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Interpreting the Assassin (Ezio Costume Series, Part 1)

This series about the Ezio costume (Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood) was meant to appear on The Wandering Bard’s blog shortly after Greg debuted the cosplay at Emerald City Comic Con in March 2012. Sorry for the delay. 

The internets provided a great deal of inspiration for my project, and I want to repay by sharing my successes and stumbles throughout the process. I hope you find these next few posts useful for your future cosplaying adventures.

This adventure began in the fall of 2011. Greg was playing Assassin’s Creed II: Brotherhood, I was watching and enjoying the story. I wanted to make Greg a costume to wear for the upcoming 2012 convention season, but he couldn’t decide on a character. I can’t remember which of us suggested Ezio, but as soon as the idea was in the air there was no doubt it was the right choice. It was a game and character that Greg enjoyed, and he felt he could pull off the poses.

Inspiration and Interpreting the Costume

Screen-caps are my savior. A quick Google (or Bing) image search for “Ezio Assassins Creed Brotherhood” returns a multitude of screen-caps, drawings, and a few cosplayers.

I printed out a number of screen cap images from the game (particularly the opening cinematic from Brotherhood because the resolution is higher) to identify the components of the costume. How many layers did I see? What did those translate to in real apparel terms? Occasionally I needed to see parts of the attire that weren’t visible in the screen caps, so I asked Greg to move around a bit in-game to let me see how the cape moved and exactly how low the doublet hung.

Then I decided how detailed I was going to be. You COULD make this as one piece (sew sleeves into the outer tunic/doublet and sew a “skirt” to the waist of the doublet instead of a full undertunic). I chose to break it into individual garments for 2 reasons:

1. Ian McKellen—in a behind the scenes costume featurette from the Lord of the Rings DVDs, while discussing discussing Gandalf’s costume Ian McKellen shows us the under tunic he wears. Movie audiences never see this under tunic beneath Gandalf’s outer robes, but the layered garments made the costume feel like real clothing to Sir Ian, which likely assisted with his embodiment of Gandalf.  I wanted Greg to feel like he was wearing “real” clothing.

2. We also wanted this costume to be multifunctional. Based on the level of detail Greg wanted, this costume was going to require substantial time and money, so I wanted Greg to be able to use the various components of Ezio’s costume for other things. For example, he might wear the under tunic with a different doublet to a Renaissance fair. Or wear the doublet (with the hood detached) with other medieval or renaissance garb.

Before I continue,  let me direct you to two of the internet sources that provided a great deal of guidance and inspiration:

I am particularly impressed with Muledex and Forcebewitya. Forcebewitya (deviant art) has made an AMAZING Ezio costume, in fact he has done a couple iterations of Ezio. Take a look through his gallery at all of his cosplay among others. Last I checked, he is willing to sell his pattern of Ezio’s hood and doublet. And Muledex provides video tutorials for all costume components including accessories. He also provides guidelines to build a pattern template from your own measurements. He has created these tutorials for multiple Assassins Creed costumes.

Each cosplayer takes a different approach to the costume construction. Before you start, decide how much time do you have, how much money and effort to you want (are you able) to put into it.

The Components

NOTE: there are a few variations between the opening cinematic, the initial promo images of Ezio (presumably before the game was finished), and the in-game play. For example, Ezio’s undertunic is split in the back in some illustrations and unsplit in others.

When I look at Ezio, this is what I see:

A longer undertunic with baggy sleeves.

  • sleeves have spiral black trim (it looks gray at times, but I think this is an optical illusion)
  • ruffled cuffs
  • ruffled collar lining

A structured doublet (with red lining):

  • shoulder flanges are sawtooth, made of angled rectangles (the shape of this differd between the pre-game cinematic and the “official” marketing shot of Ezio). I ultimately fell somewhere in the middle, guided mostly by what was easiest to sew.
  • that had a lot of  detailed topstitching…if you are familiar with corsets, the structure of the doublet reminded me of that. It was not one solid piece, it was made of sections.
  • tall collar
  • sections at the chest that have some ornate design (possibly this was silk brocade)

“Flaps” (I seriously don’t know what to call these things that extend from his waist, under the doublet)— 4 red with white trim and 2 smaller white flaps.

A half-cape with red lining

A hood (which may or may not be directly attached to the doublet), but nevertheless has to be drafted separate from the rest of the doublet

A red sash beneath the belt.

(Additional hardware accessories are obvious, but not discussed right now. Part of my agreement in making this for Greg was that he would take responsibility for the hardware.)

That adds up to 6 individual garments, each made of mulitiple pattern pieces.

Next installment I’ll discuss my pattern design process.

Greg as Ezio, perching above the con.

UPDATE on the Ezio Costume

Greg as Ezio, perching above the con.

Remember my mishap with bleeding taffeta?

UPDATE (7/8/12): Today I finally finished ripping out the seams and removing the red lining of the vest and cape. I hand washed the white components with a bar of fels-naptha and then tossed them into the wash (cold water, medium cycle).

Result? IT WORKED! The costume is white again! (Ok there are a couple tiny pink stains, but I had to stare at the costume for about 5 minutes before I saw them all.) I doubt the casual observe will notice. And if they do…well I challenge them to point it out  (see, I’ll be dressing as one of Ezio’s assassin apprentices).

A friend sent me information on colorfasting fabrics. I’ll be sending the taffeta through this process, but I won’t reuse it for Ezio. (I’m thinking maybe a “Number 6″ red dress from Battlestar Galactica down the line.) I will look for another red fabric that is less likely to rub off (and colorfast it anyway).

PAX is just under 2 months away. QUICK, hurry, sew!

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Wobble-Wobble, a Desk Chair UPDATE

My running-around-the-house-making-happy-noises victory over the sinking desk chair is under review. Blogged about HERE.

I noticed last night that the chair seat itself has begun to wobble back and forth. I think I have identified the cause: the PVC pipe is not resting flush with the base of the seat, and this has caused the pipe to become angled when I sit on the chair. I am hoping that wedging something between the top of the PVC pipe and the chair seat will straighten this out.

I will keep you posted. Until then, I’ll be sitting silently in my non-swivel chair.

….. le sigh

I went to lay the chair on its side so I could get a photograph to go with this post, and the whole seat just fell off!!

As you can see, the placement of the shaft in relation to this whole in the base of the seat is off-center. This is the source of the wobbling.

If I had a hammer, I'd hammer in the morning...

If I had a hammer…. #30DaysofGood

As part of their #30DaysfoGood, Good.com has posted a list of tools they recommend for common DIY projects.

I had a portable toolkit through college and graduate school, but it was best suited for IKEA furniture construction. When I moved in with my boyfriend, he came with a wide range of tools (hand and power).

If you are a DIY-er and live in the Seattle area, and don’t have the means to buy a bunch of new tools, let me tell you about the West Seattle Tool Library.

If you live up to 60 miles away from West Seattle, you can become a member of the tool library and “check out” tools for free. The membership application includes a liability waiver and an opportunity to donate to the library to help them manage operating costs.

The library is open Thursdays, Saturdays, and Sundays. On Thursdays they often offer workshops that highlight DIY projects or teach you how to use specific sets of tools.

None of my projects have gotten large enough to require tools we don’t already own, but I’ll be signing up this month in anticipation of future Self-Sufficient Summer projects.

If I had a hammer, I’d hammer in the morning… (Image Credit: OZinOH)

#30DaysofGood

I stumbled onto the 30 Days of Good series while on Tumblr. I’ve only been poking around the website for a few minutes, but Good seems to be an online magazine/blog that covers the usual news topics but with an emphasis on “doing good.” From their site:

What Is GOOD?

In a world where things too often don’t work, GOOD seeks a path that does. Left, right. In, out. Greed, altruism. Us, them. These are the defaults and they are broken. We are the alternative model. We are the reasonable people who give a damn. No dogma. No party lines. No borders. We care about what works–what is sustainable, prosperous, productive, creative, and just–for all of us and each of us. This isn’t easy, but we are not afraid to fail. We’ll figure it out as we go.

Call it a new party, call it a 21st century collaboration, call it an army, call it your new home. Or just call it GOOD.

We are people, businesses, moms, kids, artists, organizations, policymakers, students, teachers, and engineers. All united in one simple idea, each elevated by being connected. Let’s do what works and never default to what doesn’t. Join us, and together we’ll power what works.

In July, a series called “30 Days of Good” will focus on DIY projects and skills. In June they covered cooking and making your own meals.

As this dovetails nicely with my “Self-Sufficient Summer”, I will be following their series and maybe I’ll be inspired to tackle more DIY projects around the house.

And if you plan to join in, don’t forget to include the #30daysofgood hashtag in your tweets!

VoteEnvironment

Vote the Environment 2012 (via Patagonia)

Image credit: Patagonia.com

Patagonia never fails to inspire me.

Patagonia is preparing for the 2012 election season and will be touring the nation with the band Wilco. Their goal is to register voters and raise awareness about legislation (and the candidates) that will affect the environment for better or worse. Follow this link to learn more.

(I wanted to embed their video, but wordpress wasn’t having any of it.)

Vote the Environment (via Patagonia)

If you are curious about how your representatives in congress voted in regards to the environment, take a look at the 2011 National Environmental Scorecard. It has been put together by the League of Conservation Voters.

You can do a quick search by state: http://www.lcv.org/scorecard/

Here are the scores for Washington State representatives.

Or, if you have extra time, you can read the multi-page PDF report: http://www.lcv.org/scorecard/scorecardweb.pdf

~~~~~

To paraphrase Patagonia’s sentiment: Vote for the world you want [your family and descendants] to live in.

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Sinking Desk Chair: Repaired

In an effort to save money and continue to learn useful skills, I’m looking for ways to depend more on myself (for problems small and large) and rely less on buying something pre-made. My self-sufficient summer continues! 

PROBLEM: Every time I sit in my chair, it sinks

It is no secret that I spend A LOT of time in my desk chair. It has been with me since my first year of graduate school (2006). After I finished my thesis, the computer desk chair became a sewing chair as well. Most recently, I’ve been spending more time in it for the job application process, and over the past week I’ve noticed that the seat has been gradually sinking every time I sit on it.

As of Monday it wouldn’t even rise back up.

This proved ergonomically problematic and I started daydreaming about buying a new desk chair. But swivel desk chairs are expensive, and I am not in a place where I feel comfortable buying non-essentials.

SOLUTION: Take matters into my own hands

Eventually I remembered that I was supposed to be making responsible (economically and environmentally) decisions and I should just REPAIR the chair.

Based on a Google search, a sinking swivel chair is caused by a problem with the gas cylinder. It is replaceable, but gas cylinders can run between 20 and 80. I could buy a new chair for that cost. Environmentally Sustainable? YES. Economically feasible? NO.

Then, after a bit more Google searching, I found this tip:

I can do that, and more importantly, I can afford that. So I headed off to Home Depot to pick up  1.5-inch diameter PVC pipe, and some heavy duty metal zip ties for hoses. It cost me $6.00 (plus gas). [Word of caution, when asking the Home Depot staff about the materials you have just picked up, make sure to mention you are working on a NON-plumbing project. Otherwise, they will freak out that you are buying things that will not be water tight.]

IMPLEMENTATION: Rosie the Riveter rises again

In less than an hour:

I cut the pipe (4.75 inch long and then in half lengthwise);

I did not realize PVC would be that easy to saw through.

Sandwiched some craft foam inside the pipe to ensure a tight fit around the chair shaft; and

Be safe!

Secured the pipe in place with the metal bands.

Success! *Runs around house making happy noises*