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Halloween
Costumes
Kurt Schafer
I like making Halloween costumes. When I was little my
mother did a lot of sewing, quilting, embroidery, knitting, crochet,
tatting, etc. She showed me how to do the basics. How to
sew on a button, and encouraged me as I worked on various
projects. A square of cathedral window quilt, a lion embroidered
a lion on my lucky sock, a counted cross stitch bear. I can
remember arriving at a friends house, only to realize that the
embroidery hoop was unexpected affixed to my knee. I'd stitched
through my pant leg during the drive.
So I knew the basics, but had never gone very far with it.
Then for many years I didn't do much more then hem a few pairs of
pants. Then
my son Pioneer was born, and when Halloween rolled around I
realized that I was interested in making him a costume.
I had seen a cute baby dressed as a pumpkin, and though "I can
do that."
I discover I have a super power
Well, I wasn't exactly bitten by a radio active spider, but I
did spend many hours sifting through the mixed buttons bin at "Finche's
Fabric Farm" while my mother shopped. I'd spent untold hours in
the sewing room listening to the whir of the sewing machine, playing
with the snap pliers, pinking sheers, tracing wheels. I remember the
smell of the
sewing machine oil in it's little can.
As
I started in on Pioneer's pumpkin costume I discovered that
all those hours in my childhood had instilled in me a mysterious
power. I was totally at ease at the fabric store buying materials
for the costume. I knew exactly what to do, just by going with
what felt "right". I made paper templates. I folded
them in half before cutting to make the symmetrical. I cut test
pieces, left seam allowances, added piping. I knew how to lay
things out, pin them up, sew them, turn them inside out and stuff them
with fiber fill. It all felt totally comfortable.
Like I'd done it a thousand times, even though I'd never actually done
it at all. It felt like coming home.
Best
of all, the results were actually pretty good. Now
it may seem like silliness to spend 7 hours making a costume that
Pioneer only ever wore for 5 minuets (seven month olds aren't big on
wearing hot heavy outfits with hats for very long) but once you've
discovered a mysterious power, who wouldn't want to try it
out? To give it free reign and see where it takes you.
Why Costumes?
Halloween costumes have a lot to recommend them. They're
85% aesthetic. If they look good, they are good. They only need to
be sturdy enough to survive a few hours of trick-or-treating.
They have a fixed deadline, and a short
schedule, and a very short lifespan. These are ideal conditions for
getting in touch with ones inner
seamstress. If I'm not sketching, cutting, pinning or sewing
every minute. I'm
not going to finish, so I don't have time to second guess. It
turns out to be ridiculously fun.
I try making an owl costume.
For
his second Halloween I had Pioneer choose what he wanted to be.
He chose an owl. He likes owls. He points to them
in our bird book, makes hoot hoot sounds with me when we see them
in
his "Animals Showing Off" pop-up book. We've stood together on the
deck, under the stars, listening to their deep calls. Yup. He
wanted to be an owl.
It wasn't until I did some web searching that I discovered how
difficult a task k this was. These human owl hybrids are tricky,
and
every owl costume I saw on the web looked either sad or
ridiculous. I had my work cut out for me.
Rule 1. No mortar boards
One thing my research into owl iconography made clear was that if
you've failed to get people to recognize your owl you slap an mortar
board on top. Owls are very striking birds. I was hoping I could
get the owl idea across without resorting to whacking people with a
board.
The pumpkin had been all about fleece, but in my book owls are
corduroy. Something about the the texture and softness. So
I went off to the fabric store and bought three kinds of
corduroy. I also started making some sketches and paper mock ups
of what the owl might look like. I got in the zone, and
cranked out the owl costume in one weekend (plus two weekday
evenings.) I knew I was going crazy when I considered
making a lining for the costume. I had to remind myself that I'd
be lucky if he'd wear it for more then 5 mins.
Lessons learned from the corduroy owl:
Never
mark white corduroy
with a sharpie unless you're ok with both sides being black.
Doing lots of sewing in a shop littered with sawdust and metal shavings
involves the fine art of never
dropping anything, and perhaps most
importantly when you're son pulls out some polyester fiber fill and
puts it under his chin and says "beard... beard!"
it's so cute that it is very nearly fatal.
I had done a nice mock up in paper of what
I wanted to do.
However when it came time to make that vision a reality it turned out
that toddler heads are pretty darn big, and in order to make the owls
eyes/face the way I'd originally intended I'd have had to make the head
HUGE. I think this a problem many of the web owl
costumes were suffering from. A too small head perched on top of
the kids face. Weird and distracting. I don't think
Pioneer would have dealt with a full owl mask because that's just too
much face coverage. Besides his face is super cute, so putting
something over it, or right above it seemed like a tragic waste of
cuteness. So I opted for a more stylized treatment of the
head. Just a kind of owl horns hood stiffened with sheet plastic
and welding wire on the inside. As it turns out he actually likes
wearing
that part of the costume. He didn't want to take it off.
So
on Halloween he wore the main part of the costume pretty much all
day. It looked great. He came to work during lunch time,
and then we went out trick-or-treating with his baby group pals at
night. We couldn't quite get him to say "track-or-treat" but he
kept saying "candies" and motoring on to the next house. He did
freak out a little at one house when a motorized disembodied hand
started crawling across the porch towards him, but we distracted him
with a kitty that was right there, and he seems to have not been to
scared by the experience. He loved all the lights and
decorations. We went to quite a few houses, and then our
friends/neighbors Carl and Rita invited us in and gave us dinner, and
he got to see some old school stop motion dinosaurs in "The Lost
World."
All in all it was a very successful Halloween. I'm hoping next
year he'll be willing to try some things on before the big day.
After I'd seen him wear the thing, I realized there are some
alterations I'd like to do. The lower back section is pretty
square, and could really use a couple of seams to take out some of the
extra material and make it more form fitting. Also the Velcro
flap that holds the front closed isn't sewn all the way to the top, and
that made it so it was free to flop out a bit at the top. I was
going to hand sew that section, but didn't manage to get around to it.
Hey, I even have a picture of Pioneer clearly contemplating
how many licks it takes to get to the center of a tootsie pop:
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