Costume shop

A costume shop is where costumes for theatrical or film productions are designed, built, and stored for the company or production. Some jobs of those who work in a costume shop are designers, builders, seamstresses and stitchers. The shops themselves can all vary in size, from one large room to a house with multiple floors. Costumes from past productions, fabric, jewelry and accessories are all often stored in the shop as well.

Costume shop at the Metropolitan Opera

Purpose

Costume shops are all shapes and sizes, however, what they have in common is what makes them an integral part of a theater space. Every costume shop is where the costumes worn on stage for a production are built. Some costume shops have washers for cleaning costumes, fitting rooms, racks for storage or spaces for designers to conceptualize a costume. Some shops allow you to rent their costumes.[1] However the most common and main purpose for a costume shop is for building and finishing pieces that go onstage.[2]

There is no standard layout for costume shops though most have stations for stitching or surging, cutting tables, fabric storage, and finishing tables. A large an expansive costume shop style helps work to enable productions to be mounted lavishly and permit study and experimentation at the same time.[3] The process of building a costume requires many steps and stations, for which the costume designer first conceptualizes.[4] But before building can begin, the designer must choose where the costumes will come from.

Costume storage at the Radio City Music Hall

Once the show is designed, pieces can come from a multitude of places, but there are commonly four options:[5]

  • Rented, either from other theatres, businesses, or individuals
  • Pulled, which refers to searching through a costume shops stock. ‘Pulling’ from the rack of stored costumes.
  • Constructed, ones that the designer and costume shop create themselves.
  • Shopped, items that can be purchased from outside sources.

The costume shop will search, place orders, create, organize, and dole out the costumes for each production and each character in the manner that best fits the costume and production itself. For instance, not every shoe is cobbled in the shop, or 'in house,' some are bought and some are borrowed. It is the costume shops purpose to handle this feat.[6]

Jobs within

Within a costume shop there are a multitude of people working on different parts of the creative or accumulative process, depending on the size of the theatre or company will determine if each job goes to one person, if a group of individuals share more than one job, or if everyone pitches in on everything.[7]

Costume designer

The costume designer is an integral part of the production's creative team. Each costume designer is exactly the same, however they work closely with the director to develop a look for the actors onstage that best serves the plot of the play and concept the director has envisioned. "The Costume Designer seeks inspiration from many sources, including interviews with the actors who will play the characters, and extensive historical and visual research."[8] Depending on if the Costume Designer is a permanent position or is a by production hire will determine if they are considered the head of the costume department or shop

Assistant designer

The assistant designer helps the head designer with the jobs that must be completed. This includes but is not limited to :research, shopping, rental acquisition and fittings for actors.

Costume coordinator/supervisor/shop manager

A shop manager is responsible for daily goings on in the shop, much like a manager in a building or restaurant. They deal with the costume budget from the producers, manufacturing and purchasing, as well as work and costume building schedules and production crew requirements.

Cutter/draper

The cutter/draper is responsible for making patterns, cutting, fitting and construction of costumes from specific designs or sketches supplied by the designer. "The Cutter may assist in selecting materials and supervising the costume construction."[8] In most shops there are multiple cutters and drapers to ease and spread out work load.

Stitcher (sewer, seamstress, costume builder)

A stitcher works on the actual construction of the costumes. The Stitcher will sometimes assist during fittings to help with pinning and alterations. They are the entry-level position in a costume shop and are often the most common job that is open in a space. A stitcher will help pick up wherever needed, often stretching out from fittings, pinning, and alteration, to textiles, dye working and errands.

See also

References

  1. "Costume Shop". Our Town Theatre. 2016-04-14. Retrieved 2019-03-06.
  2. "Costume Shop". The University of Memphis. Retrieved 2019-03-06.
  3. Clark, John. “Creative Arts School in a Liberal Arts College: The Drama Program at San Francisco State College.” Educational Theatre Journal, vol. 18, no. 2, 1966, pp. 108–109. JSTOR 3205299.
  4. Covey, Ingham, Liz, Rosemary (1992). The Costume Designer's Handbook. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. pp. 15–100.
  5. Brockett, Hildy, Oscar G., Franklin J. (2007). History of the Theatre. USA: Pearson Education Inc. p. 211. ISBN 0-205-47360-1.
  6. "Costume Designer Guidelines - Department Handbook - Ithaca College". www.ithaca.edu. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
  7. "Home". www.costumers.org. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
  8. "Costume Department Job Descriptions". Don't Shoot the Costumer. 2013-02-23. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
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