Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

EDGAR ALLAN CROW

Momma Cat is sorry for that title, but she really couldn't help it!  

Edgar Allan Crow
Edgar's backside

Momma Cat recently met Edgar at JoAnn Fabric and Crafts.  He was just sitting there on a shelf, and she fell for him immediately!  There were a lot of other Halloween creatures there too, but Momma thought Edgar was the best.  So she brought him home.

If you'll notice, Edgar's cage opens, and he can be removed, say, if he needs a little exercise.  Baby Cat thinks Momma didn't feed him enough, but she swears that he came that way!

If you need some new creatures, decorations, or Halloween costume ideas, head for JoAnn's soon, before it's toooooooo late!!!!!

- Momma Cat




Friday, August 5, 2016

HOLIDAY DRESSES FOR 18 INCH MADAME ALEXANDER DOLLS

If you didn't already know, all of the Halloween and Christmas fabrics have made their way into the fabric stores already!  Momma Cat loves Halloween!  A trait she passed on to Baby Cat, by the way.

Momma Cat made this sweet little Halloween Dress and paired it with some cute little black boots that she found at JoAnn's.  Here's her little model, Wren, wearing the dress.

Wren wairing Jack Skellington print dress
 The dress is a Jack Skellington print complimented by an orange print with tiny spiders.  Momma Cat knows Baby Cat would really love this dress!  The only thing that would make it cuter is Momma Cat could find some little spider clips for Wren's hair!  

Next we have Wren wearing a beautiful red Christmas dress.  The fabric is red satin with an embroidered rose pattern.  Momma Cat made a dress for herself out of the same fabric a couple of years ago, and won a "Best Of Show" ribbon at the Multnomah County Fair!
  
In this first photo, Wren is wearing her red dress with a hand crocheted cropped red-sparkle sweater, red shoes, with a red ribbon in her hair.  Doesn't she look festive?

Wren, all in red!

In this next photo, Wren is wearing the same dress, this time paired with silver, shoes, a hand crocheted silver-sparkle sweater, and a silver ribbon in her hair.  
 
Wren, in red with silver accents.
It's amazing how a couple of small things can completely change the way an outfit looks.  Momma Cat thinks Wren looks smashing in both ensembles.  But, she wants to know what you think.  Which outfit would you choose as your favorite?

 
 Momma Cat

Friday, January 9, 2015

LEGO MOVIE COSTUMES FOR BABY CAT AND HUSBAND CAT

This blog post is a few months overdue but we wanted to share it with you anyway! This Halloween, Baby Cat and Husband Cat decided to go as Emmett and Wildstyle from The LEGO Movie. There were many wonderful tutorials for LEGO costumes online, but we decided to simplify things a bit.

Here are the original characters from the movie:




One of the first things we needed was paint that was just the right LEGO yellow!


Next was a big 3'x4' sheet of chip board to make the heads out of. We also used: black, white, and red acrylic paint for the faces, black and brown fabric for the hair, and blue and pink felt for Wildstyle's streaks.


After spray painting the board and letting it dry, Baby Cat measured two rectangles that were 10'' wide and the length of the board and cut them out with a box knife. 


She then formed the rectangles into tubes with a 1' diameter, trimmed off the excess, and secured them with yellow duct tape.


Using Adobe Illustrator, Baby Cat found some good close-up pictures of the characters faces, scaled them up, and printed outlines of them to use as templates. This one is Emmett:


Next Baby Cat cut out the features (eyes and mouth), set them aside for later, taped the Emmet template to one of the tubes, and traced inside the features.


 This is what Emmett looked like before his features were filled in...


 ...and with his eyes and mouth filled in with black paint:


Once the black paint was dry. Baby Cat cut the teeth and tongue out of the mouth template and taped the template over the mask's mouth. 


The tongue is then painted in red and the teeth in white. This took several coats to show up against the black, so be sure to leave plenty of time for it to dry in between coats.


Wildstyle's face had a little more detail but the overall process was the same. First Baby Cat printed the template...


 ...then cut out the major features...


...taped the template to the mask and traced around it.


The eyes and eyebrows were painted in black.


The lips can also be done in red in the same first step. The freckles and smile line are a light brown made from mixing white and red paint with just a hint of black.


Once Baby Cat had enough coats for all the colors to be dark enough, she let it dry completely. 


Next, she cut out the inner circles from the eye templates and the teeth from the mouth template and taped them to the face.


These are both painted in white.


Both faces were almost done but Baby Cat still had to make a way to see out of them so they could be worn as masks.


 Very carefully with the box knife, Baby Cat cut a large circle out of each of Emmett's eyes (in retrospect she probably didn't need to fill it all in with paint) and cut a slightly larger circle out of black swimsuit-lining fabric to cover it. This kept the eyes looking solid but made it so Husband Cat could see out a little bit.


Again, Wildstyle's eyes were a little trickier because of the white shine spots in her eyes, which Baby Cat cut around as much as she could, then covered the spaces with swimsuit liner.


Finally both faces were done and they just needed hair!


Emmett's hair was difficult to get right. Baby Cat used brown felt and layered it to give it a rounded shape on top of the head. She glued it to the head around the sides and added a few stitches here and there within the fabric to keep the shape.



Wildstyle's hair was made with a piece of black cotton and some strips of blue and pink felt. The cotton was glued to the head at the edges, then pulled up in the middle and tied with a hair tie to make her ponytail. Baby Cat just eyeballed the felt to get colorful streaks that were about the right length and thickness, then glued them to the hair.


And to finish the costumes off, Husband Cat wore a blue shirt under a construction worker's vest while Baby Cat added strips of blue and pink duct tape to her black sweatshirt to make Wildstyle's graffiti hoodie. Both wore yellow kitchen gloves for yellow LEGO hands!


We hope you like our costumes, they were fun to make and we always love impersonating some of our favorite movie characters on Halloween! 

-Baby Cat



Tuesday, November 12, 2013

JACK IS GETTING INTO THE HOLIDAY SPIRIT....ARE YOU?

It's about that time of year again...as soon as Halloween is over, monsters turn into elves and Jack Skellington and his friends begin their preparations to take over Christmas! This Jack Skellington doll found a good home at the St. Agatha Holiday Bazaar over the weekend, but that doesn't mean he is gone for good...

Jack hanging out at the Bazaar

If you would like a Jack Skellington Santa doll of your very own, Baby Cat is selling her original pattern on Ravelry and in our Etsy shop. Or, if you are not a crocheter yourself, we also take special orders! Just comment below or email us at kayassunta@gmail.com to place an order. But beware, we can only fill a limited number of orders by Christmas!

-Baby Cat

Saturday, October 27, 2012

How to Make Captain America's Shield in Time for Halloween

I was looking for a Captain America shield for my boyfriend's Halloween costume, and was shocked by how expensive a little plastic shield with a rubber-band handle can be. I decided to make my own cheap version using a garbage can lid and some masking tape and spray paint. I have since seen homemade shields that put mine to shame, including this one, which makes me totally jealous. But my version isn't too bad, especially if you only have a few days to put it together.

Here's what you need to do if you want to make this project yourself:


1) Begin with a metal garbage can lid. These can be found at your local thrift store, but be sure to ask for pure vibranium, or you may get an unpleasant surprise the first time you try to stop a bullet with your shield. If bullets are not a concern for you, any kind of metal will do. You also need a roll of masking tape or painters' tape and red, white, and blue spray paint.

*note: if you have a little more time and want to make sure your colors don't overlap, hand-painting is preferable to spray paint and tape, because the paint will always leak through the tape at least a little bit.


2) Next, take a drill and drill out the rivet holding the handle on the lid. Whoever made that lid put the handle on the wrong side! It will be reattached on the other side later.

3) Once the handle has been removed, I recommend spray painting the whole thing white and then proceeding to follow the procedure below for the other two colors. Of course, that's not actually what I did. For some reason, I decided to paint the red parts first, which created a lot more work for me.





First, I taped carefully around the edges of everything I wanted to be red, trying to make the tape fit as closely to the contours of the lid as possible, to minimize leaking, and trying to keep the circle as smooth around the edges as possible. I used the ridges of the lid as guides. Next, I filled in everything I didn't want to be red with masking tape and newspaper to protect it from the red paint...



And painted it!



4) You can skip this step if, unlike me, you were smart enough to use the white paint first. After waiting the recommended amount of time for the red paint to dry, peel off all of the tape and newspaper and use the same method to tape over all of the red paint, then paint it white.



5) Whether your last step was the red or white paint, wait for it to dry and, without removing any tape, tape over all of the red and white stripes so the whole thing is mummified except for the center circle.

*note: this step describes what I did to save tape. However, I ended up with some nasty stickiness leftover from the tape where I left it on too long. For this reason, you may what to change out the tape after each step. You could use a combination of tape and newspaper to save tape.



6) Next, tape off the star in the center. I had enormous trouble making a regular star out of tape. It kept coming out all wonky, especially because the star has 5 points and the lid I used has 6 segments! I ended up measuring the diameter of the center circle, then finding an image of the shield online, scaling it so that the center circle was about as big as the center circle of the lid, printing it, cutting out the star, and taping it to the shield. Then I trimmed the corners of the tape to make the points of the star pointy again. The tape around the edges makes the star slightly larger, so it wouldn't hurt to print a star that is a bit smaller than you want the finished one to be.



7) Finally, paint the center of the shield blue and wait for it to dry.

This is what the star looks like
And here is the whole thing before touch-ups

The finished shield, after touch-ups!
8) Remove all of the tape and voila! It should look somewhat like Captain America's shield! If you have white spots from the tape of places where paint is missing, like I did, you can touch it up by spraying some paint into a disposable cup so that it pools up, and applying it to any flaws with a paint brush. Use a brush that you don't really care about because spray paint is sticky and hard to wash out. I was able to pick up a brush for 15 cents at Hiron's and it worked just fine. Again, paint chipping or any problems caused by the tape can be avoided by painting the whole thing by hand, although this will definitely take longer overall.

9) The last step is to secure the handle on the inside of the shield so that you can hold onto it. You can do this with glue, a rivet, or whatever method you would like. You could also use fabric to make straps so you can strap the shield to your arm.

This whole project took me about three days to make, including drying time. I waited about 24 hours each time before applying the next coat, but this could be different for you depending on the recommended drying time for the kind of paint you buy. I used Rust-oleum in Apple Red and Brilliant Blue, and Dupli-color in Gloss White. Whatever kind you use, make sure it says on the can that it will work on metal. The actual painting took no time at all and the taping would have taken less time if I had painted the white coat first or thought of using a template for the star earlier.

I hope this helps someone with their costume!

-Baby Cat