Some time after the Panto to be performed in February 2026 had been chosen and before rehearsals started in 2025 I was approached by the director of what is to be our 2027 Panto to give some thought to making headdresses for the villain and her cohorts.
That Panto is to be Goldilocks and the 3 Bears. Apparently the “baddie” in this version is a Queen bee, and the director is thinking well ahead – which makes a nice change from the usual last minute panic. Anyway, I set about thinking how best and how cheaply to do this.
But before I got very far I was asked by our wardrobe mistress to make crowns for the King and Queen of Gooseland, for the 2026 Panto, which was to be Mother Goose. By this time we were well into rehearsal and so I had to stop thinking about bees and start thinking about geese. The wardrobe mistress wanted crowns that fit around the head rather than “tiara” type that sit on top. They should be white and should incorporate goose feathers.
We had some white feathers in stock, but none long enough to look like goose feathers, so first of all I would have to make some. We had, in our initial discussion, thought about how many would be needed. I was anxious that a fully feathered crown should not make the king look as if he was aping a native American Indian chief wearing a War Bonnet. We decided that I would make 5 feathers for each crown, taller ones for the king and slightly shorter for the queen.
I used one of my white nonwoven cotton cloths and some black (all I had) plastic rods. I used an old and well washed cloth, which when ironed stretched and ironed again became paper thin but remained flexible. I cut 10 strips about 2” wide and 8 or 9 inches long. Using “washable PVA glue … (yes, I’d never heard of it before either, it was a gift from our odd job man/friend. According to the lable on the bottle it was a mixture of water, PVA, glycerine, stearic acid and sodium hydroxide) … as I was saying, using washable PVA glue I stuck 2 lengths of the cloth together, sandwiching a plastic rod part way up the middle – short of the top and protruding from the bottom, so that it represented the quill. In this way I made 10 basic shapes which I trimmed into feather shapes, and carved 2 or 3 “notches’” randomly in the sides to add to the feather-like appearance. I painted the black quills white and, to give them extra strength, painted each side of the feathers with more of the PVA.
Making the feathers. That funny bottle shape at the bottom right is one of my eyedrop dispensers but handy for spreading glue!
Then I could consider the design of each crown; the king’s would need to be “manly” and the queen’s elegant. Having gone through my design source images I chose 2 crowns from the film version of Lord of the Rings on which to base my ideas – Elron’s crown for the Gooseland queen (No he’s not a bloke, he’s an elegant Elf – can’t you see his pointy ears?) and Aragorn’s for the king.
Elrond and his crown
Aragorn wearing his crown
I went through my stash of beads, stones and jewels and picked out items which could adorn either crown – the idea being that although they weren’t identical they would be a pair. I found a strip of muslin which had pearls and clear beads already attached to it and also some large round green cabochons mounted in “silver” frames. I painted the stones with several coats of pearl coloured nail varnish and I brightened the frames with a coat of silver nail varnish, and both with a top coat of clear.
[I find nail varnish very useful in making costumes and props, so whenever I see any reduced in price, especially odd colours, or colourless, I snap them up.]
Having obtained approval for my ideas from the director and the wardrobe mistress, I then had to wait some weeks before I received details of the king and queen’s head sizes. We had a cast of 35 in this Panto, some of whom played more than one character, and there were at least 2 costumes for most of the characters, not to mention 5 or 6 for Mother Goose, the dame. It is not surprising therefore that our poor wardrobe mistress, who does most of the work herself with the help of a couple of members, took some time to get round to sorting the wigs for the king and queen and measuring their resulting head sizes. Once I had these I was able to get a gallop on!
I started with the queen’s crown. I made a drawing based on the Elrond crown and then blew it up to the size needed. I transferred 2 copies of the pattern to the card stock I was going to use, cut them out and, after auditioning the feathers and jewellery as to placement, proceed to decorate one of them.
I’m not keen on using just glue for holding things together, whether on costumes, on props or on actors (I once lost my Polly parrot beak mid performance!) It’s belt and braces for me, so I sewed the strip of muslin with the pearl and clear beads along one of the sections of the crown, front to back on either side of the centre “V”. I also sewed the feathers to the inside of the crown and I added a shield shape to the back of the centre front to add a bit of strength. It was as well that I had cut out a second pattern, the stitching of the muslin to the narrow sections of the crown in fact weakened the card. So I attached the second pattern to the inside of the crown and then added a cut out shape of non-slip mat to the inside front of the crown. I was concerned that the weight of the stones on the front might cause the crown to slide down the actor’s forehead. (In the end however I needn’t have bothered as the actor’s coarse and curly wig had a large fringe, on which the crown sat, but again belt and braces I suppose.) Finally I joined the two ends of the crown with a large hook and eye (the sort covered in fabric and normally used by furriers) painted white.
Half a Crown design with initial choice of decoration
My design for 1/2 a crown(!) Sorry about the black Fleur de Lis on the back of the paper.
Rehearsal of design, feathers and decorations
Bead decoration stitched to crown ready for cabochons and feathers to be attached
Attaching the feathers and support for the cabochons
Attaching the strengthening lining to the crown after attaching the cabochons
The Queen’s Crown
Adding the final non-slip fabric to the inside of the crown
Then on to the King’s crown. I had found somewhere on the internet a pattern page of the pieces used to make a version of Aragorn’s crown.
Pattern for Aragorn’s Crown
I liked the basic idea of some form of emblem at the front which could hold up the feathers but I didn’t want to use the actual design from Aragorn’s crown – it was too “serious” and the Gooseland King was a comic part – so after trying out various shapes, which would also hold 3 of the cabochon stones, I decided to use a shield shape, with a smaller version at the back and smaller versions still at the two sides. I decided that I would not use the remainder of the muslin with the pearl and clear beads for the King’s crown (too feminine) so I decided to add a border of yarn around the edges of everything to add a sort of metallic rim as if the metalsmith had added a border of twisted metal, as indicated on the page of pattern pieces. So here I deviated from my glue+ method and just soaked some white yarn in PVA and ran it around the edges of the shields and the bands of the crown. I did stitch the cabochons to the front shield and also the feathers. I covered this on the inside with another shield shaped piece of card. I wasn’t sure how to decorate the two side and the back shields and I wondered if I could find a suitable monogram for Gooseland. In the end I found, somewhere on line, a drawing of a winged shield, I added a capital G to the centre of that and printed off three copies which I attached to the centre of the 3 blank shields.
Rehearsing placement of decorations 1
Rehearsing placement of decorations 2
Rehearsing placement of decorations 3
Rehearsing placement of decorations 4
Attaching the front shield and joining the side pieces
The edging cord is in there somewhere
Glueing the cord edging to the Shields
Glueing the front shield to the back shield to sandwich the feathers after sewing on the cabochons
Glueing the side and back monogrammed shields
Once all the glue was dry I packed them up and delivered the Crowns a couple of days before the first dress rehearsal.
The Queen’s Crown
The King’s Crown
King & Queen of Gooseland
King and Queen with daughter, Princess Priscilla, (who laid the golden eggs) and Dame, Mother Goose
We have costumes for two Pantomimes and one Murder Mystery Play in this post; and yes at last I’m going to tell you about the costume hair and makeup for the Wicked Queen (above).
First let’s tell you about Dig for Vengeance, the Murder Mystery Play since there isn’t much to it. In fact the only textile “makes” involved as far as I was concerned were in makeup. I was playing the part of the Reverend Simeon Knatchbull (we were – as usual – short of men so I was to do a bit of cross-dressing.) Sid, who spent most of his time in his allotment shed to get away from his garrulous wife, was played by my friend Fiona. The textile parts of the makeup were our eyebrows and side burns (extra long ones for Sid) which I made out of Shetland Moorit fibres. The Rev. was the one “who dunnit” so I‘m able to show you his mug shots and here’s a snap of Sid at his shed.
The Rev. Simeon Knatchbull (source local fuzz)Sid in his shed
The Pantomime which was our February 2019 production was Treasure Island, and I was to be cross dressing again – not sex this time but species. I was Polly, Long John Silver’s parrot. As soon as I saw the script I knew that that was the part I wanted, and although there were a couple of others trying for it, I got it. I like to think that it wasn’t just my offer to make my own costume that secured it.
The Director, Fraser Wilson (a professional actor and director) decided that he would prefer Polly to be a cartoon, rather than a realistic, parrot. That did make things much easier. I had had a look at fabrics that I had available – there was some scarlet and some royal blue, which might work so I delved into Google Images and decided on a Scarlet Macaw as the basis for Polly’s caricature. I collected various reference pictures of real Macaws as well as some cartoon characters.
Reference image 1 – scarlet macaws
Reference image 2 – scarlet macaw back & top of wings
Reference image 3 – cartoon parrots
The fabrics that I used for the costume came from two sources. The fabric for the body and the hood came from some old red and blue curtains, and the wings and tail were made from some off cuts of some sort of plasticky fabric that I had acquired from somewhere, blue and red (luckily almost exactly the same hue as the curtain fabric) and some small pieces of yellow.
The costume was made in four sections and consisted of feet and legs; lower body and breast; a tail coat – literally in this case; and a hood with clashing pirate tricorn hat.
Having again resorted to Mr Google I obtained some reference shots of parrot feet.
Reference image – feet
I constructed the feet with toes from sections of foam pipe insolation covered in needle felted yellowish fibres. I stuck some bent pieces of black painted, cotton covered wire in the tips for claws, which actually wasn’t a good idea as they kept coming out. In the event it didn’t matter as they weren’t visible from the audience anyway. I stitched the toes to an old pair of fabric shoes which I had painted black, and added more yellow needle felt around the openings to represent the feet. We always lay a black floor on The Exchange’s shiny wooden stage for pantos, so my black shoes would be less visible under the parrot feet. I stitched a length of cotton fabric, much the same colour as the toes, to the opening of each shoe, with snap fasteners up the back, to make Polly’s legs. These came up to just below my knees and were tied with a draw string to make sure they didn’t slide down during a performance. Since Polly was old – 70 – I added some varicose veins (known as “various veins” in our house – thanks to Terry Wogan), couching on some blueish pieces of yarn.
I caused great hilarity at the first rehearsal when I donned Polly’s feet. I wanted to get used to moving in them so that I didn’t trip over the toes, but I admit that it did look odd the way parrot feet protruded from the end of my jeans.
Polly’s feet
The body consisted of a bib-type front, attached at the top to a red tee shirt. Parrots having short legs without visible “knees”, I had decided that the costume crotch should come down to just above my knees. I attached very short pant legs which covered my knees and the tops of the costume legs. It might have been slightly more realistic if the crotch had come below my knees, but I remembered just in time that I’d got to be able to walk and climb stairs in this costume. Climbing steps on stage was still a bit difficult, but then Old Polly could be seen to stagger from time to time. The back of that part of the costume came up to my waist and was again tied with a draw string.
Next came the tail coat. A couple of years earlier I had acquired a Vogue Pattern, one of Sandra Betzina’s Today’s Fit series which gave me exactly what I needed to help me with the design of Polly’s tail.
Vogue pattern V8136
Vogue pattern V8136 back – Polly’s tail coat design shown on right
I constructed the coat using the pattern back, but adding wings instead of just plain sleeves. The tail feathers I boned with extra large cable ties, which gave the length and amount of rigidity I needed and I did the same with the main wing feathers.
I extended the wings/sleeves to the tips of my fingers ending on the underside in a sort of glove construction making separate sections for my thumb and first three fingers. Then I added the feathers, attaching the first three pinion feathers to the backs of the fingers of the glove. I could then move the feathers with my fingers to simulate Polly’s cartoon hands, and co-incidentally was able to hold on to bits of scenery when climbing.
The fronts of the coat were reduced to just small “bolero” type fronts. These were affixed to the body/bib just in front of my shoulders with Velcro. There was also a strip of Velcro attaching the coat inside-back just above the tail to the back waist of the body. I padded out Polly’s stomach with a thinnish sheet of foam rubber to get the right parrot shape..
I do not have any progress pictures of the costume since this all took place before I found and joined the Studio. However, I did wear the costume again 2 years ago for an appearance at the Sturminster Newton Cheese Festival. SNADS were helping out with stewarding the Festival in return for a donation to our funds and I was allowed to dress up as Polly again. That was fun, but quite warm in view of the padding. It did mean that I had a short period in which I could take some photos of the tail coat just before I donned it.
Tail undersideThe tail feathers from the backThe right wing
The hood, was just plain red and tight fitting, and the hat was more of the plastic sort of fabric, with a wired brim, and skull and crossbones appliquéd to the front. The orangy-pink with pink feather edging to the brim clashed nicely Polly’s head. The tricorn was slightly too small so I had to resort to a large safety pin to attach it to the hood to avoid it falling off during performances.
The final touch, which I didn’t really want to do but I was over-ruled by the director, was to stitch feather boas to Polly’s breast. He was right, it added that je ne sais quoi to the costume.
I found a close up image of a parrot face for makeup reference, and used a lot of red water based makeup (I went home with a pink rinse every night – very fetching!) I made Polly’s beak from some thin EVA foam, painted yellowish orange, that was stuck onto my nose with spirit gum; and I had yellow feather eyelashes. The beak was a mixed blessing. We were “miked up” for the performances so I was able to tuck the end of mine under the beak so that it wasn’t obvious. However, the theatre was very hot on the Friday night performance and just before the finalé and walkdown the beak came unstuck. The audience didn’t seem to mind though. It’s amazing what you can get away with in a Panto. I made doubly sure of it for Saturday’s two performances though.
Makeup reference imagePolly complete with feather eyelashes.Polly peering through the big house gatesPolly with Long John Silver and random pirate (Silver with crutch made by my husband)
Now at last we come to the Wicked Queen. I was asked to dress Fiona (my friend who played Sid in Dig for Vengeance) as Averice, the Wicked Queen in Snow White. This was to include wig, makeup and Crown and two complete costumes. I was given two existing dresses which fitted Fiona and which I could adapt and add to; one was red and black and the other silver and black.
The red and black was to be worn in the first half, it had a red bodice and under skirt with black lace sleeves and a black lace over skirt. I altered the dress merely by lifting the over skirt up at the centre front and fixing it with some spare bits of jewellery. At that time Fiona had a habit of stepping backwards when about to speak, so we decided that she would need a train falling behind her to help her to lose this trait and, because she learned that if she stepped back, she’d step on it, it worked. As the dress was not quite floor length, we decided that a long cape type cloak would be worn over the dress. I had a small piece of red velvet which I made into a short cape covering the top of her shoulders, and added red braid around it’s edges. We had a large piece of heavy red lace fabric with sparkles in it, which we attached to the underside of the cape starting from the front of the shoulders. The cape was fastened with more jewellery pieces.
Avarice in Red
The second dress, silver and black, was pretty plain in design (although the skirt fabric was strongly patterned) and again had no train. So I decided that I’d try to make an overdress, which I would drape on my ancient dressmaker’s dummy. I had some mauve satin type polyester fabric which I decided could do the job. I made use of Google images for some design ideas and came up with two completely different styles that I thought could be amalgamated.
Overdress reference image 1
overdress reference image 2 – sleeve
I liked the cut away front of the skirt in the picture. This could be extended at the back into a train, and there could be full over-sleeves like those in the reference image with the cross over design at the shoulders.
Having had the design approved by the wardrobe mistress I set about draping some Vilene that I had had lying around, and making pattern pieces to be cut out of the mauve satin. That was silly mistake No. 1. It wasn’t until I was three quarters of the way through draping and pattern cutting that I realised that I was using lightweight iron on Vilene, not the old sew in version that I no longer used for dressmaking.
The sleeves I drafted by basing them on a normal sleeve pattern but moving the under arm seam to the top of the arm and extending each side to form the cross over at the shoulder seam, and at the same time greatly extending the sleeve length and width. I cut 2 sleeves out of the mauve satin and 2 more out of purple organza, which I would use as lining.
Getting all the pieces for the overdress out of the mauve satin was going to be tight. In fact, in making silly mistake No. 2, I made it even tighter. I must have put one of the cut out pieces in the wrong place on the work table, because I managed to cut another pattern piece out of it, so had to do a bit of “jigsaw” patching to get enough fabric for all the pieces I needed. It’s a good job that theatrical costumes are rarely seen up close – the joins were not discernible from the auditorium.
When I took the overdress in for Fiona to try on I found silly mistake No. 3. I had not allowed any ease in the patterns made with the draped Vilene so the garment was too tight. I had to alter some of the darts I had put in for shaping, and slim down a couple of the seam allowances as well as move the front fastening.
I had a piece of black and silver furnishing fabric which was decorated with large gothic type motifs. I cut out and applied these to the dress. One large one was placed at the waist on the wrap over front. This helped with disguising the “jigsaw” seams and the added decoration helped co-ordinate with the under dress. More motifs were appliquéd down the sides and end of the train to add weight to it. I also added a short length of curtain weights to the underside of the end of the train. This solved the problem of the train tending to flip over as Fiona moved around the stage.
Avarice in full rantAvarice showing the motif covering the “jigsaw”
All this work was obviously done at home in my workshop. However I still attended rehearsals twice a week, and while I was waiting to rehearse my cameo part (a bear!) I was working on a wig for Fiona.
reference images for the pony tail treatment
I had chosen an older synthetic wig mainly for its colour. It had become quite tangled so I was cleaning and combing it bit by bit whilst the rehearsals were progressing. I found that by using a light oil I could comb out the tangles in the wig without pulling too much of the hair out. Once all this was complete, I started to plait parts of the wig and these plaits were wound around the head, leaving the long back hair to be gathered at the nape of the neck, as shown in reference image 1, but with the ends doubled back up to the nape as shown in image 2. I made snoods to match each costume to cover the “tail”.
Next came the crown. Again I searched for reference images to help with the design. I wanted something strong that would add to Averice’s character, rather than a pretty tiara type crown, which would not do at all. In the end I decided to base the design on Ravenna’s crown (Snow White and the Huntsman).
Ravenna, crown and a glimpse of hairstyle
I made it from shiny, stiff card, which was actually some bobbin lace pattern pricking card that I had got from somewhere somewhen. I painted the card with bronze acrylic paint and added some braid with marcasite-like stones attached and a bead/pendant from an old necklace, which I painted with pearlised nail varnish. I had to stick a couple of loops on the inside of the crown, so that we could use hair grips to fix the crown onto Fiona’s wig, which was itself fixed to her “wig cap”. That’s in quotation marks because the wig cap was in fact a holdup stocking. The non-slip “stuff” on the inside of the stocking is just the thing to hold onto the actor’s head/hair. With hair grips fixing the wig to the cap it will not slip off. (touch wood!)
Finally the makeup. I looked for various types of makeup for Averice, looking at “Wicked Queen” references and also “drag” makeup (which I find great for exaggerated Panto styles). In the end I picked the image that would give Fiona permanently bad tempered eyebrows. I’m not a speedy MUA so although it would have been good to have fantastic eye makeup, there wouldn’t be time to do it and get Fiona dressed and crowned in time for curtain up.
Makeup reference image – it’s the eyebrows you knowAvarice Crown Wig and Makeup. See what I mean about the eyebrows?
I’m going to have to tell you about my bear costume and the other bits I helped with in these Pantos in another post as I’ve run out of space and time with this one, watch this space.
I had intended that the next Theatre Textiles post would be about the costumes which I had made for us once we had transferred to our new venue. However in the meantime I had started work on part of a costume for our next Pantomime – The Little Mermaid. No, not the Disney version, but even so the Director has decided that the Sea Witch will be part human/part octopus (to be named Iphelia – pronounced I-feel-ya, which gives an idea of how our pantos appeal to adults as well as children!) and I have been asked to dress her. Other than make the designs and collect fabrics and accessories matching the palette of purple and “sludge” green, there isn’t much I can do until the part is cast.
The piece of the costume that I have started on is the necklace which Iphelia will wear when she takes full human form for part of the panto. So I decided that I should keep detailed notes and photos of what I’m doing so that I could tell you about it. I have designed her “human” costume so that it will have as many references to octopuses (octopi?) as possible. I was inspired by a necklace which I saw on the BBC News website (can’t remember what it was about though) and I did a quick screen clip which I added to my “costume ideas” folder. The necklace is, I think, of a snake about to devour a cabochon stone. I had also spotted, some time ago, part of a piece which appeared to be a tentacle holding a sphere. Nothing like an octopus but the stone made me think of an octopus “head”.
I thought that the tentacles could issue from behind a large stone and form the links to the rest of the necklace. Since the necklace will be worn with a top which is asymmetrical and therefore has an off centre neckline, I wanted a necklace which was also asymmetrical. This would mean that it would have to be very light so that it wouldn’t keep slipping round while it’s being worn. I knew that I could make felt look like something other than wool – I had made the horns for my highland cow from just felt, plus lots of PVA glue and a bit of graphite from a soft pencil, so I didn’t see why I couldn’t make the necklace in a similar way.
cow horns
I want the necklace to look like proper jewellery from a distance, that is a large cabochon for the head with bead eyes, with the tentacles smooth and shiny. Let’s see if I can do it.
Equipment, materials and design ideas
I decided that the best way to make the tentacles bendable would be to use a wire armature and since I still have a quantity of craft pipe cleaners I went for them. I would use my core wools – scoured merino – and some coloured tops for the surface layer.
Starting the tentacles
I carded some scoured merino and wrapped 8 half lengths of pipe cleaner, leaving an end uncovered on each. Then I made an octopus head shaped “stone” from the core wool and covered it in deep purple merino tops.
First body
I wet felted the tentacles, smoothing them out as much as possible. While the tentacles were still wet I curled up 3 of them and fixed them with light wire to help them “remember” the curves when they had dried – at which point I lost the curled up ones. (I blame The Borrowers.) As a result I had to make three more tentacles and, since they were to be curled anyway and I needed them quickly, I just made wet felted cords which were curled up.
New Curls
By the time these were dried the Borrowers had obviously decided that they didn’t want the original curled tentacles as they had reappeared. I tried various positions of body and tentacles to see how the necklace might look.
mock up of layout
That was when I decided that the octopus body should not be purple but green, looking a bit like jade, and that the tentacles needed to be purple rather than the muddy green I had pulled out to use. So I stripped off the purple tops from the body and replaced it with more carded scoured merino. Then I wet felted it and gave it a good coating of PVA glue, and I also PVA’d the tentacles.
Colour change
When they had dried I got out the metal nail file and the emery board. A good filing with these smoothed out all the ridges and bumps caused by the hairy surface under the glue. I gave them a couple of coats of Chinese Evergreen acrylic paint on the body, and of Mulberry Cream on the tentacles. These were “match pot” paints which I had acquired from a local DIY store. I find that decorating acrylic paint samples are very useful, since they have very good coverage and a fantastic range of colours. When I have a project like this, I visit and select from as many of the local(ish) stores as I can as they usually all carry a different range and therefore different colour choices.
When the paint had dried I decided that I would give the tentacles a coat of metallic purple paint (which I had acquired some time ago from a branch of The Range’s artists supplies). If it turned out the way I hoped it should look a bit like enamelling. I liked the result and, with the addition of a coat or two of clear nail varnish, it could be said to resemble enamel.
More Paint and Nail Varnish
I thought that the “jade” body stone might look good with a little purple “marbling” so added a few fine lines of a lilac coloured acrylic match paint, rubbed it a bit with my thumb and then varnished that too. Then I filed, painted and varnished the curled tentacles. Since I needed to have only two tentacles reaching up to each side of Iphelia’s neck, the rest would need to be curled around elsewhere. I thought that they could be grasping smaller pieces of “jade”, so I painted some wooden beads green and varnished those too. Having shaped the tentacles as I thought might be best, I gave everything another varnish.
When the varnish had dried I fitted the, now green, beads in the curled tentacles and stitched them in where necessary. One of them actually fitted over the tip of the tentacle and didn’t need stitching. I gave those tentacles a further final varnish to fix the beads firmly. It then occurred to me that to make the tentacles look more like jewellery I could make use of some of the jewellery findings which I had accumulated. I found some cord tips and, having added them to the ends of the tentacles without beads, painted them with an iridescent nail varnish since their “silver” colour had deteriorated to dull grey.
Varnished parts and Tentacles before brightening the cord tips
As I was about to assemble the octopus I realised that it hadn’t got any eyes and, although it is possible to sew through the painted and varnished surface, I decided that I didn’t want to risk poking a needle through in the wrong place. I needed to glue something down, but I’ve learned not to trust glue on stage. It always lets go just at the wrong time. Belt and braces are best!. I remembered then that I had acquired some glitter glue some time ago and having turned it out (eventually)I decided to just use blobs of it as the eyes. If they came off I doubted it would be noticed. I also decided that a “setting” was needed for the “cabochon” so I added a little braid which was painted and varnished.
Next I had to find a piece of the right green ribbon which I would permanently attach to one side of the necklace, and with a hook on the other end which could latch round the opposite side. Since the necklace would need to be removed quickly during the quick change which the actor would have, I would need to find a fastening that wasn’t fiddly. I had some furrier’s hooks and eyes, which are large and wrapped with yarn. I used a hook which I painted with the Chinese Evergreen acrylic and stitched that to the other end of the ribbon. And we were done.
Here is the finished piece. Hopefully in due course you will see it worn by the actor in costume.