Awkward: it's going to be depressingly easy for me to get in character.
Someone once told me: “how do
you eat an elephant? One bite at a time”.
I discovered that doing this:
1. Make
Jaune Arke’s armour
2. Job
done. time for cake
Does not work. So I broke it
down into steps:
2. Foam
armour
2.1 Pattern
pieces for: chest plate, back plate, joiners, shoulders and gloves.
2.2 cut
them out in foam
2.3 heat
gun them to shape
2.4 paint
with PVA glue (3-4 layers), coat with plasti-dip, and paint with spray paint. (fine
detail can be added with a permanent marker).
2.5 cut the
vinyl into strips
3. Cloth
bracers – hem tape required (because screw sewing that by hand)
-
Not sure if or how pattern pieces are required
here.
4. Cut
gloves to size
4.1 finger
holes,
4.2 hot
glue on the ‘metal’ plates
4.3 hot
glue on the armour plate
5. Belts
5.1 cut
vinyl to size & glue together
5.2 attach
eyelet holes
5.3 attach
buckles
5.4 new
belt
5.5 for
extra bonus points, make the leather pouches from the spare vinyl
6. Cut
sleeves off shirt and hem them (careful about size, I want to get this perfect
on my first try)
7. Wait
for wig to arrive in the mail
8. Try
it on, take photos and congratulate myself for being one damn fine looking otaku : D
Yay! The task itself has
remained the same but is somehow easier now that I know what I need to do. Sort
of. Its my first costume that I’m making myself and I know that I don't have the experience or skills to get things perfect, so I shall have to go easy on
myself when/if I don't get things one hundred percent on the first try. This won’t
be easy. Maybe my standards are too high. Homer Simpson once said this:
“You tried your best and you
failed miserably. The lesson is, never try.”
Which is strangely encouraging in a subverted sort of way. There is so much that’s wrong
with that statement. If you never try, there’d be no point to doing anything
and you may as well be dead. You just need to keep trying different ways until
something works and then you get better at it and it builds character. That’s
why hard times are called “trying times”.
Yay wisdom!
Someone once told me that art is about "not telling yourself you suck, and just going for it". so here I go, one Jaune Ark costume coming up.
I don't know how to do some of
the finer steps such as sewing hems on things. If anyone knows of easy ways to
put hems on stuff (I don’t have access to a sewing machine) please let me know
in the comment area below ↓
Also on a different topic, I’d
like to get good at drawing pictures/landscapes/scenery. the plan is to eventually draw something good enough for the background to this blog. I may play around with
sketching first but I would like a better program than MS Paint to edit things on PC
when I scan them in or maybe to even draw straight in to the program itself (I’d
like to draw like what you see in anime, but not sure how they make the
pictures the way they do). If anyone knows of any good freeware programs that will
help I’d appreciate it if you let me know.
Love you all and until next time,
This is James signing off.
Mum says glue is good for hems.
ReplyDeleteMum also says that you can get from Spotlight "hemming tape" that you can just iron on. It is like gluing but without the mess. Hemming tape is apparently like double sided sticky tape. It is important to get the hem even and the right length because once you have ironed the hemming tape you can't undo it.
ReplyDelete