Category Archives: historical reenactment

ROTFLMAO!

pawpawpawpawpaw

LOL! LOL! LOL!

I just love it when people leave mean comments without first reading the article they commented on! (See article in question here: http://www.squidoo.com/LordSesshomaruHistory)

LOL! LOL! LOL!

My opposing Sessho followers have found me on Squidoo, niiice.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

Obsessed? I’m Not Obsessed… REALLY, I’m not!

When Next You See Me I’ll Look Like This:

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

ROTFLMAO!

pawpawpawpawpaw

LOL! LOL! LOL!

I just love it when people leave mean comments without first reading the article they commented on! (See article in question here: http://www.squidoo.com/LordSesshomaruHistory)

LOL! LOL! LOL!

My opposing Sessho followers have found me on Squidoo, niiice.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

Obsessed? I’m Not Obsessed… REALLY, I’m not!

When Next You See Me I’ll Look Like This:

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

ROTFLMAO!

pawpawpawpawpaw

LOL! LOL! LOL!

I just love it when people leave mean comments without first reading the article they commented on! (See article in question here: http://www.squidoo.com/LordSesshomaruHistory)

LOL! LOL! LOL!

My opposing Sessho followers have found me on Squidoo, niiice.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

Obsessed? I’m Not Obsessed… REALLY, I’m not!

When Next You See Me I’ll Look Like This:

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

More Info On My Business Plans

pawpawpawpawpaw

I was just posting a comment on some one else’s blog and it got so long that I’m copying it to here:

I have been mulling a similar idea of my own… I even had a blog I started just for randomly posting my “start my business” ideas on, so I could see them on screen and sort out what I did and did not want to do. I think I made like 5 posts on that blog and than never went back! LOL! I need to go back and throw some more ideas around.

Well, I got my own “business” to the point where I had written up a basic business plan, not very detailed though, I need to rewrite it. And I have a portfolio of my designs that I want to do. Plus I have the business name all set up and a logo. But that’s as far as I got.

What stopped me? Well, money for one. I had originally planned on opening a shop and selling direct to the public, of both custom made costumes and the patterns for said costumes to those who wanted to make their own instead of buying ready made, but after doing research into the cost of a shop rental in Portland’s theater district, that was going to require a minimum of $200,000 (more if I wanted a shop on Main street instead of a side alley) because rent for a store is so high and they required a 3 year payment up front! So I temp. changed my idea from a store selling costumes and patterns to just selling patterns online, at least until I had enough money to do the store thing.

My next problem, was I had no idea how to get my patterns printed up so I could sell them! I checked with local print shops, but none of them did this sort of thing, and I couldn’t find any online either. So I was sunk for a while and have not yet found a way to do this. :( I’m still researching my options though.

While I am stuck on the pattern making part, I’ve still been working towards my goal in other ways. Firstly I’ve been researching “my target audience”, trying to figure out, who they are (age group, lifestyle, income, etc. etc. etc). For me, my target audience falls into the 18 – 40 age group, and are in the Goth, CosPlay, or Historical Reenactment lifestyles.

Secondly, I’ve been doing marketing research… where do my target audience types hang out in real life and online? How do I get word of my product out to them? How much are they gonna be willing to pay for my product? Who are my competitors? How are my patterns/designs different from theirs? How are they the same? What can offer my customers that no other patterns comp offers? etc. etc. etc.

I’ve got a big binder filled with my notes and ideas, and research, and stuff… about 300 pages filled so far. I’m trying to plan out every aspect I can think out, so that I can be prepared once I get started.

(I would love to hear what others, who have started their own pattern comp did to get their patterns printed and envelops made and stuff, like that, if anyone has any tips or links they could share, it’d be a big help. Cause I’m really stuck on that and Google has NOT been helpful at all. Thanks!)

I’m not planning to go big and compete with the likes of Simplicity or those guys. Though I would like to get, say about as big as Folkwear Patterns. I plan to start out with 12 or 15 patterns, and than slowly expand over time, until I have a collection of say 200 designs.

Another aspect of my goal is, I would like to do a line of books with patterns, (aimed at CosPlayers, mostly), plus a couple on embroidery.

Well, lets see what I can answer of your questions:

My proposal:
– Patterns would be in english and french.

great!

- They could be printed as booklets, because the papers never want to go back in the envelopes anyway.

ugh! fighting with paper vs envelope is such a nightmare! I like the booklet idea

– The steps would have to be clearly explained and illustrated.

always good… I often find illustrations easier to understand than the instructions, so the more illustrations the better, I say

What I still don’t know:
– Should they be basic designs to be modified by the user, or artsy personal designs?

maybe you could have a line for each? one line of simple “create your own style” patterns, and a second line with the designer originals created by you?

when I’m using a pattern I never stick with the pattern no matter how simple or hoe fancy it may be, cause I like to add my own personal touches to everything.

- Should I focus on styles that are not usually represented by major pattern brands (gothic, lolita, punk, etc.)?

If that is the style design you have a passion for, than: YES! YES! YES! OMG! It is sooooo hard to find patterns for these styles. It’s the lack of patterns for these style that resulted in me making my own patterns in the first place! With the “business” I was planning my goal was to design patterns for Gothic, Lolita, and CosPlay because those are the patterns I end up designing because no one sells them.

My advice is, do styles that you would find yourself wearing, sewing, buying, because if you would use it yourself, you’ll be more likely to “get behind” your product and really go all out with the sale pitch.

- Should I include a few costumes as well? Historical or fantasy (or else)?

It can’t hurt. The more the merrier I say. For me, my focus would be largely costume and fantasy, because I planned the patterns I wanted to sell to be aimed mostly for CosPlayers and LARPers and SCAdians, all of whom are into the whom fantasy costume thing, so those were the target audience I was aiming for.

Again, however, only add these types of things, if it is something you really believe in and feel good about having in your collection. It’s no good selling a product that you added just because you thought it would help business, but you didn’t really believe in the product yourself.

And most important: do I have any chance of selling any? I’m aware that I do not have any example of my apparel work on the net, but do you think the concept could work?

I don’t have any of my apparel work on the net either.

I think it would work (otherwise I wouldn’t be planning to do the same thing! LOL!) I think there are enough folks out there who can’t find goth type patterns who would love to buy them once you had them listed for sale.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

More Info On My Business Plans

pawpawpawpawpaw

I was just posting a comment on some one else’s blog and it got so long that I’m copying it to here:

I have been mulling a similar idea of my own… I even had a blog I started just for randomly posting my “start my business” ideas on, so I could see them on screen and sort out what I did and did not want to do. I think I made like 5 posts on that blog and than never went back! LOL! I need to go back and throw some more ideas around.

Well, I got my own “business” to the point where I had written up a basic business plan, not very detailed though, I need to rewrite it. And I have a portfolio of my designs that I want to do. Plus I have the business name all set up and a logo. But that’s as far as I got.

What stopped me? Well, money for one. I had originally planned on opening a shop and selling direct to the public, of both custom made costumes and the patterns for said costumes to those who wanted to make their own instead of buying ready made, but after doing research into the cost of a shop rental in Portland’s theater district, that was going to require a minimum of $200,000 (more if I wanted a shop on Main street instead of a side alley) because rent for a store is so high and they required a 3 year payment up front! So I temp. changed my idea from a store selling costumes and patterns to just selling patterns online, at least until I had enough money to do the store thing.

My next problem, was I had no idea how to get my patterns printed up so I could sell them! I checked with local print shops, but none of them did this sort of thing, and I couldn’t find any online either. So I was sunk for a while and have not yet found a way to do this. :( I’m still researching my options though.

While I am stuck on the pattern making part, I’ve still been working towards my goal in other ways. Firstly I’ve been researching “my target audience”, trying to figure out, who they are (age group, lifestyle, income, etc. etc. etc). For me, my target audience falls into the 18 – 40 age group, and are in the Goth, CosPlay, or Historical Reenactment lifestyles.

Secondly, I’ve been doing marketing research… where do my target audience types hang out in real life and online? How do I get word of my product out to them? How much are they gonna be willing to pay for my product? Who are my competitors? How are my patterns/designs different from theirs? How are they the same? What can offer my customers that no other patterns comp offers? etc. etc. etc.

I’ve got a big binder filled with my notes and ideas, and research, and stuff… about 300 pages filled so far. I’m trying to plan out every aspect I can think out, so that I can be prepared once I get started.

(I would love to hear what others, who have started their own pattern comp did to get their patterns printed and envelops made and stuff, like that, if anyone has any tips or links they could share, it’d be a big help. Cause I’m really stuck on that and Google has NOT been helpful at all. Thanks!)

I’m not planning to go big and compete with the likes of Simplicity or those guys. Though I would like to get, say about as big as Folkwear Patterns. I plan to start out with 12 or 15 patterns, and than slowly expand over time, until I have a collection of say 200 designs.

Another aspect of my goal is, I would like to do a line of books with patterns, (aimed at CosPlayers, mostly), plus a couple on embroidery.

Well, lets see what I can answer of your questions:

My proposal:
– Patterns would be in english and french.

great!

- They could be printed as booklets, because the papers never want to go back in the envelopes anyway.

ugh! fighting with paper vs envelope is such a nightmare! I like the booklet idea

– The steps would have to be clearly explained and illustrated.

always good… I often find illustrations easier to understand than the instructions, so the more illustrations the better, I say

What I still don’t know:
– Should they be basic designs to be modified by the user, or artsy personal designs?

maybe you could have a line for each? one line of simple “create your own style” patterns, and a second line with the designer originals created by you?

when I’m using a pattern I never stick with the pattern no matter how simple or hoe fancy it may be, cause I like to add my own personal touches to everything.

- Should I focus on styles that are not usually represented by major pattern brands (gothic, lolita, punk, etc.)?

If that is the style design you have a passion for, than: YES! YES! YES! OMG! It is sooooo hard to find patterns for these styles. It’s the lack of patterns for these style that resulted in me making my own patterns in the first place! With the “business” I was planning my goal was to design patterns for Gothic, Lolita, and CosPlay because those are the patterns I end up designing because no one sells them.

My advice is, do styles that you would find yourself wearing, sewing, buying, because if you would use it yourself, you’ll be more likely to “get behind” your product and really go all out with the sale pitch.

- Should I include a few costumes as well? Historical or fantasy (or else)?

It can’t hurt. The more the merrier I say. For me, my focus would be largely costume and fantasy, because I planned the patterns I wanted to sell to be aimed mostly for CosPlayers and LARPers and SCAdians, all of whom are into the whom fantasy costume thing, so those were the target audience I was aiming for.

Again, however, only add these types of things, if it is something you really believe in and feel good about having in your collection. It’s no good selling a product that you added just because you thought it would help business, but you didn’t really believe in the product yourself.

And most important: do I have any chance of selling any? I’m aware that I do not have any example of my apparel work on the net, but do you think the concept could work?

I don’t have any of my apparel work on the net either.

I think it would work (otherwise I wouldn’t be planning to do the same thing! LOL!) I think there are enough folks out there who can’t find goth type patterns who would love to buy them once you had them listed for sale.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

More Info On My Business Plans

pawpawpawpawpaw

I was just posting a comment on some one else’s blog and it got so long that I’m copying it to here:

I have been mulling a similar idea of my own… I even had a blog I started just for randomly posting my “start my business” ideas on, so I could see them on screen and sort out what I did and did not want to do. I think I made like 5 posts on that blog and than never went back! LOL! I need to go back and throw some more ideas around.

Well, I got my own “business” to the point where I had written up a basic business plan, not very detailed though, I need to rewrite it. And I have a portfolio of my designs that I want to do. Plus I have the business name all set up and a logo. But that’s as far as I got.

What stopped me? Well, money for one. I had originally planned on opening a shop and selling direct to the public, of both custom made costumes and the patterns for said costumes to those who wanted to make their own instead of buying ready made, but after doing research into the cost of a shop rental in Portland’s theater district, that was going to require a minimum of $200,000 (more if I wanted a shop on Main street instead of a side alley) because rent for a store is so high and they required a 3 year payment up front! So I temp. changed my idea from a store selling costumes and patterns to just selling patterns online, at least until I had enough money to do the store thing.

My next problem, was I had no idea how to get my patterns printed up so I could sell them! I checked with local print shops, but none of them did this sort of thing, and I couldn’t find any online either. So I was sunk for a while and have not yet found a way to do this. :( I’m still researching my options though.

While I am stuck on the pattern making part, I’ve still been working towards my goal in other ways. Firstly I’ve been researching “my target audience”, trying to figure out, who they are (age group, lifestyle, income, etc. etc. etc). For me, my target audience falls into the 18 – 40 age group, and are in the Goth, CosPlay, or Historical Reenactment lifestyles.

Secondly, I’ve been doing marketing research… where do my target audience types hang out in real life and online? How do I get word of my product out to them? How much are they gonna be willing to pay for my product? Who are my competitors? How are my patterns/designs different from theirs? How are they the same? What can offer my customers that no other patterns comp offers? etc. etc. etc.

I’ve got a big binder filled with my notes and ideas, and research, and stuff… about 300 pages filled so far. I’m trying to plan out every aspect I can think out, so that I can be prepared once I get started.

(I would love to hear what others, who have started their own pattern comp did to get their patterns printed and envelops made and stuff, like that, if anyone has any tips or links they could share, it’d be a big help. Cause I’m really stuck on that and Google has NOT been helpful at all. Thanks!)

I’m not planning to go big and compete with the likes of Simplicity or those guys. Though I would like to get, say about as big as Folkwear Patterns. I plan to start out with 12 or 15 patterns, and than slowly expand over time, until I have a collection of say 200 designs.

Another aspect of my goal is, I would like to do a line of books with patterns, (aimed at CosPlayers, mostly), plus a couple on embroidery.

Well, lets see what I can answer of your questions:

My proposal:
– Patterns would be in english and french.

great!

- They could be printed as booklets, because the papers never want to go back in the envelopes anyway.

ugh! fighting with paper vs envelope is such a nightmare! I like the booklet idea

– The steps would have to be clearly explained and illustrated.

always good… I often find illustrations easier to understand than the instructions, so the more illustrations the better, I say

What I still don’t know:
– Should they be basic designs to be modified by the user, or artsy personal designs?

maybe you could have a line for each? one line of simple “create your own style” patterns, and a second line with the designer originals created by you?

when I’m using a pattern I never stick with the pattern no matter how simple or hoe fancy it may be, cause I like to add my own personal touches to everything.

- Should I focus on styles that are not usually represented by major pattern brands (gothic, lolita, punk, etc.)?

If that is the style design you have a passion for, than: YES! YES! YES! OMG! It is sooooo hard to find patterns for these styles. It’s the lack of patterns for these style that resulted in me making my own patterns in the first place! With the “business” I was planning my goal was to design patterns for Gothic, Lolita, and CosPlay because those are the patterns I end up designing because no one sells them.

My advice is, do styles that you would find yourself wearing, sewing, buying, because if you would use it yourself, you’ll be more likely to “get behind” your product and really go all out with the sale pitch.

- Should I include a few costumes as well? Historical or fantasy (or else)?

It can’t hurt. The more the merrier I say. For me, my focus would be largely costume and fantasy, because I planned the patterns I wanted to sell to be aimed mostly for CosPlayers and LARPers and SCAdians, all of whom are into the whom fantasy costume thing, so those were the target audience I was aiming for.

Again, however, only add these types of things, if it is something you really believe in and feel good about having in your collection. It’s no good selling a product that you added just because you thought it would help business, but you didn’t really believe in the product yourself.

And most important: do I have any chance of selling any? I’m aware that I do not have any example of my apparel work on the net, but do you think the concept could work?

I don’t have any of my apparel work on the net either.

I think it would work (otherwise I wouldn’t be planning to do the same thing! LOL!) I think there are enough folks out there who can’t find goth type patterns who would love to buy them once you had them listed for sale.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

More Info On My Business Plans

I was just posting a comment on some one else’s blog and it got so long that I’m copying it to here:

I have been mulling a similar idea of my own… I even had a blog I started just for randomly posting my “start my business” ideas on, so I could see them on screen and sort out what I did and did not want to do. I think I made like 5 posts on that blog and than never went back! LOL! I need to go back and throw some more ideas around.

Well, I got my own “business” to the point where I had written up a basic business plan, not very detailed though, I need to rewrite it. And I have a portfolio of my designs that I want to do. Plus I have the business name all set up and a logo. But that’s as far as I got.

What stopped me? Well, money for one. I had originally planned on opening a shop and selling direct to the public, but that was going to require a minimum of $200,000 because rent for a store is so high and they required a 3 year payment up front! So I temp. changed my idea from a store selling costumes and patterns to just selling patterns online, at least until I had enough money to do the store thing.

My next problem, was I had no idea how to get my patterns printed up so I could sell them! I checked with local print shops, but none of them did this sort of thing, and I couldn’t find any online either. So I was sunk for a while and have not yet found a way to do this. :(

Well, lets see what I can answer of your questions:


My proposal:
- Patterns would be in english and french.

great!


- They could be printed as booklets, because the papers never want to go back in the envelopes anyway.

ugh! fighting with paper vs envelope is such a nightmare! I like the booklet idea


- The steps would have to be clearly explained and illustrated.

always good… I often find illustrations easier to understand than the instructions, so the more illustrations the better, I say


What I still don’t know:
- Should they be basic designs to be modified by the user, or artsy personal designs?

maybe you could have a line for each? one line of simple “create your own style” patterns, and a second line with the designer originals created by you?

when I’m using a pattern I never stick with the pattern no matter how simple or hoe fancy it may be, cause I like to add my own personal touches to everything.

- Should I focus on styles that are not usually represented by major pattern brands (gothic, lolita, punk, etc.)?

YES! YES! YES! OMG! It is sooooo hard to find patterns for these styles. It’s the lack of patterns for these style that resulted in me making my own patterns in the first place! With the “business” I was planning my goal was to design patterns for Gothic, Lolita, and CosPlay because those are the patterns I end up designing because no one sells them.


- Should I include a few costumes as well? Historical or fantasy (or else)?

It can’t hurt. The more the merrier I say. For me, my focus would be largely costume and fantasy, because I planned the patterns I wanted to sell to be aimed mostly for CosPlayers and LARPers and SCAdians, all of whom are into the whom fantasy costume thing, so those were the target audience I was aiming for.


And most important: do I have any chance of selling any? I’m aware that I do not have any example of my apparel work on the net, but do you think the concept could work?

I think it would work (otherwise I wouldn’t be planning to do the same thing! LOL!) I think there are enough folks out there who can’t find goth type patterns who would love to buy them once you had them listed for sale.

Work From Home, Is It Possible?
The Goldeneagle
How to Start a Publishing Company
Self-Publish vs Vanity Press vs Traditional Publisher

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

All donations to Star Log go to The Rabbit Hole Fund. The Pidgie Fund buys food for pets in Southern Maine.

More Info On My Business Plans

I was just posting a comment on some one else’s blog and it got so long that I’m copying it to here:

I have been mulling a similar idea of my own… I even had a blog I started just for randomly posting my “start my business” ideas on, so I could see them on screen and sort out what I did and did not want to do. I think I made like 5 posts on that blog and than never went back! LOL! I need to go back and throw some more ideas around.

Well, I got my own “business” to the point where I had written up a basic business plan, not very detailed though, I need to rewrite it. And I have a portfolio of my designs that I want to do. Plus I have the business name all set up and a logo. But that’s as far as I got.

What stopped me? Well, money for one. I had originally planned on opening a shop and selling direct to the public, but that was going to require a minimum of $200,000 because rent for a store is so high and they required a 3 year payment up front! So I temp. changed my idea from a store selling costumes and patterns to just selling patterns online, at least until I had enough money to do the store thing.

My next problem, was I had no idea how to get my patterns printed up so I could sell them! I checked with local print shops, but none of them did this sort of thing, and I couldn’t find any online either. So I was sunk for a while and have not yet found a way to do this. :(

Well, lets see what I can answer of your questions:


My proposal:
- Patterns would be in english and french.

great!


- They could be printed as booklets, because the papers never want to go back in the envelopes anyway.

ugh! fighting with paper vs envelope is such a nightmare! I like the booklet idea


- The steps would have to be clearly explained and illustrated.

always good… I often find illustrations easier to understand than the instructions, so the more illustrations the better, I say


What I still don’t know:
- Should they be basic designs to be modified by the user, or artsy personal designs?

maybe you could have a line for each? one line of simple “create your own style” patterns, and a second line with the designer originals created by you?

when I’m using a pattern I never stick with the pattern no matter how simple or hoe fancy it may be, cause I like to add my own personal touches to everything.

- Should I focus on styles that are not usually represented by major pattern brands (gothic, lolita, punk, etc.)?

YES! YES! YES! OMG! It is sooooo hard to find patterns for these styles. It’s the lack of patterns for these style that resulted in me making my own patterns in the first place! With the “business” I was planning my goal was to design patterns for Gothic, Lolita, and CosPlay because those are the patterns I end up designing because no one sells them.


- Should I include a few costumes as well? Historical or fantasy (or else)?

It can’t hurt. The more the merrier I say. For me, my focus would be largely costume and fantasy, because I planned the patterns I wanted to sell to be aimed mostly for CosPlayers and LARPers and SCAdians, all of whom are into the whom fantasy costume thing, so those were the target audience I was aiming for.


And most important: do I have any chance of selling any? I’m aware that I do not have any example of my apparel work on the net, but do you think the concept could work?

I think it would work (otherwise I wouldn’t be planning to do the same thing! LOL!) I think there are enough folks out there who can’t find goth type patterns who would love to buy them once you had them listed for sale.

Work From Home, Is It Possible?
The Goldeneagle
How to Start a Publishing Company
Self-Publish vs Vanity Press vs Traditional Publisher

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

All donations to Star Log go to The Rabbit Hole Fund. The Pidgie Fund buys food for pets in Southern Maine.

More Info On My Business Plans

I was just posting a comment on some one else’s blog and it got so long that I’m copying it to here:

I have been mulling a similar idea of my own… I even had a blog I started just for randomly posting my “start my business” ideas on, so I could see them on screen and sort out what I did and did not want to do. I think I made like 5 posts on that blog and than never went back! LOL! I need to go back and throw some more ideas around.

Well, I got my own “business” to the point where I had written up a basic business plan, not very detailed though, I need to rewrite it. And I have a portfolio of my designs that I want to do. Plus I have the business name all set up and a logo. But that’s as far as I got.

What stopped me? Well, money for one. I had originally planned on opening a shop and selling direct to the public, but that was going to require a minimum of $200,000 because rent for a store is so high and they required a 3 year payment up front! So I temp. changed my idea from a store selling costumes and patterns to just selling patterns online, at least until I had enough money to do the store thing.

My next problem, was I had no idea how to get my patterns printed up so I could sell them! I checked with local print shops, but none of them did this sort of thing, and I couldn’t find any online either. So I was sunk for a while and have not yet found a way to do this. :(

Well, lets see what I can answer of your questions:


My proposal:
- Patterns would be in english and french.

great!


- They could be printed as booklets, because the papers never want to go back in the envelopes anyway.

ugh! fighting with paper vs envelope is such a nightmare! I like the booklet idea


- The steps would have to be clearly explained and illustrated.

always good… I often find illustrations easier to understand than the instructions, so the more illustrations the better, I say


What I still don’t know:
- Should they be basic designs to be modified by the user, or artsy personal designs?

maybe you could have a line for each? one line of simple “create your own style” patterns, and a second line with the designer originals created by you?

when I’m using a pattern I never stick with the pattern no matter how simple or hoe fancy it may be, cause I like to add my own personal touches to everything.

- Should I focus on styles that are not usually represented by major pattern brands (gothic, lolita, punk, etc.)?

YES! YES! YES! OMG! It is sooooo hard to find patterns for these styles. It’s the lack of patterns for these style that resulted in me making my own patterns in the first place! With the “business” I was planning my goal was to design patterns for Gothic, Lolita, and CosPlay because those are the patterns I end up designing because no one sells them.


- Should I include a few costumes as well? Historical or fantasy (or else)?

It can’t hurt. The more the merrier I say. For me, my focus would be largely costume and fantasy, because I planned the patterns I wanted to sell to be aimed mostly for CosPlayers and LARPers and SCAdians, all of whom are into the whom fantasy costume thing, so those were the target audience I was aiming for.


And most important: do I have any chance of selling any? I’m aware that I do not have any example of my apparel work on the net, but do you think the concept could work?

I think it would work (otherwise I wouldn’t be planning to do the same thing! LOL!) I think there are enough folks out there who can’t find goth type patterns who would love to buy them once you had them listed for sale.

Work From Home, Is It Possible?
The Goldeneagle
How to Start a Publishing Company
Self-Publish vs Vanity Press vs Traditional Publisher

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All donations to Star Log go to The Rabbit Hole Fund. The Pidgie Fund buys food for pets in Southern Maine.

BedSheets, Historical Accuracy, and Tent Covers

pawpawpawpawpaw

On an SCA forum, someone asked a question about if it was alright to use bedsheets to make their garb, even if bedsheets were not historically accurate.

For me, it depends largely on what I am making. A few years back I did a velvet gown that required 7 yards for the skirt alone, and than it had these huge triple puffed sleeves and those needed another 3 yards each. Well, than I made it really hard for myself, because I wanted to do it in an old style shade of rose, and no other color would do. I had already plotted and planned and drawn out my sketches, and it HAD to be rose colored velvet. Have you ever tried looking for a dusty rose colored velvet! ACK!

Well, finding velvet in an odd color was one trouble I was having, but the fact that I needed so much of it was the major problem, because I rarely put very much money into the fabric I buy. I tend to root through Jo-Anns, red tag $2 a yd clearance section to find most of my fabrics. It did not take me long to realize that if I wanted rose colored velvet, the only way to get it was to have it special ordered at some $45 a yd! That was a great big: NO WAY! So, I changed my outlook on my dress, and put off sewing it, for about 7 months, because I still could not imagine it in anything but rose colored velvet.

Than, nearly a year later, and nearing in on Easter time, I was in WalMart, and they had just gotten in a whole batch of new Easter fabric… among them, were some pretty pastel colored polyester panne velvets, and a whole uncut bolt of a dusty rose that just screamed “BUY ME!”. Okay, so technically it was stretch velvet or velveteen and made out a fabric that had only been around the last 40 years or so, but the color was perfect for what I wanted, and it LOOKED like real velvet even if it wasn’t real velvet and it only cost $3.95 a yd!

In the end I got my rose colored “velvet” dress, not accurately, but I didn’t care, because it looked the way I had invisioned it.

Of course, as I said for me, it depends largely on what I am making, and so I have yet another story on me vs accuracy, this one currently ongoing. As you may or may not have heard me say before, I am doing what I am told is utterly unheard of and completely impossible to do, (by about 40 different people so far, and I expect that list to grow as my project continues). Hey, keep telling me I can’t do this too, because thats what keeps going… the desire to prove I can! LOL!

Anyways, I am taking a character out of a modern day fantasy comic book and *horrors* recreating his entire wardrobe (6 different outfits) in as much historical accuracy as possible. He’s a prince from 1558 Japan, who grew up in China, than went on a personal spiritual quest all across Asia and picked up various elements of each place he went along the way. And thus wears cloths that are mixed up with Japan, China, Mongolian, and Portuguese elements, plus a few VERY imaginary fantasy elements thrown in to boot.

Oh such fun it is torturing myself like this. I now have to figure out which parts of his outfits came from which periods of which countries, so that I can make each part historically correct, even if wearing them all at once isn’t historically correct. If you think it’s hard tracing down one item from one country and one time period… try 45 different items from countries of unknow origin which you have to study each coutries history to find out where each one came from! eeek!

Well, I finally traced most of the items and their origins and what they should be made out of, and FINALLY, I started my search for the fabric: silk, from Asia, in historically accurate widths. I found silk from Italy 45″ wide, silk from France 45″ wide, silk from India 45″ to 68″ wide. I needed silk from Japan 15″ wide.

I went to my local JoAnnes told them what I was doing, what I needed, the woman looked at me like she thought I was a nut, and than asked “But why don’t you just buy the 45″ wide fabric and cut it down to 15″ wide strips?” Well, because the whole point of making this outfit is to be historically accurate, and my studied showed me that his cloths would have been made of 15″ wide silk, that was sewn on selvage, and part of the design element is the fact that it HAS to be sewn on selvage, so I MUST use 15″ wide silk.

It took me three months to track it down, but I finally found a guy (who lives in Japan) who does nothing but collect and sell 13″ – 16″ wide Japanese silks! YAY! I emailed him, told him what I wanted and he was able to find me five bolts of *OMG* antique handwoven 15″ wide silk. For the first time in my life, I bought a fabric that had a major price tag on it.

I am so happy with my silk. It arrived last week and I’ve been driving my family nuts talking about it steady! LOL! This is the first time in over 20 years, that I have ever allowed myself to buy a fabric for the sake of historical accuracy. The price of historically accurate fabrics, usually sends me off looking at my curtains and thinking: “Hey, I’ll bet I could cut that up to make my garb out of! LOL! Usually I settle for: “Oh that LOOKS accurate enough and only costs $15 dollars”. Yeah… like you said, bed sheets can make great garb, and often I go that road myself, as long as it LOOKS accurate… hey, try looking at the curtains in WalMart… I do that often, the big prints on curtains often have a nice period look to them.

oh yes! I agree with the bedsheets for camp curtains. They are great for that because of their size.

Blankets make the best tent covers! I’ve never used anything else to make a tent cover with! For the tent I made, I needed a thick fur look. I’m an animal rights activist so using real fur was out of the question, and buying fur fabric didn’t set well with me because all I could find was really cheep looking stuff that either had too thick a pile, or too fake looking a color.

I wanted it to look like cheetah or leopard skins, and than I found these throw blankets to go on your couch. They had a nice short “realistic” nap to them, and and the print looked like real leopard. So those blankets ended up becoming my tent cover. (The tent was a 6Wx8Lx5H one person sit in the shade-lay down take a nap type tent, so it didn’t take much fabric to make it.)

I did worry because they were so thick, that they might hold in the heat and make the tent unbearable hot. However the opposite was true. They were so thick that they blocked the sunlight was getting in and kept my tent the coolest bit of shade there was to be found!

I’m planning to make another, more portable one later this year. The one I made is on a frame of 2×4′s and a permanent fixture that has stood in my yard for 3 years now. I still use it, though the fabric is starting the wear thin now, after surviving 2 blizzards and 4 hurricanes.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

BedSheets, Historical Accuracy, and Tent Covers

pawpawpawpawpaw

On an SCA forum, someone asked a question about if it was alright to use bedsheets to make their garb, even if bedsheets were not historically accurate.

For me, it depends largely on what I am making. A few years back I did a velvet gown that required 7 yards for the skirt alone, and than it had these huge triple puffed sleeves and those needed another 3 yards each. Well, than I made it really hard for myself, because I wanted to do it in an old style shade of rose, and no other color would do. I had already plotted and planned and drawn out my sketches, and it HAD to be rose colored velvet. Have you ever tried looking for a dusty rose colored velvet! ACK!

Well, finding velvet in an odd color was one trouble I was having, but the fact that I needed so much of it was the major problem, because I rarely put very much money into the fabric I buy. I tend to root through Jo-Anns, red tag $2 a yd clearance section to find most of my fabrics. It did not take me long to realize that if I wanted rose colored velvet, the only way to get it was to have it special ordered at some $45 a yd! That was a great big: NO WAY! So, I changed my outlook on my dress, and put off sewing it, for about 7 months, because I still could not imagine it in anything but rose colored velvet.

Than, nearly a year later, and nearing in on Easter time, I was in WalMart, and they had just gotten in a whole batch of new Easter fabric… among them, were some pretty pastel colored polyester panne velvets, and a whole uncut bolt of a dusty rose that just screamed “BUY ME!”. Okay, so technically it was stretch velvet or velveteen and made out a fabric that had only been around the last 40 years or so, but the color was perfect for what I wanted, and it LOOKED like real velvet even if it wasn’t real velvet and it only cost $3.95 a yd!

In the end I got my rose colored “velvet” dress, not accurately, but I didn’t care, because it looked the way I had invisioned it.

Of course, as I said for me, it depends largely on what I am making, and so I have yet another story on me vs accuracy, this one currently ongoing. As you may or may not have heard me say before, I am doing what I am told is utterly unheard of and completely impossible to do, (by about 40 different people so far, and I expect that list to grow as my project continues). Hey, keep telling me I can’t do this too, because thats what keeps going… the desire to prove I can! LOL!

Anyways, I am taking a character out of a modern day fantasy comic book and *horrors* recreating his entire wardrobe (6 different outfits) in as much historical accuracy as possible. He’s a prince from 1558 Japan, who grew up in China, than went on a personal spiritual quest all across Asia and picked up various elements of each place he went along the way. And thus wears cloths that are mixed up with Japan, China, Mongolian, and Portuguese elements, plus a few VERY imaginary fantasy elements thrown in to boot.

Oh such fun it is torturing myself like this. I now have to figure out which parts of his outfits came from which periods of which countries, so that I can make each part historically correct, even if wearing them all at once isn’t historically correct. If you think it’s hard tracing down one item from one country and one time period… try 45 different items from countries of unknow origin which you have to study each coutries history to find out where each one came from! eeek!

Well, I finally traced most of the items and their origins and what they should be made out of, and FINALLY, I started my search for the fabric: silk, from Asia, in historically accurate widths. I found silk from Italy 45″ wide, silk from France 45″ wide, silk from India 45″ to 68″ wide. I needed silk from Japan 15″ wide.

I went to my local JoAnnes told them what I was doing, what I needed, the woman looked at me like she thought I was a nut, and than asked “But why don’t you just buy the 45″ wide fabric and cut it down to 15″ wide strips?” Well, because the whole point of making this outfit is to be historically accurate, and my studied showed me that his cloths would have been made of 15″ wide silk, that was sewn on selvage, and part of the design element is the fact that it HAS to be sewn on selvage, so I MUST use 15″ wide silk.

It took me three months to track it down, but I finally found a guy (who lives in Japan) who does nothing but collect and sell 13″ – 16″ wide Japanese silks! YAY! I emailed him, told him what I wanted and he was able to find me five bolts of *OMG* antique handwoven 15″ wide silk. For the first time in my life, I bought a fabric that had a major price tag on it.

I am so happy with my silk. It arrived last week and I’ve been driving my family nuts talking about it steady! LOL! This is the first time in over 20 years, that I have ever allowed myself to buy a fabric for the sake of historical accuracy. The price of historically accurate fabrics, usually sends me off looking at my curtains and thinking: “Hey, I’ll bet I could cut that up to make my garb out of! LOL! Usually I settle for: “Oh that LOOKS accurate enough and only costs $15 dollars”. Yeah… like you said, bed sheets can make great garb, and often I go that road myself, as long as it LOOKS accurate… hey, try looking at the curtains in WalMart… I do that often, the big prints on curtains often have a nice period look to them.

oh yes! I agree with the bedsheets for camp curtains. They are great for that because of their size.

Blankets make the best tent covers! I’ve never used anything else to make a tent cover with! For the tent I made, I needed a thick fur look. I’m an animal rights activist so using real fur was out of the question, and buying fur fabric didn’t set well with me because all I could find was really cheep looking stuff that either had too thick a pile, or too fake looking a color.

I wanted it to look like cheetah or leopard skins, and than I found these throw blankets to go on your couch. They had a nice short “realistic” nap to them, and and the print looked like real leopard. So those blankets ended up becoming my tent cover. (The tent was a 6Wx8Lx5H one person sit in the shade-lay down take a nap type tent, so it didn’t take much fabric to make it.)

I did worry because they were so thick, that they might hold in the heat and make the tent unbearable hot. However the opposite was true. They were so thick that they blocked the sunlight was getting in and kept my tent the coolest bit of shade there was to be found!

I’m planning to make another, more portable one later this year. The one I made is on a frame of 2×4′s and a permanent fixture that has stood in my yard for 3 years now. I still use it, though the fabric is starting the wear thin now, after surviving 2 blizzards and 4 hurricanes.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

BedSheets, Historical Accuracy, and Tent Covers

pawpawpawpawpaw

On an SCA forum, someone asked a question about if it was alright to use bedsheets to make their garb, even if bedsheets were not historically accurate.

For me, it depends largely on what I am making. A few years back I did a velvet gown that required 7 yards for the skirt alone, and than it had these huge triple puffed sleeves and those needed another 3 yards each. Well, than I made it really hard for myself, because I wanted to do it in an old style shade of rose, and no other color would do. I had already plotted and planned and drawn out my sketches, and it HAD to be rose colored velvet. Have you ever tried looking for a dusty rose colored velvet! ACK!

Well, finding velvet in an odd color was one trouble I was having, but the fact that I needed so much of it was the major problem, because I rarely put very much money into the fabric I buy. I tend to root through Jo-Anns, red tag $2 a yd clearance section to find most of my fabrics. It did not take me long to realize that if I wanted rose colored velvet, the only way to get it was to have it special ordered at some $45 a yd! That was a great big: NO WAY! So, I changed my outlook on my dress, and put off sewing it, for about 7 months, because I still could not imagine it in anything but rose colored velvet.

Than, nearly a year later, and nearing in on Easter time, I was in WalMart, and they had just gotten in a whole batch of new Easter fabric… among them, were some pretty pastel colored polyester panne velvets, and a whole uncut bolt of a dusty rose that just screamed “BUY ME!”. Okay, so technically it was stretch velvet or velveteen and made out a fabric that had only been around the last 40 years or so, but the color was perfect for what I wanted, and it LOOKED like real velvet even if it wasn’t real velvet and it only cost $3.95 a yd!

In the end I got my rose colored “velvet” dress, not accurately, but I didn’t care, because it looked the way I had invisioned it.

Of course, as I said for me, it depends largely on what I am making, and so I have yet another story on me vs accuracy, this one currently ongoing. As you may or may not have heard me say before, I am doing what I am told is utterly unheard of and completely impossible to do, (by about 40 different people so far, and I expect that list to grow as my project continues). Hey, keep telling me I can’t do this too, because thats what keeps going… the desire to prove I can! LOL!

Anyways, I am taking a character out of a modern day fantasy comic book and *horrors* recreating his entire wardrobe (6 different outfits) in as much historical accuracy as possible. He’s a prince from 1558 Japan, who grew up in China, than went on a personal spiritual quest all across Asia and picked up various elements of each place he went along the way. And thus wears cloths that are mixed up with Japan, China, Mongolian, and Portuguese elements, plus a few VERY imaginary fantasy elements thrown in to boot.

Oh such fun it is torturing myself like this. I now have to figure out which parts of his outfits came from which periods of which countries, so that I can make each part historically correct, even if wearing them all at once isn’t historically correct. If you think it’s hard tracing down one item from one country and one time period… try 45 different items from countries of unknow origin which you have to study each coutries history to find out where each one came from! eeek!

Well, I finally traced most of the items and their origins and what they should be made out of, and FINALLY, I started my search for the fabric: silk, from Asia, in historically accurate widths. I found silk from Italy 45″ wide, silk from France 45″ wide, silk from India 45″ to 68″ wide. I needed silk from Japan 15″ wide.

I went to my local JoAnnes told them what I was doing, what I needed, the woman looked at me like she thought I was a nut, and than asked “But why don’t you just buy the 45″ wide fabric and cut it down to 15″ wide strips?” Well, because the whole point of making this outfit is to be historically accurate, and my studied showed me that his cloths would have been made of 15″ wide silk, that was sewn on selvage, and part of the design element is the fact that it HAS to be sewn on selvage, so I MUST use 15″ wide silk.

It took me three months to track it down, but I finally found a guy (who lives in Japan) who does nothing but collect and sell 13″ – 16″ wide Japanese silks! YAY! I emailed him, told him what I wanted and he was able to find me five bolts of *OMG* antique handwoven 15″ wide silk. For the first time in my life, I bought a fabric that had a major price tag on it.

I am so happy with my silk. It arrived last week and I’ve been driving my family nuts talking about it steady! LOL! This is the first time in over 20 years, that I have ever allowed myself to buy a fabric for the sake of historical accuracy. The price of historically accurate fabrics, usually sends me off looking at my curtains and thinking: “Hey, I’ll bet I could cut that up to make my garb out of! LOL! Usually I settle for: “Oh that LOOKS accurate enough and only costs $15 dollars”. Yeah… like you said, bed sheets can make great garb, and often I go that road myself, as long as it LOOKS accurate… hey, try looking at the curtains in WalMart… I do that often, the big prints on curtains often have a nice period look to them.

oh yes! I agree with the bedsheets for camp curtains. They are great for that because of their size.

Blankets make the best tent covers! I’ve never used anything else to make a tent cover with! For the tent I made, I needed a thick fur look. I’m an animal rights activist so using real fur was out of the question, and buying fur fabric didn’t set well with me because all I could find was really cheep looking stuff that either had too thick a pile, or too fake looking a color.

I wanted it to look like cheetah or leopard skins, and than I found these throw blankets to go on your couch. They had a nice short “realistic” nap to them, and and the print looked like real leopard. So those blankets ended up becoming my tent cover. (The tent was a 6Wx8Lx5H one person sit in the shade-lay down take a nap type tent, so it didn’t take much fabric to make it.)

I did worry because they were so thick, that they might hold in the heat and make the tent unbearable hot. However the opposite was true. They were so thick that they blocked the sunlight was getting in and kept my tent the coolest bit of shade there was to be found!

I’m planning to make another, more portable one later this year. The one I made is on a frame of 2×4′s and a permanent fixture that has stood in my yard for 3 years now. I still use it, though the fabric is starting the wear thin now, after surviving 2 blizzards and 4 hurricanes.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

A Meme For Brainstorming Persona Names… Funny!

pawpawpawpawpaw

Here’s my answers, what are yours?

1. Your rock star name (first pet, current car): Buttons 330

2. Your gangsta name (fave ice cream flavor, favorite type of shoe): French Vanilla Combat Boot

3. Your Native American name (favorite color, favorite animal) Orange Moray Eel

4. Your soap opera name (middle name, city where you were born): Christine Biddeford

5. Your Star Wars name (the first 3 letters of your last name, the first two letters of your first name): AllWe

6. Superhero name (2nd favorite color, favorite drink): Blue Moxie

7. NASCAR name (the first names of your grandfathers): Charles David

8. Stripper name (the name of your favorite perfume/cologne/scent, favorite candy): Topaz Jawbreaker (LOL!)

10. TV weather anchor name (your 5th grade teacher’s last name, a major city that starts with the same letter): Allen Austen

11. Spy name (your favorite season/holiday, flower): Halloween Blue Girl Rose

12. Cartoon name: (favorite fruit, article of clothing you’re wearing right now): Grape Kimono

13. Hippie name (What you ate for breakfast, your favorite tree): Tortellini Pine

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

A Meme For Brainstorming Persona Names… Funny!

pawpawpawpawpaw

Here’s my answers, what are yours?

1. Your rock star name (first pet, current car): Buttons 330

2. Your gangsta name (fave ice cream flavor, favorite type of shoe): French Vanilla Combat Boot

3. Your Native American name (favorite color, favorite animal) Orange Moray Eel

4. Your soap opera name (middle name, city where you were born): Christine Biddeford

5. Your Star Wars name (the first 3 letters of your last name, the first two letters of your first name): AllWe

6. Superhero name (2nd favorite color, favorite drink): Blue Moxie

7. NASCAR name (the first names of your grandfathers): Charles David

8. Stripper name (the name of your favorite perfume/cologne/scent, favorite candy): Topaz Jawbreaker (LOL!)

10. TV weather anchor name (your 5th grade teacher’s last name, a major city that starts with the same letter): Allen Austen

11. Spy name (your favorite season/holiday, flower): Halloween Blue Girl Rose

12. Cartoon name: (favorite fruit, article of clothing you’re wearing right now): Grape Kimono

13. Hippie name (What you ate for breakfast, your favorite tree): Tortellini Pine

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

A Meme For Brainstorming Persona Names… Funny!

pawpawpawpawpaw

Here’s my answers, what are yours?

1. Your rock star name (first pet, current car): Buttons 330

2. Your gangsta name (fave ice cream flavor, favorite type of shoe): French Vanilla Combat Boot

3. Your Native American name (favorite color, favorite animal) Orange Moray Eel

4. Your soap opera name (middle name, city where you were born): Christine Biddeford

5. Your Star Wars name (the first 3 letters of your last name, the first two letters of your first name): AllWe

6. Superhero name (2nd favorite color, favorite drink): Blue Moxie

7. NASCAR name (the first names of your grandfathers): Charles David

8. Stripper name (the name of your favorite perfume/cologne/scent, favorite candy): Topaz Jawbreaker (LOL!)

10. TV weather anchor name (your 5th grade teacher’s last name, a major city that starts with the same letter): Allen Austen

11. Spy name (your favorite season/holiday, flower): Halloween Blue Girl Rose

12. Cartoon name: (favorite fruit, article of clothing you’re wearing right now): Grape Kimono

13. Hippie name (What you ate for breakfast, your favorite tree): Tortellini Pine

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

On Making Samurai Armor

pawpawpawpawpaw

I had to come back and add another post here. Okay, for the past couple of weeks I’ve been mulling over what to do for the armor I’m going to make this summer, and yesterday I got out this book from the library:

Arms and Armor of the Samurai by I Bottomley

It doesn’t really tell you how to make armor per say, but it goes into great detail about the armor of ancient Japan, and there are loads of close ups and details about how is was made.

Anyways… the armor I wanted to make was scale armor, but when I looked on the internet for scale armor how to’s all I found was sites on hand forged metal scale armor, and I really don’t want to make metal armor. But than I found this Samurai book and it has a whole chapter on scale armor! OMG!

He shows all sorts of close up pictures of scale armor in Japan, and than shows drawings of what the scales looked like before they were assembled, and than shows how they laced the scales together. And get this, the whole thing was made out of 2″ pieces of suede leather laced together with silk! OMG! I can actually make that! All I have to do is cut out a bunch of suede leather squares, punch holes in them, and than lace them together with silk ribbon. I can have it finished in about 3 days.

Well, I don’t know if that of any help to you or not, but I thought I’d let you know what I found in case it might help you out anyone making armor.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

On Making Samurai Armor

pawpawpawpawpaw

I had to come back and add another post here. Okay, for the past couple of weeks I’ve been mulling over what to do for the armor I’m going to make this summer, and yesterday I got out this book from the library:

Arms and Armor of the Samurai by I Bottomley
http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=spacedock13-20&o=1&p=8&l=as1&asins=0517644673&fc1=000000&IS2=1&lt1=_blank&lc1=0000FF&bc1=000000&bg1=F9B6F8&f=ifr

It doesn’t really tell you how to make armor per say, but it goes into great detail about the armor of ancient Japan, and there are loads of close ups and details about how is was made.

Anyways… the armor I wanted to make was scale armor, but when I looked on the internet for scale armor how to’s all I found was sites on hand forged metal scale armor, and I really don’t want to make metal armor. But than I found this Samurai book and it has a whole chapter on scale armor! OMG!

He shows all sorts of close up pictures of scale armor in Japan, and than shows drawings of what the scales looked like before they were assembled, and than shows how they laced the scales together. And get this, the whole thing was made out of 2″ pieces of suede leather laced together with silk! OMG! I can actually make that! All I have to do is cut out a bunch of suede leather squares, punch holes in them, and than lace them together with silk ribbon. I can have it finished in about 3 days.

Well, I don’t know if that of any help to you or not, but I thought I’d let you know what I found in case it might help you out anyone making armor.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

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Blingo

On Making Samurai Armor

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I had to come back and add another post here. Okay, for the past couple of weeks I’ve been mulling over what to do for the armor I’m going to make this summer, and yesterday I got out this book from the library:

Arms and Armor of the Samurai by I Bottomley

It doesn’t really tell you how to make armor per say, but it goes into great detail about the armor of ancient Japan, and there are loads of close ups and details about how is was made.

Anyways… the armor I wanted to make was scale armor, but when I looked on the internet for scale armor how to’s all I found was sites on hand forged metal scale armor, and I really don’t want to make metal armor. But than I found this Samurai book and it has a whole chapter on scale armor! OMG!

He shows all sorts of close up pictures of scale armor in Japan, and than shows drawings of what the scales looked like before they were assembled, and than shows how they laced the scales together. And get this, the whole thing was made out of 2″ pieces of suede leather laced together with silk! OMG! I can actually make that! All I have to do is cut out a bunch of suede leather squares, punch holes in them, and than lace them together with silk ribbon. I can have it finished in about 3 days.

Well, I don’t know if that of any help to you or not, but I thought I’d let you know what I found in case it might help you out anyone making armor.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

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Blingo

Is Buying a Costume Instead of Sewing It Considered Cheating?

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Ahh… making AND embroidering a custom kimono…. now you are talking my language! I’m an embroiderer, and for me, making my costumes is not so that I can say I made the costume so much as it is so I can say:[I] “OMG! I can’t believe I actually embroidered every inch of this thing myself!”[/I]. I am currently in the process of hand embroidering antique silk to make Lord Sesshomaru’s Pink flower furisode kimono (from the movie), and I’m doing it in 16th century Noh Theater style covering every inch of the cloth with embroidery… it’s going to take me at least 4 months to embroider, and could take 8 or 9 months.

If you are going for a historically accurate embroidered and layered kimono… OMG! Those things can take up to 4 years to make! Some of the detail work that goes into them are amazing, but hand embroidery is just the slowest thing you could ever try to do. Embroidered kimonos are usually done by 5 or 6 people all sitting around it and embroidering sections of it, and even than it takes 4 or 5 months to finish. If you are talking 16th century embroidery in the Noh style, you are talking a majorly advanced project that you’ll really have a hard time finding a seamstress willing to do. Those things are a real pain to make… I know, because, I’m doing one right now.

Weird thing about this is, I’m not doing it to enter any Cons or contests, and I’ll probably never go to a Con (haven’t been to one yet, but that never stopped me from CosPlaying). I will however wear this as part of my street cloths, as I do with all of my CosPlay stuff.

I do this because I just love to sew and embroider things. For me, personally, CosPlay is all about the actual construction of the costume… the designing, the planning, the hours spent in fabric stores looking for just the right fabric, than the months spent sewing.

However, as I said, that me. Everyone is different. And you know what? You do not have to make it yourself to CosPlay!

In fact the best most detailed costume I ever wore, was one of the ones I did not make myself. It was way to advanced, and I knew my sewing skills would not cut it, so I had a seamstress make it up instead and she did an amazing job on it. It was Miss Piggy from the Muppet Show, and it had a full head mask, that looked EXACTLY like the Miss Piggy puppet on the show, the whole thing was made out of sculpted felt and was utterly amazing. I could have done the dress, but I just let her do the whole thing. It was the mask that really stumped me, because I just can’t sculpt fabric and make it look like anything.

A agree with this statement here:

    [QUOTE=Danzikumaru;1807749]*

    It isn’t cheating to buy a costume. It IS cheating to enter a costume contest with a bought costume and claim you made it.

    *[/QUOTE]

For me personally, I’d feel like I was cheating if I wore a bought costume, because I’m so damn good at sewing that I’d run myself through a guilt trip over it (unless it was so advanced that I couldn’t make it myself). But that would be me judging me, not me judging someone else. I started sewing at age 6, because my mom was a seamstress. I grew up sewing costumes, it’s just second nature to me, so for me to buy a costume would just [I]feel [/I]wrong.

On the other hand though, I would never accuse any one of cheating for buying a costume. I know first hand just how much time and money and long hard work goes into sewing a costume, and I also know it’s not something every can or wants to do. It takes a lot of work to make a costume, and even people who have the skill, may not have the time, what with school-jobs-family, for a lot of folks, sewing a costume, just really is not an option, even if they did want to sew it themselves.

To me, I feel it’s really snobby, for anyone to tell you that yo are cheating it you didn’t sew it yourself.

CosPlay = Costume Play, nothing more and nothing less. CosPlay does not mean Sewed Costume Myself Play, it doesn’t dictate that you MUST sew the costume yourself. All it dictates is that you wear a costume, not how you came by said costume.

So, my feelings are that you are only cheating if you bought the costume and than said you sewed it.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

Is Buying a Costume Instead of Sewing It Considered Cheating?

pawpawpawpawpaw

Ahh… making AND embroidering a custom kimono…. now you are talking my language! I’m an embroiderer, and for me, making my costumes is not so that I can say I made the costume so much as it is so I can say:[I] “OMG! I can’t believe I actually embroidered every inch of this thing myself!”[/I]. I am currently in the process of hand embroidering antique silk to make Lord Sesshomaru’s Pink flower furisode kimono (from the movie), and I’m doing it in 16th century Noh Theater style covering every inch of the cloth with embroidery… it’s going to take me at least 4 months to embroider, and could take 8 or 9 months.

If you are going for a historically accurate embroidered and layered kimono… OMG! Those things can take up to 4 years to make! Some of the detail work that goes into them are amazing, but hand embroidery is just the slowest thing you could ever try to do. Embroidered kimonos are usually done by 5 or 6 people all sitting around it and embroidering sections of it, and even than it takes 4 or 5 months to finish. If you are talking 16th century embroidery in the Noh style, you are talking a majorly advanced project that you’ll really have a hard time finding a seamstress willing to do. Those things are a real pain to make… I know, because, I’m doing one right now.

Weird thing about this is, I’m not doing it to enter any Cons or contests, and I’ll probably never go to a Con (haven’t been to one yet, but that never stopped me from CosPlaying). I will however wear this as part of my street cloths, as I do with all of my CosPlay stuff.

I do this because I just love to sew and embroider things. For me, personally, CosPlay is all about the actual construction of the costume… the designing, the planning, the hours spent in fabric stores looking for just the right fabric, than the months spent sewing.

However, as I said, that me. Everyone is different. And you know what? You do not have to make it yourself to CosPlay!

In fact the best most detailed costume I ever wore, was one of the ones I did not make myself. It was way to advanced, and I knew my sewing skills would not cut it, so I had a seamstress make it up instead and she did an amazing job on it. It was Miss Piggy from the Muppet Show, and it had a full head mask, that looked EXACTLY like the Miss Piggy puppet on the show, the whole thing was made out of sculpted felt and was utterly amazing. I could have done the dress, but I just let her do the whole thing. It was the mask that really stumped me, because I just can’t sculpt fabric and make it look like anything.

A agree with this statement here:

    [QUOTE=Danzikumaru;1807749]*

    It isn’t cheating to buy a costume. It IS cheating to enter a costume contest with a bought costume and claim you made it.

    *[/QUOTE]

For me personally, I’d feel like I was cheating if I wore a bought costume, because I’m so damn good at sewing that I’d run myself through a guilt trip over it (unless it was so advanced that I couldn’t make it myself). But that would be me judging me, not me judging someone else. I started sewing at age 6, because my mom was a seamstress. I grew up sewing costumes, it’s just second nature to me, so for me to buy a costume would just [I]feel [/I]wrong.

On the other hand though, I would never accuse any one of cheating for buying a costume. I know first hand just how much time and money and long hard work goes into sewing a costume, and I also know it’s not something every can or wants to do. It takes a lot of work to make a costume, and even people who have the skill, may not have the time, what with school-jobs-family, for a lot of folks, sewing a costume, just really is not an option, even if they did want to sew it themselves.

To me, I feel it’s really snobby, for anyone to tell you that yo are cheating it you didn’t sew it yourself.

CosPlay = Costume Play, nothing more and nothing less. CosPlay does not mean Sewed Costume Myself Play, it doesn’t dictate that you MUST sew the costume yourself. All it dictates is that you wear a costume, not how you came by said costume.

So, my feelings are that you are only cheating if you bought the costume and than said you sewed it.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

Is Buying a Costume Instead of Sewing It Considered Cheating?

pawpawpawpawpaw

Ahh… making AND embroidering a custom kimono…. now you are talking my language! I’m an embroiderer, and for me, making my costumes is not so that I can say I made the costume so much as it is so I can say:[I] “OMG! I can’t believe I actually embroidered every inch of this thing myself!”[/I]. I am currently in the process of hand embroidering antique silk to make Lord Sesshomaru’s Pink flower furisode kimono (from the movie), and I’m doing it in 16th century Noh Theater style covering every inch of the cloth with embroidery… it’s going to take me at least 4 months to embroider, and could take 8 or 9 months.

If you are going for a historically accurate embroidered and layered kimono… OMG! Those things can take up to 4 years to make! Some of the detail work that goes into them are amazing, but hand embroidery is just the slowest thing you could ever try to do. Embroidered kimonos are usually done by 5 or 6 people all sitting around it and embroidering sections of it, and even than it takes 4 or 5 months to finish. If you are talking 16th century embroidery in the Noh style, you are talking a majorly advanced project that you’ll really have a hard time finding a seamstress willing to do. Those things are a real pain to make… I know, because, I’m doing one right now.

Weird thing about this is, I’m not doing it to enter any Cons or contests, and I’ll probably never go to a Con (haven’t been to one yet, but that never stopped me from CosPlaying). I will however wear this as part of my street cloths, as I do with all of my CosPlay stuff.

I do this because I just love to sew and embroider things. For me, personally, CosPlay is all about the actual construction of the costume… the designing, the planning, the hours spent in fabric stores looking for just the right fabric, than the months spent sewing.

However, as I said, that me. Everyone is different. And you know what? You do not have to make it yourself to CosPlay!

In fact the best most detailed costume I ever wore, was one of the ones I did not make myself. It was way to advanced, and I knew my sewing skills would not cut it, so I had a seamstress make it up instead and she did an amazing job on it. It was Miss Piggy from the Muppet Show, and it had a full head mask, that looked EXACTLY like the Miss Piggy puppet on the show, the whole thing was made out of sculpted felt and was utterly amazing. I could have done the dress, but I just let her do the whole thing. It was the mask that really stumped me, because I just can’t sculpt fabric and make it look like anything.

A agree with this statement here:

    [QUOTE=Danzikumaru;1807749]*

    It isn’t cheating to buy a costume. It IS cheating to enter a costume contest with a bought costume and claim you made it.

    *[/QUOTE]

For me personally, I’d feel like I was cheating if I wore a bought costume, because I’m so damn good at sewing that I’d run myself through a guilt trip over it (unless it was so advanced that I couldn’t make it myself). But that would be me judging me, not me judging someone else. I started sewing at age 6, because my mom was a seamstress. I grew up sewing costumes, it’s just second nature to me, so for me to buy a costume would just [I]feel [/I]wrong.

On the other hand though, I would never accuse any one of cheating for buying a costume. I know first hand just how much time and money and long hard work goes into sewing a costume, and I also know it’s not something every can or wants to do. It takes a lot of work to make a costume, and even people who have the skill, may not have the time, what with school-jobs-family, for a lot of folks, sewing a costume, just really is not an option, even if they did want to sew it themselves.

To me, I feel it’s really snobby, for anyone to tell you that yo are cheating it you didn’t sew it yourself.

CosPlay = Costume Play, nothing more and nothing less. CosPlay does not mean Sewed Costume Myself Play, it doesn’t dictate that you MUST sew the costume yourself. All it dictates is that you wear a costume, not how you came by said costume.

So, my feelings are that you are only cheating if you bought the costume and than said you sewed it.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

Members of The SCA are Not Anachronists or What Is a Creative Anachronist?

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First off, by now you have heard me talking about the SCA, and are probably wondering if I belong to their group. The answer? No, I am not a member of the SCA. The reason? Well, the SCA is a historical reenactment group, (historical reenactment being a rabid hobby of mine) however, they focus on a time period that STOP at the year 1599. There in lays the problem: I do all eras. I’ve done pre-Columbian Native American, 14th century Gothic, I’ve been wearing various Japanese garb since I was 8 years old (no idea what era any of it comes from), I live 24/7 in Napoleon era empire gowns and Edwardian frock coats, I wear roaring 20′s flapper dresses, 1950′s poodle skirts, and on top of that I’ve done fantasy stuff varying from cartoon characters to book characters to comic book characters to characters of my own to circus clowns to faeries to futuristic sci-fi stuff fit for Theirry Mugler’s Monster Collection, and of course my latest project comes from manga. To make this a bit more strange for most people is the fact that these cloths I wear are NOT costumes. They are in fact the cloths I wear every day. Every time I set a foot outside, people gawk at me and start asking the silliest stupid dang questions. Like:

    Are you promoting a play for the local theater?
    Are you on the way to a costume party?
    Is there a Renaissance Fair nearby?
    Are you a circus clown?
    OMG! It’s a Harry Potter fan!
    Are you a witch? . . .

and my personal favorite:

    What the hell planet did you drop off of?!?

yea . . .okay . . . whatever. So what prompts these non-ending string of questions everywhere I go? My cloths.

Historical Reenactment & CosPlay is my life. I have never been to a Con or a Ren Faire, but that hasn’t stopped me from wearing “costumes”, though technically these are not costumes as they are my actual street cloths or garb and therefor I do not call them costumes because I do not think of them as costumes. I do not own any “normal” non-costume “street cloths”. What you see me wearing as CosPlay type things IS the way I dress when I’m not CosPlaying, because for me, this is not about “playing”. My CosPlay can more correctly be termed as “historical reenactment of fantasy costumes”.

My clothen style includes velvet, capes, empire gowns, gowns with trains, burnoose, shawls, runas, fishnet hose, striped stockings, combat boots, velvet, top-hats, long dresses, ruffled frilly skirts, cosplay, Gothic, Lolita, Victorian, Edwardian, velvet, frock coats, Alice in Wonderland, vampire fashions, Medieval fashions, crinolines & petticoats, kimono, ethnic costumes, eyelash-fringe fabric, sequins, beads, glitter, lace, cloaks, ruffles, broomstick skirts, stripes, plaid, poet blouses, peasant dresses, fairy tale princess gowns, faerie outfits, wizard-look stuff, big hats, bright colored hats, ballet flats, platforms, anything that Dracula would love to wear, and also stuff like worn by Jem*, The Holograms, and The Misfits. I the 1980′s I wore min-skirts, but as the years have gone by, my dresses and skirts got longer; today my hems sweep the floor and they often have trains. I have one dress that has 7 yards of fabric on the skirt alone, it can be worn with or without hoops.

Whenever I go out in public, my conversations with strangers sounds something like this:

    I was dressing like Jem, before Jem was invented.

    I love anything made of velvet!

    I don’t like pants: won’t wear them, won’t own them.

    No, what I’m wearing is not a costume.

    Yes, I dress like this every day, all day long, even around the house, when working in the garden, and when shoveling manure out of the barn. Yes I am a farmer. Yes I do dress like this while doing farm work.

    No, I don’t own any “normal” clothes.

    No, I can’t tell you where I bought them, because I didn’t buy them, I sewed them.

    No, I can’t tell you where to buy the pattern, I didn’t buy a pattern I made the pattern. I’ve been sewing since I was 6 years old when I made my first doll. I made my first ball-gown at age 12. At age 16 I graduated from a 2 year course in fashion design & merchandising. I’ve spent most of my life studying fashion history and the art of recreating historical clothen from the Gothic periods (1300 – 1500 & 1850 – 1930), and those are the clothes I thus wear.

    No I already told you this is not a costume, these are my regular cloths, I don’t care if you think this is a costume, it is not, please stop asking me if it is.

    I don’t like people who think I’m wearing a costume even after been told that I am not.

    Yes, I know this looks like a Willy Wonka costume, yes, Johnny Depp inspired it. Yes, I do wear a top hat everywhere I go. No, I repeat this is not a costume.

    Yes, I REALLY am making a historical reproduction of Lord Sesshomaru’s costume, and yes, I do intend to wear it daily as part of my street cloths, fluffy tail, battle armor, and all.

    No, I’m not crazy, I just hate that Halloween only comes once a year so now I live every day like it was Halloween.

    No, THIS . . . IS . . . NOT . . . A . . . COSTUME . . . I already told you, I always dress like this. I’ve been dressing like this for the last 20 years. Please stop making me repeat myself.

I have had that conversation so many times now it’s burned in my brain.

I think the funniest thing is that I am constantly asked for my ID….“You got to be over 18 . . .” yadda, yadda, yadda

Than I whip out my ID… “Is this real? Wait, you’re really THAT old? . . .but . . .but . . your cloths…. I thought you were a teenager! I’m so sorry, I didn’t realize… it’s just that your cloths… I thought…”

Honey, I haven’t been a teenager for 20 years! But thank you for thinking I was one, it’s not every day some one my age gets mistaken for a teenager… will, with me it is, but for other folks my age . . .

I am an Anachronist. An anachronist is someone who does not wear “normal” street cloth, but rather wears ethnic or period cloths instead of street cloths. The Amish are also anachroists, because they shun modern society and have “stopped” history at the year 1860 and will do, own, or wear nothing that was invented after 1860.

The problem with The SCA is that though they call themselves anachronists, they are only anachronist wanna-bes, because they only “pretend” to dress old fashioned when they go to meetings and ren faires and than once the faire is over they quickly change out of their garb and into their jeans and T’s with a sigh of relief that they can finally get out of their garb now that the faire is over.

As you can see, though I do create and wear cloths that come from the SCA’s pre-1600 era, I usually wear stuff from the late 1700′s – 1930′s instead, and thus I don’t really fit in with the SCA’s criteria. Though I am not a member, I do love their group, and the members are absolutely wonderful, thus I actively promote their group.

Here’s the thing: I’ll mention the SCA to someone and they go “Huh? What’s that?”. The first thing they want to know is not “What do they do?”, no, the first question asked is, “What does SCA stand for?”

So, what does it stand for? It stands for The Society for Creative Anachronism.
Well, the first part of it’s easy to figure out: it’s a group of people and they do something creatively. The problem is that word *Anachronism*, because nobody knows what an Anachronist is or what an Anachronist does or why any one would choose to become an Anachronist in the first place. And that is why I am writing this post: to explain what an Anachronist is and what they do.

The dictionary tells us that an Anachronist is one who practices Anachronism. Well, I must say THAT was REALLY helpful. Okay, so what is Anachronism? According to Wikipedia Anachronism is this:

    An anachronism (from the Greek “ανά”, “against”, and “χρόνος”, “time”) is anything that is temporally incongruous in the time period it has been placed in—that is, it appears in a temporal context in which it seems sufficiently out of place as to be peculiar, incomprehensible or impossible. The item is often an object, but may be a verbal expression, a technology, a philosophical idea, a musical style, a material, a custom, or anything else closely enough bound to a particular period as to seem odd outside it.

    An anachronist prefers older, often obsolete cultural artifacts over newer ones. For example, a modern-day anachronist might choose to wear a top-hat, use quill pens, or use a type-writer. This choice may reflect an eccentricity, aesthetic preference, or an ethical acceptance or rejection of the societal role of that artifact.

    An anachronism can be an artifact which appears out of place archaeologically, geologically or temporally. It is sometimes called OOPArt, for “out of place artifact”. Anachronisms usually appear more technologically advanced than is expected for their place and period.

    Anachronism is used especially in works of imagination that rest on a historical basis. Anachronisms may be introduced in many ways, originating, for instance, in disregard of the different modes of life and thought that characterize different periods, or in ignorance of the progress of the arts and sciences and other facts of history. They vary from glaring inconsistencies to scarcely perceptible misrepresentation. It is only since the close of the 18th century that this kind of deviation from historical reality has jarred on a general audience. Anachronisms abound in the works of Raphael and Shakespeare, as well as in those of less celebrated painters and playwrights of earlier times.

    In particular, the artists, on the stage and on the canvas, in story and in song, assimilated their characters to their own nationality and their own time. Roman soldiers appear in Renaissance military garb. The Virgin Mary was represented in Italian works with Italian characteristics, and in Flemish works with Flemish ones. Alexander the Great appeared on the French stage in the full costume of Louis XIV of France down to the time of Voltaire; and in England the contemporaries of Joseph Addison found unremarkable (in Pope’s words)

    “Cato’s long wig, flower’d gown, and lacquer’d chair.”

    Shakespeare’s audience similarly did not ask whether the University of Wittenberg had existed in Hamlet’s day, or whether clocks that struck time were available in Julius Caesar’s ancient Rome.

    However, in many works, such anachronisms are not simply the result of ignorance, which would have been corrected had the artist simply had more historical knowledge. Renaissance painters, for example, were well aware of the differences in costume between ancient times and their own, given the renewed attention to ancient art in their time, but they often chose to depict ancient scenes in contemporary garb. Rather, these anachronisms reflect a difference of emphasis from the 19th and 20th century attention to depicting details of former times as they “actually” were. Artists and writers of earlier times were usually more concerned with other aspects of the composition, and the fact that the events depicted took place long in the past was secondary. Such a large number of differences of detail required by historic realism would have been a distraction. (see Accidental and intentional anachronism below)

    Authors sometimes telescope chronology for the sake of making a point. Bolesław Prus does this at several junctures in his 1895 historical novel, Pharaoh, set in the Egypt of 1087–1085 B.C.E. The ancient “Suez Canal,” proposed by Prince Hiram (chapter 55),[1] had existed in ancient Egypt’s Middle Kingdom, centuries before the period of the novel. Conversely, the remarkably accurate calculation of the earth’s circumference by Eratosthenes, and the invention of a steam engine by Heron, both ascribed in chapter 60 to the priest Menes,[2] had historically occurred in Alexandrian Egypt, centuries after the period of the novel.

    In recent times, the progress of archaeological research and the more scientific spirit of history have encouraged audiences and artists to view anachronism as an offense or mistake.

    Yet modern dramatic productions often rely on anachronism for effect. In particular, directors of Shakespeare’s plays may use costumes and props not only of Shakespeare’s day or their own, but of any era in between or even those of an imagined future. For instance, the musical Return to the Forbidden Planet crosses The Tempest with popular music to create a science fiction musical.

    A celebrated 1960 stage production of Hamlet, starring Richard Burton, was set on a bare New York stage in contemporary rehearsal clothes: the audience could have been watching the rehearsal before the dress rehearsal. The point of the staging was apparently that the story of Hamlet is a universal one that was equally credible in the 20th century as in the 17th.

Well, the Wiki article goes on and on and has a whole lot more to say, but that there sums it up pretty good, and you know what? It doesn’t say anything about being limited to a pre-1600 era! It’s that limiting to the pre-1600′s era that prevent me from becoming a member of the SCA, because I can not in good conscious call myself a true Anachronist if I was to limit myself to recreating historically accurate history from a single time period, not when the meaning of the word Anachronist means to take one thing from history and deliberately throw it into another time period.

You see to be an Anachronist, is to throw historical accuracy to the wind and NOT be historically accurate, for the sake of mixing old with new, and be yourself and doing what you want to do, regardless of the norm, the rules, or what others think you should do. You wear cloths from periods not today, not to faires as costumes, but EVERY DAY, 24 hours a day 7 days a week, because for an anachronist those as the clothes you feel comfortable in. You may drive a horse and buggy instead of a car. Maybe you use a wringer washing machine instead of an automatic one, like I do.

It confuses me that the SCA and it’s members promote the historical accuracy to such extremes when doing so goes completely against the meaning of the name of their group. It farther confuses me that they claim to be anachronists and yet less than 1% of them wear the cloths they wear to the fairs as part of their daily wear. A true anachronist would wear them every day, not just one or two weeks a year.

Anyways now you know what an Anachronist is and how they are different from SCAians.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

Members of The SCA are Not Anachronists or What Is a Creative Anachronist?

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First off, by now you have heard me talking about the SCA, and are probably wondering if I belong to their group. The answer? No, I am not a member of the SCA. The reason? Well, the SCA is a historical reenactment group, (historical reenactment being a rabid hobby of mine) however, they focus on a time period that STOP at the year 1599. There in lays the problem: I do all eras. I’ve done pre-Columbian Native American, 14th century Gothic, I’ve been wearing various Japanese garb since I was 8 years old (no idea what era any of it comes from), I live 24/7 in Napoleon era empire gowns and Edwardian frock coats, I wear roaring 20′s flapper dresses, 1950′s poodle skirts, and on top of that I’ve done fantasy stuff varying from cartoon characters to book characters to comic book characters to characters of my own to circus clowns to faeries to futuristic sci-fi stuff fit for Theirry Mugler’s Monster Collection, and of course my latest project comes from manga. To make this a bit more strange for most people is the fact that these cloths I wear are NOT costumes. They are in fact the cloths I wear every day. Every time I set a foot outside, people gawk at me and start asking the silliest stupid dang questions. Like:

    Are you promoting a play for the local theater?
    Are you on the way to a costume party?
    Is there a Renaissance Fair nearby?
    Are you a circus clown?
    OMG! It’s a Harry Potter fan!
    Are you a witch? . . .

and my personal favorite:

    What the hell planet did you drop off of?!?

yea . . .okay . . . whatever. So what prompts these non-ending string of questions everywhere I go? My cloths.

Historical Reenactment & CosPlay is my life. I have never been to a Con or a Ren Faire, but that hasn’t stopped me from wearing “costumes”, though technically these are not costumes as they are my actual street cloths or garb and therefor I do not call them costumes because I do not think of them as costumes. I do not own any “normal” non-costume “street cloths”. What you see me wearing as CosPlay type things IS the way I dress when I’m not CosPlaying, because for me, this is not about “playing”. My CosPlay can more correctly be termed as “historical reenactment of fantasy costumes”.

My clothen style includes velvet, capes, empire gowns, gowns with trains, burnoose, shawls, runas, fishnet hose, striped stockings, combat boots, velvet, top-hats, long dresses, ruffled frilly skirts, cosplay, Gothic, Lolita, Victorian, Edwardian, velvet, frock coats, Alice in Wonderland, vampire fashions, Medieval fashions, crinolines & petticoats, kimono, ethnic costumes, eyelash-fringe fabric, sequins, beads, glitter, lace, cloaks, ruffles, broomstick skirts, stripes, plaid, poet blouses, peasant dresses, fairy tale princess gowns, faerie outfits, wizard-look stuff, big hats, bright colored hats, ballet flats, platforms, anything that Dracula would love to wear, and also stuff like worn by Jem*, The Holograms, and The Misfits. I the 1980′s I wore min-skirts, but as the years have gone by, my dresses and skirts got longer; today my hems sweep the floor and they often have trains. I have one dress that has 7 yards of fabric on the skirt alone, it can be worn with or without hoops.

Whenever I go out in public, my conversations with strangers sounds something like this:

    I was dressing like Jem, before Jem was invented.

    I love anything made of velvet!

    I don’t like pants: won’t wear them, won’t own them.

    No, what I’m wearing is not a costume.

    Yes, I dress like this every day, all day long, even around the house, when working in the garden, and when shoveling manure out of the barn. Yes I am a farmer. Yes I do dress like this while doing farm work.

    No, I don’t own any “normal” clothes.

    No, I can’t tell you where I bought them, because I didn’t buy them, I sewed them.

    No, I can’t tell you where to buy the pattern, I didn’t buy a pattern I made the pattern. I’ve been sewing since I was 6 years old when I made my first doll. I made my first ball-gown at age 12. At age 16 I graduated from a 2 year course in fashion design & merchandising. I’ve spent most of my life studying fashion history and the art of recreating historical clothen from the Gothic periods (1300 – 1500 & 1850 – 1930), and those are the clothes I thus wear.

    No I already told you this is not a costume, these are my regular cloths, I don’t care if you think this is a costume, it is not, please stop asking me if it is.

    I don’t like people who think I’m wearing a costume even after been told that I am not.

    Yes, I know this looks like a Willy Wonka costume, yes, Johnny Depp inspired it. Yes, I do wear a top hat everywhere I go. No, I repeat this is not a costume.

    Yes, I REALLY am making a historical reproduction of Lord Sesshomaru’s costume, and yes, I do intend to wear it daily as part of my street cloths, fluffy tail, battle armor, and all.

    No, I’m not crazy, I just hate that Halloween only comes once a year so now I live every day like it was Halloween.

    No, THIS . . . IS . . . NOT . . . A . . . COSTUME . . . I already told you, I always dress like this. I’ve been dressing like this for the last 20 years. Please stop making me repeat myself.

I have had that conversation so many times now it’s burned in my brain.

I think the funniest thing is that I am constantly asked for my ID….“You got to be over 18 . . .” yadda, yadda, yadda

Than I whip out my ID… “Is this real? Wait, you’re really THAT old? . . .but . . .but . . your cloths…. I thought you were a teenager! I’m so sorry, I didn’t realize… it’s just that your cloths… I thought…”

Honey, I haven’t been a teenager for 20 years! But thank you for thinking I was one, it’s not every day some one my age gets mistaken for a teenager… will, with me it is, but for other folks my age . . .

I am an Anachronist. An anachronist is someone who does not wear “normal” street cloth, but rather wears ethnic or period cloths instead of street cloths. The Amish are also anachroists, because they shun modern society and have “stopped” history at the year 1860 and will do, own, or wear nothing that was invented after 1860.

The problem with The SCA is that though they call themselves anachronists, they are only anachronist wanna-bes, because they only “pretend” to dress old fashioned when they go to meetings and ren faires and than once the faire is over they quickly change out of their garb and into their jeans and T’s with a sigh of relief that they can finally get out of their garb now that the faire is over.

As you can see, though I do create and wear cloths that come from the SCA’s pre-1600 era, I usually wear stuff from the late 1700′s – 1930′s instead, and thus I don’t really fit in with the SCA’s criteria. Though I am not a member, I do love their group, and the members are absolutely wonderful, thus I actively promote their group.

Here’s the thing: I’ll mention the SCA to someone and they go “Huh? What’s that?”. The first thing they want to know is not “What do they do?”, no, the first question asked is, “What does SCA stand for?”

So, what does it stand for? It stands for The Society for Creative Anachronism.
Well, the first part of it’s easy to figure out: it’s a group of people and they do something creatively. The problem is that word *Anachronism*, because nobody knows what an Anachronist is or what an Anachronist does or why any one would choose to become an Anachronist in the first place. And that is why I am writing this post: to explain what an Anachronist is and what they do.

The dictionary tells us that an Anachronist is one who practices Anachronism. Well, I must say THAT was REALLY helpful. Okay, so what is Anachronism? According to Wikipedia Anachronism is this:

    An anachronism (from the Greek “ανά”, “against”, and “χρόνος”, “time”) is anything that is temporally incongruous in the time period it has been placed in—that is, it appears in a temporal context in which it seems sufficiently out of place as to be peculiar, incomprehensible or impossible. The item is often an object, but may be a verbal expression, a technology, a philosophical idea, a musical style, a material, a custom, or anything else closely enough bound to a particular period as to seem odd outside it.

    An anachronist prefers older, often obsolete cultural artifacts over newer ones. For example, a modern-day anachronist might choose to wear a top-hat, use quill pens, or use a type-writer. This choice may reflect an eccentricity, aesthetic preference, or an ethical acceptance or rejection of the societal role of that artifact.

    An anachronism can be an artifact which appears out of place archaeologically, geologically or temporally. It is sometimes called OOPArt, for “out of place artifact”. Anachronisms usually appear more technologically advanced than is expected for their place and period.

    Anachronism is used especially in works of imagination that rest on a historical basis. Anachronisms may be introduced in many ways, originating, for instance, in disregard of the different modes of life and thought that characterize different periods, or in ignorance of the progress of the arts and sciences and other facts of history. They vary from glaring inconsistencies to scarcely perceptible misrepresentation. It is only since the close of the 18th century that this kind of deviation from historical reality has jarred on a general audience. Anachronisms abound in the works of Raphael and Shakespeare, as well as in those of less celebrated painters and playwrights of earlier times.

    In particular, the artists, on the stage and on the canvas, in story and in song, assimilated their characters to their own nationality and their own time. Roman soldiers appear in Renaissance military garb. The Virgin Mary was represented in Italian works with Italian characteristics, and in Flemish works with Flemish ones. Alexander the Great appeared on the French stage in the full costume of Louis XIV of France down to the time of Voltaire; and in England the contemporaries of Joseph Addison found unremarkable (in Pope’s words)

    “Cato’s long wig, flower’d gown, and lacquer’d chair.”

    Shakespeare’s audience similarly did not ask whether the University of Wittenberg had existed in Hamlet’s day, or whether clocks that struck time were available in Julius Caesar’s ancient Rome.

    However, in many works, such anachronisms are not simply the result of ignorance, which would have been corrected had the artist simply had more historical knowledge. Renaissance painters, for example, were well aware of the differences in costume between ancient times and their own, given the renewed attention to ancient art in their time, but they often chose to depict ancient scenes in contemporary garb. Rather, these anachronisms reflect a difference of emphasis from the 19th and 20th century attention to depicting details of former times as they “actually” were. Artists and writers of earlier times were usually more concerned with other aspects of the composition, and the fact that the events depicted took place long in the past was secondary. Such a large number of differences of detail required by historic realism would have been a distraction. (see Accidental and intentional anachronism below)

    Authors sometimes telescope chronology for the sake of making a point. Bolesław Prus does this at several junctures in his 1895 historical novel, Pharaoh, set in the Egypt of 1087–1085 B.C.E. The ancient “Suez Canal,” proposed by Prince Hiram (chapter 55),[1] had existed in ancient Egypt’s Middle Kingdom, centuries before the period of the novel. Conversely, the remarkably accurate calculation of the earth’s circumference by Eratosthenes, and the invention of a steam engine by Heron, both ascribed in chapter 60 to the priest Menes,[2] had historically occurred in Alexandrian Egypt, centuries after the period of the novel.

    In recent times, the progress of archaeological research and the more scientific spirit of history have encouraged audiences and artists to view anachronism as an offense or mistake.

    Yet modern dramatic productions often rely on anachronism for effect. In particular, directors of Shakespeare’s plays may use costumes and props not only of Shakespeare’s day or their own, but of any era in between or even those of an imagined future. For instance, the musical Return to the Forbidden Planet crosses The Tempest with popular music to create a science fiction musical.

    A celebrated 1960 stage production of Hamlet, starring Richard Burton, was set on a bare New York stage in contemporary rehearsal clothes: the audience could have been watching the rehearsal before the dress rehearsal. The point of the staging was apparently that the story of Hamlet is a universal one that was equally credible in the 20th century as in the 17th.

Well, the Wiki article goes on and on and has a whole lot more to say, but that there sums it up pretty good, and you know what? It doesn’t say anything about being limited to a pre-1600 era! It’s that limiting to the pre-1600′s era that prevent me from becoming a member of the SCA, because I can not in good conscious call myself a true Anachronist if I was to limit myself to recreating historically accurate history from a single time period, not when the meaning of the word Anachronist means to take one thing from history and deliberately throw it into another time period.

You see to be an Anachronist, is to throw historical accuracy to the wind and NOT be historically accurate, for the sake of mixing old with new, and be yourself and doing what you want to do, regardless of the norm, the rules, or what others think you should do. You wear cloths from periods not today, not to faires as costumes, but EVERY DAY, 24 hours a day 7 days a week, because for an anachronist those as the clothes you feel comfortable in. You may drive a horse and buggy instead of a car. Maybe you use a wringer washing machine instead of an automatic one, like I do.

It confuses me that the SCA and it’s members promote the historical accuracy to such extremes when doing so goes completely against the meaning of the name of their group. It farther confuses me that they claim to be anachronists and yet less than 1% of them wear the cloths they wear to the fairs as part of their daily wear. A true anachronist would wear them every day, not just one or two weeks a year.

Anyways now you know what an Anachronist is and how they are different from SCAians.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

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Blingo

Members of The SCA are Not Anachronists or What Is a Creative Anachronist?

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First off, by now you have heard me talking about the SCA, and are probably wondering if I belong to their group. The answer? No, I am not a member of the SCA. The reason? Well, the SCA is a historical reenactment group, (historical reenactment being a rabid hobby of mine) however, they focus on a time period that STOP at the year 1599. There in lays the problem: I do all eras. I’ve done pre-Columbian Native American, 14th century Gothic, I’ve been wearing various Japanese garb since I was 8 years old (no idea what era any of it comes from), I live 24/7 in Napoleon era empire gowns and Edwardian frock coats, I wear roaring 20′s flapper dresses, 1950′s poodle skirts, and on top of that I’ve done fantasy stuff varying from cartoon characters to book characters to comic book characters to characters of my own to circus clowns to faeries to futuristic sci-fi stuff fit for Theirry Mugler’s Monster Collection, and of course my latest project comes from manga. To make this a bit more strange for most people is the fact that these cloths I wear are NOT costumes. They are in fact the cloths I wear every day. Every time I set a foot outside, people gawk at me and start asking the silliest stupid dang questions. Like:

    Are you promoting a play for the local theater?
    Are you on the way to a costume party?
    Is there a Renaissance Fair nearby?
    Are you a circus clown?
    OMG! It’s a Harry Potter fan!
    Are you a witch? . . .

and my personal favorite:

    What the hell planet did you drop off of?!?

yea . . .okay . . . whatever. So what prompts these non-ending string of questions everywhere I go? My cloths.

Historical Reenactment & CosPlay is my life. I have never been to a Con or a Ren Faire, but that hasn’t stopped me from wearing “costumes”, though technically these are not costumes as they are my actual street cloths or garb and therefor I do not call them costumes because I do not think of them as costumes. I do not own any “normal” non-costume “street cloths”. What you see me wearing as CosPlay type things IS the way I dress when I’m not CosPlaying, because for me, this is not about “playing”. My CosPlay can more correctly be termed as “historical reenactment of fantasy costumes”.

My clothen style includes velvet, capes, empire gowns, gowns with trains, burnoose, shawls, runas, fishnet hose, striped stockings, combat boots, velvet, top-hats, long dresses, ruffled frilly skirts, cosplay, Gothic, Lolita, Victorian, Edwardian, velvet, frock coats, Alice in Wonderland, vampire fashions, Medieval fashions, crinolines & petticoats, kimono, ethnic costumes, eyelash-fringe fabric, sequins, beads, glitter, lace, cloaks, ruffles, broomstick skirts, stripes, plaid, poet blouses, peasant dresses, fairy tale princess gowns, faerie outfits, wizard-look stuff, big hats, bright colored hats, ballet flats, platforms, anything that Dracula would love to wear, and also stuff like worn by Jem*, The Holograms, and The Misfits. I the 1980′s I wore min-skirts, but as the years have gone by, my dresses and skirts got longer; today my hems sweep the floor and they often have trains. I have one dress that has 7 yards of fabric on the skirt alone, it can be worn with or without hoops.

Whenever I go out in public, my conversations with strangers sounds something like this:

    I was dressing like Jem, before Jem was invented.

    I love anything made of velvet!

    I don’t like pants: won’t wear them, won’t own them.

    No, what I’m wearing is not a costume.

    Yes, I dress like this every day, all day long, even around the house, when working in the garden, and when shoveling manure out of the barn. Yes I am a farmer. Yes I do dress like this while doing farm work.

    No, I don’t own any “normal” clothes.

    No, I can’t tell you where I bought them, because I didn’t buy them, I sewed them.

    No, I can’t tell you where to buy the pattern, I didn’t buy a pattern I made the pattern. I’ve been sewing since I was 6 years old when I made my first doll. I made my first ball-gown at age 12. At age 16 I graduated from a 2 year course in fashion design & merchandising. I’ve spent most of my life studying fashion history and the art of recreating historical clothen from the Gothic periods (1300 – 1500 & 1850 – 1930), and those are the clothes I thus wear.

    No I already told you this is not a costume, these are my regular cloths, I don’t care if you think this is a costume, it is not, please stop asking me if it is.

    I don’t like people who think I’m wearing a costume even after been told that I am not.

    Yes, I know this looks like a Willy Wonka costume, yes, Johnny Depp inspired it. Yes, I do wear a top hat everywhere I go. No, I repeat this is not a costume.

    Yes, I REALLY am making a historical reproduction of Lord Sesshomaru’s costume, and yes, I do intend to wear it daily as part of my street cloths, fluffy tail, battle armor, and all.

    No, I’m not crazy, I just hate that Halloween only comes once a year so now I live every day like it was Halloween.

    No, THIS . . . IS . . . NOT . . . A . . . COSTUME . . . I already told you, I always dress like this. I’ve been dressing like this for the last 20 years. Please stop making me repeat myself.

I have had that conversation so many times now it’s burned in my brain.

I think the funniest thing is that I am constantly asked for my ID….“You got to be over 18 . . .” yadda, yadda, yadda

Than I whip out my ID… “Is this real? Wait, you’re really THAT old? . . .but . . .but . . your cloths…. I thought you were a teenager! I’m so sorry, I didn’t realize… it’s just that your cloths… I thought…”

Honey, I haven’t been a teenager for 20 years! But thank you for thinking I was one, it’s not every day some one my age gets mistaken for a teenager… will, with me it is, but for other folks my age . . .

I am an Anachronist. An anachronist is someone who does not wear “normal” street cloth, but rather wears ethnic or period cloths instead of street cloths. The Amish are also anachroists, because they shun modern society and have “stopped” history at the year 1860 and will do, own, or wear nothing that was invented after 1860.

The problem with The SCA is that though they call themselves anachronists, they are only anachronist wanna-bes, because they only “pretend” to dress old fashioned when they go to meetings and ren faires and than once the faire is over they quickly change out of their garb and into their jeans and T’s with a sigh of relief that they can finally get out of their garb now that the faire is over.

As you can see, though I do create and wear cloths that come from the SCA’s pre-1600 era, I usually wear stuff from the late 1700′s – 1930′s instead, and thus I don’t really fit in with the SCA’s criteria. Though I am not a member, I do love their group, and the members are absolutely wonderful, thus I actively promote their group.

Here’s the thing: I’ll mention the SCA to someone and they go “Huh? What’s that?”. The first thing they want to know is not “What do they do?”, no, the first question asked is, “What does SCA stand for?”

So, what does it stand for? It stands for The Society for Creative Anachronism.
Well, the first part of it’s easy to figure out: it’s a group of people and they do something creatively. The problem is that word *Anachronism*, because nobody knows what an Anachronist is or what an Anachronist does or why any one would choose to become an Anachronist in the first place. And that is why I am writing this post: to explain what an Anachronist is and what they do.

The dictionary tells us that an Anachronist is one who practices Anachronism. Well, I must say THAT was REALLY helpful. Okay, so what is Anachronism? According to Wikipedia Anachronism is this:

    An anachronism (from the Greek “ανά”, “against”, and “χρόνος”, “time”) is anything that is temporally incongruous in the time period it has been placed in—that is, it appears in a temporal context in which it seems sufficiently out of place as to be peculiar, incomprehensible or impossible. The item is often an object, but may be a verbal expression, a technology, a philosophical idea, a musical style, a material, a custom, or anything else closely enough bound to a particular period as to seem odd outside it.

    An anachronist prefers older, often obsolete cultural artifacts over newer ones. For example, a modern-day anachronist might choose to wear a top-hat, use quill pens, or use a type-writer. This choice may reflect an eccentricity, aesthetic preference, or an ethical acceptance or rejection of the societal role of that artifact.

    An anachronism can be an artifact which appears out of place archaeologically, geologically or temporally. It is sometimes called OOPArt, for “out of place artifact”. Anachronisms usually appear more technologically advanced than is expected for their place and period.

    Anachronism is used especially in works of imagination that rest on a historical basis. Anachronisms may be introduced in many ways, originating, for instance, in disregard of the different modes of life and thought that characterize different periods, or in ignorance of the progress of the arts and sciences and other facts of history. They vary from glaring inconsistencies to scarcely perceptible misrepresentation. It is only since the close of the 18th century that this kind of deviation from historical reality has jarred on a general audience. Anachronisms abound in the works of Raphael and Shakespeare, as well as in those of less celebrated painters and playwrights of earlier times.

    In particular, the artists, on the stage and on the canvas, in story and in song, assimilated their characters to their own nationality and their own time. Roman soldiers appear in Renaissance military garb. The Virgin Mary was represented in Italian works with Italian characteristics, and in Flemish works with Flemish ones. Alexander the Great appeared on the French stage in the full costume of Louis XIV of France down to the time of Voltaire; and in England the contemporaries of Joseph Addison found unremarkable (in Pope’s words)

    “Cato’s long wig, flower’d gown, and lacquer’d chair.”

    Shakespeare’s audience similarly did not ask whether the University of Wittenberg had existed in Hamlet’s day, or whether clocks that struck time were available in Julius Caesar’s ancient Rome.

    However, in many works, such anachronisms are not simply the result of ignorance, which would have been corrected had the artist simply had more historical knowledge. Renaissance painters, for example, were well aware of the differences in costume between ancient times and their own, given the renewed attention to ancient art in their time, but they often chose to depict ancient scenes in contemporary garb. Rather, these anachronisms reflect a difference of emphasis from the 19th and 20th century attention to depicting details of former times as they “actually” were. Artists and writers of earlier times were usually more concerned with other aspects of the composition, and the fact that the events depicted took place long in the past was secondary. Such a large number of differences of detail required by historic realism would have been a distraction. (see Accidental and intentional anachronism below)

    Authors sometimes telescope chronology for the sake of making a point. Bolesław Prus does this at several junctures in his 1895 historical novel, Pharaoh, set in the Egypt of 1087–1085 B.C.E. The ancient “Suez Canal,” proposed by Prince Hiram (chapter 55),[1] had existed in ancient Egypt’s Middle Kingdom, centuries before the period of the novel. Conversely, the remarkably accurate calculation of the earth’s circumference by Eratosthenes, and the invention of a steam engine by Heron, both ascribed in chapter 60 to the priest Menes,[2] had historically occurred in Alexandrian Egypt, centuries after the period of the novel.

    In recent times, the progress of archaeological research and the more scientific spirit of history have encouraged audiences and artists to view anachronism as an offense or mistake.

    Yet modern dramatic productions often rely on anachronism for effect. In particular, directors of Shakespeare’s plays may use costumes and props not only of Shakespeare’s day or their own, but of any era in between or even those of an imagined future. For instance, the musical Return to the Forbidden Planet crosses The Tempest with popular music to create a science fiction musical.

    A celebrated 1960 stage production of Hamlet, starring Richard Burton, was set on a bare New York stage in contemporary rehearsal clothes: the audience could have been watching the rehearsal before the dress rehearsal. The point of the staging was apparently that the story of Hamlet is a universal one that was equally credible in the 20th century as in the 17th.

Well, the Wiki article goes on and on and has a whole lot more to say, but that there sums it up pretty good, and you know what? It doesn’t say anything about being limited to a pre-1600 era! It’s that limiting to the pre-1600′s era that prevent me from becoming a member of the SCA, because I can not in good conscious call myself a true Anachronist if I was to limit myself to recreating historically accurate history from a single time period, not when the meaning of the word Anachronist means to take one thing from history and deliberately throw it into another time period.

You see to be an Anachronist, is to throw historical accuracy to the wind and NOT be historically accurate, for the sake of mixing old with new, and be yourself and doing what you want to do, regardless of the norm, the rules, or what others think you should do. You wear cloths from periods not today, not to faires as costumes, but EVERY DAY, 24 hours a day 7 days a week, because for an anachronist those as the clothes you feel comfortable in. You may drive a horse and buggy instead of a car. Maybe you use a wringer washing machine instead of an automatic one, like I do.

It confuses me that the SCA and it’s members promote the historical accuracy to such extremes when doing so goes completely against the meaning of the name of their group. It farther confuses me that they claim to be anachronists and yet less than 1% of them wear the cloths they wear to the fairs as part of their daily wear. A true anachronist would wear them every day, not just one or two weeks a year.

Anyways now you know what an Anachronist is and how they are different from SCAians.

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

pawpawpawpawpaw

————-
If you liked reading this blog and want to read more stuff written by me, I have lots of websites, where you can read other things I write, here are a few of the ones I like the best:

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape

Blingo

Lord Sesshomaru’s Kimono: Anime & Manga

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Sessho-Maru-Sama’s Kimono

Besides being the world’s most powerful demon, Lord Sesshomaru is both a warrior and nobleman, a wealthy and powerful Feudal overlord,The Ruler of The Western Lands (believed to be somewhere in China or Mongolia) and a much feared (a murderously violent) aristocrat and as such wears a style of ceremonial Kimono which is only worn by the elite few of his social standing. This can be seen by the fact that he wears white, a color reserved only for royalty, brides, and the dead, and by the fact that there are so many imperial crests embroidered onto his Kimono.

Sesshomaru’s Kimono is a very ceremonial style, of solid white, with full swinging sleeves that sweep in lengths just above his ankles. The lower quarter of each sleeve is dyed red, and the left shoulder is also dyed red.

On the front and back of each sleeve, near the boarder of the dye are embroidered three family crests (twelve in all). The crest is repeated on the neck and shoulder of the left side.

Each crest consists of a triple hexagon with a six petaled white plum/cherry blossom in the center of each red hexagon, surrounded by a white boarder.

There is some debate among fans as to the lower edge of the kimono and what it should look like, since the hem of Sesshomaru’s kimono is never seen in either the books or the show. There is also question as to just how long the kimono he wears is; again, he wears a hakama over his kimono, so we never see the hem edge of it.

In the areas of Lord Sesshomaru’s costume where we do not have a visual reference to go by, we must instead look to the history books and find out what a real warring lord of Endo Japan would have done, and in doing that, this is what my research told me:

When worn by common folk, soldiers, and laborers, the length of a kimono worn under a hakama would have been knee length. However, the kimonos worn by noblemen, lords, and aristocrats would have been long full length kimonos.

The length of Lord Sesshomaru’s kimono should be long: very, very, very long. My study of Japanese fashion history tells me that a war lord of Sesshomaru’s status, would have worn a kimono of overblown proportions, not only are the sleeves abnormally long, but so to would have been the length of the kimono, which in some cases would have a train several feet long in the back! All of this extra fabric however would not be seen, because it would be girdled with a braided cord, and stuffed into the legs of the overlaying hakama, thus helping to give the hakama it’s huge ballooning pant-legs-effect.

Additionally, my research tells me that the hem edge of the kimono would be patterned and decorated to match the pattern of decoration on the sleeves and left shoulder. Note that the fact that the pattern is ONLY on the left shoulder, is an indication that this is not only a lord, but a lord of near Shogun status. Lord Sesshomaru is a very high ranking lord.

So my advice? I would say to make his kimono at least 4 inches longer than floor length for the wearer, and dye the lower 8 to 12 inches red to match the sleeves, and add imperial crests staggered at the same intervals as on the sleeves..

Beneath his Kimono Sesshomaru wears a white (or sometimes red flower print) Nagajuban.

This is the ONLY version ever to be drawn by Sesshomaru’s creator Rumiko Takahashi. All other versions of his costume were created by the tv anime artists and manga inkers.


(my art from my fashion design costume portfolio)

On occasion, Sesshomaru is seen wearing a slightly different kimono. This can be considered either a mistake on the pat of the anime artists, or an indication that he has not one, but four different kimonos.

Alternate Kimonos #1 and 2 are essentially the same as his regularly worn kimono, the only difference being the color of the dye and patches.

Alternate Kimono #3 is completely different and is much less formal as is has no crests on it at all.

If you want to make one of the alternate kimonos, they are described as follows:

What’s your take on this? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this post. Leave a comment and share your views!

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