Showing posts with label steampunk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steampunk. Show all posts

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Steampunk at Convergence

I didn't snap nearly as many photos as I should have in retrospect. There was always so much going on! I did manage to grab some fun examples.

I liked her eye makeup overcoat and have picked up a sewing
pattern for something similar to use in the future. Actually, I think she must have used the same pattern, the more I look at it!
The originality of her outfit was sublime. I thought the dirty face was a nice touch.



I really wanted a pic with his wings open but he said no because they were such a pain in the ass to close again. They looked heavy too!

I had no idea who she was supposed to be.
Apparently a steampunk WoW (World of Warcraft) character?
This guy's staff lit up, and the ball on top was one of those crazy electricity balls that shoot an electrified stream of light to wherever you touch it on the glass.
These ladies were SELLING these dragons!
Handmade...I believe they said Dark Silouette on Facebook (haven't searched them out yet, but rest assured I will). They said silouette was spelled without an H and they take custom orders. I do believe I will be hitting them up in the future to have them make my very own fire-lizard of Anne McCaffery Pern fame! The dragons were completely moveable from head to tail.
Very elegant steampunk Tony Stark!
His lights were incredibly bright and he could have them on two settings, blindingly brilliant or just slightly less than blindingly brilliant.
This airship captain has seen some combat action, it would appear.
Found this aviator on a trip to the car to reload our booze. He was having some girl drama unfortunately but allowed me to snap a pic with my roomie.

This guy had by far the best steampunk accessories I saw all weekend. When I showed my mom this pic, all she could say was, "He's wearing a Coach purse! That's a Coach purse on his hip!" Mom may not know what is steampunk is, but she can spot a purse a mile away!

Almost everywhere you looked people were dressed up. Not as much steampunk as I would have thought from this year's theme, but then again it's fun to do your own thing. Geeks are nothing if not fierce individualists!

Next post, my cosplay is finally revealed, along with more cosplay pics from Convergence. Remember, if you're ever in Minnesota around the 4th of July, be sure to stop by the Con for a good time!

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Accessorizing...the (Cheap) Steampunk Way!

I thought that I would get a lot done on my steampunk designs while I was home taking care of the Big B.

Wrong! Like so many well laid plans, the minute reality hits they go awry.

I did manage to get to Michael's Craft store this weekend buy some acrylic paint in gold, bronze, and copper. The silver tempted me but they were having a buy 2 get one free sale so silver got the shaft.

Being a big believer in the fact that I'm often more ambitious than dedicated on follow through, and the fact I'm a big procrasinator, I decided to hedge some bets with my outfit and buy some of these fantastic plastic water guns at Target for five whole bucks. You really can't go wrong!

 Chintzy, but what do you expect for $5?

I was inspired by some "repurposed toys for adults" for sale on Etsy that were modified from Nerf and watergun toys into spectacular and devastating-looking ray guns and other fun weapons when I bought these.



(Green nails left over courtesy of St Patrick's Day)


After playing with the guns for a few minutes by shooting at the kitties and making them thoroughly disgusted with me (a required activity when you buy toys), I got my brush and my paints ready and settled down to business.

My initial brushstrokes told me right away that this was going to need several coats to cover the garishly colored plastic. After successive coats and some time to dry, it was looking pretty good.



After drying overnight, I'm pleased to say the color covers the plastic
even better than I'd hoped. Shows you what an impatient person I am.

Or good enough to give me hope, in any case! I'm still debating whether I should cover the green plastic watertank bubble or leave it to look electrifyingly raygun-ish. I'll have to see what it looks like once the rest of the toy is painted.

These will be my back-up if I can't create an entirely original weapon on my own. Or if I end up doing multiple outfits like I plan to, I may use these to fill it out. I'm still stuck on my steampunk version of the gargoyle Demona, but I also want to do a straight steampunk outfit if possible.

Then there's the Rainbow Bright outfit I've worn to CONvergence in the past...my friend Jack suggested I do a steampunk Rainbow Bright, and the idea appeals to me more and more with every day. I have some white leather I could use to make killer goggles with (now that I know I can soften it) and I'm picturing a kick-ass Rainbow Bright outfit with some wicked thigh holsters for some sleek & deadly rayguns. Steampunk and rainbows, some of my very favorite things.

I'm getting there. Bring on the Con!

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Makin' Progress

The Steampunk party at the Doll House was this past weekend, and I gathered with a small group of friends to brainstorm and work on costume and accessory ideas. Nobody produced a whole lot in the way of physical results, but plenty of ideas were floating around. My roomie had eagerly dived into research for us and put together a slide show of pics to get us storming along. I can't lie; the evening did devolve into a game of Universalis, but I perservered and continued working industriously away while the cat-mafia on the space station battled for the Hand Drill in an epic adventure to keep the sun from blowing up and a time paradox to kill all the parrot people (refer to Universalis link above to understand this last bit more).

I did manage to get a few things done, mainly a pair of goggles that I'm particularly happy with. Now I have a direction to go in, and some idea of what I'll need to get there. But before I reveal them, I need to update you on my roomie's compass. He's made some modifications that I think improved it greatly and the finished product is detailed, functional and beautiful.


He changed the interior of the compass by removing the gear he had
added and allowing the compass needle to spin freely. Instead, he mounted gears into the compass covering  by heating them up and then melting them into the plastic for hold.


For more outside decoration, he placed a piece of circle of aluminum can in the center and twisted wire around in a cool design. I can almost see the electromagnetic energy powering this thing!


My roomie is so clever! He used a gear to make the cover movable so you can access the inside of the compass and needle. He even uses another gear at the opposite side to keep it in place.


Good thing too, because in taking all the pictures I made the needle
fall off its teeny tiny pole! Luckily for me, he had built in a way to fix it.


My roomie also got started on a gun for himself made out of a cylindrical flask & cigar holder combo and an empty air canister.

Its very rough but you can see the promise.

My gun, on the other hand, is mostly conjecture at this point.


It works pretty great with minimal effort. My cat Gizmo loves to play fetch and he thought that mommy had brought him home a new toy at first. But this toy is for mommy, my fuzzy one! My buddy suggested I set up a mechanism that holds back a spring that can be released with a trigger to work the pump. Which is probably exactly how Nerf guns work, I'm sure. At this stage I'm wondering if the effort of building such a thing would be worth it knowing that, but I'm not ruling it out just yet. It would be really cool to build a projectile gun around this cheap $2 toy that has some real heft to it. Just wandering around the garage that night, I discovered all kinds of interesting metal pieces and shapes that have future ray gun potential.



Finally on to the culmination of my evening!
I wanted to get my hands dirty but needed a small project to start off with. Eye wear seemed appropriate, and after a household scavenge I came up with some materials that had great parts that practically screamed "Goggles!" at me.

I started off making a template with some practice foam and getting the eye hole placement just right. As you can see, earlier designs needed some tweaking!


 The plastic cups were handily left behind at our Halloween party. Thanks Jello-shot Man, whoever you were!

Can you guess what the other cannibalized object from around the house was?
(Best sacrifice of a bra ever!) The straps could be used for two separate pairs of goggles, and my roomie gave me an idea on how to use the clasps to my advantage. We figured we could probably find a use for the pad and lace at some point too. Waste not, want not!


My final working prototype convinced me this was definitely doable.


I cut the clasps in half so I would be able to create two of these if I wanted. By cutting the goggles in half at the bridge of the nose and attaching the bra clasps, I would be able to make goggles that I could take apart and let hang down on either side of my neck. What airship crew member would be without these puppies?



Of course this move necessitated another tryout before moving to final production stages.



The next step would be adding the finishing touches, like metallic paint and the telescoped "lenses". Not as easy as it seemed! I must have burned my fingers with hot glue several times getting all the metal in place. Wire resists being twisted prettily, and if you force it, ugly crimps develop easily. I can already tell that wire will be an ongoing purchase during the next few months.

I am very pleased with the results. With extremely cheap materials, a little ingenuity and elbow grease, I have a nice pair of original goggles.


I think the ability to split them at the bridge of the nose is one of the coolest features.

I added the big gear to help camouflage the bump from the clasps and added some more for flair to the temple area. Even the staples from securing the strap gave it a nice touch (so far as we can tell, nothing sticks to craft foam except latex paint, and that apparently only to itself when applied to craft foam. Staples were my go-to solution. Some use duct tape, I use staples).


It's kind of hard to see, but I beveled the material surrounding the plastic goggles to make sure they didn't impair my eyesight. 


I'm not sure what costume these will end up being used on, but no matter where they end up I'm going to be excited to show off their functionality.


Of course they needed one final field test before I could consider them complete.


In the end I decided not to put lenses in this set. I did have some clear plastic that would have worked well but I prefer not to mess with my eyesight right now. I can always modify later on if I change my mind. My only complaint with these are that the end product feels very fragile. In fact, during the taking of the picture above I dislodged one of the metal circles on the left eye and had to re-glue it. (A couple of days after construction and they appear to be holding up).

My next iteration plans on solving the durability problem using leather. However, the leather my roomie had purchased is stiffened. I looked up some ways to soften old leather using household items and found a recipe that called for isopropyl alcohol and Vaseline. I cut out another front-clasping goggle pattern out of some of the leather and used the inner eye pieces as test subjects. Its hard to tell the difference in color with this photo, but the eye patterns are the original untouched leather, the piece on the left is softened using the homemade alcohol-Vaseline solution, and the piece on the right was done using saddle soap found at the pharmacy and used to soften shoes. I felt that the homemade remedy worked better, but my hubby B thinks the saddle soap did better. The saddle soap did discolor the leather less than the Vaseline/alcohol solution, and when bent doesn't ripple up as badly either. Clearly, more experimentation is called for here.

 I also decided that my next pair of leather goggles would be a more traditional one-piece in white leather, to accommodate one of the costume ideas I had. The new pattern is in orange, compared to the old pattern used for the overlapping and detaching goggles.

Also at the party was my buddy Jack's girlfriend Courtney. She's a talented sculptress and was playing with my roomie's modeling clay all evening. She created a seahorse and some spiders and I just had to have them cooked and hardened for preservation.


I asked her to make me another seahorse, thinking that perhaps I could put a flatter one on the bridge of the brown leather goggles in the same place the gear is located in my first version.


Check out the spiders she created later on! I have no idea how she was able to create those teensy little barely-there mandibles!




I still have a lot of work to do, this is just the beginning. I plan on doing my ambitious steampunk Demona costume and have added a steampunk Rainbow Brite to the mix as well. If inclination, materials, funds and time permits, I may do a steampunk for steampunk's sake outfit as well. Possibilities continue to percolate!

The event is over and I felt it was a success. The only sad part was that it was the last night I got to spend with my roomie for several months. His job requires him to be on the road for months at a time, and he was heading out Sunday afternoon. We shared one last pic before saying goodbye.



He's still in touch thanks to the digital world, and he'll be spending his time in some warm and tropical vacation areas, even if he is working. I wish I could join him in Florida and Hawaii, but will have to content myself with the knowledge that spring isn't too far away now, even for the snowy cold north.

Hopefully this will inspire you to try some steampunk creation or other cosplay of your own. I've found it's best to just look at everyday materials in a new light, have creative friends who live outside the box, and a willingness to experiment.

More to come as the weeks crawl towards summer and that desperately hot and humid month of July which is the exact opposite of February.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Steampunk Beginnings

My friends and I are getting excited for this summer's CONvergence already. It's not until the beginning of July but we are getting things together and starting to plan already. I was introduced to the wonder and fun that is CONvergence back in 2007 and I haven't missed one since. It's 4 days of all the nerdly fun your geek mind can handle. There are panels, exhibitions, themed party rooms, dancing, costume parades, art shows, cinema, guest speakers, and of course every kind of gaming you can imagine, from old-fashioned pen and paper to MMORPG. Not to mention all the fun people you'll meet.

2010's theme was Villians, but 2011's theme is "A Celebration of Yesterday's Visions of Tomorrow". That means steampunk! The whole group is fired up about this year's costume ideas. Some of us have been planning since we went to bed the first night after 2010's CON ended. I had what I can only describe as a vision when I went to sleep that night.

Unfortunately, my vision came almost exactly a year too late. In some strange fugue state between sleep and active wakefulness, I came up with the almost complete and perfect plan to make myself into a gargoyle. Specifically, Demona from Disney's animated Gargoyles series.
 

Miraculously when I woke up the next morning, all of the plans and ideas were still burbling around in my head. For once I didn't wait and immediately put it all down on paper so I wouldn't forget.

But last year's theme was villians, not this year. So back to the drawing board? No way! A geek girl must be open-minded and creative at all times, so this calls for some adaptation. And really, I can use this to my advantage. I don't have to be Demona necessarily, and that opens up a lot of possibilities. I will need to adapt my steampunk costume idea (vague at this point, which is a helpful coincidence) so I can embrace both of that which is victorian and gargoyle-ness.

Meanwhile, my industrious (and self-admitedly bored) roommate went shopping today for supplies for our upcoming steampunk craft party. He is a person who can always think outside the box, and his creativity is inspiring. He went to Michael's, Home Depot, and Ax-Man (a surplus store common in the Twin Cities) and picked up all kinds of nifty stuff. I saw the possibilities and couldn't help but eagerly catalog his stuff. Luckily my roommate is a sweet and laid-back kind of person.


Note the two long cylindrical tubes that come apart and double as a flask! and the smaller
capsules that unscrew to hold small items of value.
And this stuff is just the beginning! That very night after tacos (I know that geekers need our sustenance so I keep them fed at my house) my roommate got to work building a steampunk compass. He dismantled a regular plastic compass and painted the outside a metallic bronze. Then he laid some tiny brass strips down on the bottom inside to form an N.


He also put a new pin through the bottom that would hold a tiny gear he bought in addition to the compass needle. He heated up the metal pin with a candle and melted it through the back of the plastic case.



After the plastic had cooled and hardened securely around the pin, he had to put the compass needle on it.


The he carefully placed the gear on the shaft.




Ta-da! A genuine home-made MacGuyver'd steampunk compass.




He still has to figure out a way to cover it so the gear will stay in place, but I'm confident he'll solve that riddle. This was just with a few hours' work, imagine what the bigger finished products will look like? I can't wait.

He hasn't just been busy buying likely-shaped things at home improvement stores however. He also bought a pair of stylish air-captain boots with weather guards and was kind enough to model for me.



I had boot-envy over his stylish footwear. Frustratingly, not all of the purchases turned out to be sound. The copper-colored liquid latex body paint was bad, both jars of it. It was chunky and you could see the rubber pieces in it.



Yuck!
But I think that one other buy has serious potential.





This mask is some serious equipment. When wearing it, I can barely hear him speak unless he uses the microphone. The battery pack he has at his side powers the circulation system and runs the microphone. It sucks a bit of juice, but my buddy is looking into battery replacement in hopes of fixing that problem. This lovely packs some serious filters as well--but don't worry, my friend got it for a steal. Hopefully at the end he'll be able to say that it looks so steampunk it shouldn't actually work, but surprisingly still does. He's a thrifty kind of guy that way and if anyone can do both, he can.




Seeing all this potential has got my mind feverishly spinning (ha ha) and I have a lot of half-formed ideas swirling around in there. I need to get to some stores and search for supplies in unlikely places and hit up a fabric store. The party is two weeks away and I will have a great opportunity to get some neat stuff built. I'm blessed that so many of my geek friends are hands-on and creative thinkers with experience in making things work. One of the friends attending loves film and has made some incredible sets and props for his movies. His expertise should be taken advantage of while it's here!

As things progress I will attempt to continue the chronicle. Look forward to future posts about our progress towards our very own steampunk CONvergence experience.