I used no commercial patterns to make this costume! Everything was either drafted, freehanded,
or taken off an existing piece of clothing. I'm very proud of that!
Pants
I'll start with the pants, since they were my original inspiration for making this costume. Although the
pants were made of a stretchy material, they were very loose and baggy-- I have no idea why. But it was good
that they were, because I had to salvage every last bit of the pants fabric I could in order
to cover the bra and make all of its straps. The first thing I did was take off the waistband and remove the pocket.
Then I put the pants on myself, and pinned all the excess fabric off to the outside of my legs so the pants
fit tightly, like leggings:
I then used my serger to sew the new, tighter pants and remove the spare fabric in one go. I put the
pants on again, and estimated how low I wanted the waist to be based on where the skirt was going to hit
my waist. Then I trimmed the excess fabric, folded the new waist down to make an elastic casing, and
ran 3/4" elastic through it. The coverstitch setting on my serger worked really well for sewing the casing.
Finally, I put the pants on one last time and added my boots, to decide how much fabric I could cut off the
bottom of the legs. The pants now end a few inches below my knees, and I have to gaff-tape them to my
legs to make sure they don't ride up above the boots! Ah well, the sacrifices we make for our art...
Bra top
First, I went to Marshalls and combed through their bra rack for a bra that matched the overall shape
of Sikozu's. I was lucky enough to find one that had almost the exact right shape and also had a layer of
lace covering the cups, which came in really handy later.
The first thing I did was mock up all the straps in muslin. The top has a lot of straps-- six on her shoulders,
and two more circling her lower torso. That took a few tries to get right. Then I had to figure out how I was
going to get that vertical seam down the bra cups. This is where that lace layer was really useful-- I just
cut it off of the bra cups, then cut it vertically where I wanted the seam to be. Poof! Instant pattern. I
added a generous seam allowance (because the actual fabric was going to have to wrap around the sides of the
cups so it could be securely affixed) and did a quick muslin mockup to make sure the seam was where I wanted it.
Then it was time for the real adventure: covering the bra! I had to plan very carefully, because I was limited
by the amount of fabric I'd salvaged from the pants. No room for error! Here's a picture of all the spare
fabric I got out of the pants:
I had made muslin pieces of all the different parts I was going to need, and I arranged those around on the
scraps until I was satisfied I would be able to cut all the pieces properly. Here's what was left after I
cut everything out!
To cover the actual bra, I pinned the pieces on, hand-basted them, and then stitched them on with the chainstitch
on my serger. It was important to use the chainstitch so I could retain the stretchiness of the bra and the
fabric. The bra closed with hooks in the back, so I poked two holes in the covering fabric to allow the hooks
to attach to the eyes. I also added a little fabric extension with two snaps, for extra security and
neatness. I had already removed the bra's original straps, and to add the six new straps I first pinned
the completed straps to the bra, to confirm how long they needed to be for the bra to sit comfortably:
I then securely handstitched the straps to the underside of the bra. I repeated the process for the two lower
straps. The two lower straps were also handsewn to each other where they met at the sides, and small
snaps were added to close the lowest strap in the back.
Skirt
The skirt was quite easy to draft and make. It's basically four equal trapezoids and a waistband. I determined
the size of each trapezoid by taking three different measurements: around my waist where I wanted the skirt to sit, around
my hips, and the distance between where the skirt would sit and where it would end. I divided the first two
measurements by four to get the top and bottom lengths of the trapezoid, and the third measurement was its
height. I mocked the skirt up in muslin based on these measurements, and then adjusted as necessary, making
the bottom a bit wider and the length a bit shorter. Then I just added an inch-wide waistband. I ended up
taking in the two side panels 1/2" each by adding a seam down the center, both because the waist was a bit
too big and because I noticed the side panels had those seams after I'd already made the skirt.
The skirt is made out of a thin pleather-like material with a fuzzy back. The fabric was not stiff, which
was very important, because the original skirt did not look stiff. The pleather was originally maroon; I
colored it with two layers of Dylon Shoe Color, which I bought
from chaffinch.com. Yep,
I've now bought supplies from overseas for one of my costumes. :) I used a mix of Terra Cotta, Red, and Yellow
in a 4:1:1 ratio. I also used this dye on the boots and the gauntlets.
The skirt closes with small snaps at the right rear seam. And, to my eternal shame, the edges of the skirt panels were finished by folding them under and securing them
with a combination of double-stick tape and a sticky substance made for scrapbooking. I'm not proud of it,
but it was the only way I could figure out to make the sides of the panels look like the original, with no
visible stitching.
Gauntlets and Boots
These were a bit of an undertaking for me, because they were entirely craft projects-- no sewing whatsoever!
After a bit of thinking, I decided to use craft foam, the regular old kind you can get at Michael's, for the
gauntlets and the tops of the boots. Each was made out of three layers of foam: two layers as a base, and then
a third layer to give the raised or indented design. I made a paper template, then cut the foam and hot-glued
the layers together. Hot glue worked really well because it set quickly and melted the foam just slightly
to attach the layers permanently.
After that, I covered the foam with the same pleather I'd used for the
skirt, but I used regular craft glue painted over the foam surface to attach it. The fuzzy back of the
pleather helped the pleather stay in place. I then painted the gauntlets and boot tops with two layers
of the shoe dye, and I put four coats on the boots themselves, which had originally been black. The heel
on the boots are a bit too high (which makes them pretty painful to walk in!) but they were a bargain find
at $18, and they were just my size, so I make do.
The boot tops sit right on top of the boots, and are currently attached by gaff taping the pointy bit of
the boot top onto the boot itself. At some point I may permanently attach them, but it proved easier to
prevent boot-top squishing while packing if the tops were separate from the boots. The gauntlets are also
attached with duct tape right now. From what I can tell, the actual gauntlets attach with some sort of
metal clips, so I'm keeping an eye out for things that might work. I tried regular hooks and eyes, but
they didn't work at all.
Wig
Oh boy! This is my first costume with a full wig. I did quite a bit of searching and finally ended up
buying the Brook wig in Copper Red from wowwigs.com.
I had to trim it a bit, since it was longer than Sikozu's hair. The one thing I don't like about it
is that it doesn't have a center part the way Sikozu's hair does, but I can live with that. (And I've had
far too many people ask me whether it's my real hair. Yeah, not so much.)
Makeup
Sikozu has some pretty extensive makeup, including some really nifty glittery gold scales. When I first wore this costume, at Comic-Con and GenCon, I didn't have the skills to do her full makeup. Instead, I tried to achieve her basic face
coloration. To do that, I first used a tinted lotion that my friend Steph gave me, which essentially
gave me a very sparkly tan. That went on my face, arms, and chest. I then added color around my hairline and eyes with this horrendous orange-red
lipstick I happened to own, and then of course I used the lipstick on my lips as well.
At the Farscape official convention in Burbank in November 2004, I wore the costume and makeup as I usually do. But while I was at the convention, I met a nice couple named
Hayley and Josh who offered to do my makeup more accurately with an airbrush. Hayley also has an awesome Sikozu costume, but I didn't get to see it at the con. They used just watered-down
acrylic paint, and to do the scales, they laid netting against my skin and then sprayed over it. It was really cool and inspired us to buy our own airbrush for future costume use.