne, Clint Eastwood, Gary Cooper and other cowboys to study cool, emotionally reserved traits while developing GoGo Tomago’s look and personality.

IT’S ALL ABOUT THE BLINK – Baymax sports a standard nine-frame-blink, says head of animation Zach Parrish. “We play with the speed of his blink throughout the film, but for the most part, it’s a standard blink. It’s the amount of time we give the audience to think before he blinks that says a lot—the longer it is, the more time he’s processing. A double blink shows confusion. We used that a few times in the film. That could be an acting choice for a human character, too.”

More Fun Facts and activities too! 

March 1, 2015 · Leave a Comment

Previous Post: « McFarland Featurette
Next Post: Interviewing Ginnifer Goodwin »

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Affiliate Disclaimer We work with a variety of different affiliate companies. This means that we will receive a small compensation if you purchase from one of our affiliate links. This will not affect the price of your item(s). "As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases."

Search by Category

Copyright © 2026 · Farmhouse Theme by Restored 316