![]() The final shirt I made started out with a different garment reference. I just drew a line from the gap toward my nipples and sewed the darts there. I fixed this in one shirt by creating little darts out from the armhole. Men won’t really run into a problem with this, but the fabric has to create a dome over breasts, which creates the gap. ![]() Envy’s has more of a halter look, so I didn’t originally account for armhole gapping. The only problem is that the armhole of that shirt and Envy’s are different. ![]() The first two shirts I made were based off of a sleeveless turtleneck shirt I own that I think fits me really well. Other elements that make up the costume include: To be fair, making test versions with the stretch fabric was good because I wouldn’t know how the garment would actually lay with a non-stretch fabric. I’m glad I did because I ended up making the shirt three times! That’s what happens when I don’t use a pattern or make a mockup first. I usually overestimate how much fabric I’ll need just in case I make mistakes. ![]() I purchased 3 yards of Yaya Han’s stretch pleather fabric and cut all of the pieces from that. Here’s my journey on Envy from Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood.Įnvy’s costume is composed of a few sewing elements, all of which I made from the same fabric. In the short amount of time I had between finishing grad school applications and C2E2 (which took place April 6-8), I was able to squeeze in a simple cosplay. All of that is done now, so I can turn my attention back to cosplay. For those of you wondering where I’ve been the last few months, I took a cosplay hiatus to apply to grad school. ![]()
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