Monday, August 27, 2012

diy luggage creativity

According to my mother, my sister, and Little Town on the Prairie, one of the biggest purchases before college is luggage. And a computer and sheets and a ridiculous amount of food to have in your dorm room at any given time. So when I got my boring, black luggage, I had one obvious task: this needed to be decorated so I could spot it from the sea of boring, black luggage.


My artistic ability falls right about at stick people, so I decided to write quotes all over my bag. Easy, and a great way to personalize things that lack originality.

My books of choice

This is an easy job. Grab a stack of your favorite books or movies or internet videos (though those can't quite be grabbed), and pick your favorite quotes. Then just write them on your luggage with a black or silver sharpie (black for things like red and green bags, silver for things like black and navy blue bags).

You could do this on luggage like I did, or on a notebook, a mug, or even a piece of paper for a kind of quirky poster. Basically, a blank surface that needs more creativity.  I'm even thinking about doing this on the very basic grey curtain in my dorm.

Monday, August 6, 2012

so this is love...

That magical summer before I went away to college, I fell in love. Completely head over heels in love. An "I'm planning the wedding" kind of love--or at least the dress.

Nope, it's not some romantic boy who swept me off my feet. It's a dress. For many Titanic fans, it's the dress: what we call the "Dinner Dress".




Really, it's a love 15 years in the making. At the tender age of three, I fell for the movie (or at least with the ads I saw on TV) and I made Rose and Jack paper dolls. Back then, I wasn't allowed to touch the sewing machine because I couldn't reach the pedal and see the fabric at the same time. Otherwise, you better believe that a toddler-sized, poorly done version of Rose's "pretty dress" would have been made up faster than you could say "PG-13".

Now, I've finally got the sewing/designing abilities to start thinking about the dress in a more three-dimensional, fabric-and-sequins kind of way. So during this in-between summer, I started doing the extensive research necessary to turn a toddler's daydream into a twenty-something's reality. And I found what a lot of people have found: the same three images, inaccurate reproductions, and the lovely concept sketches. But these sites turned out to be better than the rest.

sensibility.com's Titanic Project: This was the first site I ever saw about how to sew the Dinner Dress. I was thirteen and still sewing my hems on the machine. But unlike my sketchy sewing abilities then, the site actually was and is sound. It has a lot of good recreations to look at and some great information for making your own.

humblebeeandme.com: I stumbled on this site because (drumroll please) I was looking for pictures of the Dinner dress, and her reproduction is undoubtably stunning. It's not perfectly accurate (sorry, Marie!), but it is an excellent jumping off point. It's defninitely worth a poke around for all things Titanic.

make-it-count.org: I was led here from Humblebee and Me.  Together with the previous site, it perfectly describes how Marie made her dress.


titanicdinnerdress.blogspot.com: What a pity that this woman never posted the end result of all the research and drawing! But there is nothing like her pictures. Not the Sensibility library. Not my library. Not even the Costume Designer's library. Because she has A. the left side and B. the back. You could sift through dozens of stills and watch the scenes til your eyes dry up in your sockets from lack of sleep, but you will still not get the angles that she has from a costume display exhibit.

She has pictures like this--and more!

And of course, the classic: The Costumer's Guide. It's definitely a good place to start for picture research.

I keep telling myself that someday this beautiful dress will one day be in my closet. Until then, I'm going to watch the movie until my tear ducts keel over from overuse.

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