Do your want costumes that are over $100 without the accessories? Here is a great story about a girl who took that $80 dollar
costume and made the same thing for a lot cheaper.
It’s a down economy and a presidential election year—could there
possibly be a MORE appropriate 2012 Halloween costume than a homemade
Statue of Liberty designed for 5 bucks? I doubt it. (Hello, Humility? I’m sorry, she’s out to lunch.)
Last year my daughter came across a very nice Statue of Liberty
costume in a catalog, but with torch, robe and crown, it came to about
$80. While I was pleased about her costume choice considering the
less-than-original-princess-and-fairy-costumes of years past, I decided I
could do better with my own resources.
From around the house, we gathered the following for Lady Liberty:
Cardboard
Sage green paint leftover from a home-painting project
Black paint
A princess crown (for Liberty’s crown)
An empty ribbon spool (for torch)
Foam sheets used for packing breakable items (torch flame)
Small flashlight (torch “light”)
(Also needed: Ponytail holder, stapler, safety pins, scissors, markers and duct tape)
At the thrift store, we purchased:
Two sage green curtains, $5 (for robes)
Then we went to work. Here’s how it came together:
Instructions
• The Crown: Cut a cardboard piece to cover the
entire front of any child’s princess crown; paint green and let dry.
Once it’s dry, paint black rectangles across the green piece. Cut long,
skinny triangles from cardboard; paint green. Once all paint is dry,
attach front piece to crown with duct tape. Attach crown spires with a
stapler. Touch up paint once crown is assembled, if necessary.
• The Torch: Paint a large empty spool of ribbon
with green paint. Using markers, color foam sheets yellow and orange and
cut 3-4 pieces into a tear drop shape for flames. Glue foam flames
around the top inside edges of the spool, leaving a hole through the
middle. Slide small flashlight into the spool with the light part up. If
the flashlight doesn’t fit exactly, add more foam around the edges.
When the flashlight is turned on, it makes a great Liberty torch that
actually lights—fun for nighttime trick or treating!
• The Robe: I do not sew, but pinning curtains to
form a robe worked fine, and was less work for me. Only thing is, you
have to re-pin if you wear the costume again. Pin one curtain loosely
around child so it drapes around the body. Fold second curtain into a
long rectangle and drape over one shoulder like a sash; secure under the
other arm with a large ponytail holder (easier than pins, and
removable).
For more information see Colorado Parent.
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