Sunday, October 30, 2011

Sewing: red fleece, part 2

Here's what happens when I get an idea in my head:

I'd seen a picture of a lobster-ifide infant in a kettle, and thought it was hilarious. Go on, judge me. There's a surprising number of lobster costumes online (go on, search for it.. you'll be surprised!), and decided that I couldn't justify the price, and I wanted a project anyway. I realized that the costume was basically a bag with sleeves and a hood. McCall's 5963 served as a great basic pattern. I changed the shape of the bunting to add the lobster tail, and made tubes of fabric for the little legs and antennae, and attached claws on the folded hand-parts, and attached the chest piece with velcro. A little topstitching for ridges on the exoskeleton.

Hmm, that sounds like a lot. Actually, it wasn't as hard as I thought. Fleece is pretty forgiving, doesn't need edge-finishing, and the whole costume was not form-fitting, so measurements didn't have to be that particular.

The biggest problem is that the lovely lined (i.e. double-layered) fleece is really, really warm. If we lived in the upper-Midwest where I grew up, I'd be okay taking him around the neighborhood in the big soup kettle. But we don't. So I have to unzip my little crustacean for the evening. He's okay with that.

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