Sunday, October 6, 2013

Wonderful Ice Cream Duster



Ted Puffer modeling his own creation: The Wonderful Ice Cream Duster
Wonderful Ice Cream Duster
This is the first full scale garment that I made for fun.  Up to this point I've been making performance vests for the singing group I'm in: Happy Notes!  The group performs a variety of songs around the High Desert.  We usually perform in black vests, but for holiday shows I wanted to make something a little more entertaining.  I created 5 reversible vests which show festive and holiday themed patterns.  I'll post photos of those later on.
There was a duster that I bought ages ago from Fredericks of Hollywood, back when not only did Fedrick's sell clothing for men, but also at a time when clothes were actually made in the U.S.A.  This should give you an idea of how old this duster was.  I loved it like crazy but time was not kind to it.  It was black, but after awhile the black dye started to bleed out, so it was a mottled black color.  Still cool, but not the image that I was looking for.  So the duster stayed in the back of my closet for years and I've been carting it around to multiple states, unwilling to let it go but not really ready to put it on again.
Then I took a sewing class and had an idea.  Maybe, just maybe, it would be possible for me to take the garment and take it apart piece by piece and use it as a template for a new duster.  Could I do it?  Sure I could!  After about a week of messing around with material, I made the Wonderful Ice Cream Duster!

To make the look complete, I put the QR code which leads to the Talent For Raw main website.  This is something that I knew that I had to do, bu was also aware that it could ruin the jacket but good.  After all, I was putting an untried (by me) method of painting on material.  The design I wanted would have the look of actually being branded onto the material.  When all is said and done, I think the results worked out pretty well!

I didn't realize it at the time, but imbedding a QR code into a jacket isn't really a new thing.  It's been done a handful of times before, but I really like my approach the best.  There are some sites where people have cross-stiched the pattern onto the garment, or made a new textile out of the blocky pattern.  But my idea was to have something that looked added on after the fact.  So while it's not incorporated into the design of the garment, it really stands out on its own.
This is the QR code to redirect to the main site for Ted Puffer on the back of the jacket.
Wonderful Ice Cream Duster QR Code

No comments:

Post a Comment