We are all about costumes at our house! 
Any excuse to dress up is a win in my book. With Halloween approaching I
 wanted to share Little Plum's DIY costume from last year (I'm still 
busily plotting Halloween 2014!). We go to a themed party each year, and
 last year was our first attempt at incorporating a baby into our 
costumes. We needed something easily tote-able as Little Plum was not 
yet walking. After some brainstorming and Pinterest searching, we settled
 on chefs with Little Plum as a lobster. The adult costumes were easy 
enough. We grabbed some cheap catering aprons, chef hats, and bow ties 
all from the craft store. Done. 
For Little Plum, I knew we 
needed something comfy and easily removable in the event of baby rage or
 dirty diapers. I began by tracing a pattern from one of her shirts with
 raglan style sleeves (think baseball-tee sleeves) because these are way easier to sew than set-in sleeves.
 I added large scallops to the bottom hem to make the lobster tail.
  
  | 
| Body pattern | 
The 
whole costume was made out of fleece to minimize hemming. I 
finished off the back and neck openings with coordinating bias tape, 
leaving the ends long so that the costume tied like a smock over her 
regular clothes.
  | 
| Front View | 
  | 
| Back View | 
For the claws, I measured the width of her 
sleeves and the length from elbow to wrist to get the general claw 
dimensions, then free handed a claw pattern, leaving enough seam 
allowance to stuff the claws with 1/4 inch foam. I also left a large 
seam allowance on the back end of the claws to give me plenty of room to
 attach them to the sleeves. I made four claws total, two for each arm. 
  | 
| Claw pattern - the back edge is the width of the sleeves | 
I chose to sew the claws on about 
half way up her arms so that she would have easy access to her hands. I 
attached two claws to each sleeve by hand, first sewing each claw on and
 then tacking the two claws together on each side. 
  | 
| Detail view of where the claws were attached and then tacked together | 
  | 
| Here you can see how much sleeve was poking through the claws | 
The hat was another bit of
 tricky business. I ended up heavily modifying a pilot cap pattern to 
fit Little Plum's massive noggin. A pilot cap has two seams down the 
crown which is the perfect place to attach antennae.
  | 
| Hat pattern  | 
I made a casing out
 of bias tape and stuffed it with pipe cleaners for the antennae, which I
 then sandwiched into the pilot cap seams prior to sewing it up. I 
finished off the edges of the cap with bias tape, leaving long tails for
 ties. The antennae are a little floppy when the hat isn't on a 
head. I left the casing extra long on the inside of the cap so that no 
pipe cleaners were jabbing into baby heads.
The hilarious 
Muppet-like eyeballs totally make the costume! For those, I cut out 
large circles from white knit fabric. I attached solid black safety eyes
 to the center of the circle (you can find safety eyes in the bear/doll 
making section of most craft stores). Then I just hand stitched a quick 
running stitch around the perimeter of the circle and stuffed it full of
 fiberfill as I pulled the stitches tight. Once the eyeballs were 
stitched closed, I tacked them onto the hat by hand.
Overall I 
was super pleased with how the lobster costume turned out. It was 
completely tolerable to a baby and looked freaking hilarious! We 
carried her around in a huge canning pot lined with bath towels. 
Do you DIY Halloween? Do you have a family costume theme?
 
This is so sweet! Love the lobster costume! Must b delicious!
ReplyDeleteLOVE THIS!!!
ReplyDeleteLobster baby mom chef dad chef in a pot on fire say yes YouTube
ReplyDeleteDad chef mom chef lobster baby in a pot on fire say yes youtube
ReplyDeleteI love this!! Do you have printable patterns available??
ReplyDelete