Friday, November 29, 2013

Making the Satyr: The Legs

"Finally!" I'm sure you're all saying.

Here is how I made the legs. Most people who do the digitigrade legs have to accommodate for the foam. At this point my brother decided we were going to scrap the idea of digitigrade and just do regular hairy pants (I will explain how we managed to make them digitigrade after all in a moment). To make the pants without a pattern I just set down a regular pair of pants. Pants are tricky in the fact that you'd expect them to be just two diagonal tubes, but they're more complicated than that. Take a look.


So, using that as a guide (and a fabric pencil I had to sharpen after every two feet of marking) I managed to cut all four pieces of the fur.


Something to note about working with such a hairy fabric: it will make a mess. You will get hair on the floor, on your clothes, and everything else it touches. That's all before you even start cutting it. Make sure you have a lint roller and a vacuum cleaner handy (neither of which you should use on the fur fabric itself, just on what's shedding off)


Here is one of the legs sewn together. It looks long on the bottom and tall on the top, but ended up being perfect on the bottom and maybe a little short on top. I intentionally left part of the bottom unsewn (you can kind of see a V on the left where the foot is poking through) so there was more room and so that the pants can rest on the hooves better.

The pants ended up being surprisingly baggy. Enough so that we decided to bring back the digitigrade pillows and give them a try. We stuffed the upper front pillows from the top and the lower back pillows from the bottom (it takes two people to put the legs on). It's a tight squeeze but it also means the pillows won't slip out.

Overall, this is what we ended up with:


He is standing completely straight.

Perhaps in the future we will consider Velcro to attach the digitigrade pillows and an elastic band for the top of the pants, but for now it works very well for an attempt made with no previous costuming experience.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Making the Satyr: The Accessories

The best fabrications have detail, some so small that you never even see them, but if they weren't there you'd notice (take the Lord of the Rings movies for example). In my spare time while my brother was working and I had a few mornings off I decided to make a few small accessories. If you find yourself trying to come up with some ideas, or don't even know where to start, think more in the theme of the materials you will be working with. I wanted more natural materials, things you would find in the woods or could create from such things: leather, wood, and feathers. Bone and clay would work well if you have the ability to work with those materials as well.

The Bow and Arrows



After a quick trip to the craft store I picked up some dowels with the idea of making a bow and arrows. You'll notice the back-most dowel is actually thicker than the rest, this was to be the bow.


To make the bow I chose a hemp cord, the string I've been using for previous things is far too rough and would cause the bowstring to look frayed. Hemp, however, looked to be the appropriate size and style. If I wanted it to look really nice I would have chosen some more expensive waxed cord I had seen.

My intention was to make notches on both ends of the dowel to hold the string in place. Making the notches with a knife causes the knife to dull too quickly and I was nervous with the idea of using a knife (if I can cut myself on a light switch twice I really shouldn't be trusted with sharp objects). Having just recently moved I was also lacking tools like sandpaper or a saw. However, I have used a nail file before to buff paint off a piece of metal using the logic that it's basically a form of sandpaper, so I decided to use that with some surprisingly good results and got the notch that I needed. Unfortunately, after several attempts at stringing the bow, the dowel broke.


I decided to reevaluate the bow and instead focused on the arrows. I bought a pack of feathers and cut them into the desired shape for arrow fletching (definitely a project you do outside) the dowels I cut to 2 feet, long enough to be convincing arrows and short enough that they wouldn't be awkward. Because they were cosmetic arrows I left out some details intentionally, like the notch the bowstring would fit into and even arrowheads. The arrowheads for two reasons: because the arrows would stay in a quiver and not even be seen, and so they wouldn't be considered a weapon (weapons and weapon-like objects in costumes are very much a safety issue to keep in mind)

I attempted to glue the feathers on with several types of glue, having poor results: the weaker glues aren't sticky enough for the feather to stick on while it dries, and super glue is too runny and has other disastrous problems (by wearing nitrile gloves I didn't glue my fingers together, but everything else became a runny mess that quickly dried into a crispy mess). I did scrap the idea of arrows, but only because the costume deadline was coming up, and I had other things I needed to do more. Only recently realizing I should have researched it before hand, a quick search brought up a very interesting website here that shows fletching by hand without a jig.

Although I didn't complete the arrows I did, however, halfway complete a quick and dirty quiver by gluing leather over a cardboard paper towel roll. I'll see about posting some pictures someday.

Vest Extras


Accessorizing the vest was what got me started on the details. My brother was nervous about buttons on the vest, wanting to leave it open, but after a year I think he got more comfortable with the idea of me adding to it. For the buttons I chose horn toggles. I've never been a fan of button holes as I want to be able to correct mistakes, and cutting holes are pretty permanent, so I use loops. The loops I used are made of a rough twine. Afterwards, I poked some small feathers under the stitching of the buttons, they hold together very well. There are three on the bottom and one on the top to help hide the tips of the bottom feathers jutting out.

Painting the Horns


 I already mentioned in a previous post this month about buying the horns. While the horns are gorgeously designed I have to admit I wasn't expecting them to be so pale. The picture on Amazon shows them as a tan brown, while the ones we received were as pale as my hands in this picture (and that's with my summer tan). I chose acrylic paint in the hopes that it would work on the polymer clay the horns are made of (I have no idea what either of those mean, I mention it in the hopes that someone more knowledgeable than me is currently stroking his beard going "Hmm, yes.")


Along with the quiver here is a list of other accessories I didn't feature here: headband, scarf, bracelets, loincloth, tail, and bottles.

Friday, November 15, 2013

Making the Satyr: The Digitigrade

This is it, the part that's a big mystery to everyone who wants to make a detailed satyr costume: The digitigrade legs.

In comparison, humans have what are called plantigrade legs. We step with our entire foot, toe to heel. Digitigrade animals, meanwhile, step on mostly their toes, the heel of their foot extending upward before finally reaching their knee.

I had to look at furries in the name of learning.

The problem with making a satyr costume is making plantigrade legs look like they are digitigrade legs. Some people have really elaborate metal leg brace systems that they end up balancing on, like stilts, others use foam to achieve the appearance. Massive metal stilts are very impractical, not to mention I don't have the resources nor the knowledge for such a thing, so I chose the foam method.

For the foam I chose a less rigid type than what most people use because it was cheaper and I felt would be easier to work with. To me it was more like layers of quilt batting than actual foam. They ended up being 16 inches long by 5.5 inches wide (I didn't measure the depth since I didn't think about it). I made four of them, two for the top front of the legs and two for the back bottoms. Keep in mind the person I am making this for is 6 feet tall.

The original plan was to shape them into the desired curvature, but instead I decided to leave them square and put them into a tightly sewn section of fabric that would hopefully cause it to curve. It did, but was a pain to stuff, the action requiring the effort of two people.
 
 
Afterwards we taped them in place to see how it would look in terms of shape with the intent that we would later sew them to the green pants set aside specifically for this project. 
 
 
 I a later post, I will show you how it looks once the pants are finished and the padding put into place.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Making the Satyr: The (Failed) Hooves and Horns


Although I failed terribly at making hooves there's still a lot to be learned, and I hope that by making a mistake I can maybe help someone else end up one step ahead than they were before.

So, to make some hooves I've seen several videos. Going by what they were generally doing I decided to use some clay molded on top of som shoes my brother didn't want anymore. The clay I chose was a natural brown clay that air dries well.



I made sure to clean the shoes beforehand, put down some wax paper to protect the floor, and set to work, carefully pressing the clay onto the shoe. I've never worked with clay before, and I found it both easy and difficult to work with. Easy because it attached itself much easier to the shoe than I was expecting, difficult because it took a lot of pressing to get it to shape the way I wanted.

 
As I began working my way up the shoe I ran into a problem: When I reached the meshy section of the shoe (the area that lets your foot "breathe") the clay refused to stick to it. I found a workaround by attaching more clay on the areas that attached well and eventually built my way up, squeezing and shaping to get this (the middle cloven shape I achieved using a pen cap to shape it):

 
I also decided to attempt some horns, because I had plenty of clay left. Throughout the entire process the clay only got harder to work with and began to crumble easily. Within 24 hours the clay cracked, crumbled, and I was left with chunks of clay and stained shoes.
 
Instead I decided to save my sanity, throw money at the almighty Amazon, and buy some hooves and horns (the horns of which I am quite happy with, the hooves are a fair alternative to madness.)
 
What would I do in the future if I decided to attempt it again?
 
I would definitely use a wire mesh in the future, to provide the clay something to really stick to. I would also probably shop around to see about types of clay and what might work best in the situation. Most of all, however, I would definitely get a brother with smaller feet.

Friday, November 1, 2013

Satyr Month!

Remember some of those old Satyr posts I made a while back? (Like this one, this one, and this one?) Of course you do! Those are probably the three that got you here in the first place. Quite honestly they're my three most popular posts by far according to my read count (553, 166, and 164, compare that with my #4 post having only 47 views)

The People demand satyrs.

I am, of course, happy to provide now that I have more material to work with.

Obviously the planning stages of my brother's satyr costume were well over a year. Mostly because my sewing skills are subpar (I've mentioned before I sewed an armhole shut on a vest), and I procrastinated in the hopes that my brother would lose interest and move on. A year later and he still showed interest, so I could only shrug and give it my best shot.

So, throughout the second half of October I spent time, money, and effort into attempting a satyr costume.

Here are the posts you can expect this month:

1. Hooves and Horns

2. Digitigrade

3. Accessories

4. The Legs