redbrunja: (Warrior Girl (Suki))
redbrunja ([personal profile] redbrunja) wrote2007-12-19 01:23 pm

Oh, God. I'm A Crazy Person

I'm clinically insane. That's the only explanation. And you know, this really isn't my fault, I can't be held responsible - this is because of lack of sleep (I do crazy things when I'm sleep deprived, like making rp journals) or the fact that the water was shut off this morning in my apartment (Me last night: I want to wash my hair. Mmmm, better not, there's never hot water at night. Me this morning: *turns on the facet* *no water at all* Oh, you are kidding me.) Oh! Finals. This is because of finals. And I'm still half-sick. Really, I can't be expected to make rational decisions right now.

*takes deep breath*

So you want to know what I'm not doing?

This morning, I did not take screencaptures of Suki's awesome and fiendishly complex outfit.


 



I am not poking around on fabric sites looking at what's available.

I am not looking at pattern sites and thinking, 'hmm, am I crazy, or would that Tibetan Chupa make a good base for her outfit'?

Oh, god, I'm clinically insane aren't I?

Flist, I throw myself on your mercy. 

Help. 

If you could either a.) find and return my sanity

b.) give me the information on cosplay, specifically time/skill/money estimates, ideas on how to make the vest, headdress, arm bracers and detailing.

c.) smack me across the mouth and stick my head into a bucket of ice water.

[ETA: use this and possibly this.

A-Line Skirt]
ext_12512: Hinoe from Natsume Yuujinchou, elegant and smirky (STS Suki come-hither)

[identity profile] smillaraaq.livejournal.com 2007-12-21 10:57 am (UTC)(link)
The armholes on the chupa are sort of curvy; if you want to add sleeves to that, it's going to be like doing the sleeves on a men's dress shirt, and easing those curvy pieces tends to be tricky for beginners. The sleeves and armholes on a kimono are all just straight lines, so that would be much, much easier for you to do -- if you've made a skirt, you can doubtlessly handle sewing straight lines! :) So if you have to do alterations, taking something like a kimono pattern and making the sleeves a little bit longer or narrower would be pretty simple -- you're just taking a big rectangle and changing its dimensions before stitching it on to another straight piece of fabric; constructing a curvy sleeve from scratch and making it fit onto the curvy armholes of the chupa would be trickier drafting as well as trickier sewing. (Also, the way the shoulder seams fall on the sleeves in the screenshot, it looks more like the boxy cut of rectangular sleeves, not the closer curvy fit of a set-in sleeve.)