Quick! I Need a Costume!
October 24, 2011 4:58 am Crafts, Green Crafting, Halloween, Holidays, Sewing, Techniques and MediumsBy Recycled Crafts Contributor, Anitra from the blog Coffee Pot People.
This is the time of year for costumes, which is good for me. I never did outgrow loving to play dress-up, and I just love creating costumes. But what do you do when you need a costume in a hurry?
The costume at the top is one solution, and got a lot of laughs at our recent Cousins’ Night Out. We were supposed to dress in “French costumes”. Have you figured Mama and me out yet?
We’re French Fries, complete with the fry baskets!
If you want to go as an order of fries, or let one of the kids do it, these are the “ingredients”:
- A red hat and scarf for “catsup”
- Tan pants and turtleneck for the “fry” part
- A plastic basket from the dollar store, with the bottom cut out. (You’ll be surprised how small a basket “fits”, I bet!) To put it on, just step in and squiggle it up until it hits a comfortable “staying” spot.
- Last step, for extra fun: Get two catsup packets from your local fast food joint, poke holes in the flat edge at the top center of each one, and hang them from earring wires.
This was a fun costume to put together and wear, and we even took first prize–for sheer creativity!
Want a couple more quickie costume ideas?
This one came to me just today, as I was cutting and rolling sheets of bubble wrap to take to a local non-profit: Wear white pants and tee, wrap yourself from head to toe in big-bubble bubble wrap, and go as a bubble bath! Make a cap of the stuff, and “accessorize” with a washcloth or back brush. Just be careful if you sit down, lol!
Another one, a little more time-consuming, but fun, is to go as a Rubik’s cube. I did this for one of my girls when she was about eight. First, get a cardboard box big enough to go from the neck to the top of the thighs. If it’s more or less a cube, that’s great, but it doesn’t have to be. Cut construction paper into rectangles or squares the right size to make three rows of three squares across, in six different colors, then glue them randomly on the sides and top of the box. (Yes, it’s an unsolved cube. Never could put those things back right, myself.) Cover with clear self-stick vinyl (such as Contac paper) to make them shiny. Cut holes for the head and arms.
Another costume I created for one of my girls when she was maybe six was a caterpillar. I took a velour turtleneck she already had and lengthened it with wide bands of velour until it was an ankle-length tube. Then I went to the thrift store and bought six or seven pairs of the teensiest baby shoes (fabric type) that I could find, and safety pinned them in a double row down the front of the tube to be her caterpillar feet. We topped her off with an antennae head-band, and painted her face one of the colors of her costume, with bright lips, and a big polka dot on each cheek.






Splendid Little Stars :
Date: October 24, 2011 @ 5:27 AM
cute costumes, Anitra!
Jusa :
Date: October 24, 2011 @ 9:35 AM
A riot! I admit, I didn’t catch on until I read the text, but really a cute idea. Maybe some wax paper lining the baskets? I like the ketchup packet earrings. The costumes I made all seemed to take forever, although I enjoyed them. I did manage to reuse a generic furry animal costume several times over the years. Worth the initial investment of time and money to get several good costumes out of it. Also saw cute butterfly a friend made out of two cardboard wings painted appropriately, and a cap with antennae. For a young boy, no less. Adorable.