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Props, Scenery, Costumes and Makeup
 Community Theater Green Room Discussion Board :Producing Theater :Props, Scenery, Costumes and Makeup
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Joan54
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bullet Topic: dirty wet dress
    Posted: 3/13/06 at 10:10am

I'm well into the costumes for "Taming of the Shrew" and have made a beautiful, beaded, ornate wedding gown for Kate.  Of course she needs to show up later at Petruchio's in the same dress...ruined by travel.  I have made a second dress with limper, duller ornaments and will have Kate  remove her farthingale so the dress hangs and drags.  How do I make it look wet and dirty?   I am thinking of something that I can spray on the bottom hem of the gown that will actually look like caked mud......not just stained.  Is there a polymer plaster or something that I can dye brown and stick to the fabric?

While we're on the subject...any ideas on making someone look wet without actually dousing them? 

"behind a thin wall of logic panic is waiting to stampede"
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bullet Posted: 3/13/06 at 10:45pm
Have you considered sewing weights into the hems, sleeves or cuffs.  BB's in a bag, fishing weights, washers, etc, will add weight to the movement of the garment as if it were sopping wet.  It may also give the actress suggestions on moving in a heavier dress.
"None of us really grow up. All we ever do is learn how to behave in public." -- Keith Johnstone
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Joan54
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bullet Posted: 3/14/06 at 7:39am
Thank you for the suggestion...I already made the "wet dress" longer than the original so that it would drag on the ground and I made the big sleeves long and limp but the weights will make it even better.  It's the color and texture that I want to get right.....I experimented with spraying the hem area with tea and with diluted brown dye and it works quite well but when it dries it looks like a stain...not wet.
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tristanrobin
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bullet Posted: 3/14/06 at 9:37am
you might try that spray on paint-like "granite" stuff - IMO it never looks like
granite - but DOES look like mud and grit and is very textural
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Joan54
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bullet Posted: 3/14/06 at 10:53am

Ah.....you mean like trunk paint...very textural....thanks I'll give it a try.

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Gaafa
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bullet Posted: 3/15/06 at 4:48am
 Just a thought Joan. Spray the dress with Glycerine or water proofing, which ever is easier!
Then douse it with water from a spray bottle, just before the performer goes on. If nothing else the water will glisten, until it dries, leaving wet trails & areas on the stage, as it runs down the dress.  

      Joe
Western Gondawandaland
turn right @ Perth.
Hear the light & see the sound.
Toi Toi Toi Chookas {{"chook [chicken] it is"}
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to a full house}

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bullet Posted: 3/17/06 at 1:19am

Dear Joan54:

From your posts on this thread and others I've read, you sound like an absolutely fabulous costumer.  Where are you located and do you take orders over the phone?

Keep up the great work!

"None of us really grow up. All we ever do is learn how to behave in public." -- Keith Johnstone
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Joan54
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bullet Posted: 3/17/06 at 8:20am

Well.....here's my story.  My mother was a tailor and I learned her skills and I also grew up in Western Canada where sewing skills are a valued and common attribute.  I ended up in New York...on eastern Long Island in a town called Southold running a construction company.  Life's weird huh?  My son was born to act  and I was appalled at the level of costuming and set design in the local theaters where he learned his craft.  So I started working for all the local theaters.  If I could start my life over I would make hats....they are my absolute joy but most theater groups want the rest of the costume too.  I'm also a fairly good painter. 

 My son and I have started our own theater company and it is doing well.  We work mainly with traditional Shakespeare...you know doublets, codpieces, farthingales....the works.  This suits me because I really don't have very much interest in the modern era of dress.  For example; our next play (opening in two weeks) is "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"  and I have not made a single costume for it.  Hate the fifties and sixties.  I have done the set and even that was a chore.

I have never charged a cent for my work but I own all of the costumes I ever made.  I am sort of a lending library of costumes.  I truly believe that there should be more cooperation and less competition between small theater groups and if you went into the theater to make money you were a fool.  It makes me happy to see my costumes used by another theater group or my backdrops borrowed by an opera company.

This brings me back to your question.  Yes I could take orders but I don't know what to charge.  I don't want to make boring costumes.  My time is limited, particularly now because we have "Taming of the Shrew" and "Othello" scheduled for this summer so that's about 30-40 costumes for me and a lot of set painting.  If you are interested in talking to me about your project send me the details. eeijoan@optonline.net 

 

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bullet Posted: 3/17/06 at 9:31am
Alas, I shall then have to make do with the locals.  However, in these days of digital photography, self-publishing and websites perhaps you might consider creating a catalogue of your creations?  I'm sure your designs would enlighten and inspire the rest of us.
"None of us really grow up. All we ever do is learn how to behave in public." -- Keith Johnstone
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Mike Polo
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bullet Posted: 3/17/06 at 9:47am
Now that sounds like a worthy project... the Green Room would be happy to donate webspace...
Mike Polo
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