Posts Tagged ‘costume how to’

Turkey Time

Friday, November 27th, 2009 by tcg
turkey1

I whipped up a Turkey costume to wear this year to Thanksgiving dinner. No sewing, of course. I used craft items on hand like duct tape, craft sticks, glue, and remnant fabric. I used pinking shear to camouflage any mis-cuts or wobbly lines. From start to finish was less than four hours of work. The next problem was figuring out what my turkey costume would look like. I decided on a tail, little wings, and a beak. With this combo, I can wear the turkey with any clothing I like and it can fit anyone becasue I attach each piece using ribbon or string.

tail_frame
duct_tape

First I made a the tail frame. I arranged the craft sticks in a fan pattern. The height is around two feet give or take a few inches ( I didn’t measure one bit.) Once I was happy with the pattern I used duct tape to connect the sticks. Flip the tail and cover with another layer of duct tape.

feathers
brown_feathers

Next, I spent some time cutting the fabric scraps into shapes. I made some large feathers out of orange. Cut double the feathers so you can have feathers extend above the tail and cover any sticks you use. I cut one big piece of brown material. Remember to make a front and back for the brown base to cover the frame. I cut one smaller black piece and one sorta beige stripe. I also added some reddish color just because I thought the orange and brown were too boring.

complete_tail
wings

Next I just glued everything in place. You can use hot glue, fabric glue, or even white glue. It all depends on how quickly you’d like to put on your costume. Lay out the brown, place the frame, next piece of brown, and then arrange all the other feather bits. I used some leftover brown for wings. Simply fold the brown over your arm to create a sleeve-like covering. Once each piece is ready, use a hole punch to attach your ribbon or string. My tail ties on like a belt.

Lastly, you need a beak. I found some old yellow fun foam and cut it into a triangle. Then I glued a long wiggly red piece across it’s bridge. When I tie it on my face i looks like that gobbler thingymajig.

I hope you got some ideas from this costume. You can make a duct frame for all sorts of costumes. Have fun!

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