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Hyena feet! |
As you may have gathered, here at Cooking and
Cosplay, we do more than make delicious things to eat. We also take
costuming very seriously, and have attended Dragon Con in Altanta for
the past several years. This year, we will be attending as the Hyenas
from the Lion King. I will be Shenzi, and Stoney will be Bonzai.
We've modeled our costume concept off of the Broadway hyenas:
So,
step 1 for making these babies involved constructing hyena feet for our
feet. For our front legs, we will be doing hand stilts with paws
attached (and that will be another post). Although I will admit that
the fur feet are time consuming, they really are not hard to construct.
Step 1:
Get yourself some foam. We used a block of Premium Poly Foam, 4" x 22"x 22".
Cut
the foam down into manageable blocks, and then place your shoe on the
foam and draw an outline. Once your outline is drawn, carve out a hole
for the shoe to sit in, like so:
Glue the cut-out piece to the shoe using hot glue.
Step 2:
When you have your shoe glued in the foam, draw your paw shape on top.
Step 3:
Cut
the paw shape out, and use scraps to cover the back of the shoe with
hot glue. Once you have everything secured to the shoe, you can work on
carving a better paw shape into the foam:
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Finished carved foam |
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Top pair: work in progress on the carve.
Bottom pair: finished |
Step 4:
Using
whatever fur you decide will work for your feet (we used a short pile
black fur), drape the fur over your carved feet, and cut out a square
that is about 1-2 inches larger around than your feet. Next, pin the
fur onto the foot form. Once you have everything pinned, you can start
cutting (this may involve unpinning and repinning sections). Begin by
cutting away any fabric that covers the sole of the shoe. At this
point, cut slits between the carved toes, so that you can get the fabric
to lay nicely around the toes. Next, you can start to cut out the
darts (a dart is a small triangle of fabric that helps to make a flat
piece of cloth into a moldable form capable of going around all the
curves of the form), which will allow the fabric to lay flat on the paws
without wrinkles once you have glued it down.
We
made the cuts on the center of the main toe and around the sides of the
other toes. This is fairly simple to do: unpin the fabric on the toe
and pull it tight to get a triangle of fabric that hangs out or can be
folded over. Next, cut off the triangle of fabric and pin down the
remainder. If it overlaps a little, that's good. If it doesn't reach
and leaves a space open then you can fill it in later with a strip of
excess fabric (aka, everything is fixable!). You will also need to cut a
triangle out at the heel, but you should do this after you have already
glued down the paw (it makes it easier to pull everything tight, and
get everything to line up).
Step 5:
Start
glueing your fur down. You will have to unpin sections as you work on
them. Use a hot glue gun and glue small sections at a time (make sure
to pull them tight). After glueing a section, hold it down firmly until
your glue is set, and then continue on down from that section. Start
at the toes. The way to go about it is to start at the base of the
center toe and then work to the tip. Next, do the same for the
surrounding toes. Once you have all the toes glued down, unpin the
rest of the fabric and start glueing the top and sides from front to the
back.
Step 6:
Once
you get to the opening for your foot, cut out a hole for your foot (an
exacto knife helps), making this hole far smaller then your foot so you
can then cut slits at the corners, allowing you to cover the inside lip
of the shoe.
Next, cut the dart out of the back to
remove any wrinkles. Then just glue down the rest. Also glue down any
fabric that wraps around underneath the shoe on the foam, then cut off
any excess that covers the sole of the shoe.
Step 7:
If
you find that you have bits of foam showing, fear not! You can either
glue down more fur, or use a sharpie the color of the fur to color in
any uncovered bits.
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