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Ideas for Making Your Own Halloween Costume
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Ideas for Making Your Own Halloween Costume
Maybe you are old enough to remember when making
your own Halloween costume, or at least deciding what you wanted to be
for Halloween, used to be half the fun of Halloween. It wasn't really
the anticipation of that bag full of candy---it was putting on a costume
and maybe a wig and some makeup, and walking around, pretending your
were a comic book character, a Fairy Princess, or some
hobgoblin (or a hobo...if you couldn't think of anything else, you could
always be a hobo). If you are even a little older, you remember planning and
plotting how to make your costume out of pieces of cardboard, swatches
of material, paper towel tubes, and tinfoil. Come on, admit it---it was
fun! Get a little of that fun
back---and make your own costume this year! And if you are too old to go
Trick or Treating, then have a Halloween costume party just so that you
can play dress up and be the Wicked Witch of the West!
Think Outside the Box!
Well, actually---maybe you should think inside
the box...a cardboard box that is. Think about what comes in a cardboard
box---and then be that for Halloween. Do you work in an office,
shuffling paperwork all day? Then be a box of computer printer paper!
Find a printer paper box to use an example. Buy a packing box that is
wide enough to fit across your shoulders (and around your middle), cut a hole in the
closed-end bottom for
your head, and then decorate the box like the sample printer paper box.
Wear a black T-shirt and black pants or black tights underneath. (Think
U-Haul or places like that where you can buy oversize packing boxes.)
Maybe you are addicted to Honey-Nut
Cheerios---then be a box of Cheerios! Zillions of things "come in a box"
so let your imagination run wild! Sturdy
hunks of cardboard can be the basis for numerous types of costumes. Just
keep two things in mind: Eventually, you are going to need to be able to
sit down...and you are going to need to go to the bathroom. Keep these
thoughts in mind while you are crafting your costume!
Go to a Thrift Shop or Second-Hand Store
You've probably got at least one thrift store
near-by, or maybe a Goodwill outlet. Wander through the aisles and check
out the old clothing, shoes, coats, and other accessories. Be the Crazy
Old Lady Who Lives Next Door and get really campy. Or be a Wacky
Professor and be completely scatterbrained! Be The Oldest Punk Rocker
Alive and go for the safety pins and dog-collar look! Shop for clothing
styles that are either really over the top or totally out of fashion.
Think of any stereotyped character, and then find clothing and accessory
items to suit that character. Got a
Sewing Machine? If you are handy with
needle, thread, patterns, and lengths of material, you can make real
costumes. You can buy patterns that Halloween costume specific---or you
can cobble together elements from several patterns to make costume
items. Let's say you need a frock coat for a Rhett Butler period
costume. Find any man's jacket pattern that you can use for the "waist
and up" portion of the jacket. On newspaper draw a "dove's tail" shape
so that the blunt end of the "tail" is one-half the width of the back of
the jacket. Allow for seam allowance, and cut two tails. When you cut
out the jacket back, cut it off straight at the waistline. Sew on the
"tails" and voila! You have a frock coat!
No matter what type of costume you want to make,
if you can't find an exact pattern for that, just mentally break down
the garment into segments. Now look for patterns that will offer you
that type of segment---or make your own pattern. Remember, it's a
costume, the measurements don't need to be exact!
Accessories Make the Costume!
Don't worry if you can't exactly come up with
everything you need for "the perfect costume." Most costumes are just
representations of the character you want to portray. You can get away
with a little less costume and a little more accessorizing. Just be over
the top! Wanna be The Crazy Lady Who Lives Next Door? Just wear clothing
pieces that don't match, clash horribly (like plaids and florals) and
then spray your hair some really awful orange, get outrageous dangling
earrings, wear ten strands of fake pearl necklaces, two different shoes,
and carry a dog leash with no dog on it, etc.
If you can't think of what kind of costume to
create, do it backward---shop the thrift shops for accessories, and let
them dictate what character you will create.
Get Some Mileage Out of Prom Gowns, Bridesmaid
Dresses, and Wedding Gowns! Here's
your chance to finally use that dress for something other than the one
day that you wore it! Wedding gowns make great Fairy Princess
costumes---just add wings, a magic wand, and white wig, and glittery
makeup! Be a Wallflower! Put on your Bridesmaid gown, and get a pair of
old-fashioned gunky plastic rim glasses. Do you hair in a really bad
hairstyle, spray on way too much hairspray, get a really tacky
artificial flower that doesn't match your gown---and you are an instant
Wallflower! Now that you've got some
ideas, let your imagination run free! Halloween used to be fun and can
still be fun---even now that you are an adult! So enjoy it!
For other Halloween-related articles, please
visit:
Make your own Trick or Treat bag! Get ideas,
examples, and free printable Halloween pictures at:
http://freecontent.janktheproofer.com/HalloweenBag.htm
Now that you have a great costume and a Trick or
Treat Bag, you may
need some ideas for what to do for Trick or Treat night! Visit
"Halloween Can Be Fun" at
http://articles.janktheproofer.com/Aug24/HalloweenCanBeFun.htm.
For Trick or Treat treats, visit "Halloween
Popcorn Balls" at
http://articles.momsbreak.com/HALLOWEENPOPCORNBALLS.htm.
Jan K.,
The Proofer is a freelance proofreader and copyeditor. Visit
http://www.jansportal.com for more information about Jan’s
proofreading and copyediting services and Jan's other free resources. Please visit Mom's Break
(http://www.momsbreak.com/) for
free printable crafts and projects.
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