Posts

Showing posts with the label Bill the Duck

The Chicken Opera: Bill the Duck

Image
  The Chicken Opera   B ill The Duck Completed March 2012 Items made:  Jacket, Pants   (I did not design these amazing makeups -- I wish I had -- but I included them an yway because they're that final element that fin ishes the look.)    If you've been reading my blog, you'd know that I made several of the costumes for my college's original production, The Chicken Opera .   We were going for the look of a Mallard with this so we went with a pretty green damask for the main body of the jacket and navy for the collar and cuffs.  It was originally a double breasted jacket pattern with pointed lapels but I changed the front to a bib neckline and swapped the collar for a shawl collar to mimic the breast of a duck.  I'm very happy with how it turned out. The trousers are basically oversized shorts with banded legs made from a really nice orange microsuede.

Taking the Duck outta Turducken!

Image
Hey Cool Cats and Cute Kittens, So I actually "finished" this coat about a week ago but I've just been too busy to upload the pics. (And by finished, I mean, the coat is sewn together but the linings haven't been sewn down and the closures aren't done). One thing nice about working in a costume shop is that I can hand stuff off to other people to finish. Which is great because I don't like to handsew. SEW, I can let someone else handsew all those linings. Mwhahahaha! Maniacal Laughter! But I really REALLY like this coat. I want one just like it, in my size -- For steampunking purposes, of course.... or maybe just to wear out on a cool evening. You know, those 3 evenings a year in Texas that are cool enough to comfortably wear a coat. But a little more about the coat. It started off as Burda 2627. I changed the front from a two button center close to a deep tuxedo bib front thing with a shawl collar. I also had to resize this as the pattern ...

More Turducken pics.

Image
Hey there! Hi there! Ho there! Well, I finished drafting the duck's jacket last Tuesday. Which fit him perfectly. Which is awesome because I'm still not very confident in my drafting abilities. But I'm working on them and that's the important thing. So, NOW, I get to do the fun part--making the actual jacket! As I've mentioned before, the duck is supposed to be a mallard so his coat is green and I'm going to do the cuffs and collar in a really pretty blue. I'll also line the jacket in white, which sounds weird but I want that flash of white when he moves since if you've seen mallards, they have a bit of blue and white on their wings. So this coat will have white on its tails... which, surprisingly, the tails on the coat look a little duckish. Another thing I wanted to mention is that you're probably wondering "What's up with all the progress pictures?" Well, it's not a bad idea to document your process. Whe...

It has begun...

Image
Hey there all you cos-crazy people!!! So... something I've wanted to do for quite some time is to start my own costume pattern line. And recently I made a goal for myself to get the first one ready by no later than the end of March. Well, at least to the point where everything is drafted... maybe not all put together and packaged. But tonight I've started the first one. Here's a sneak peek... I know... I know... it isn't very much... just a waist band and a pocket yoke... so obviously I'm drafting a pair of trousers... but for what??? Well... that's a secret. But if you were wanting a certain military uniform to wear in a fantasized post-industrial revolutionary Europe wherein alchemy is utilized by the government and scientific fields... well, this would be a pattern for you. It's actually pretty challenging since this one has to be a unisex costume and the sizes will range from XXS-XXL. (that's SEVEN different sizes!) So I'm hoping...

Ducks and Duchesses!!!

Image
Okay not really a Duchess... actually the Queen of Hearts from Alice in Wonderland. (even though there IS a duchess in the story). Anyway, I started working on the pattern for the Queen. And here's a picture of my favorite place to work... .... sitting on my bed with a big work desk (aka piece of cardboard). Yay for stocking feet in the pic. I have an area set up in my den, but it's by a window and it gets cold in there. Plus on my bed I can stick pins through the cardboard and into the bed to hold down patterns and stuff. By the way, I use Husky 3.5 Plastic sheeting (the clear kind) to transfer my patterns onto. It's less than $10 at Wal-Mart for 250 square feet and makes perfect, indestructible pattern pieces. Just lay the plastic over your pattern piece and pin (this is where pinnable surfaces come in super handy) and trace away. Here are all the bodice pieces traced and cut out. I'm using Simplicity 3782 as my base. I'll need to alter the col...