Stuart Walford spent lockdown constructing elaborate fashion costumes using household items, which taught him a thing or two about what adults need in their dress-up boxes
A red skirt with ruffles was good for both matador and flamenco dancer. An old layered petticoat made the perfect Little Bo Peep. Eighties prom dresses became ballgowns, long black capes transformed us into pirates and witches. The box had tiaras, bonnets, berets and fedoras; long beaded necklaces, plaited leather belts, suspenders, glasses, waistcoats and wings. Occasionally our younger brothers could be persuaded into sequined tutus.
“Things like helmets and umbrellas make for effective bases to head pieces. While dishwashing gloves and gumboots have the potential to make everything scary.” “I think a lot of people assume that you have to have pattern making or fashion knowledge to be able to make a garment,” he says. “But actually, by draping fabric on your body and using other accessories to help it stay, you can make totally new silhouettes.”He describes bed sheets as really helpful. “I just staple them together to make sort of pleats and folds. You can belt a sheet over your waist and then pull it up so it becomes a skirt,” he says.
Lockdown Fashion Costumes Household Items Dress-Up Boxes Enid Blyton Halloween Spending Cheap Costumes Plastic Waste
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