Tag: Sewing

  • Manipulating Fabric

    Manipulating Fabric

    I’m really in love with the idea of doing something different with my costumes. I love the simple lines of things like robes and tunic, but as I’ve mentioned so many times before, I also really love the idea of taking things just that little bit further. Usually I do that by trying to make the interior finishes really special and the outside very neat, but I also love the idea of manipulating and even making your own fabric.

    As I mentioned in my Mythlore post, I plan to experiment heavily with pin tucking and cording in the pieces I’m making at the moment. the idea is to create a theme that runs through all the pieces and ties them together. A motif, if you want to use the fancy word. 😉

    But I’ve also been looking around the net for inspiration and have been coming up with all kinds of creative things that you can do. Here’s a few that have started to get my brain thinking.

    Manipulating Fabric for Costume
    Manipulating Fabric for Costume Manipulating Fabric for Costume Manipulating Fabric for Costume Manipulating Fabric for Costume Manipulating Fabric for CostumeAnd from this book which has now gone on my amazon wish list after finding it on Google books: The Art of Manipulating Fabric

    The Art of Manipulating Fabric

    Manipulating Fabric for CostumeManipulating Fabric for Costume Manipulating Fabric for Costume Manipulating Fabric for Costume Manipulating Fabric for Costume Manipulating Fabric for Costume

    This book also looks like it might be worth a look: Shadowfolds: Surprisingly Easy-To-Make Geometric Designs in Fabric

    Shadow Folds - Manipulating Fabric

  • Mythlore Costume – Diablo 3

    Mythlore Costume – Diablo 3

    So I’ve been on a total binge recently of playing Diablo 3. Barely a day goes past that I don’t play at least one round on bounties mode. DWM and I are currently working on obtaining infernal machines over… and over… and over… Blizzard does like a good grind.

    Anyway, I feel like quite a lot of the Mythlore inspiration is coming from my Monk character in Diablo 3. In my opinion, Mythlore is similar to a costume available in Diablo 2. It is worth noting that most of the in-game items from Diablo 2 such as the hellfire torch, the hellfire torch d2, and the stone of Jordan can be found in Diablo 3. It also appears that the new version contains more new costumes.

    Mythlore is pretty much the colour palette I like, and actually the belt wasn’t that far from what I was imagining. Only with long robes under it.

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    The leg and wrist wraps are quite a nice variation on armour (gloves and boots) in D3 and I’m wondering if perhaps wraps like this on the arm might be a good feature for a Physic. After all, would they not use what they have to protect themselves?

    As an aside, I’d love to be able to make costume tatty like this. How do you do that and not let it fray more than you want it to fray?

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    Yellow is a great colour for this character. Judas was always painted wearing yellow in Renaissance paintings, and so it has connotations of deceit and betrayal. It also represents feelings of cowardice and has long been used to signify physical illness. Dark yellow also feels oppressive to be around. As a cowardly and lazy, ex-criminal, cursed physic, this seems pretty perfect.

  • Mythlore Costume – First Thoughts

    Mythlore Costume – First Thoughts

    So the request from a friend came in this morning. “I might need to enlist you to make me some costume at some point.” Well I’ve been contemplating my next project and I can’t currently justify spending more money on kit for myself (I really just don’t need it) so this seems like a perfect opportunity. Plus I wasn’t in the mood to work so I jumped right on it.

    It’s for Mythlore, run by the extraordinarily talented Mark Cordory. It’s an incredible visual spectacle. I’d love to go and photograph it, but my friend Tom along with Mark himself already do a rather wonderful job so I would be utterly surplus to requirement!

    Anyway. Enough sucking up. Back to the costume.

    Persian inspired without any of the shiny satin fabrics (so that means natural materials from this point on). No key armour pieces, player is a physic and seems to want the robed look from the pictures he sent.

    Let me talk you through what I’ve got so far.

    Colour pallet. So that I can start keeping my eye out for things. This could evolve.

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    Headwear. Headwear is essential. Tagelmusts are an easy way to get headwear if you can learn to tie them. Just a strip of fabric, easy.

    a097878af28f08330e98ee0b8ce44758Cross body straps and layers. Because texture is cool.

    b50e2666655379d35de66a30a105f524Outer robes. 3/4 length sleeves seem to look good here, faced with wide bands of colour.

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    But I’ve got a trick up my sleeves for the back of the robes. I love the way that this is split into three layers.

    dea45ede11bcfe9968aa4e06ac320d0fAnd then there’s the under garments. A simple kimonoish style robe tied at the sides.

    vlcsnap-2014-07-03-12h49m04s195Since this is fantasy, like the outer robes we don’t have to stick to authenticity. I saw this drawing where the sash really caught my eye, something like this might be in the works.

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    In my quest to try out new techniques and finishes to the pieces I make, I’ve invested in a pin tuck foot for my sewing machine. Basically you use it with fine cording under the fabric to create raised lines. I can never find fabric that is textured to my liking, so I figured why not create my own? This is the best picture I could find of the technique:

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    So I’m envisioning lines of texture placed at key points on the robes. I’m lucky that the person I’m dressing is slim and athletic, therefore we can dress him and use texture and surface decoration to accentuate his silhouette. That means I’m going to attempt to fit the robes to him while making them flutter about in the breeze, and load them with texture that flows the flow as he moves.

    I’m excited.

     

  • The embroidered horse bag

    The embroidered horse bag

    I’m calling it a horse bag because horse pouch sounds… well…

    A few months ago I blogged about the horse embroidery I’d been working on but I forgot to blog the finished piece.

    Here it is! Having been through two muddy empires. I’m incapable of hand washing anything properly, so I guess it’s going to stay muddy until I take it to my mothers.

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  • Odyssey Minoan – Tunic

    Odyssey Minoan – Tunic

    So the costume making continues. Since MattP brought us fancy red and black site jackets for Empire, there is very little costuming that needs to be done for the game. I have a jacket, I have trousers, I have shirts, I can get on the field in kit. I don’t quite have enough to wear something clean each day, but that’s a minor problem.

    However with Odyssey there is no ‘site kit’ so I still need to make more of my own. This time, it’s a black tunic to hide the camera straps (which are also black).

    I mentioned in my previous post that I enjoy making the finish of my kit as good as it can be and this piece is no exception. Actually I’m going all out on this one and spending time making it seriously nice. The good thing about being time-rich is that I can finish it to a standard that is higher than I can buy. Well, I probably could convince a trader to finish it as nicely as I’m planning to, except it would cost me an absolute fortune.

    Costs:

    Fabric: 1.15m of £3 per meter Ditte from Ikea – £3.45

    Trim: Ceolred Monger, £7.50 for 4m, I think – £5.63

    Total: £9.08

    Illiani asked me on FB to break down the process I was using to finish the kit, so this is picture and explanation heavy.

    I started out with a pattern I drafted from a book I have called Metric Pattern Cutting for Women’s Wear. I don’t have the book here, but I’ve written on it ‘Easy Fit Kimono’ which I think was the name of the pattern I drafted it from within the book. Here’s the pieces and the top that they made (neckline my own alteration):

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 075931

    Yeah, it’s not your ‘basic’ T-tunic that is sold as basic LRP kit, but it sure as hell is more comfortable as far as I’m concerned. The very gently sloped shoulder and sleeve, imo, makes it more comfortable if you have slightly sloping shoulders like most women (and lots of men too). I guess if you’re really broad then the basic T-tunic would be more comfortable.

    Here’s a closer look at the pattern pieces, you might be able to distinguish some of my workings if you’re interested, there’s not really any rocket science going on:

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 075928I took those blocks, laid them onto pattern paper and traced round them. The tunic is quite snug round the hips on me but that isn’t a problem for the shirt because obviously I’ve slit the sides as you can see in the first picture. A floor length tunic would be less forgiving so it had to flare from the waist. I decided to double the hem in size from the waist to allow good movement, and also because I want it to foof out behind me when I walk… yeah… foof is totally a technical word.

    Here’s the drafted pattern, pinned to fabric and cut out. Since it’s almost identical front and back, I’m actually cutting four layers here – both on the fold for the front and back pieces. And four sleeve pieces. Efficiency ftw! (Sorry, totally out of focus. Took the picture at about 10pm.)

    You can see the slight curve I added to the bottom of the tunic so that I don’t have to trim the hem later.

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 075926Then I separated the pieces and cut a V out of one of them to make the front.

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 075925After that the sleeves get french seamed to the body pieces and you end up with something that looks like this:

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 075923

    And then I went to bed. So from now on the pictures will be better.

    I really hate turning over hems. I’m just not very good at it. They’re always a bit wonky and they never quite look right. Since I was planning to trim this tunic extensively (Minoan bling ftw) I decided to use the trim as a kind of reverse seam binding. There is a couture finish that you can use on hem’s where you basically sew a ribbon or similar piece of fabric over the join where you’d normally just turn the hem up and sew it down. Obviously that happens on the inside usually, but I’m basically going to do it on the outside leaving a beautifully clean finish on the inside too.

    Now, because I hate hemming when a garment is made up too, I thought I would do it when it’s still flat. If you’re going to do this, your pattern pieces must have been cut immaculately so that they’re identical lengths. And you’re probably going to have to ease the seams together to make them fit as well. Here’s what I did.

    Turn over the hem of the sleeve or the bottom by ½ inch on the right side of the fabric and iron a sharp crease. Then pin your trim over the top, concealing this raw edge. Then sew the trim carefully to the garment.

    When you sew the trim to the curved hem you must pin the outside bit first and sew it (i.e. the widest circumference, the bit that will hit the floor) and then pin the inner edge (the top edge). This is because the top edge will be a smaller circumference and you’ll have to ease the trim to fit the fabric, by bunching it up slightly. If you go very slowly you should be able to ease it to fit without any creases. Then you can steam iron it later (with a pressing cloth to protect the trim) in order to shape the fabric and the trim to each other.

    The picture is kind of dark, but you can see just about how I’m enclosing the raw edge of where I turned the hem up. Remember, this is the right side of the fabric.

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 075922This isn’t the normal foot I’d use on my sewing machine, but I thought I’d also add in a picture of how to sew trim. Trim often has a border of plain colour around it. You want to match your top thread to this colour as accurately as possible (get an assistant in a sewing shop to help you match thread – there’s a trick to do it where you undo some of it and lay it across the fabric – when the thread ‘disappears’ you have the right colour). As much as possible sew only within the this band of colour, like this:

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 075920

    By doing this I have an almost invisible finish on the trim itself – the brown thread is hidden in the brown foil of the trim. I used black thread in the bobbin so that the back very neatly looks like this:

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    And then when you take it off the machine and lay it out, this is what you have:

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    Next step was to sew up the two sides and under the arms in order to make it a whole tunic rather than two halves. I don’t like raw edges, as I’ve already said, so I used a kind of modified felled seam. Basically what I did was I sewed the seam as normal and then folded under each side of the seam allowance and sewed that fold to the garment each side of the original seam. See here:

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 121049

    From the outside that looks like this:

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 121051

    Just don’t look too hard under the armpits – as usually I have completely cocked them up. I don’t know why I struggle with armpits so much. I just do.

    But anyway, after that all that you need to do is french seam the shoulders and tops of the arms, turn it back the right way and you’re virtually done! There is one last thing that I need to do which is to bias bind the neckline, but that requires me making some bias binding (or buying some if I’m feeling lazy) and I’ve not got round to that yet.

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 121048

     

    Gosh, that’s a terribly out of focus photo. I’m almost ashamed to call myself a photographer.

    It looks like this when it’s assembled with the linen outer tunic:

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140701 121046All I need to do now is make the sash/belt/thing and some pouches to keep my junk inside. Awesome. And get Rich from Evenlode to make me a fancy camera strap, but I might need to wait for some money before that happens.

     

  • Odyssey Minoan – The Outer Tunic

    Odyssey Minoan – The Outer Tunic

    I love making costume. I swear that sewing and making is in my blood almost as much as photography. I’ve not been able to make nearly as much as I’ve wanted to over the winter though due to first having a tiny room in student digs, then finding myself living in one room at mine and my Dads old house with no heating… it wasn’t exactly conducive to costuming. However now I have a decent size flat with a HUGE front room and more than enough space to properly draft patterns on real rolls of pattern paper and then cut large amounts of fabric. Fabulous!

    I didn’t yet have any costume for Odyssey, despite Odysey: The Arrow of Fire being my third event. So I figured I had two months to rectify that problem before Odyssey: The Dweller in the Deeps in August.

    I started with the easy win. An outer tunic to hide my cameras. My cameras are obnoxiously obvious when I’m wearing them. The other problem has been that when I first started shooting LRP I shot with just a camera on a neck strap which wasn’t that invasive. As a result I made loads of light colour costume because it’s nice and cool and to be frank, I had about a bolt of Ikea muslin hanging around. Then I upgraded, bought an amazingly cool cross body camera strap but it’s black and has lots of straps and does not fit the world at all.

    So it started off with this. I traced a pattern roughly off the top half of a hi-vis vest. If someone else has already done the work then why bother doing it again? Before extending the length to make it finish somewhere around my ankles. I was going to inset gores into it but decided that cutting it like this with a wider bottom would allow me to french seam the entire inside, which appears to my utter neat freak. Basically, I only ever make something if I can do a better job (or have it vastly cheaper) than I could buy it. So I meticulously finish inside seams (most of the time) in order to make myself something really nice.

    Costings:

    Linen fabric: £7.10 from eBay including postage (Still have enough left to make sash and some bags).

    Trim: £4.50 from Ceolred Monger.

    Total: £11.60. With some left over to spare.

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140629 160521

    This is actually it with the fabric cut out too. Since I’m so short I managed to cut these pieces selvage to selvage on the fabric (£8 linen from Ikea) meaning that it only took me a fraction over a meter and a half to make.

    As I said, I french seamed the sides and shoulders to make the basic structure.

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140629 160518

    This is it unironed at the moment which is why it’s a slightly strange shape. You’ll also notice that I edged the front opening, neck and arm holes in cute bias tape. I’m just waiting for it to hang for a couple of days before I cut and finish the hem. Nothing special, I’m just going to turn it up and inch or so.

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140629 160516I’ve also got to the stage where I’ve begun acquiring random bits of pattern paper with vague instructions written on them. So I’ve started to store them like this, with a picture of the garment and some brief notes:

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140629 160514Evernote Camera Roll 20140629 160510

     

    Still to make/finish for next Odyssey:

    1. Full length black tunic to go under this outer tunic.
    2. Sash with bull embroidery.
    3. Trousers for Simon (because he seems to have skinnied out of his old kit).
    4. Mongolian inspired kimono/coat thing in black.
    5. Quilt that has been in the works for some time for Minoan tent.

    I should also show you come of the goodies that I got for the next Odyssey too. A tray and bowls from Ikea to fill with nice cheese, bread and olives for the Minoan tent. Not that we’re having a middle-class thing in there. We’re not a bunch of foodies at all…

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140629 160523And not to forget, the miles and miles of fabric that I bought last weekend. About 26 meters of it in total, including the linen for this tunic.

    More grey linen too, not sure what I’ll make from that. Potentially a nice, long tunic as an alternative to the black one. The self striped fabric is actually a bedspread, I thought it would make nice Minoan trousers, but it all looked a bit beige when I held it up to the tunic. They might still be trousers for another outfit though. Or possibly a shirt.

    Evernote Camera Roll 20140629 160522And this is 16 meters of gorgeous muslim from Tahim’s in Coventry. It’s not blue, but rather a beautiful slate grey. It’s destined to be shirts and things so that I can keep putting on clean clothes at events. It’s gorgeously thin, very slightly sheer. Perfect for summer. I also bought myself some commercial patterns from Simplicity to make them out of, but I’m not so convinced having looked at them closely.Evernote Camera Roll 20140629 160524

  • The Cote

    Feeling inspired by good progress on the coif, I decided to start working up a cote for my Empire costume. After all, a good archivist needs a flowing cote to go swashbuckling in tombs, right?

    I know it’s not really very ‘Highguard’. but I’m also kind of limited by the fact I spend most of the time in the woods with my camera round my neck. The challenge here for a young and adventurous archeologist type is how to find a compromise between the strict lines flow of Highguard, while maintaining the ability to move easily. Armour hides a multitude of sins for most people. I think the key here is in the colour. Black, black and more black, with contrast white linings and bindings.

    But I have come across a problem. I want a men’s fitting cote, but I have a woman’s body.

    So following the guides in the medieval tailors handbook, I worked up the pattern for a 14thC men’s cote. The problem is, it’s too big at the shoulders but fits round the chest. As the author notes the whole ball of the shoulder should sit outside the seam and in the sleeve itself for a period fit, but you can see that’s not happening here (even though my mannequin doesn’t have shoulders).

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    Actually that’s a terrible picture. But you can also see the other problem I’m having, setting gores into flat pieces of fabric. Fuck that, I’m going to quarter it and stick a seam down the front and back.

    So here’s where I started to pin it on the stand in order to change the fit of the shoulders.

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    I’ve taken some out the front and back and also narrowed the shoulders to make up for me not having big, broad, manly shoulders.

    You can see that the medieval sleeve fit is *very* small. Just a 40cm circumference. This is where my problem is apparently lying. Them sleeves, they’re bloody ugly. However I’m not sure if this is a result of my sewing, or if early medieval cotes just had ugly sleeves…

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    Looks great if I just walk around with my arms held out at right angles the whole time…

    So anyway. The other problem with pulling it in so much to fit is that I’ll never get it on and off. Form fitted is great when you’re a guy, but harder when you have breasts. So I have two choices, I either make it button up the front (I’m not keen) or I go for a less authentic fit.

    I made these linens early on last year and they fit really nicely. I enjoy wearing them because they’re so comfortable.

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    They’re a kimono style sleeve which gives lots of room for movement, and a sloped shoulder. I know I lose *alot* of the authenticity, but I think it might be a worthwhile compromise considering what I’m trying to do.

     

  • The coif

    The coif

    So last night I made the first successful iteration of the coif for my empire costume! Well, semi successful – it still needs some adjustments.

    It went through a few iterations, beginning with me pinning fabric on my head I front of the tv.

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    And the final pattern:

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    Leading to the final work up of the cap:

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    The only problem is that this is now the state of my front room as I try to determine exactly what fabric I own…

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  • Outer layers inspiration

    More Spartacus here.

    I can’t just wear a tunic, I’ll freeze to death. I’m always cold and being outside for four days doesn’t help. Who thought it would be a good idea to run a mediterranean themed game in the UK? I know exactly who. I’ll get my revenge one day.

    So wraps and cloaks it is then. The long, hard task is going to be finding some suitable fabric for a wrap of some sort. The three examples below are varying approaches. There’s Spartacus’ rough blanket. I’ve got something that might be suitable here, it’s a threadbare throw that was on our couch for as long as I can remember, and worn away over the years by two labradors. Alternatively there’s the praetors smart red wrap with that golden trim that is just to die for. This in blue perhaps? I hesitate to look too Roman though.

    Ganicus is in there because I like the layering his character has. You really get the feeling he’s carrying all his possessions on his back, don’t you?

    Speaking of Ganicus, I’m just going to indulge for a second.

    nkel476Anyway. (Also I like those bracers for my Empire character.)

    Ashur in the first couple of series also had a beautiful cloak but I’m not sure how I’d go about creating something like that. Might have to visit some upholstery fabric shops. Perhaps a jacquard of some sort might work?

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    I want to talk about female costumes in Spartacus.

    It is hard to talk about practicality here in any meaningful way, because obviously the men also have their bare chests and stomaches exposed. In southern Italy in Roman times I can imagine this would have been practical if you were a gladiator. No top getting in the way of your armour, nothing to stop you sweating, free to move etc.

    I can also understand why the female slaves don’t have leather armour in most cases. The male slaves took it with them when they were freed from being gladiators anymore. It made sense for them to retain their leather arm pieces, leg armour and the like.

    But the girls don’t seem to have any armour at all. I can’t imagine that after fellow slaves had fallen they wouldn’t have picked up and adapted the guys armour? And on top of that, the outfits are just so sexy. It’s all scant little threads of fabric wrapped around their boobs! God, if I tried that everything would all fall out within hours.

    Having said that, I do like Navias outfit for the show. She wore something practical and it seems that she also salvaged bits of armour from other slaves. Why couldn’t all the female characters be like this instead of being ultra sexy? (Citizens excluded as they were generally in their nice dresses.)

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  • Four hours of sewing

    The first four hours of sewing on the Costume Challenge are done! I started at about 1400hrs and finished at about 1800hrs when it became far too cold in my house to keep going (broken heating…).

    Work on the first tunic began!

    First a sketch:

    image-1

    I will note here for when I remake it, that I shortened the sewn edge from 28″ to 24″.

    Then cutting. Everything is a straight strip of fabric the width of the bolt so I used a long gridded ruler and a rotary cutter. Must invest in a new blade, this one is not quite so good anymore.

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    Mmmm, many strips…

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    My grandfather was a tailor and it has highly influenced the way that I create. I don’t see the point in doing things if I’m not going to do them to a standard higher than I can afford to buy. For that reason I do things like enclose every seam. Every single seam. I don’t mind that it takes me longer because the finish of the piece if worth it to me, to create a beautiful garment that I want to wear and will last for many years. I will not make something you can just buy off the peg.

    Check out the wonderfully neat french seams on the blue stripe! The blue fabric is pieced into the black rather than appliquéd on. I did consider the latter but decided it would be harder to get a lovely straight stripe.

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    And here is where I left it. The side seams have been put in, it’s just raw around the arm scythes and the hem. I was going to just turn them up, but I think I will end up bias binding them. I am unsure yet if I want to bind in black or blue. Any thoughts?

    The neckline is simply just ‘not sewn’ across the opening to make it a straight slash. It’s faced by simply turning over 4″ before sewing the shoulders together. The good thing about Ikea ‘Ditte’ fabric is that it has a lovely finished edge to the selvage!

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