https://linktr.ee/Kecharacosplay
The most boring person you will probably forget.
36. She/her. Pro-choice, BLM, Anti-guns, LGBTQ-friendly, tree hugging hippie, pacifist apparently. Just a tired, old nerd who hates conflict and just wants to sew. đ¤ˇđťââď¸
I am slowly losing my mind over the shift towards video as the default media format.
I do not find this to be an efficient way to absorb information. I am bored and distracted by the time the largely unnecessary introduction is over. I can't use ctrl+f to find the specific information I'm looking for. If there are instructions to follow, I don't want to have to constantly pause and back up to the part I need.
Hey guys! I promised a tutorial so hereâs a little one.
Iâm just going to explain overall what I did and not go into anything too detailed. Feel free to throw me a question if something is left too unclear!
gif made by
My wings are articulated and theyâre not attached to my hands in any ways (Though Iâm planning to change that by adding a string connected to my hand because my original way of pulling them up didnât work, theyâre too heavy with the feathers).
Here are some pictures of the base:
The idea of articulated wings is that the whole structure moves when you lift/move one part.
As you can see from the picture there are 3 longer and 2 shorter pieces. Theyâre made out of plywood but Iâve heard that balsa wood is a better option.
There are a total of 7 (14) joints at the points where the pieces of wood overlap. Each wing is attached to the back with a hinge so that I can fold them behind me (Useful in crowds and when walking through doors).
Then there are the feathers, aka the reason I never want to touch scissors again
I used 7m (23 feet) of white felt. I soaked the whole amount of fabric (in pieces) in a mixture made out of glue and water to harden them. It takes at least one or two days for them to dry completely. I forgot to flip some of them around at least once so they got stuck on the floor, dont do that. Cover your floors! I used some big trash bags I found lying around.
I also glued some sticks to the longest feathers after cutting them out to give them more support and to make them look more featheryâlike. I made probably 400â500 feathers. I recommend getting your friends to help cutting them if you donât want to lose your mind :âD
Getting the feathers attached was a tricky part. You canât just glue them to the base or theyâll be sticking into odd directions when opening/closing the wings.
They need to move around freely so basically I just sticked a loop of wire to each feather. Then I put another piece of wire through it and secured it into place by twisting the two ends together. After that I glued the thing to the frames.
So beautiful! But hey, they arenât supposed to show. Hot glue is gonna be your best friend at this point.
The biggest feathers are all attached to one big âringâ made out of thicker wire. Big mess and the backside of the wings.
The feathers are in 3 layers, each layer overlapping the previous feathers:
The primaries and secondaries (1st layer) are painted from both front- and backside. The 2nd and 3rd layers cover the framework so youâre gonna need a lot of feathers over them. Note that wings donât look the same from both sides!
I used the same technique for attaching the 2nd layer as for the 1st (wire-thingy) but I glued 3 feathers into each other to save time.
The 3rd layer is just glued to the top because will face the right way even if you do so.
When I had attached the feathers they were just hanging straight down (gotta love gravity). I had to do something to get them to lift up when I open the wings so I sewed them together. There goes a thread in the middle of each feather giving the wings also a maximum opening point (which is pretty big). I made some knots that the thread doesnât slip away.
You wonât be able to do anything with these if you canât get them on. I made a harness that you put on like a backbag through a hole in the shirt.
And woop, there it is! A pair of hella big articulated wings.
â This is kind of obvious but making wings like this is expensive and time consuming. I used probably around 100⏠for the materials and the hours Iâve spent on this project are also close to a hundred (2 weeks of working from 10AM to 8PM or more, ugh)
â If you decide to do something like this please be careful not to strain yourself too much! I was crouching on the floor for many days in a row and my back and knees hurt like hell in the evenings. Also my right hand still hurts from bending all the wire although itâs been a week already.
â Youâre gonna need space. No, not a small corner with a little table, I mean a huge amount of space. For the most of the time you need to work with the wings open (on a floor unless you have an enormous table), and mine are twice the size of me! tho Iâm a 16âyearâold short girl The wingspan is around 4+ meters, so, yeah. Of course you could always make smaller ones which I really do recommend.
â Surprise, this is also really messy! Especially the feathers make a big mess and youâre gonna get little pieces of felt stuck everywhere.
â This requires some sort of knowledge of using different tools. And skill. Feel free to challenge yourself but this isnât the easiest sort of thing to do. It was hard even for me although Iâve made a pair of (still) wings before.
â These were surprisingly easy to wear around the convention even though the place was small. They are pretty heavy but not too much to not be able to wear them for 2 days straight.
â I bet that there are a lot better ways to do some parts and Iâm fixing them & updating this tutorial when I can figure out better alternatives. (Also if you can think of something before me, send me a message!)
I hope that this was at least somewhat useful although itâs not really detailed. If you do make something inspired by this Iâd love to see the results. Also it would be great to put a link to this so that other people can also get help making a pair uvu
Edit: Check out also my âdavesprite cosplayâ tag at my blog for more information!
Any conspiracy theory about people going missing in National Parks is automatically silly to me. Like "Why are National Parks such a hotbed of disappearances???" because they're full of idiots. You've got thousands of people who've never pissed outdoors in their life wandering around the woods/desert/mountain with zero experience and zero gear and zero understanding that this place can kill them. You don't see as many disappearances in wild areas because people don't go to them unless they have some background knowledge. Whereas you get tour buses full of old folks and suburban families shuttling people into National Parks 365 days a year. If you took the same amount of buffoons and dropped them in the actual wilderness the disappearances would be significantly higher than at the parks. Use your brain.
Itâs so weird whenever i see a writer or poet say they donât read other peopleâs work because they donât want their style to be influenced like huh art is a buffet and eating a lot of different foods is only going to make your own cooking better and more interesting baby stop falling for the trap of âoriginalityâ youâll end up just bland and repetitive and boring
Listen to me: You get good at things by being bad at them. You learn by failing. You gain competency and a sense of mastery by failing at something many times and in many interesting ways.
The sooner you are able to laugh at your own failures, to enjoy the process of messing up, the easier life will be. Because you'll no longer be afraid of learning.
And once you're no longer afraid of failing, you can learn anything.
What is your special interest and do you have any fun facts about it?
ok there's this thing in the sahara desert called the Richat Structure. It's 30 miles wide, it can only really be seen from space. it just looks like this giant fucking EYE in the middle of the desert. i came across it by accident while just scrolling around on google earth like a decade ago and went HUH???? cause it's so creepy and weird so then I got obsessed.
basically scientists think it's a highly eroded dome and not an impact site or man-made or anything. a bunch of different kinds of rock are exposed in concentric rings. however, it is an archeological site and they've found a bunch of Archeulean tools and artifacts in great condition there (like stone axes and stuff from homo erectus). archeologists think this area was used in tool manufacturing.
im just totally fascinated i think it's cool as hell
My cat, who is otherwise young and healthy, needs a tooth extraction that's been quoted at $2,978. The vet said if I don't get this procedure done, it could lead to serious health complications for her. I need a $500 deposit up front, and the rest over time.
I am disabled with only SSI as income, and stuck living in an abusively toxic household that drains me everyday. The only thing keeping me sane is this cat.
I have explored all options for how to pay for this, but am coming up empty and am very worried and at a loss of where else to turn.
Which brings me here, asking for donations to my ko-fi. I need to use ko-fi (rather than a go-fund-me) because SSI caps my bank account at $2,000. With ko-fi I can transfer funds in installments.
Please, even if you can't donate, please signal boosts about this so it reaches a wide range of people.
I do also have adoptables on this page up for sale. It's been a rough going to make anymore, but I hope to do so to go toward this.
An extraordinary collection of fine and rare miniature books, published from the mid-17th-century to the modern day. It includes books printed in France, the Netherlands, England, Italy and Germany, on a diversity of themes ranging from histories to works of scripture, devotion, literature, almanacs, and natural history. The collection boasts three 17th-century works, with the earliest being a Dutch song book from 1650 preserved in a charming contemporary vellum wallet binding, as well as a French book of hours from 1684 and an English bible in contemporary morocco from 1693. Many of the books are attractively bound in contemporary gilt morocco, others in gilt and blindstamped calf, decorative paper wrappers, silver cases, while some are contained within miniature wooden boxes as part of a childâs sewing kit. Some books are housed in cases with their own miniature magnifying glasses, and others are arranged on miniature shelves or cabinets, including a miniature revolving bookcase constructed by Julian Stanley of High Wycombe, commissioned by Lord Wardington and presented by him to Nanni Israel.