Tuesday 22 October 2013

Kain Highwind Armor : Arm armor stage 1

FINALLY!

We started work on the armor for our costumes!  Our Cecil already had his arm armor started, so he helped me get the jump on my Kain arm armor.
Kain, why you so spiky!?


Using the taped patterns we had made a month or so ago, we drew on the shape of the armor and cut out our patterns. Then we fixed the edges of those patterns and made paper patterns from them and mocked it up in paper. After that was done it was a matter of marking left and right arm, and then cutting out the pieces in craft foam and worbla.

Transferring to craft foam, you can already see parts of the patterns drawn onto the worbla.
Still transferring/cutting out.


After everything was cut out, it was time to break out the heat gun and heat up the Worbla plastic. After its heated, we placed the craft foam in between the 2 layers and sandwiched it, pushed down our edges to seal it, timmed off the excess plastic (saving all discarded parts) and then smoothed out the edges.
Once the 2 pieces were stuck together with the craft foam inside and the edges smoothed out, it was time to shape the pieces to my arm.  Now I have a really high heat tolerance, so keeping that in mind we heated up the plastic, let it cool a tiny bit and  then placed it right on my bare skin (not recommended, wear a shirt if you aren't numb to heat like me).  Once it was on my arm, with my other hand I shaped the front armor shaped plastic to my arm shape. High Heat tolerance aside, my arm was really red for about an hour after this, so seriously, wear a shirt as a buffer. Also, Worbla is sticky when it's heated and my arm hair stuck to  it a bit as well.

Anyway. The front arm shape I made myself, but looking at the picture above, the back arm shape peels away from my elbow, so in that case my friend bent that away from me while I held down the other pieces to shape to my arm.  The result looks like this:

I'm pretty darn pleased!


This is the base for our Cecil's arm armor:

After the arm armor was done, it was time to start on the patterns for the leg armor, which resulted in some...compromising photos.

Drawing the pattern of the leg armor onto the masking tape.

After it was all drawn, it was time to cut me out again.

That is as far as we got that night, so stay tuned for the next update!





Monday 14 October 2013

How to make Cuite Mark socks/legwarmers.

Hello all!

So I did these a couple weeks ago, but was too busy to post until now. So now you get a quick little guide on how to make Cutie Mark socks/legwarmers!

What you need:
  • Pencil
  • Paper
  • Steam-a-seam, heat n' bond or stitch witchery (some sort of two sided iron on adhesive to attach your design to the sock)
  •  2 way stretch fabric in the colours of your pony and their cutie mark.
  • Scissors (paper and fabric)
  • Thread matching your fabric.
  • Measuring tape.
  • ruler


First, pick your pony.  Mine is of course Applejack.

On some paper, draw out the preferred pony's cutie mark.  Remember, if your pony has more then one picture for their mark, you need to make the sign pretty small so the multiple pictures will fit on the front of your shin not wrap around to the back of your sock (This goes for a single mark cutie mark like Rainbow Dash or Twilight sparkle as well). Applejack's cutie mark is 3 apples with leaves, so this is how big my apple and leaves are in comparison to a pen.



Next, cut out your mark or marks from the stretch fabric and the steam-a-seam. Once done, set them aside.

I forgot to take pictures of this part. (sorry!)
 With a measuring tape,  measure how long you want your sock to be and then measure around your leg in 3 place: The top bottom and middle of  where your sock will land. I measured above my knee, around the thickest part of my calve and my ankle.

My socks length was 47 cm long (approx 18.5 inches). The width at the top (over my knee) was  36cm, the calve was 33cm and around my ankle was 20cm.

Draw a center line that is the length of your sock.  At the top, middle and bottom of this line, draw a line across that is the width of your top, middle and bottom measurement (half on each side of the center line).  You'll end up with something that looks like this:



Join the top line to the bottom line.  Don't worry if it cuts the edges of your middle line off a bit, it's more important to get the shape then match everything up.  Doing that, you will get a shape like this:

 Cut that shape out and you have your bace sock/legwarmer pattern.

Next, positioning your cutie mark:
I am making these for Applejack's Equestria Girls outfit, which means they are meant to be worn with cowboy boots.  So, I slipped my pattern into my boot and traced around the top edge of the boot so I would know where that ended.
 
Once I traced around the top of my boot, I drew in my cutie marks and then double checked it in the boot to make sure it still worked.


Once I had the final position of my cutie mark figured out, I put in notches  to mark the sides and bottom of each mark as well as where the bottom of the leaves would be.  This is so you can trace the positioning onto the fabric easier.



 With a marking tool, trace around the pattern of the sock.

Cut out the fabric, flip it over so the right side of the fabric is out and put your pattern back on the fabric.  Take your marking tool and trace out the cutie marks.


Remove your pattern and place your already cut out cutie marks (with adhesive) onto the fabric.  Carefully take that over to the ironing board (re-position if they moved in transport) and using a pressing cloth  iron your cutie marks to your socks.

Once you have ironed your marks down. Stitch around the edges of the mark with the zigzag stitch in matching colour thread so it blends in.  This is to secure them further and keep your edges from possibly rolling from wear and tear later.

Hem the top and bottom of your sock with a zigzag stitch (a straight stitch will snap and break in a stretch fabric because it doesn't move, whereas a zigzag will move with the fabric and stay sewn).

Once you have sewn the top and bottom, match up your edges and sew your sides, also with a zigzag stitch. You may want to put an extra pin in at the top and bottom to secure your hems from moving in sewing and being uneven.

Hooray! we have something that looks vaguely like a tube sock!  But trying it on you realize it is rather baggy in places still, isn't it?  That is because there is one last step:

Take your tube, and put it on inside out.  Either by yourself or with the help of someone else, pin along the contours of your leg to get a tighter fit. It'll end up looking something like this:
Hello  Cheshire from young justice's knee band.
Very carefully slide the pinned tube off your leg, so as to not poke yourself or loose any pins.  Re-adjust your pins so you have a smoother line and sew up this new pinned line.  Cut off the now excess fabric and  finish your edges, either by surgeing or cutting with pinking shears. Sew a little line of stitching to secure down the seam allowances at the top and bottom so they don't poke out and Voila!

 Now you have a sock/legwarmer!  Wear and enjoy!


If for some reason, they don't want to stay up, its just a matter of bringing in the seam at the back more so they are tighter.  I wore mine around the house for a while (hence the wrinkles) to test if they would stay up.

You may have noticed my leggings are brown not orange like Applejack.  This is because  her cutie marks in Equestria Girls are on her cowboy boots, which are brown.  So I made my socks to reflect that.

Thursday 3 October 2013

Equestria Girls AppleJack (My Little Pony Friendship is Magic)

So I have always loved My Little Pony.  I have 4-5 shelves full of G1 (generation 1 aka the ponies from the 1980's) ponies and that collection grows on a regular basis.  One of my favoirte's was and still is Applejack.  Infact Applejack is the reason I started watching the new My Little Pony Friendship is Magic series.  So it seemed like fine idea to me to cosplay as one of the ponies, and as much as my friends all probably thought that would be Fluttershy, it was always going to be Applejack.

Now I am not a hoofed mammal, so obviously this costume would have to be a human version of the character, which is when the Equestira Girls movie came out (and turned out not to be terrible) I had my chance. In that movie after all were cannon Human ponies.

So here she is.  Applejack.  A pretty basic costume. I  chose to take a couple creative liberties with the costume.  Obviously I was probably never going to find Cowboy boots with apples on them (although the ones I did find have butterflies, Fluttershy would approve) So I will be making brown socks with the cutie marks on them instead.  Also,Applejack is a country girl, and country girls like to square-dance, so I made my skirt more poofy with a crinoline (in orange and yellow, her pony colours) underneath it.



I found this fan art online and really liked it.  The Equestira Girls outfit is after all rather void of detail, so I chose to use the styling from this fanart.  So my pockets have the loopy design on them and my hem is double stitched in yellow.


This is what I have so far, please ignore how wrinkled it looks, its been on and off that Judy a billion times now (and in a heap on a table/floor more then once). It's also looking much longer then the actual skirt there cause my Judy is not matching my actual height (I'm 5'10, the Judy is like 5')
All that is left is to attach the pockets to the skirt, make the socks and an apple shaped belt buckle!

Thursday 26 September 2013

Even Godzilla would be dwarfed

 Yeeeaaah..... maybe binding those edges with bias tape was not the best idea.  Thank God I only did 1 layer bound and then tried it on under the skirt before doing the other 3 layers.
Poster skirt for Abba's new hot song "Square dancing Queen"


My face when I  first saw the effect it had:
Oh Darling! What were you thinking!?
I don't know Rarity. I really don't.










My horror was short lived though, after it wore off, it basically turned into this and started taking pictures.
If you can't laugh hysterically at your mistakes, you are too serious.



Wednesday 25 September 2013

Making a crinoline.

Making a crinoline.

TAKES FOREVER!

 So I am making a crinoline for a Halloween costume I have been working on.  The skirt in the pictures is quite poofy so I figured this was the best way to get that look.  

It's in two layers (folded, so I guess 4 layers) of Crinoline.  Yellow is the longer layer for the bottom

And orange for the above layer.


This is my day...right here.  
Gathering and gathering and gathering.


The Crinoline is being sewn the way I remember Fabrics doing ours at Kings Landing Historical settlement. 
Layers of gathered ruffles rather then the standard 50's petticoat crinoline.  I wanted a good amount of poof, and if this method works for and 1860's hoop skirt. It should work for this.


So the white part (which will be trimmed) is actually just a cotton version of the circle skirt that will be over it.  I guessed that the over-skirt length would be about 40cm or so when done, so I've made the petticoat 35com so it doesn't hang below. Once it is done, it will get sewn into the waistband of the over skirt and function as a lining/petticoat.
I've left it bare down to about the 20cm mark, which is just around where my hips are (so I don't get a big butt profile :P)

The orange layer of gathering is 3, 3m pieces about 31 cm wide and then folded in half (so 15-16 cm after the fold), sewn and gathered together.  The yellow band under it is 20 cm wide (so 10 cm when folded) and is 4, 3m long pieces.

Once it is all gathered, I laid the skirt out flat and pinned the ruffle along a line I drew in chalk to make where i wanted it to be.  As I went  along , I made sure I had it the right length to wrap around the entire skirt and that the gathers were even. Then I sewed down the orange later.  I've repeated the same steps for the yellow ruffle and have just got it pinned and ready to sew down.

Once it is sewn down, I'll be binding the edges with cotton seam binding (crinoline is hella scratchy/picks otherwise) and then trimming off the excess white fabric and hemming it/attaching it to the already made over skirt.


Stay tuned!

Sunday 25 August 2013

Armor making for Final Fantasy 4

I've got some fantastically talented friends who along with me have decided on a group cosplay for Anime North 2014  in Toronto (already have our hotels rooms and everything).  My friend Sean decided our first group cosplay: Final Fantasy 4.

Cause we are crazy and feel the need to jump in headfirst into making entire suits of armor!

Fortunately, the boys have done a ton of research and studding and know what they are doing (admittedly the who armor thing is daunting and scary to me) so they have taken up the mantle of Armor and Props for Delirium's Edge Designs!

So here is the start of these costumes:

The pattern for the upper body armor for Kain Highwind. It was made by wrapping me with plastic wrap and then covering it in painters tape.  This will be the base the guys make the patterns off of for my eventual cosplay armor.


I was trying to look cocky...I think I failed.

And here is Sean in his beginning  base armor pattern wrap for Paladin Cecil.

Congratulations! You won the fight! *insert Final Fantasy Victory music here*

All together we will have 4 of the FF characters done for Anime North 2014: Paladin Cecil, Kain Highwind, Rosa and Edge.  Between Cecil and Kain that is a ton of armor to be molded, painted and attached, which is why we are starting now.


Just in case people have not played one of the best Final Fantasy games ever made, here are some visuals:

Cecil (Paladin)

Rosa

Kain Highwind

Edge.



I'll be making Edge's pants, cape, body armor, leg armor. Cecils Cape(s) and Kain's Butt-cape (and possibly helping out with Rosa, who's cosplayer lives in a different city) and helping out they guys making the armor and prop weapons.  


Wish us luck!






Sunday 14 July 2013

I'm not dead, or ignoring my blog. I'm just taking the month of July off to actually enjoy the summer!

Sunday 23 June 2013

Messy but effective!

I just spent my morning painting all the gray vinyl pieces with a wash of black acrylic paint.  I found they looked way to plastic for my tastes and the wash brings out the texture of the vinyl a bit better.

what a mess....
  I used some paper towel which i dabbed into black acrylic paint and then in water to water it down and then rubbed all over the vinyl. Then I wiped away the excess with a dry paper towel piece.

I dunno if you can see the difference, but the gray band over the knee covers is the original untouched vinyl and everything else are the ones that have had a black wash over them.

 I am fitting the belts and bands on the client around 1pm today, then it just a matter of sewing on some velcro, a buckle and the elastic for the boot covers and I am done! Woo!

Saturday 22 June 2013

Well for starters, he doesn't go by Speedy any more. Call me Red Arrow.

I am so close to being done I can feel it! Or maybe that is the red dye from this shirt I feel, it kinda rubbed off on everything! It's so strange, it just rubbed red everywhere, my pin heads, my sewing machine, my hands...the pants and socks (which where white -__-) I was wearing... so when I washed it in cold water I expected that water to go pink fast, but NOTHING. So weird. I washed it in cold water and vinegar just in case.

Anyway, the shirt is done, I only had to do that blasted zipper 2-3 times, even with it basted and pinned with in an inch of its life, somehow that point came out uneven!  Finally though, it worked out. :)

 I fitted these...Wednesday night I believe? All that is left is to mark and put in the thumb holes on the arm bands.


The shoulder harness is done too, it was a first. I had no clue how to go about making one so I kinda made this up as I went. I think once I am done the bags and belt I will go over it with a wash of black acrylic paint to bring out the texture in the vinyl  so it looks less gray and shiny.

And here is the rest of what I have left. A pile of belts and bags for his leg bag things.

The end is Neigh!

Tuesday 18 June 2013

Not a sidekick

Yesterday consisted of a lot of pattern drafting and today consisted of a ton of sewing for Red Arrow from Young Justice



So far on the "things that are done" list I have the arm bands ready to fit:




The knee bands ready to go for a fitting:
Before.

After.


And the shirt (now) just needs its collar put on and bound, and the sleeve holes finished. Oh and the Zipper.

I also have his shoulder harness nearly ready to go, it just needs the underarm straps attached and fitted.

Not to shabby for a days work, but boy and I beat!