Monster Hunter has so many amazing armor build and I have a whole list I would like to try but I chose the Kamura armor from Monster Hunter Rise because it was a combination of fabric and foam so it allowed me to work with something I was comfortable with as well as branch out into a new medium. After that I started making cosplays that weren’t for pole competitions or performances.įabric was/is the medium I am most comfortable in but seeing all the amazing foam builds made me really want to branch out into foam crafting as well. I then went on to do Zero Two from Darling in the Franxx for my next pole competition. I was covered head-to-toe in clothing but I used a combination of grippy fabric and upholstery vinyl to allow me grip and still pull of the original Nightingale armor look. My first full cosplay build was the Nightingale Armor from Skyrim as a pole cosplay. So I started with just modifying store bought Halloween costumes to make them as true to original as I could but still allow grip where I needed it. As a theater kid at heart all of my pole dance performances were very theatrical and I wasn’t happy with just making skimpy versions of costumes just to make them pole-able (pole requires grip which normally comes from skin). Kamura armor from Monster Hunter Rise / Cosplayer echo_waters Cosplay Stories Photo : alfashots_photography ![]() This story first appeared Cosplay In America and if you want to share a “Cosplay Stories” to be shared here on this website, full details can be found here. Thank you so much!!!ĭisclaimer: All images and videos used, do not belong to FnC and belong to their respective owners. I would like to recognize Janan Boehme of the winchestermysteryhouse for providing pictures of the tower windows, and Estella Inda of the San Jose Library California Room for providing the picture of Sarah Winchester. The house felt smaller than before, in a friendly and familiar way, because I had put so many parts of it into my head in the process of putting it onto my costume. And I incorporated a lot of details as accurately as I could! It was also really interesting seeing the house in person again after having studied the pictures so closely while working on the costume. They were able to appreciate better than anyone the details that I incorporated. Wearing the costume at the Winchester house was really neat, because of course the people on staff there know the house so well. So I learned to solder for this costume, in order to use lights that would work for the effect I wanted! I had hoped to use a ready-made product of some kind so I wouldn’t have to deal with wiring, but I couldn’t find anything that would work. ![]() To get the costume on and off I have to hammer it together or apart with a mallet which is a pretty funny looking process!įiguring out how to do the lights was difficult as well. Ultimately though I had to build a wheel base to get the weight onto the ground. The difficulty came in connecting with the top and bottom smoothly, and in supporting what became a very heavy “skirt.” Originally I was going to have it hang from a frame that just attached to my waist, like a bustle. The bodice is based on a standard Victorian style pattern. The bottom half of the costume breaks down into four flat panels. I also realized that the 100th anniversary of Sarah’s death with nearly coincide with SiliCon in 2022, so it seemed like the perfect time and place to present the costume! There were so many details that I felt I could incorporate into a really interesting garment. I was inspired to make the costume when I visited the house in 2021. The house reached seven stories before the 1906 earthquake destroyed a large portion of it. She had the budget to pay for amazing woodwork, beautiful stained glass, and many innovative and modern features for the time such as a shower and an in-house “telecom” system. She was basically a hobbyist architect, and in a time before building codes she could do anything she wanted!Įach room was a new creative project, and she added onto the house with no overall plan. She bought a small farmhouse in 1886, and began adding onto it. Her husband died of tuberculosis and afterwards she moved to San Jose, California. ![]() Sarah Winchester was heiress to the Winchester rifle fortune. Photographer: wireheadarts kylie.clark_makes.things
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