Thursday, November 17, 2011

Peacock Costume Tutorial "Birds of a Feather Flock Together"

Handmade Peacock Costume
This costume post was just featured on coolest homemade costumes check it out and all their other amazing halloween costumes!

As usual i'm behind on my blog posts. However it still isn't Thanksgiving so I feel like I have time to include how I made my Peacock Halloween costume. As you'll remember from last year I was a 1950's housewife. This year I wanted to up my game a bit more, and instead of having my mom sew a few items I decided I'd do it all myself! (With the help of my friends of course!)

THE FLOCK!
For Halloween my friends and I wanted to go as a group and needed an idea fast! I've always wanted to be a peacock so we came up with the idea to all be birds.  Our theme was, "Birds of a Feather, Flock Together," once we had that settled it was off to buy hundreds of feathers! The materials used:


Target Stretch Skirt
Cheap black lace-up corset
3 Feather Boas
Additional aqua Boa
2 Peacock garlands from Michaels
200 5ft Peacock feathers from Featherstore.com
Stretch Belt
Cardboard
Duct tape
LOADS of hot glue
Needle and thread


Before the madness started!
Skirt: To start I hung the stretch skirt from my dress form and stitched the boas in a zig zag pattern running up and down the skirt. Only tacking the boa at the waist band and letting the rest fall freely.  

Brooke helping me stitch!

After this first tacking was complete I went back in and horizontally stitched the zig zags down to cut down on the "poof". 
Stitch after Stich after Stich - control the poof!

1) 1st round of skirt.  2) Skirt after being tacked down. 3) Final Costume!
When the skirt was tacked down, I added peacock feather garland pieces, aqua boa chunks I had cut off and sewed on and individual peacock feathers sewn into the mix.  

Adding in aqua blue feather chunks and peacock feathers.
The skirt took around 10 hours...so be prepared for a great outcome but a lot of work! 

Finished! So pretty!
Below is a little image I threw together to give you a better understanding of how it's done:



Corset: Once the skirt was complete I took two sections of the peacock garland and hot glued them up the center of the corset front. Following that base layer I filled in with aqua feather chunks cut from the boa, blue black and finally peacock feathers arranged fanning upwards to my neck. After these were all glued down I hand stitched over the glue to make sure the feathers would hold.

Peacock garland from Michaels.

Starting the Corset.


Monte wants to help!
Tail: The most important part of the whole costume was the tail. It had to be grand! I needed a way to attach it to the costume so I could get it on and off for riding in cars or getting through doorways.  I started with a black stretch belt sandwiched it between two pieces of cardboard but left a track for the belt to move freely. The card board was cut in a shape like a ball field with the bottom squared off. 


Belt sandwiched between cardboard with duct tape to reinforce.


Once the belt and cardboard were one piece I started taping the feathers in place facing forwards on the inside and outwards on the outside. (So from the front you could see the eye of the feathers and from the back you could as well).  




After the initial height (about 5 ft) was reached with the feathers I cut down the next layer and began to make the fan at a lower level (about 3 ft) repeating this step for 1.5 ft,  8 inches and then the base of the tail was finished with garland pieces and rhinestones.
Almost Done!
I made sure to try the belt on every so many feathers to make sure it was even and balanced. The feathers were so light I didn't need any other support besides the belt tucked under my corset to hold it in place.
Finished!
Pairing the costume with crazy teal and blue eye make-up, feathers in my upswept hair, sheer black tights and 5 inch heals the costume was complete!

Flamingo, Owl, Chick, Peacock, Robin

Shake ya Tail feather!
The entire costume took about 30 hours to complete and was a huge success.  Not one feather was lost after partying for a good 8 hours!





 This is my favorite costume to date! And the reaction from the crowds of people when an 8 foot peacock and the flock walked in was priceless!

Update to this blog post! I sold the peacock costume this past October to a sweet girl named Adele in NY for Halloween and she looked FABULOUS! Check out how she rocked the costume and how the "tail" of the peacock lives on!

Also Deveon posted in the comments of this blog last year asking for help making her costume perfect. She followed the instructions exactly and check out the results! Pretty amazing - the costumes almost look identical!

Thanks guys! This Post has had so many views - it's fun to see people using the steps to make their own awesome peacocks! :)

7 comments:

  1. Hi! I'm gonna ATTEMPT to do my first homemade costume this year, and I decided on a peacock. Stumbled onto this blog post and I love it! Only a few questions:
    1. Is the cardboard piece that you attached the feathers to for the tail tucked under/inside the corset or is it on the outside? Or is it both with a section under and the rest on the outside? I've seen it both ways but it's hard to tell from the pics you posted.

    2. Is the belt attached to the outside or inside of the cardboard for the tail? Was it heavy at all? Seems like the belt would buckle or fold over with all the feathers and cardboard.

    ok, last one!
    3. Where did you get the corset from?! I'm having the hardest time finding a CHEAP corset!
    Ok thats all! Thanks so much for any help at all! This is an awesome post!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi! Thanks for your comment!

      1) I started making the cardboard to have a little 3 inch wide flap that would hook under my corset and then the corset would lace over it, however after I got the feather tail on I realized that would make the tail sit too low and I'd smash it all night. The tail was actually really light and even with just a stretchy belt it stayed upright all night! So just have the cardboard on the outside. I covered the back side of the cardboard (Side facing away from my back) with black felt before I hot glued the feathers on.

      2)The belt was sandwiched between two identical pieces of cut out cardboard. I layed the belt between the pieces and hot glued them together then taped the edges of the card board with black duct tape.

      3) Found the corset at

      http://www.corsetchick.com/servlet/StoreFront

      Kind of a seedy site and the email about my order was odd...but the corset came in 3 days and worked well. Cheap material but I hot glued all over it so it was fine!

      Thanks and good luck!

      Erin

      Delete
    2. Ok great that was really helpful thanks!!

      Delete
  2. Is it possible to "cut down on the poof" without one of those dress form things? I've tried without it and everytime I tried it on I would break a stitch! What am I doing wrong here? Help! Im not sew-savvy :(

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi again! I know it's after Halloween but I just wanted to thank you for this blog post and answering my questions! My costume was a huge hit, so thanks again! And if you want to see a pic of the finished product, here it is:

    https://www.facebook.com/deveon.bromby#!/photo.php?fbid=4955669693017&set=a.1599282705440.2079514.1337191773&type=1&theater

    I hope you can see it since it's on my facebook, but if not, then just trust me that it looked awesome and I couldn't have done it without this blog! Have a good one!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Deveon! I just now saw your comment after so long! The link you included you look great and the costume is spot on! What an awesome creation! I hope you had as much fun wearing it as I did mine! I hope you don't mind I included your picture in the updated blog! Thanks again for sharing!

      Delete
  4. Do U Think It Will Work If I HAVE A Dress

    ReplyDelete