(I hadn't added the buttons to the back when this photo was taken)
Then to make it look all creepy, I attacked the entire dress with a box cutter. I sliced and ripped it to shreds. I had a lot of friends suggest that it must have been sad to destroy my work, but I was kind of sick of the dress by then. It actually felt kind of good.
Then to creep it to a new level, I painted the dress on all three layers (the top was a diaphanous type of polyester, the middle layer was a crepe polyester-- not terribly historically accurate, but cheap!-- and the bottom layer was cotton muslin) with watered down clay and acrylic paint. It worked like a charm! I went with this, on two artist friends suggestion, because polyester fabric will resist dying. So this was really painting. After the clay dried, I had to actually vacuum the dress, because the cast was choking on the dust during rehearsal!
I enjoyed that experience, and I certainly wouldn't mind doing something like that again.
4 comments:
Susan,
Reading about the experience brought a lot of chuckles, as I was remembering the dust stories myself.
What a cool experience! The costume looks great.
Having done many theatre costumes over the years, I commend you on how well your costume turned out. Excellent work!
Thanks so much! Susan
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