This past weekend was the 3rd Annual Funky Junk Fashion show at Green Light. Every year they invite anyone interested to create an outfit out of recycled materials. Green light is a local boutique in downtown Missoula which specializes in green products; clothes made with organic cotton, upcycled garments, fair trade items, sustainable home decor, etc.
I competed last year and had a blast. I entered with my friend Sofi and we both spontaneously made our outfits 3 days before the show. This is the outfit I made last year; It won “most creative use of recycled materials” which awarded me a $75 gift certificate!
This year I put more time into my outfit, and had my vision developing since last year. I knew I wanted to use coffee filters, and had been salvaging them from our compost over the summer and fall. (I did have a few set backs when entire piles gathered mold)
This was my first time working on a dress form, which was so much fun. It’s like a 3- D inspiration wall of all your ideas; you drape your materials and they suddenly come to life.
I started on this very curvy form because my slimmer one was unavailable. I bought this one in an antique shop, and I’m pretty sure it’s from the 40’s. VERY old and falling apart but it looks awesome sitting in my room.
My first draping session with this dress form, was expiremental. I didn’t have my coffee filters together yet, so I used pattern paper where I wanted the filters to go. I originally thought I’d make a mini dress out of the rubber bike inner tubes but they were brutal to sew through by hand (I don’t have an industrial sewing machine). I remembered I’d kept my scraps of canvas from my painting class, so I dug them out, and draped a short pleated skirt. I knew I'd saved those scraps for some reason ;)
I then retrieved my slimmer form which was practically identical to my model's actual measurements (which made fittings so much easier). So here you see my outfit coming together. The top is re-used from last year, but I basically had to re-stitch the whole thing anyways, plus re-work all the closures in the back, which lead to me stabbing my fingers with pins and killing my fingernails since I tend to use them as a thimble. If that makes any sense to you…
You also can see the canvas skirt, and my first steps in laying down the coffee filters. Keep in mind that this is all just pinned together, so the next steps involved laying down the permanent stitches, figuring out how and where to put closures so I can get it on and off my model etc. etc.
You also can see the canvas skirt, and my first steps in laying down the coffee filters. Keep in mind that this is all just pinned together, so the next steps involved laying down the permanent stitches, figuring out how and where to put closures so I can get it on and off my model etc. etc.
Below is photo of my model getting dressed the night of, a good view of the canvas skirt (Which I tried dip dying in coffee which looked more like I just spilled coffee on it.. not sure whether I'd do that again) and this is without the trail of coffee filters attached to it. The other photo is a close up of my Bicycle Bit Earrings, this pair in particular was inspired by galaxies.
This year I won crowd favorite. My model was Janyssa Overturf, just a friend who knows how to work it. She had her hair and make up done by Boom Swagger, who do everyone’s for the show, and as you can see from the group photo (which wasn’t everyone just to clarify) that they went for a consistent look this year, not exactly my styling request but I think it worked and I did like that everyone looked cohesive and unified.
so just a side note about the skirt; I ended up making the train removable, it was a layer of pattern paper that went down to the floor, and I glued the coffee filters on(and they are used ones, hence the coffee grounds still in tact).
To the left is a photo of myself on the runway, and to the right is Janyssa in motion. Funny story; right before she stepped up to the runway she bent over and her top came unsnapped (I know it makes me look bad but I mean I could've used safety pins, so at least I put in legitimate closures despite their failure). She was so good at keeping her cool, just walked with one arm behind her holding her top on, kept calm and collected, and a slow even pace, and THIS is why I have her model my stuff, because nothing phases her, I know I'd have completely panicked.