This has resulted in a some creative and beautiful custom corsets......
Anka Lupes' costume design:
David Larsen (center) as Bill Calhoun/Lucentio and members of the Glimmerglass Opera Chorus Photo: Cory Weaver/Glimmerglass Opera.
For Goodspeed Opera
Gilbert and Sullivan's Pirates of Penzance
David Woolard's costume design:
David Woolard requested the Kristina/Judith hybrid shape; this time with the signature Kristina tabs, (no busk) and flat-lined to custom fashion fabrics. He sent us six distinctive pastel patterned brocades for Mabel and all her sisters corsets. They wore them under their costumes for most of the operetta, but you can see a glimpse of the corsets pictured below. This is the scene where the sisters relax by the seaside after "Scaling rough and rugged passes climb[ed] the hardy little lasses till the bright sea shore they gain."
Lincoln Center Festival 2005
My Life as a Fairytale
Elizabeth Caitlin Ward 's costume design:
This is an amazing example of a designer using a Period Corsets® shape without alteration. By adding unusal fabrics and creative construction techniques we achieved something completely new and unique. Ms. Ward chose the shape of our stock c. 1660's Kristina (without tabs). We made a multi-layer corset, using our custom corset flatlining process. The base color is the steel grey silk shantung provided by the designer with an over-layer of plastic window screening mesh. If you look closely you can see the spiral steel bones between the layers as per her design request!
Pictured here in performace to great effect.
For the Roundabout Theatre Company
Les Liasions Dangereuses
Katrina Lindsay's costume design:
This corset is an example of a cross between our Kristina c.1660 corset and a corset from a client's own stock. Ms Lindsay, the designer, wanted the final product to have the versatility our corsets offer: alteration points in the side seam and the strap shoulder seam. She wanted to recreate the shape of the existing corset, and maintain the heavily boned look and varying agles of the bone lines in each panel. This is hard to do and have a side seam! So we put the alteration point in the side back, and added straps. For the final corsets we used the client's custom beige brocade coutil.
To complete the 18th century look we made our pocket hoop panniers out of the same brocade.
It gives us great pleasure to work with designers to create just the look they want for their productions.
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