CHRISTIANNE BAKEWELL COSTUME DESIGN
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About Christianne

Christianne is a NYC based freelance costume designer who grew up in Nebraska. She received her BA in Theatre Studies from Northern Arizona University and her MFA in Costume Design at Rutgers University.
​Christianne's most recent design work includes Bitter Greens at 59E59, Bye Bye Birdie​ at Quincy Community Theatre, and CLASS, an indie short that was recently in the Rhode Island International Film Festival. 
She also has worked as a Costume Production Assistant on shows such as Orange is the New Black and Katy Keene.
Picture
Photo credit: Jennifer Tchiakpe

Costumer Hack-Light box

9/28/2015

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If you're a poor grad student like myself, you know owning fancy tools like a light box is a luxury. Hopefully your university should have one or two for use (mine does), but if you are at home rendering and realize you need a duplicate character, here is my hack for a light box.

Supplies:
  1. Rendering to be copied
  2. Paper such as marker paper (needs to be thin. No Bristol board!)
  3. Painter's tape or masking tape
  4. Pencil

Make sure your original and "new copy" are lined up. Tape the corners to the window very lightly. Trace away!

Needless to say, make sure it's light outside. Don't try this at night unless you live in my apartment with a street lamp right outside the window. Even then, don't do it at night. Daytime tracing for best results. 

This really doesn't replace a light box or scanning your design and printing another. But, if you need it on paper that doesn't work in your printer, this will work in a pinch.  

If you're exploring designing a show  but don't want to sketch out all the characters, check out the article: Interpreting Design Without Drawing. 
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How many times do I need to read the play?

9/1/2015

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The cheeky answer would be "as many times as it takes". But I'm not cheeky today.

  1. Just read it! Read the play once all the way through from start to finish (in one sitting if possible) to get the gist of the play. Afterwards I usually write myself a quick synopsis by act or scene to make sure I retained the plot of the play. 
  2. Search for line and stage cues. The second time make notes of any line that is specific to clothing, time of day, time of year, etc. Anything that you need to know when clothing the characters. Is it early morning and raining in Georgia in August? Make note of that. What year or years does the play encompass? 
  3. Learn about the characters. I usually do a little of this in the beginning too (This is a guideline, sometimes I smoosh these together). Better understand each character you are dressing. Find out their age, social rank, etc. This is much easier to do in a play such as The Little Foxes as opposed to Titanic: The Musical. In larger productions try to do this at least for the main characters. 
  4. After meeting with the design team read it again. They probably mentioned something you missed. 
  5. Read it, again. Just do it. You probably missed something again. 


Five could be the magic number. For the purposes of this post five is, but take it as a guideline, not a rule. If it is a play I've designed before I skip straight to #2 or #3. After meeting with the design team and director reading the play with their ideas and vision in mind also allows things to come forward that you may have overlooked the first few reads. But, when it doubt read it again, with a pad of paper and pen by your side. 

Yes, I have written about reading the script before in one of my Life Lessons from the Costume Shop and the number of times and order has changed since I've written that post. These are guidelines as I stated above. Read both, see which you prefer. 

Once you've read your play, check out this article on places to do research other than the internet! 


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