Oh yeah, I never wrote this up. Oops.
Anyways, I did successfully complete my Isabela costume, let's see if I can remember what I did at this point.
So, I broke this costume into pieces, and I'll go over them one at a time:
- Headscarf and hip scarf (and hair)
- Jewelry
- Tunic
- Corset
- Armor pieces
- Boots
First of all, I took a lot of my inspiration from this cosplayer:
For the scarves I knew I could keep it pretty simple, I bought some pashmina shawls in a pattern that looked pretty close:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B019PBZVYE/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o04_s00?ie=UTF8&th=1
I argued way too hard with myself about whether or not this was the right shade of blue, it's shimmery nature made it hard to lock on to what color it actually was. I think it may be a bit dark, but it was close enough.
For the hip scarf, I just cut it into a triangle, hemmed it, and tied it around my waist. Easiest cosplay accessory I've ever done.
For the headscarf, to save a little money I sewed the leftover triangles of the scarf into a square, and then painted on the gold trim (That you can barely see in any screenshots, I'm not sure why I bothered) with a generic stencil and gold fabric paint.
The seam in the middle was kinda ugly, but it was going to be folded in half and tied around my head, none of it would be visible.
Hair was easy, my hair color is right, even if it was too long and my bangs were wrong. It wasn't different enough to bother with a wig, so I was just going with my own hair.
The jewelry was a bit of a thing. I would have LOVED to make the coins look just like hers, I had some good screenshots, just no good way to make them. The blog I used for reference had a laser engraver and I was very jealous. In the end I had to convince myself to buy some generic pirate coins and be content.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08B6DW197/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o01_s01?ie=UTF8&th=1
For her earrings, I repainted the coins gold and added a bit of black rub'n'buff for antiquing, and then straight up glued earring posts to them. Very straightforward. I decided I liked the star design better because it had slight echoes of the actual design her coins should have, and the skulls are just too on the nose for a pirate.
For the coins that hang down from the collar, I drilled holes in the coins with my dremel and connected them with jump rings, but held off painting since I'd just do it all at once when I attached them to the collar
I planned to use magnets in the back to hold it closed, but once again, the magnets just wouldn't hold. When it came down to it, I didn't have a better idea or enough time to be clever, so I just looped a ribbon around the back of the snakes and tied it shut.
From here I spray painted the whole thing gold, antiqued it with rub'n'buff, and painted the gem turquoise. I don't have a final picture of the collar by itself, you'll see it on the whole outfit.
Isabela also has a small gold armband just above her bracer, I kept that simple and just rolled a snake of worbla scraps and shaped it on my arm. Painted it gold like the rest of her jewelry.
For her lip piercing, I was able to actually take one of the extra studs I bought for my Xena costume, trimmed off the prongs, filled it with a bit of worbla, and day of I just stuck it to my chin with some spirit gum.
That's it for the jewelry!
For her tunic, I bought this top:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07FSZCWBX/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o05_s00?ie=UTF8&th=1&psc=1Purely because it had the lace up neckline, so I didn't have to do it myself. I removed the sleeves and cut off the lace band around the middle and sewed the remaining pieces back together. I kept it short enough that the middle section would be hidden by the corset, and then I added flaps to the front and back made of the same corset fabric that I stitched decorative channels on it to give it the look of panels like Isabela's has. I also used the removed sleeve fabric to make a small collar to fold over around the neckline.
This is the only picture I took of any sewing I did, so you're just gonna have to look close at the final costume, my bad!
Since I've gained a bunch of weight, none of my old corset patterns would fit me, I had to draft a new one. That... did not feel great. But we pushed through.
I just bought some basic white linen like fabric for it. To make it look like it laces up the front but still have a normal corset busk for getting in and out I basically made an extra panel to go over the busk that would be held down by the lacing. It made edge binding complicated, but I figured it out. I can't really give you a detailed tutorial at this point, I'm afraid I just don't super remember. I am not the right person to teach you how to make corsets, unfortunately.
One extra detail, Isabela's outfit is actually open on the sides with strips of fabric connecting it. Since I'm wearing an actual corset, leaving the sides open wasn't really an option for me, so I ended up getting some skin colored fabric and gluing strips of it down the sides of the corset with small white strips going across to sort of mimic the look. It worked okay.
For the armor, I had a shoulder pad, two elbow pads, a bracer and a set of gloves to make.
I had to kind of mock up the base shape myself, I had a vague idea of how big I wanted them to be, so I started with a basic triangular shape, and then curved the inner seam to give a three dimensional shape. It's really hard to describe, hopefully the pictures help.
When you cut it out of foam and glue that curved gap in the middle together, you get a nice rounded convex shape, like a shield. I just repeated this smaller and with a slight shape variation for the elbow pads.
To get the designs, I honestly just screenshotted the pictures from that cosplayer I was using as reference, and used the magic of photo manipulation get the perspective right. I'll add them to this post when I get them back, I'm on a new laptop and don't have them at the moment.
I printed out the patterns, cut them out, traced them on foam, and then glued those onto the foam bases. That's a very simple description for something that took HOURS.
Once these were glue together, they were painted silver and antiqued like the jewelry.
For the upper arm bit that comes down from the shoulder pad, I cut four chevrons of foam and glued some vinyl pleather on top and painted them black. I heated them up slightly and folded them in half to give them the ridge down the middle. I also painted some buttons silver and glued them on place to be the rivets.
For the gloves, I bought some faux leather gloves, cut them short and cut off the fingers.
The armor bits on the gloves were made the same way as the others, printing off the design, cutting out a base shape and the design out of foam, gluing them together and painting. I added bits of cord to the underside of the little finger guards to make them 3 dimensional.
That was it for the armor bits, aside from the bracer and straps, but that will get lumped in with the boots, which we will cover now.
Shopping for fabric was scary, I wanted vinyl pleather, but it was expensive. However, I managed to hit the jackpot when I found a grey pleather on clearance for $5 a yard. I bought ten, I was so excited. I bought some brown upholstery spray paint so I could make it brown, I figured that would be perfect. For the record, this is fine for a one time wearing, but the paint chipped and scratched a LOT while worn. All the pieces I did this way would need to be remade if I wanted to wear this again.
For the straps, I painted a chunk of pleather, cut it in strips and did a single line of topstitching around all the edges for decoration. I added buckles and buckle holes, the buckles I got on Amazon in a bunch of different sizes, small for elbow straps, wider for the bracer and the boots.
These are straps I was making for the boots, but you get the idea.
For the bracer I wrapped my arm in paper and tape to make a pattern, and just cut that out of painted vinyl, and glued three buckles and straps to it. Once again, no direct pictures, sorry! I was on a tight timeframe for this costume, I only had two weeks, and sometimes I was just focused on getting things done as fast as I could.
For the boots, I was going to use the bottom half of an old pair of boots I didn't wear because the zippers were broken, and make thigh high boot covers to match Isabela. I started by wrapping my leg in duct tape to get a pattern, which was a CHORE to do single handedly, I really should have waited until I had someone to help me. I cut these out before painting in an effort to save paint.
No comments:
Post a Comment