Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Commission: Lucy from Fairy Tail

Well, after an entire day's work, I've finished my youngest sister's costume, and I am exhausted. So ridiculously exhausted. Hard to believe I haven't even started on my own costume yet. We're really getting down to it. *jumps up to stop euphoric cat from rolling around in tissue sewing patterns* 

The costume wasn't all that difficult, though the pattern I bought for the bolero top had the strangest collar I've ever seen. It's like something the bourgeoisie French might've worn. *scratches head* Really bizarre. What _was_ difficult was how many separate pieces there were, and the various details of each. Bolero top, bodice (fully lined, with appliqué), tie-on flounce sleeves, and a skirt. That's a lot to finish in one day, lemme tell ya.

Anyway, another anime character costume, from another show I've never seen and know nothing about. At least my sister is delighted. I wasn't terribly sold on the electric yellow with the royal blue, but it does give it a sufficient pop of color. I adjusted the original costume to make it more modest (made the bodice a full one instead of a belly shirt, and lengthened the skirt). 


I have to say, it looks remarkably good on her. The skirt and bodice mesh together well, and almost look like a dress. The flounce sleeves are really (dare I say it?) cute. I think my version looks better than the one in the anime. *satisfied grin*

Next up in my pre-Halloween costume marathon is Daenerys! Haven't seen Game of Thrones, but I'm sufficiently impressed by the costume work, especially the gowns worn by the "Mother of Dragons." I have a shoulder dragon I'm going to use as part of the costume; looking forward to wearing it. But first... I'm taking a much-needed break. :)

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Commission: Maka Coat from Soul Eater

Firstly, I have no idea what a "soul eater" is, and I think I might prefer it that way. Secondly, I generally avoid that particular niche of interest known as anime and manga. Alas, my sisters are highly enamored of it, and spend most of their days scheming about how they're going to acquire their next fix. Thus, I find myself in the strange position of recreating costumes from animes, as both my sisters want to be anime characters for Halloween (my youngest sister wants to be, I've been informed, "Lucy from Fairy Tail." That means absolutely nothing to me. I was all, "Whatev. Just show me a picture, and I'll make the stupid outfit." *muttermutter*))

Anyway, here's the finished coat for my second youngest sister, meant to be Maka's from Soul Eater. She has a huge red and black scythe that goes with it. I wonder if she's meant to be some kind of Grim Reaper. A fashionable Grim Reaper. *shivers*


It's black wool suiting fully lined with some kind of slubby polyester that used to be a curtain. The buttons were fun to do. They started out their short little lives as ordinary black buttons from Joann's. Now they're fabulous silver buttons with black x's on them. (For anyone who might be making this same costume, get thin scotch tape, cut pieces in half lengthwise, and stick them on the button to form an x. Then spray paint the whole thing in metallic silver, wait for it to dry, remove the tape, and cover in a coat of clear acrylic sealer.) 

For those interested in the lining process, I basically made two coats, then pinned them together, right side to right side, and sewed around the whole thing, leaving a small gap in the lower hem. After I turned the coat right side out, I designed the cuffs (basically a long rectangle of white fabric fused to interfacing), and hand sewed them to the ends of the sleeves, using the cuff to sandwich the raw edges for a nice, clean finish. There are also matching buttons on the cuffs.


The pattern I used for the coat/dress is one I've used for many different projects. I love it because it fits me well, and as such, is quite flattering to anyone with more of an hourglass figure. As you can see from the above picture, the coat scoops in to hug the small of the back instead of proceeding downward in a straight, boring line. It's really great if you can find a basic pattern that works for your body type, because you can use it over and over for all sorts of custom work and you're already familiar with the pattern and its assembly.


Anyway, expect more rapid updates in the next few days. I have on the docket, to finish before Halloween:
1) Lucy from Fairy Tail
2) Daenerys's Wedding Gown from Game of Thrones
3) Simple, last minute Thor costume for my younger brother (he wants to wear it to his job at Wal-Mart, since all his fellow employees evidently refer to him as the aforementioned Norse god because of his long blond hair and beard) 

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Commission: Dr. Who Inspired Cloak

So I didn't really document this process as much as I probably should have, but suffice it to say... it wasn't so much challenging as it was time-consuming. It's fully lined, and quite heavy, made of blue linen look fabric and gold crepe back satin. 

The Tardis windows on the lower hem are appliqués, hand cut out and applied, then stitched around. That took the majority of the first day.


The 50-odd Dalek circles were as evil and homocidal as their fictional counterparts, and I had to hand paint every single one. It took about six hours total. 



If it had just been an ordinary lined cloak, it would've taken about three hours. All told, this decorative cloak took me some fifteen hours. Repetitive tasks. Not a fan. 


I'm going to have nightmares about painting black circles... over and over and over and over. Exterminate! *dies*