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Thursday 20 February 2014

The Chewbacchus Parade Mardi Gras Costumes


Midori Tajiri-Byrd, Unicorn,during the Chewbacchus parade 2013.
Mardi Gras is upon us here in New Orleans. Beads, floats, brass bands, and... geeks! Yes, geeks. Our next parade, which rolls this Saturday, February 22, is the Intergalactic Krewe Of Chewbacchus, a strange krewe of science fiction, fantasy and cosplay fans (or BacchanAlians).

I caught up with Midori Tajiri-Byrd, artist, costumer, milliner, baker, make-up artist, writer, musician, parade captain, and weirdo. Midori is essentially a force of nature. She creates amazing costumes, has modeled for me, has done make-up for my photography sessions, and marches in several parades. In amongst all of those things, Midori is captain of the Mystic Krewe Of P. U. E. W. C.

Tuesday 18 February 2014

Mardi Gras Costume and Accessories








Countdown to Mardi gras begins!!!! GO Purple, green & Gold!...
Mardi Gras – the season of music, parades, picnics, floats and excitement is just around the corner, things are starting happening and a lot more to go. When people talk about Mardi Gras (literally "fat Tuesday" in French), they could mean the entire season that stretches from Twelfth Night (January 6) all the way to Ash Wednesday, or they could mean just that one wild Tuesday. Popular practices like wearing masks and costumes, sports competition are going around. In New Orleans, Mardi gras revellers dress up in masked costumes and go to the streets with food and drinks. The closer it gets to Lent, the wilder the parties get. On this Carnival season buy our featured Mardi gras themed costumes and go ahead with the complimenting accessories. We have the most popular, distinguished and modish collection at PartyBell.com. What are you waiting for? Go on the streets for your celebration with this wide range of costumes, let all the others jealous of you. Do not forget to give it a try. 
If you are planning to give your home a Mardi Gras look then have something up your sleeves. And since Mardi Gras is about excess, let your motto be, "Why decorate when you can over decorate? Surprise your family by decorating your house with a huge collection of decorations at PartyBell.com .Buy colored balloons, crepes, ribbons. Need some party decoration inspiration? In New Orleans, traditional Mardi Gras colors are purple, gold, and green. You can buy the beads and feathered masks at our store.
Continue the over-the-top theme of Mardi Gras by shopping at Partybell.com where you do not have to stand in the long queues or rush to the physical stores. Choose anything and everything from our exclusive and readily available party supplies for Mardi Gras at affordable prices.
So wear these costumes, get some friends, make a float, be a walking float or line the streets to catch some beads, Mister, then be entertained and dance the night away!!! So Come and shop with us and make PartyBell a part of your celebrations and we assure you that you will definitely to come back to us again for your all party needs.


Mardi Gras Queen Adult Costume
Description: Includes:Dress, Mask and Gloves. Does not include stockings or shoes.
Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Manufacturer/Brand: Rasta Imposta



Mardi Gras Plush Floppy Jester Hat
This product includes a hat.
Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Material: polyester




This costume includes headpiece and attached jumpsuit with attached vest and shoe covers. Does not include beads or scepter.  
Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Material: 100% Polyester exclusive of decoration





A tri-colored turkey feather boa with Green, Yellow and Purple feathers.  
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Availability: The colors/sizes above are confirmed in stock & ready to ship!
Material: feathers
Manufacturer/Brand: Forum Novelties Inc



Mardi Gras Decor and Street Lights Props Wall Add-Ons

 Mardi Gras Decor and Street Lights includes 21 Wall Add-Ons printed on lightweight plastic. Wall Add-Ons include: (1) Sign Banner - 46" wide, (2) Mask Decorations - 8" wide, (2) Fan Decorations - 10" diameter, (4) Ball Decorations: 2 - 8" diameter, 2 - 11" diameter, (6) Wall Posters: 1 - 11" wide, 2 - 10" wide, 3 - 12" wide, (6) Street Lights: 3 - 30" high, 3 - 45" high. All dimensions are approximate.
Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Material: plastic




Description: Includes one half mask.
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Availability: The colors/sizes above are confirmed in stock & ready to ship!
Material: Polyester



 Mardi Gras Jumbo Glitz N Gleam Bow Tie is made of 100% polyester with green, gold and purple sparkling Disco Dots. Bow Tie features a simple elastic band (no actual tying is needed!) Tie measures approximately 11.5" wide x 8" high. The other side of the Tie has solid green Disco Dots that could be worn for St.
Patrick's Day!
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Care Instruction: Spot Clean Only.


 Includes: (8) themed 9 fl. oz. paper cups. Cups are versatile enough to serve warm or cold beverages.  Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Material: Paper
Care Instruction: Disposable



 This product includes one pair of glasses.
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Availability: The colors/sizes above are confirmed in stock & ready to ship!
Material: Plastic-PC


This costume includes dress and shrug. Does not include mask, beads, or shoes.
Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Material: 100% Polyester




Includes a Green, Gold and Purple Vest made from velvety polyester and gold lame' fabrics with foam lining for shaping. One size fits most adults. Shirt, bow tie, and pants not included.
Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Material: All Polyester Fabrics Exclusive Of Trim
Care Instruction: Hand Wash Cold Water with Mild Detergent Hang To Dry






Includes: Purple and green hood, shirt and pants. Shoes not included.
Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Material: 100% Polyester exclusive of trim
Care Instruction: Dry Clean Only.
Manufacturer/Brand: Forum Novelties Inc



This product includes a mini hat headband.
Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Material: Feather, paper
Manufacturer/Brand: Amscan





Holographic Mardi Gras Mask 37" Foil Balloon
Shipping: This product ships Worldwide.
Material: foil
Manufacturer/Brand: Party Destination


Krewe du Vieux 2014

"Krewe du Vieux and Krewe Delusion bring a party to the French Quarter and Faubourg Marigny," reports Cate Root.

    See Root's day-by-day 2014 Mardi Gras parade planner.

We want to see your (PG-rated) costumes, revelers. Share your pictures in the 'Mardi Gras en masse photo gallery' this weekend and all throughout Carnival season. Here's how:

    Sign into your NOLA.com profile, or create one for free or sign in with Facebook
    Upload your photos
    Find your image, title it, explain what it is in the caption and type "mardi gras" in the "Tags" section
    Select the "Mardi Gras moments en masse" gallery
    Click the 'Upload' button

If you can't be in New Orleans, check out our live cam on Jackson Square. The parades don't (officially) go through the Square, but you'll be sure to spot some festive folks this weekend.

Little Rascals Little Rascals children's parade

The seventh annual Krewe of Little Rascals children's parade sponsored by the city of Pascagoula will march at noon, Saturday, Feb. 15, starting from Beach Park. If it rains, they'll parade Feb. 22.

The krewe's slogan is "Today's little rascals are tomorrow's leaders and our hope for the future!"

Participation is open to all children up to age 12 with those under age 6 accompanied by an adult. Children are encouraged to wear costumes and will walk, ride, skate or be pulled along the route. Awards for first, second and third place, as well as honorable mention, will be given for best costumes and best floats.

In keeping with tradition, the school system's administrator of the year will lead the parade.

The king and queen will come from the city's elementary schools, which alternate the honor of providing the royalty. Teachers from that school submit names from which a king and queen are drawn.

More information about the parade is available by contacting Rebecca Davis at 938-6604 or rdavis@cityofpascagoula.com, or LaLinda Grace at 938-2352 or lgrace@cityofpascagoula.com

Friday 14 February 2014

Mardi Gras of the North Costume ideas

WOONSOCKET - For the past two decades, party goers have flocked to Woonsocket once a year to celebrate Fat Tuesday in style with food, music, costumes and the crowning of a queen.

In 2014, the revelers will take a moment amid the colorful masks, beads and pageantry, to remember one woman who helped to carry on the tradition, and her role in reviving a festival that was nearly forgotten.

The "Mardi Gras of the North," as it was once known, was first held in Woonsocket during the 1950s. Sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce, the celebration lasted four days, and included a parade and multiple sites for the "Grand Balls."

The modern version, sponsored by Northern Rhode Island Council for the Arts, has more modest expectations, with just a single night of revelry, food and live music.

But the tradition just may have disappeared entirely if it wasn't for the work of volunteers, including the late Phyllis Thomas, and other dedicated supporters of the arts, who resurrected it in the 1990s.



Already, the city is alive with preparation as games, promotions and contests lead up to the big day.

First, there are the would-be queens: a group of five lovely ladies vying for the royal title in 2014 through the sale of raffle tickets. Brittney Croteau, Carla Faria, Amanda Girard, Sheylon Lawson and Debbie Wesley Pitochelli are selling the $1 tickets, which will be entered into a drawing on the night of Mardi Gras. In addition to a queen - the lucky lady who sells the most tickets - two runner-up princesses will also preside over the Feb. 22 ball.

First prize in the drawing will be $300; second prize is tickets for two to three shows at the Stadium Theatre; third prize is a gift certificate for Pilgrim House Inn in Newport; and fourth prize is a $50 gift certificate to River Falls Restaurant in Woonsocket. Proceeds from the ticket sales help offset expenses for the Mardi Gras celebration.

On Feb. 16, NRICA will hold a Queen Coronation ceremony at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs hall at 1 p.m.

There's also the King Jace contest, a friendly annual competition to identify a "mystery monarch," who will be unmasked at the ball. Dave Richards of WOON Radio organizes the yearly game and has released 10 clues about the identity of King Jace XX.

The king:

1. Has more in common with Prince Charles than most kings.

2. Plays the game with fifty-one.

3. Has been a president and a chairman.

4. Is "ram" tough.

5. Has royalty in his family.

6. Watches the dollars and cents.

7. Frequently sees double.

8. Is torn between two countries.

9. His favorite season is autumn.

10. Occupies two houses.

The Children's Mardi Gras Celebration will be held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the same day as the adult ball. The event is free for kids in grades kindergarten through 4 and includes a costume party and parade, along with entertainment by Linda Trudeau and prizes for best costumes. Chef Gary McLaughlin will provide macaroni and cheese, cookies, popcorn, and beverage for the young guests.

It all leads up to the big event Saturday night, when doors open at 5:30 p.m. at the former church building at 84 Cumberland St. The entertainment begins with country music by Jeff Gamache and Runaway Train.

For the adults, McLaughlin will lay out a full Cajun buffet from 6 to 8 p.m. including New Orleans style crawfish, Creole chicken and Cajun porketta, plus Bourbon Street pudding for dessert. Guests will dance the night away with the return of the evening's second act: local zydeco band Slippery Sneakers. Organizers will hand out prizes for the best costumes and the fun will continue until 11:30 p.m.

It's all made possible with the help of volunteers from NRICA, a local organization that aims to upgrade community life through the arts.

"A lot of people that belong have the same mission of keeping our culture alive," said Berthiuame.

Thomas, a founding member of NRICA passed away last August after many years of working to preserve and promote beauty, culture and art in her hometown. Thomas was president of the Woonsocket Garden Club and Woonsocket Beautification Committee, and founder of the Animal Protective Association of Woonsocket. She fought for the preservation of parks and conservation areas as a member of the Woonsocket Conservation Commission and directed the Woonsocket Historical and Preservation Society. Thomas belonged to the Woonsocket Opera House Society, which later became the NRICA. She served on the Board of Directors, and as treasurer of the organization for many years.

When NRICA was founded, the city's Mardi Gras events, once a proud and vibrant celebration, had long disappeared.

"They decided to revive the idea of Mardi Gras and it's been going on since," said Berthiuame.

At the 20th annual event, Thomas will be honored during a brief ceremony between the two musical acts, and a plaque will be presented to members of her family.

"I think it's important a community preserve its culture and history," said Berthiuame. "In these tough economic times a tradition like Mardi Gras is especially important because people need an escape and a chance to just have a good time."

Tickets for Mardi Gras 2014 can be purchased by calling Lorraine Cloutier at 401-762-9072. Advance tickets are $30, with limited tickets available at the door for $35. For more information, visit www.nrica.org .

Mardi Gras homes of serious costumers and Costume Ideas

Diane Lundeen works on her costume for Krewe du Vieux. “If you walk by and men love it, and women love it, and children want to play with it, you know you’ve done a great job.”












A costume hangs from a mannequin at the home of Diane Lundeen. A room in her shotgun house is dedicated to costume-making.

Dana Embree parades with the Box of Wine marching krewe and 'Tit Rex miniature shoe-box float parade.


Dana Embree set up a dedicated sewing/costume-making room in her Mid City home.

Dana Embree had book shelves built to separate her study room from her costume-making room.

Courtney Bullock works on a costume in a room she's dedicated to all things Mardi Gras.

Courtney Bullock paints her face in a room she has dedicated to costume making at her house in New Orleans.


Courtney Bullock uses this wall sconce near a bar area to hold some of her brushes.

Organization is vital to keep up with all the small parts required to make costumes at Courtney Bullock's home where she has dedicated an entire room to the craft.


A king's crown awaits its costume-maker in the house of Tracy Thomson in Faubourg St. John on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)


Spools of hyper-colored threads line the walls of costume-maker Tracy Thomson's home in Faubourg St. John on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)


Textured fabrics from Chinatown await transformation into a Creole Carnival costume in the house of Tracy Thomson in Faubourg St. John on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)


Ribbons, measuring tapes, and mannequins signal Carnival time in the house of Tracy Thomson in Faubourg St. John on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)



Costume-maker Tracy Thomson holds up a codpiece for a Carnival outfit she designed for her partner a few years ago in the Saint Anne Parade on Thursday, January 30, 2014. "I knew it was love when he let me dress him up in striped pants and a codpiece," said Thomson. The green-getup also made an appearance in an episode of HBO's Treme. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building. (Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)


Velvet, silks, brocades, wool, and "green" costume materials line the walls Tracy Thomson's home in Faubourg St. John on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building. (Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)


Porcine inspirations line the desk of costume-maker Tracy Thomson's desk in Faubourg St. John on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)



It's wall-to-wall tutus, fabrics, and Mardi Gras costumes in Tracy Thompson's house in Faubourg St. John on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)



Costume-maker Tracy Thomson's cat, Zydeco, loves to sit next to the sewing machines on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)

It's wall-to-wall masks and Mardi Gras costumes in Tracy Thompson's house in Faubourg St. John on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)

Venetian Carnival costumes stand on dress forms in the back of costume-maker Tracy Thomson's house. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)


Costume-maker Tracy Thomson adjusts her Venetian Carnival costumes from 12th Night on Thursday, January 30, 2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)

Costume-maker Tracy Thomson stands among her Carnival creations in her Faubourg St. John home on Thursday, January 30.2014. Thomson takes Carnival so seriously she's dedicated square footage in her home to the art of costume building.(Photo by Julia Kumari Drapkin, Nola.com | The Times-Picayune)







Buried deep within the yards upon yards of silks, taffetas, cottons and tulles laid out along the walls, spilling from shelves and hanging from racks in Tracy Thomson's work room is a pint-sized princess get-up, complete with a pointed hennin hat.

"I was about six when my mom made this for me," said Thomson, holding up the iridescent green dress, meticulously stitched with tiny leopard trim.

Thomson, a New Orleans artist best known for her Kabuki hats sold at Jazz Fest and the Dutch Alley Artists Co-op, has never outgrown her love of playing dress up. It's as much a passion for the 50-year-old milliner as it was for the 6-year-old princess.

To say her two-story Mid-City home has a dedicated costume-making space would be to over simplify things. The front door opens to a double parlor turned double work room, used for personal costume design and professional hat-making.

With the downstairs consumed by costuming, Thomson and her partner, Andy Roberts, live upstairs. ("I knew I loved that man when he let me put him in pink tights," she said).

In the front room, where the sofa sits in most shotgun houses, is a standing-height cutting table, a sitting-height sewing table and racks filled with plastic bins labeled brocades, linens, cottons, wools, trim and so on. Design books rest on tables and shelves. A window provides natural light. For a place overflowing with glittery, sparkly and shiny things, it's remarkably organized.

The front room is primarily for sewing, while the second room is for daydreaming up designs. A month before Mardi Gras, bolts of fabric covered nearly every surface, stacked so deep in spots it was hard to see the walls behind them.

"What I do is color stories," Thomson said. "I take all of the fabric that I've collected over the years, and I look at it to see if something is a costume in the making."

In late January, Thomson was still mulling over the various designs she'd need for this year's parading, which includes Saturday night's Krewe du Vieux (she's on the costume committee for her subkrewe, Mama Roux), the Society of St. Anne on Mardi Gras and myriad other costume-required events throughout the season.

The inventory of fabric here would make crafters and seamstresses swoon. Much of it comes from New York. "I try never to spend more than $20 a yard, and most of it is under $10 (a yard)," Thomson said.

Some pieces were ultra bargains. A king-sized leopard-print satin bed sheet, for example, she found at the Goodwill. One day, surely it will work its way into a costume.

A mannequin in the center of the second room is dressed in robes worthy of a Shakespearean stage. The costume features a brocade riding coat with covered buttons, elongated cuffs, a coordinating hoop skirt, matching mask and tricorn hat.

Thomson made the elaborate outfit for a trip to Carnevale in Venice, Italy, she took four years ago with friends. "We all purchased the same color scheme fabric (a green dragonfly print) and then we each made our own costumes," she said. "We sat in the Piazza San Marco and drew a crowd."

To make the get-up more suitcase friendly, Thomson designed the hoop skirt to collapse.

That trip to Venice was the only time Thomson, a native of a Staten Island, NY, has missed Mardi Gras in New Orleans in the 30 years she's lived here. But she has been one other Carnival outside of the Crescent City.

"The other one was in Cuba," she said, "but they move the date. They hold it in summer."

That trip was Thomson's first visit to Cuba, but she found an easy way to make friends during her stay: She held a costume-making workshop for local kids. -- Susan Langenhennig
****

Courtney Bullock: "I feel like my soul was born here, and it took my body a while to catch up."

Courtney Bullock considers nearly every room in her lovingly renovated Riverbend home a dream room -- the master bath is her "dream bathroom"; the upstairs closet is her "dream walk-in"-- but one area shines above the rest.

"This is the costume mecca," she said, walking into a wonderland of make believe. Located off the kitchen and leading out to the back yard, the subdued multicolor of the tile floor and white cabinetry provide a perfect canvas for the explosion of tone and texture in Bullock's fantastical creations.

Counter-height workspace lines half the perimeter, with a sewing station at one end -- the self-threading sewing machine, a bequest from her late mother, a designer, is one of her favorite things about the room -- and oodles of crafting supplies at the other. Jars of different beads and glitter await employment, and a trio of glass wall sconces holds dozens of paint brushes. In the middle of the room sits a large round table covered in pretty floral oilcloth, to protect the furniture from hot glue and other costuming residue.

Her walk-in costume closet is a treasure trove of garments, accessories and make-up. Tutus hang on a single looped belt in one corner, with a cascade of wigs in another. Umbrellas decorated for different occasions, such as Uncle Lionel's jazz funeral or the 610 Stompers' summertime ball, hang from one side of the doorway.

A hand-painted chest of drawers bears the names of all its contents: "Headbands," "Masks," "Bras and Bustiers." A vanity and mirror crowned with dressing-room lights is her make-up station, and it's covered with different face paints and glitters.

"This room is really a hodgepodge, but it all came together," Bullock said. "I can really create something fantastic without leaving this room. It seems to always be able to provide whatever I need, whenever I need it."

Bullock grew up in Los Angeles. Her father, a television writer for "The Flinstones" and "The Andy Griffith Show," among others, was "so funny, so kind, so generous," Bullock remembered. Her mother was always sewing and crafting, and the two parents raised their daughter to "think outside the box," Bullock said. "I grew up costuming . . . and it wasn't, 'Here's a princess costume; do you want to be a princess?' It was, 'What do you want to be?'"

After learning to papier-mâché in San Francisco, Bullock first moved to New Orleans in the early 1990s to work as a float builder for Studio 3. She instantly felt a rapport with the city's creative spirit, joining the gone-but-not-forgotten Mystic Herd of Nutria. Bullock later returned to California but, after the death of her parents, returned to New Orleans in 2008 and has been laying down strong roots ever since.

She is now a member of Krewe du Vieux and serves on the costume committee for her subkrewe, Mishigas. In addition to designing fascinators for some of the marchers, she helped lead costume kit-making sessions to provide members with everything they need to look right on the big night. Bullock also is a member of a new marching group, the Dames de Perlage, and has been busily working on her Mardi Gras Indian-inspired costume.

This time of year, Bullock works on her costumes "every possibly moment when I'm home," she said. "I feel like my soul was born here, and it took my body a while to catch up." -- Molly Reid

*****

Diane Lundeen: "If you walk by and men love it, and women love it, and children want to play with it, you know you've done a great job."

When she recently moved into an Uptown camelback, Diane Lundeen didn't dilly-dally over where to put the couch or ponder the merits of positioning one rug here or another there. She started, first thing, by selecting the spot for her costume workshop.

The space had to be big enough: The room she chose, the third in the sidehall-style shotgun, is about 15 feet by 17 feet.

It needed a window for natural light, and it had to be central to the house. "Lots of people come over to sew," she said of those who share her passion. They include members of her Krewe du Vieux subkrewe, Mishigas (craziness, in Yiddish), for which she is co-captain and chief costumer.

Lundeen, by day a state worker's compensation judge and owner of chic pet boutique Petcetera on Magazine Street creates whimsical, remarkably detailed Carnival costumes. They take from 40 up to 120 hours to make.

"The gauge of a good costume," she said, "is if you walk by and men love it, and women love it, and children want to play with it. You know you've done a great job."

The key to success in setting up a costume work room, she says, is organization. "If you don't know where the thread is or the rulers are, you can't get anything accomplished -- or it takes 10 times longer, and you get cranky.

"And making customs should be joyful!"

So in Lundeen's costume room, she's repurposed the conference room table from her former law office to hold large spools of thread in a Crayola-box full of colors and several sewing machines -- she has four, each with a different function -- along with scissors and other supplies neatly grouped in bins. A wooden storage chest doubles as a coffee table, and it's often called upon for triple duty: It's also just the right height to stand on for hemming.

There's a TV over the mantle, for watching while she works. And in another nod to the social nature of her creative outlet, which Lundeen likens to the quilting bees of old, a built-in corner cabinet holds a bar. Champagne bottles, lying prone like Carnival revelers after a night that's little too wild, are stacked high. Many are gifts from those she helps with their sewing.

Passing on knowledge is as much a part of her aesthetic as her use of multiple textures and light.

Her costuming mentor, the late Daniel Breaux, told her, "You don't keep it for yourself. You pass it on as part of Louisiana's traditional heritage. It will die if you don't pass it on."

Breaux taught her how to work with wire framing to accommodate the physics of a costume. Now, she said, she's moving out of a wire and papier mache phase and into a textile phase, experimenting with textures.

Her costume for Krewe du Vieux (Mishigas' theme, which combines Jewish heritage with current events: "Let My People Go Cup") depicts the Red Sea by mixing a sequined red leotard with a swirling skirt of red netting, red tulle and shiny silver ribbon, to add light. Dangling ruched netting pieces with red glitter create the waves.

She'll teach the ruching technique to those fellow float-riders who are interested, she said, but some may not choose to go into such detail.

The outfit will be worn with a silver bra and red petticoats.

She likes to make costumes in pieces, which can be reused. "I have a bra bin. I have a mantle bin. I have a tutu bin," she said, as if these were common household things.

There are also prop boxes: "You need a battle ax? I have it. A lollipop? I have it." -- Karen Taylor Gist

*****

Dana Embree: "Like Scarlett O'Hara, I've made a dress out of curtains."

For last year's Not So Super Superheroes party, a gathering of alter egos held the Friday before Mardi Gras, Dana Embree went as Blunder Woman, a hard-knocks version of Wonder Woman.

"I can't say it was sexy," she said, "but it was definitely amusing."

The get-up now hangs, with dozens of others, on racks in her spacious costume-making studio. The room has pride of place in Embree's Mid City home, stretching across the front of the house.

The century-old home started life as a shotgun, but was renovated into a box double before Embree bought it. In the early 1990s, she opened it up more, reconfiguring the layout to make it into a single-family home and turning the former front room into a perfect costume-making space.

The entrance to the room is framed by a wall of bookshelves built by a friend. The same friend built the custom sewing table out of an old door, shrinking the table's height to accommodate Embree's 5 foot "and a bit" frame. The table is on wheels, so she can move it around.

A vintage notions cabinet holds threads and patterns. An early 1960s Bernina sewing machine found on eBay is the room's workhorse ("I can't believe how much it cost to ship it here," she said.)

"The big thing for me is to try not to let the space get too cluttered," Embree said. "I try to weed out costumes every year; otherwise I look like a hoarder. I do clothing swaps. This year, I had a wig swap. We had 20 people in here looking at wigs."

During the build-up to the Carnival season, friends often come over, cradling fabric, glitter and hot-glue guns for pot luck-costume making-wine parties.

"The first rule of costuming," Embree said, "is it has to be fabulous. The second is it has to be cost effective. The third is, can you pee? And the fourth, can you dance?"

Costuming is both a professional and personal passion for Embree, who parades with the Box of Wine marching krewe before Bacchus and with 'tit Rex, the pint-sized shoebox float parade. She's a costume designer/costumer in the film industry.

A native of Oklahoma, Embree moved to New Orleans in 1979. "I arrived on the back of a VW van," she said "I had a trunk and my sewing machine, like all good hippies."

Her love of costuming, though, started long before she moved to the land of Mardi Gras. "A normal day of play for me as a kid was in the yard, dressed in my dad's T-shirt and a tutu. I just never stopped dressing that way." -- Susan Langenhennig