1892 A Few Practical Hints on “MAKING Up” By Adolph Rothe

  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
  • 1892 A Few Practical Hints on "Making Up" by Adolph Rothe
Continue reading 1892 A Few Practical Hints on “MAKING Up” By Adolph Rothe

1920’s J. Burkinshaw & Sons Theatrical Requisites, Liverpool, UK, Price list ( Catalog)

1920's J Burkinshaw & Sons New Price List of Theatrical Requisites, Catalog Cover.  Liverpool c. 1920s
1920’s J Burkinshaw & Sons New Price List of Theatrical Requisites, Catalog Cover. Liverpool c. 1920s
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
  • 1920's J Burkinshaw Theatrical Goods Catalog
Continue reading 1920’s J. Burkinshaw & Sons Theatrical Requisites, Liverpool, UK, Price list ( Catalog)

Costume Class Project: Dollar Store Witch Hat to Early Victorian Bonnet

What you will need for this project

  • Velour Witch Hat in Adult Size
  • Recycled plastic tub for frozen strawberries, cottage cheese, or other tub about 5″-6″ across the mouth.
  • Hot Glue Gun and Glue
  • Scissors
  • Artificial Flowers
  • Trim of lace or braid
  • Black thread & Needle
  • Spool of Wired Ribbon
  • Plastic hair comb
  • Fruit Bag net that looks like hat netting
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Costume Class Project: Suit Conversions With Paint

What you will need

  • A suit jacket with a smooth surface texture (male or female)
  • Fabric Paint(s)
  • Tailor’s chalk or marking pencil
  • Brush(es)

Background: When I worked at UAF we were blessed years ago with a donation of a box of old white 50’s tuxedos, and were annoyed when a coolant leak in costume storage stained them all with beige splotches. It proved a blessing in disguise, since it made it “OK” for us to paint and dye them. See all the pictures below, and then do this:

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Costume Class Project: Designing in Cooperation

The “Lecture” (please read):

One of the first points that should be made about costuming is that it is part of a social organism. The organism may be part of a University theatre program, or part of a film production company, community theatre, Renaissance Faire producing group, television series producing studio, or professional repertory theatre, etc. However in all cases, costuming exists as a piece of a much bigger pie, in which costume is not the center, but a support to a larger whole. This is the key to understanding what we do. We exist as one of the heads of a multi-headed beast trying to create ‘ art.’ If we don’t talk or get along with the other heads, if we try to pull in the opposite direction from that which the rest of the beast is going, we trip over our own feet, and go nowhere at all.

Therefore, lesson number one: everyone must talk to each other, get to understand how one’s cohorts think, trade ideas, make suggestions, and then, when all the heads find a consensus on which way to go, go, go, go…..GO with commitment in the direction chosen, even if it means going over a cliff in one’s individual opinion.

This is very hard to do.

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Costume Class Project: No Color Designs

Color is such a useful trick for establishing character and group identity in plays that often designers forget that pattern, texture and especially silhouette can also be more effective design tools. One of the best exercises one can do to force oneself to rely more on these tools, so as not to get rusty, is to design a show periodically that is either monochromatic (uses only one color) or de-saturated (uses only gradients of black and white). It is the latter that you will do here.

To see an example of a show done in this manner see my designs for a low-budget student production of The Seagull done in Russia some years ago.

The Project:

10 characters from a Shakespeare Play that you will render using only black and/or white or gradients of the same. Using silhouette, line, and other means still left to you, delineate the characters and their relationships with one another. You may set the play in any era before 1916, in any culture, or you may costume them totally abstractly, but do not set it any time in the last 100 years of Western civilization’s clothes, or you will get unduly distracted by your modern mental associations with certain garments.

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