“Who better than Cupid to help people find their fairytale ending, right? What does it matter that I don’t have one of my own?”
Photo by vicissijuice
i don't do bad sauce passes
ojovivo

Kaledo Art
d e v o n
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

roma★
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Monterey Bay Aquarium
dirt enthusiast
AnasAbdin
Sade Olutola
Mike Driver
YOU ARE THE REASON
styofa doing anything

JVL

Janaina Medeiros
wallacepolsom
sheepfilms

tannertan36
Peter Solarz
seen from Germany

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from T1
@iridescentigloo
“Who better than Cupid to help people find their fairytale ending, right? What does it matter that I don’t have one of my own?”
Photo by vicissijuice
“I want much more than this provincial life!”
Photo by Lost Dumplings Photography
“You can see me? From talking to Dexter, I was starting to wonder if I was invisible.”
Photo by vicissijuice
I’m going fabric shopping this weekend and then I promise I’ll break up this Cupid and Belle spam!
... but in the meantime...
Photo by Ken AD Photography
“A most peculiar mademoiselle...”
Photo by Lost Dumplings Photography
I meant to upload this for Epic Winter and then just kind of forgot! But on the note of Epic Winter, I fully intend to make the little purple shawl and earmuffs to add to this costume for a winter shoot. They looked so cute~
Photo by vicissijuice
Ever After High
Royals and Rebels
2016.04.02
This team was so hexellent and spelltacular♥!!
We are planning to cosplay some more Ever Afters :)
But guys, for real, baby Moana trailer has sent me screaming back into a frenzied princess phase, so can it please be November 24th?
Photo by Lost Dumplings Photography
“I’m not a fairytale, I’m a myth.”
Photo by vicissijuice
Yeticon photos make me miss Yeticon so much!
Photo by Novii Photography
“I’m just not sure I fit in here. There’s no one I can really talk to.”
Photo by Lost Dumplings Photography
“Let go of the fear and fly Higher and higher”
Photo by Ken AD Photography
The evolution of our Camilla armour draft! Drafting armour for legs and arms can be really tough to do by yourself, so luckily Jenn has me and my problem-solving determination to push through this long process.
Brief timeline of our work (not all stages shown in these photos): 1) Use the clingwrap and tape method for the form-fitting parts of the calf armour. Draw a centre line on the front and back so you can mirror details accordingly. 2) Mark where the three-dimensional parts will be. Cover with clingwrap so the 3D layer can be easily removed without damaging the form-fitting layer; this will also make it easier to correct the shapes on the 3D pattern pieces. 3) Start building up a rough structure out of aluminum foil, twisting and shaping it to give you the height you’ll need for the 3D parts. Tape the foil shapes to the clingwrap layer to hold them in place. 4) Experiment with creating the 3D shapes. We used heavyweight drawing paper (180gsm) and masking tape for this. For curves, try cutting a curve from two stacked pieces and taping along that curve, so when you open it up, you create a convex shape. 5) Keep messing around with this until you’re happy with it. You can do subtle corrections without wasting a ton of paper by simply building small paper pieces on top of your in-progress pattern. You’ll be cutting it all apart and tracing it onto paper for final pattern pieces anyway, so these mockup pieces don’t need to be super clean-looking. 6) Do test runs with the footwear (or similar footwear) that you’ll be wearing with the finished costume. Jenn borrowed my in-progress Tiki boot for this. Since Camilla’s greaves extend into talons at the ankle, we needed to base the claw angles on how much clearance they’d need when Jenn walks. 7) Do one final marking of where you’ll be cutting your pattern apart. 8) Admire metal-as-fuck greaves. 9) Have your drafting friend cut you free from your tape/paper/clingwrap prison, preferably along the seam where your finished armour will open up for you to slide in your leg.
We’re super proud of how this came out!!
- Kat
For the attachments on my vambraces I used leather straps, but since I needed to get my arm in I added elastic to one end to allow some stretch. When it’s on my arm there’s no evidence of the strapping which is how it looks in game. I’m really happy with how it tuned out.
#cosplay #worbla #leather #diablo #doomcrusader #diablo3 #diablocosplay #d3 #armor
I dig this, this is a neat approach to straps without buckles.
“Cross my heart.”
Photo by vicissijuice
Tutorial time: How to sew inset corners! A really useful skill that a lot of people have trouble with. Mastering this technique will enable you to piece together seams with difficult angles, and also help improve your precision and dexterity overall.
There are probably multiple ways to do this, but here is the method I learned from God Save the Queen Fashions when I was her intern.
1. Start by marking the seam allowances on the back of your fabric to find the exact point at which your corners intersect. On the piece which will be the outer corner (blue in my sample) I have marked the entire length of the seam allowance for clarity. I sometimes do this when sewing complex shapes. On the piece which will be inset (pink here), you can just mark the corner itself.
2. This is just three different views of how the pieces should be pinned and positioned. With the right sides of the fabric together, push a pin through the exact corner of your outside piece (blue) and then through the exact corner of your inside piece (pink) so that they are brought together face-to-face at this point. Pivot the fabric pieces until edges line up along the first side you will be sewing, then prepare to feed it into your machine. When sewing, it will be easier to keep the outside piece (blue) on top.
3. Stitch along the first side, removing the pin before you reach it. On the final stitch, make sure that your needle lands in the exact corner where the pin was. With the needle still engaged in the fabric, lift the presser foot. This is now a pivot point.
4. Pivot the fabric around so that you are looking at the inside of your corner. With a pair of very sharp, narrow snips, clip through the top layer as close as you can possibly get to the needle itself.
5. Pull the other side of the top piece around until its edges line up with the other side of the bottom piece. This opens up the cut you just made. You should be able to fold down the excess fabric fairly neatly if your corner is clean. Once you are in position to sew the second side, lower the presser foot.
6. Stitch along the second side and tie off your thread. Once you remove it from the machine, you should have something like this. The blue fabric is still folded up in my hand in this image so that you can see both sides of the corner.
7. Unfold your fabric, lay it flat, and enjoy the excellent corner you have sewn. If yours isn’t as crisp as you’d like it to be, press it flat with an iron or consider top-stitching, as shown in the first image.
Practice will make you better at this. When I first learned, Cathy made me sew like ten in a row until they looked better than the one in this sample (sorry, Cathy). If you’re having trouble, be patient and keep trying and you will end up an expert.
Now show me all of your beautiful inset corners!
Make Some Pocket Extenders for Your Pants
So I don’t know about you, but I’m often frustrated by the ridiculous smallness of girls’ pockets. At a bare minimum, I need to be able to shove my cellphone in there - come on, pants companies! So what I started doing was making myself pocket extenders. I’ve done this several times, for pants and shorts. It’s great.
I just got this pair of jeans, so I thought I’d show you how to do it. I kind of feel like it just hasn’t occurred to some of you that this is an option, so maybe now it will. All you need is your pants, some fabric (I just took a random piece from a scrap bin), a needle, and some thread (thread doesn’t even need to match the fabric since literally no one will see it).
See? Ridiculous. Like, half a cellphone, or only 2.5″. Useless.
So turn those inside out to expose the pockets.
Figure out how big you want your pockets to actually be. I kinda go by whatever looks like might be right. I didn’t really measure them. Fold the fabric in half, so you have a pocket, and then fold it in half again so you can have two equal ones.
Try to get the edges to line up enough, pin it in place, then sew up the sides! Are your stitches crazy uneven and wonky looking? Doesn’t matter; nobody’s going to see it. These are in the inside of your pants. The only thing that matters is that it holds up. So I double-did the corners, since those tend to get the most stress.
Cut open the bottom of the existing pockets.
Pin it in place, then sew around, joining the new pocket to the old pocket. I did this by keeping my hand on the inside, so I wouldn’t accidentally sew through the other side. Again, I reinforced the corners, and didn’t worry about what it actually looks like. Then I turned it in side out to make sure the inside was all joined properly.
Yay all done! And the pockets are so much bigger now!
Whaaaat I can fit my entire phone and entire hand and probably something else now, are girls’ pockets even allowed to do that?! Heck yeah they are.
You are a goddamn hero.
This is one of this ways we crush the patriarchy and I’m completely for it.
^^^^^^