Oddly enough, but parents constantly dress up their children in some strange costumes - musketeer, batman, spider-man and so on. But all this is not ours, not Russian! How so? We ourselves from childhood teach children to a different culture! And potto ourselves wonder why everyone adores the West so much. And in our history and culture there are many wonderful heroes, the prototype of which can be used for a children's costume. One of these is a koshcheyushka!
It is necessary
- Lots of paper
- Black pajamas
- Luminophore paint
- Glue
- Safety pins
Instructions
Step 1
Oddly enough, but parents constantly dress up their children in some strange costumes - a musketeer, batman, spider-man and so on. But all this is not ours, not Russian! How so? From childhood, we ourselves teach children to a different culture! And potto ourselves wonder why everyone adores the West so much. And in our history and culture, there are many wonderful heroes, the prototype of which can be used for a children's costume. One of these is a koshcheyushka!
Step 2
You can not grab your head if suddenly your child wants to dress up as Koshchei the Immortal. In fact, this costume is not as difficult to make as you might think at first glance. And now I will prove it to you.
We take ordinary black clothes. It is advisable if it is tight, or something like pajamas. We try it on so that everything is smooth, and we begin to draw sketches of human bones on paper. It's not hard. The task is so simple that even a child himself can sit with you and draw the anatomical components of the human skeleton.
True, I will admit a reservation that it will take all a fairly large amount of paper. But you will have a great time with your child, which will undoubtedly bring you closer together.
Step 3
Now that we're done with cutting out the bones, let's start attaching them to the clothes. If you don’t mind this outfit, you can put it on glue. If you still understand that these things will still be useful to you, then you can get by with pins.
When you finish fastening the bones, find some scary mask, make a crown and something like a cloak of a cape (after all, we still have Koschey himself, and not an ordinary skeleton).
You can also add a saber cut out of cardboard and pasted over with foil to the suit. And if you buy a bottle of white fluorescent paint in a store and apply it to the surface of the depicted bones, then after exposure to light it will begin to glow with a greenish tint, which will best affect the quality of the costume.