It was a great purse, but it is somewhat small and I always cycle between big and small purses as I get tired of the different inconveniences that go with each.
I had recently discovered a seller on Etsy who sells cool custom purse magnets and zipper pulls:
She had some really cool pentacle and dragon themed stuff that I just had to buy. I still had some decent chunks of the velvet fabric from my Yennefer costume, so I decided I wanted a new purse with the pentacle magnets and brocade velvet.
And decided it was perfect for my new purse.
It came out great.
I used it for a month or so and almost immediately came to realize I can't STAND having a flap over the top of my purse like that. I need my purse to have easier access, this was driving me crazy, despite how cool it looked. I was gonna have to make a new purse, no matter how silly it was to replace this basically brand new one.
I knew for my second purse I wanted to use the dragon themed hardware from Natural Nerd. I ordered some alligator skin vinyl in black from Amazon:
And started looking for the right pattern.
Around this same time, I saw a Facebook ad for a crafter/influencer/cosplayer girl named Charity Grace. She's crafty and athletic and gorgeous and I hate her.
I don't. I'm just jealous.
Anyways, she was advertising for a new tutorial on her website for a new costume that looked like this:
I.... I mean.... I had to have it.
I, like so many other women right now, am DEEP into my smut fantasy books era, and while Charity doesn't say so, that is CLEARLY Violet Sorrengail from Fourth Wing, which is probably my favorite of the smutty fantasy books I've read. It's so good.
Charity Grace was advertising for her membership only website that I did check out, but it was like $10 a month and I didn't think I needed it. I got most of the info on how to make the outfit from the ad, honestly. I watched it over and over and took a lot of screenshots. So I ordered more of the alligator vinyl and got ready to craft.
AT THIS SAME TIME.
I stumbled across this pattern from Simplicity:
Holy shit. It's so beautiful. I mean, I wouldn't pick pastel purple but she looks straight out of a fairytale and I WANT it.
Yes, I do see the wildly clashing vibes of these outfits. I have more than one side to me, deal with it. A woman can be both a badass dragon riding warrior and a fairy princess.
I tried to resist, but in the end I ordered the pattern. The pattern designer even had a full sew along video for this pattern, just to make it super easy! I could totally handle two big costume projects at once.
I did some fabric shopping and picked out a black linen for the base dress and a golden brown chiffon for the sheer layer, and I found a gold beaded organza for the flower layer, figuring I could skip the step where she manually attaches all the flowers by just using a flowered fabric. My plan was to go for a gold and black kind of theme, with brown leather accessories.
I bought all my fabric for this project from https://fabricwholesaledirect.com/ by the way. It's my go-to when I can't find it at Joann's and I guess it's my primary source now that Joann's is out of business. ðŸ˜ðŸ˜ðŸ˜
I also realize how funny that sounds as most of the other fabric I've written about I ordered on Amazon. I swear I shop here more, sometimes Amazon is just convenient when I'm also getting other stuff!
I had some faux brown leather vinyl leftover from Rachel's Eevee corset I figured I would use for the accessories.
I even managed to find what I'm almost certain is the exact same lace the pattern maker used for trim on her dress on Amazon. Since I was going black and gold, it worked perfectly for my version.
I even discovered a local ren faire coming to town in May so I'd have somewhere to wear this outfit!
While shopping for this project I kept studying Charity Grace's video for the dragonrider armor and the thought that there was a more complete tutorial with more specific details on her website was absolutely TORMENTING me. Sure, I'm clever enough to figure it out, but what if there's some useful techniques or something?
So I ended up signing up for it.
There was a free 7 day trial period, I figured I'd get what I needed for this outfit and then cancel.
I get in there and I am OUTRAGED to find that her "tutorial" is a video that is maybe a minute longer than the ad, with zero additional info, just longer shots of each section and a few Amazon links for the supplies she used. This was NOT worth $10 a month. I guess there's a community and whatnot, but I don't care about that.
The website is https://www.whimsyforge.co/ by the way. I may not think it's worth the money, but maybe you do and want to check it out. I'm not gonna steal traffic from her. And she does deserve credit for the ideas, after all. I didn't design this stuff.
So I screenshot and save any relevant information and go looking through the site just to see what else there is while I'm here.
Oh. Oh damn. Fuck me.
I'm so fucked.
There is almost no hesitation as I screenshot the information I need and go to the supply links and order everything. A mesh corset, TONS of various flowery and beaded appliques, and some very very pretty printed chiffon.
I'm sorry, there just is no universe where I don't have this gorgeous drapey flowy elf gown. And it's actually a pretty simple assembly. So again, not REALLY adding that much to my rapidly growing project list.
I also have half a dozen little things I'd like to finish while I'm at it, some leggings that need better elastic waistbands, a cloak project I started months ago I'd like to finish, a capelet I want to make, the closure for the velvet Yennefer skirt I made and just didn't QUITE finish. Things like that. It's getting crazy.
Oh, and I also found the pattern I wanted to use for my new dragon purse.
FREE The Gerbera Mini Crossbody Bag - PDF Sewing Pattern – Blue Calla Patterns https://share.google/mRJjKO34DiEKedAvz
I had a vague idea of turning those front panels into one solid panel that looks like a dragon wing and is a pocket for my phone with the dragon head magnet in the middle to hold it closed.
Around this time I was playing my way through Divinity: Original Sin 1 and 2, since you know I played Baldur's Gate 3 and I wanted more from that developer. Good games all around. I beat 2, and then I put the video games down and went into SUPER CRAFT MODE.
So, while I was waiting for my fabric for the princess dress to arrive, I started with the purse. My idea worked, I took the front panel piece and made it a separate piece with a lining. I tested several dragon wing designs until I got what I liked. I even figured out how to sew some black lacing on to be the ridges in the wing.
It turned out perfect. My phone slipped right into that pocket in front, I was super happy.
The three costumes I sort of worked on all at once, when I got tired of doing one thing I could switch to another, but it will get very confusing if I write it out that way, and honestly, it's not like I remember every detail at this point, so I will just describe each costume one at a time.
First, the princess dress.
So, as I was waiting for the fabric, I got an email from the company telling me that unfortunately they were actually out of stock of the beaded organza. I panicked, since I had sort of based my whole theme around it. Lucky for me they came back like a day later and said "oops! Nevermind! We totally have it!" Freaked me out for no reason.
So my fabric arrives. The linen is lovely, the chiffon is good but the organza....
That.... That's orange, man. Going back and looking at the website pictures, I really don't know why I was so convinced it was a gold color. It's definitely orange. I hate it. Okay, I don't hate it, but it is ALL WRONG for what I was planning. I can't put orange organza with a black linen base, I'll look like a Halloween pumpkin. So I scratch the whole plan. I was going to try to return the fabric, but then I had the idea that the organza would make a really cute party dress with a fitted bodice and a circle skirt. And the chiffon would make a pretty tiered maxi skirt.
So I set those fabrics aside. I was still gonna use the black linen and the gold lace, but I needed a new theme. Out of emotional distress over my ruined plans, I went to Joann's just to see what was left on their picked over shelves. This was in the last month or so of them being open, so everything was on clearance.
I browsed around and eventually found this really pretty black tulle fabric with embroidery flowers, and a yellow tulle with 3d flowers that would be gorgeous as embellishments. I already had a fairly large chunk of burgundy chiffon in my fabric stash that would match that had a purpose at one time, but damned if I remember what it was now, I've had it for years.
I then ran to Wal-Mart for unrelated reasons and in their fabric section found this really cool basket weave brown faux leather. This idea started to come together of a spring time basket of flowers kind of theme. The black makes it kind of dark though.... Wait, darkness and springtime flowers? Persephone! New theme found!
I bought the faux leather and went home and ordered a bunch of pomegranate seed beads to make jewelry and decorations with and got to work.
And these are the beads I bought:
I used these to make a necklace, some earrings and a chain I draped around my hips, just for decoration.
I also picked up some tiny ribbon flowers with rhinestones in the middle at Wal-Mart I figured I would sew to the black tulle for a little extra dimension and sparkle.
The dress was a shocking nightmare to make, honestly. It should have been simple, especially with the video. But the sizing was all over the place, it tried to convince me I needed the largest possible size, which was obviously incorrect, plus the dress did this weird godet thing on the sides to make it flare out instead of just having panels flaring out as a solid piece. It also made the absolutely insane choice of having you hem the sleeves AFTER putting elastic in them to gather them up. Who in their right mind would hem AFTER gathering? It was such a strange pattern. I did not enjoy making it.
I also made some minor alterations since I didn't want the whole chemise to be covered in a layer of chiffon, I just wanted it to be a skirt for the lower part, so I kinda had to get clever and just make a skirt with an elastic waist band out of the chiffon and tulle layers that would be hidden by the corset belt.
I also made a flower crown and a little drawstring pouch to go with it for accessorizing.
The end result was gorgeous, but goddamn, 0/5 star pattern.
I am kicking myself every day that I don't have a picture of myself actually wearing it. I did wear it to the Ren faire in May, and got tons of compliments, but we never got around to taking pictures.
Shortly before the Ren faire I had a sudden intense desire for a crochet parasol. I saw one online and it was gorgeous and it's not like I didn't have enough projects, right?
I chose this pattern:
I worked on it during the early evenings, Stu and I were watching the Sopranos for the first time so I would just crochet while we watched.
I'm not unhappy with it, but somehow I came out with two extra repititions of the pattern, I really don't know how, so it doesn't sit exactly evenly on the frame. I didn't even end up taking the parasol to the Ren faire, I took the fan I made for Yennefer, and between that and always having a drink in my hand I would not have been able to handle a parasol.
I also made a black snood (medieval hair net thing for women) like, the night before the Ren faire because it was supposed to be like 90 degrees and I wanted to put my hair up. It's nothing fancy, but the pattern I used is here:
Ravelry: Snood-Tastic pattern by Sue Ann (Suna) Kendall https://share.google/7opmnfdvQHw4eEzJv
That's it for the princess dress. Next up, the elf dress!
The chiffon was from a site called Before & Ever, but that company apparently has become a children's clothing company now? So I can't even link you to the fabric I got. They had like 40 different patterns, and I did consider getting a different one from the one Charity Grace used, but in the end I just really like the green leafy vibe. The fabric was being sold as a prop for photography, mostly for what looked like maternity shoots, so if you're looking for something similar, maybe try something like that?
I got various different appliques too, some the same but not all because some were just too expensive and I think you might understand why I was starting to hesitate to spend more money. Mostly just a bunch of random things from Amazon.
I also opted to cover the mesh corset, her version is much more daring and revealing and I mean, damn she's got the body and the confidence for it. I do not.
I had these semi-sheer moss green curtains I'd picked up from the thrift store years ago just because I liked the fabric, so I used those and a great deal of fabric glue to just cover the mesh corset in that, making a green corset top that still has sheer vibes without actually being sheer. I also used the rest of the curtains to make a lining/underskirt to, again, reduce sheerness, hide the seams of the skirt, and also just to add fullness. Nothing wrong with a fuller skirt.
The whole thing was really simple, cutting the chiffon into triangles and sewing them together, attaching them to the corset. The sleeves are separate pieces, cut out, hemmed and attached to elastic to basically wear as flowy armbands. The fun thing I did learn from Charity Grace was the idea of sewing fishing line into the hems to make them all wavy and flowy. I doubted it at first, but it really added a lot of movement and fun flowy-ness to the dress.
I had no intention of copying her hot glue method for attaching the appliques but I wasn't gonna sew them either, so I used my old friend fancy fabric glue. Just put the dress in my mannequin and went to town.
This is what I came up with. Charity Grace's version is more sparkly with gems and whatnot, I went more leafy with vines and I'm very happy. I don't have a picture, but I even found some pearls that match the ones in the dress and made some jewelry, plus a leaf crown.
Also, for literally no reason, I bought a long while wavy wig from Arda Wigs to go with it. Here's the thing, in any fantasy game where there is a character creator, Elder Scrolls, Dragon Age, Baldur's Gate, etc, I will always, ALWAYS choose to be a white haired elf, as long as I have the option. Even if I can't be an elf, like in Dragon Age 2, I still have white hair. It's my dream hair color. So we're gonna call this elf dress my OC costume, and if she's an elf, she needs white hair. Plus someday I am gonna cosplay Ciri from the Witcher 3, so I will need a white wig eventually anyways.
I still don't have a plan for when I will wear this, I'm kinda hoping for a Halloween party this year. Or a con, I suppose, but I have other plans for con.
Next up, the dragonrider armor.
So, Charity Grace bought a generic Amazon corset for her armor. As an experienced corset maker, obviously I didn't need to do that. But with everything else I was working on, I didn't REALLY want to make a new corset from scratch. So I dug through my corset collection.
And I came up with one of my oldest corsets, my first overbust, second ever, made from a random generic pattern I found online, lined with denim, burgundy steampunk corset. You might remember it from one of my way, way, way back posts.
It was a solid little corset, but the bust shape never worked right for me. The cups just opened outwards and didn't actually come back in to cover anything so it could be we be worn without a shirt. I had a theory that I could gather in the cups with some heavy duty stitching, which would of course be as ugly as sin, unless of course one were to cover the area in dragon scales. But I wasn't using the corset as it was, it was worth seeing if I could alter it to make it wearable.
So, two big problems to start with. It was burgundy, and I needed to be black, and also, you better BELIEVE that corset is too small for me. Technically I could get into it, but only if the lacing was left so open you could see my whole damn back.
The first problem was easy. Fabric paint. It took two coats to make it solid, but I just straight up painted the thing black. Easy. The second problem was MUCH more complicated.
In the end what I did was carefully open up a seam on the back, attach a strip of canvas to either raw seam on the inside, add a layer of alligator scale vinyl to the outside, top stitch it flat and then add bias binding to the added sections. Luckily it was just store bought bias, no fancy homemade stuff on this one, and I had some on hand.
I also added a scale modesty panel in the back just for security.
We'll get to the paint job in a minute, but doesn't it look cool?!?!?
I was also able to run some stitches along the top of the bust and gather it in like I thought. And yes, it is ugly as sin. But it worked. And it will be invisible.
Next up was making the scales. These were really very simple, but good GODDAMN if I didn't overdo it.
This was just a process of cutting out strips of vinyl of various sizes, cutting those into small rectangles, and then cutting the rectangles to a point on one end to make it scale shaped.
I had a 1 yard piece of vinyl that I had cut a few things out of for the dragon purse and bracers and whatnot, and I decided to take the remaining vinyl in that piece and turn it all into scales.
THIS WAS WAY TOO MUCH.
I cut it into strips of 1 1/2", 1" and 1/2". Cut those into rectangles, cut the rectangles into points, as described. I did try to curve the cut I made for the points so the scales weren't just harsh straight lines, that wouldn't look natural.
I didn't count, but I must have made HUNDREDS of scales. SO MANY. I should not have used most of a yard of vinyl. I needed like, a half to a quarter yard. It was an absolute nightmare. But once I was in, I was committed. I cut out all the scales.
The next detail on the scales was putting a ridge down the middle. Charity Grace just holds the folded in half scales up to a lighter to warm the middle, then presses the fold while it's warm to set the crease. This works wonderfully, but staring at the mountain of scales in front of me, my thumb skin would be ripped off my finger flicking a lighter that many times. I needed an alternate method.
My solution was a hair straightener and parchment paper. I would take a piece of parchment paper, fold it in half, settle a scale in the fold so that it was also folded, and then I would press it with the hair straightener fairly briefly. I had to be careful, because the straightener could and did melt the vinyl if I held it too long, but this worked perfectly. And was way less violent on my fingers. It was however somewhat rough on my shoulder, due to my couch setup where I did this, my straightener was on the end table to my left, and constantly reaching over to set down and pick up the straightener just ruined me. I counted and I spent about 20 hours creasing scales. Just the creasing step. That does not include all the cutting. It was awful.
In the end, I had three very full ziplock bags of various sized scales.
Next, was attaching them. I just used glue. Again, Charity Grace used hot glue, but that just feels like asking them to fall off if they get bumped. I used fabric glue. I originally intended to place the scales so that the buskin the front of the corset could still be used to get in and out of it, but it really wasn't going to work, so I just sewed it shut. It is a non-functional busk now.
I followed her recommendation for larger scales in the middle and fading out to smaller scales and just worked from the bottom up between two of the side front bones. It took some time since regular fabric glue doesn't grab as fast as hot glue, I had to hold them down a bit while it set, but I got there.
Finally, painting.
Charity Grace uses the Folk Art Color Shift paint in White flash. I went to Michael's to get it, and while there saw the full line of the Dragonfly Glaze iridescent paints as well. I bought them all. I didn't even have a plan but they're soooooooo SHINY. I also picked up a bottle of the Color Shift in Black Flash, figuring I'll play with the paints and see what I like.
I tested ALL the sparkly paints on some scrap vinyl, and in the end the White flash was too opaque. Made the scales look kinda silver, which isn't a bad thing, but not what I'm going for. After playing around, I settled on these three:
I think. I do not confidently remember at this point.
What I believe I did was start with the blue-green-gold, and I painted that in the edges and ridge of each scale. Loosely and messily, it really didn't have to be perfect. And then I went in with the black flash, hitting the unpainted sides of the scales. Again, messily. After this I was somewhat dissatisfied with the green-ness I had going on. I wanted to lean more into a blue-purple like Andarna's iridescent-ness in Fourth Wing, even though I KNOW the scales in Violet's corset aren't from her. So then I took the violet-blue-green and just did light streaks all over everything. In the end I got something that sort of looks like an oil spill, which wasn't my intention, but I LOVE it.
It just, really, really doesn't photograph easily.
It's also not as aggressive as the White flash would have been. More subtle, which is what I wanted.
You might notice there are some grommets in the lower edge of the corset. Well those were added because I want to be able to have a pouch with this outfit to carry things in, but I do not trust those scales to put up with the pressure of a belt worn over them. So I made this.
Just a real simple pouch with clips on the back that will hook into those grommets, no belt needed. And I put grommets on both sides so it looks like an aesthetic choice when I'm not using the pouch.
For the shoulder armor, I originally tried to make my own shoulder piece out of black vinyl, but failed utterly. It fit poorly, edges didn't line up, I just apparently did a bad job. So I just bought the one Charity Grace used from Amazon.
Getting this ready just involved more scale gluing and the same paint job.
I made the bracers as well, Charity Grace provided a pattern for the shape, and it was as simple as cutting it out, gluing scales on, adding grommets for lacing, and painting to match everything else.
I also made an undershirt to go under the corset, just a basic sleeveless top with a high collar out of a soft stretch fabric with a scale pattern I got on Amazon.
I was tempted to buy some scale print leggings as well, but at some point it's too many scales. I already own black faux leather leggings, it's good enough. Which did get an upgraded elastic waistband in the midst of all this!
I'm beyond pleased with all of these pieces, and when my friends started talking con this year, I desperately just wanted to do this. No one could come up with a compelling group con costume, so I'm totally doing it. I'm in the process of collecting the remaining accessories to complete Violet Sorrengail's look.
I have a jacket:
With patches I have ordered from Etsy that I will attach once they get here:
Flight goggles:
Of course, daggers:
I intend to cut them down a little and improve the paint job. I will also only be carrying six, I cannot figure out how to place twelve on me like she does.
And a wig:
Psst- they do have a different version that is a little longer and does not have a permanent part, if you're looking for one, I just like the length of this one better.
I don't even need to buy boots, the ones I got for my Goth Fauna outfit will work just fine. I'm so excited for it.
I may have also bought a Violet themed perfume:
Just for the sheer hell of it. I'm really looking forward to wearing this costume.
Okay. So this post has gone on FOREVER. But like I said, it was a pretty serious crafting frenzy. I've never crafted that hard and that consistently for that long. It was kinda nice to get back to video games, honestly.
But apparently, I wasn't done yet because very shortly after I finished all this, I had a burning desire to cosplay Aloy from Horizon Zero Dawn. Obviously she's not for this year's con, but with how complex this outfit is that's probably a good thing. I will be taking way more progress pictures of this one and writing it all up as I go. But for now, I think it's time to call it.
Good lord, blogger is struggling to load as I type, this post is so big.