In this era of lockdowns, thanks to SARS-CoV-2, it feels like we can get a little stir crazy. Try to stay sane my friends and maybe go for a walk. But if you do go out, do it in style. It is, after all, May the Fourth and you know what that means?
What follows is a series of TikTok videos my dear friend Lena Volkova demonstrated on her account. Unfortunately, I’ve yet to find a way to remove the cranky, white border around the videos to keep it in line with the esthetique with the site, its theme, and the official category of this post as Cosplay. Nonetheless, I feel this is important so f’d up CSS be damned! We need to stop SARS-CoV-2! So, without further à Deux, here is her A/B Reusable Mask Tutorial: A Mask with a Pocket for Filtration Media Such as a Surgical or N95 Mask.!
Pretreat the Fabric
This is part of a larger effort to help those out in need.
If you’re planning on helping out with making surgical face masks, you need to pretreat and disinfect your fabrics prior to sewing.
To pretreat fabrics: • Prepare a cold water bath to soak your fabric. ■ 100% cotton is preferable for masks. • You can add two tablespoons of salt for dye runoff. ■ This is optional. • Add one cup of distilled, white vinegar to your cold water bath. ■ Vinegar works both as a color stabilizer and disinfectant. • Add your fabric to the bath and let saturate thoroughly. • Set your timer and let it soak for thirty minutes. • Rinse with cold water and let air dry.
Of course, first you need to find some fabric you have lying around. Perhaps some old, cotton clothes or linen sheets you could sacrifice? Either way, this pretreatment step is important as it helps keep the color from bleeding while in use and of course disinfects.
Patterning
The pattern for this A/B Mask style mask and instructions can be found on craftpassion.com.
• Start by folding your fabric—you need to cut two of each fabric (inner and outer layer). ■ This is easy if the fabric is folded onto itself. • Using your pattern, measure out an additional one inch from the sides. • And three eighths around the rest of the mask. • Cut your fabric—this is your outer layer. • The inner layer is a half-inch shorter on the side than the outer layer. ■ Use your outer layer as a template to measure. • Cut out your inner layer fabric. ■ Set it aside.
For those wondering, the Face Mask Pattern can be found here.
Assembly, Part 1
• Separate your fabrics, but keep the layers together as a pair. • Finish the raw edge that is curved. ■ This will face the inside pocket and needs to be secured. • Any overlocking or zigzag stitch will do. ■ You don’t need a serger. • With the right side facing inward, pin together and sew along the curved edge. ■ Use a quarter-inch seam allowance. • Do this for both inner and outer layers. • Open your fabric, then flatten the finished edges onto the fabric and sew the finished edges onto the fabric. • Align the inner and outer layers. • Fold the side edge of the inner layer onto itself twice—you’re rolling in the raw edge. ■ Pin in place.
I’ll be honest, I keep thinking about investing in a sewing machine. I know at Nova Labs, I could borrow one of their machines, but I’m nervous about doing seamwork in a public space. Plus, I need to find some decent patterns to so—like an A/B Surgical Mask!
Assembly, Part 2
• Sew the roll into place along the inward edge of the roll. • With the right sides of the fabric facing together, align the layers and sew the top and bottom edges together. • Clip the curved edge of the fabric where both layers meet. ■ It should be approximately a quarter-inch inward. • Turn the mask inside out. • Roll the raw top and bottom edges inward onto itself to cover the raw edge. ■ Pin in place. • Do the same for the side edges. ■ There should be approximately a half-inch of fabric remaining on both sides. • Sew into place along the inner edge.
Remember to leave those sewing margins! You’re almost done.
Finishing
• Fold the side flap inward, under the inner layer pocket. • Sew in place—both sides. • Insert your filter medium—cloth, a surgical mask, or an N95 mask. • Make sure the nose wire aligns with the nose part of the mask. • If using elastic, take a sixteen-inch length of one sixteenth elastic cord. ■ There’s a tolerance of plus or minus one to two inches for sizing. • Feed it through the channels you made in the sides, and secure it with a double knot. ■ Hide the channels. • To wear: Hold the mask in one hand and slip the bottom elastic over your head, followed by the top. • Adjust accordingly to endure a proper fit. • To wash: hot water, like scrubs. ■ Can be autoclaved. ■ Remove media as appropriate. ■ Sanitize elastic as appropriate.
I never cease to be amazed as the skills and achievements of my friend Lena. I am so astonished I can call her my friend, but then she’s one of the nicest, funniest people you’re likely to meet.
Thank you Lena. Hopefully when SARS-CoV-2 abates, we can cosplay together again!
I got in to cosplay a number of years ago. I was aware of it for quite a while but I really started to take an interest on a trip up to Connecticut to visit me mum. Back then I was in #CO2Fre3 or #CO2Fre2 and in those Nissan LEAFs, I had to stop a number of times to get enough electricity to get to my destination.
So, I stopped a Hotel in Baltimore to use the CHAdeMO charger and get some fuel when I passed some cosplayers going to a convention. I asked to get a picture and kept it as part of my trip log memories on Swarm, as I used to do back then.
Of course I was intrigued so when I heard about this new group, D.C. Cosplay Photo Shoot, forming on Facebook, I joined right away, getting in on the ground floor. I remember that phone call very well as I was driving #CO2Fre home from work. Sarah Brice, an amazing cosplayer in her own right, was there with the other founders. That’s when we planned out what the group would be and how it would be organized. In those early years I was more of a lurker rather than a participant.
I started going to a local Doctor Who convention, ReGeneration Who, now defunct. Seeing all those Whovian cosplays, I decided it was time for me to start building my own cosplays. That’s where I met one of my very best friends in the entire world, Ilona Hull Berberich, who is a dead-ringer for Susan [Foreman].
I was finally ready to attend my first D.C. Cosplay Photo Shoot event. I invided Ilona so I would have someone I met there and we made a great team, having a number of photos taken of us.
From that point I attended a number of D.C. Cosplay Photo Shoot events, building my cosplay database up from a since Doctor Who companion to various other media franchises, getting some great photos and making some great friends.
One of the best parts of all from those events was the Munchie Squad. After an afternoon of posing and snapping picture, we’d all gather and have a friendly meal together. I so enjoyed chatting with my very dear friends Rachael S. Norberg, an amazing cosplayer, and Kevin K. Nguyen, an outstanding photographer, and so many others! It was the perfect capstone to a great event.
I was going to do a Tegan crossplay for the convention. Ilona was coming and would be in a Turlough crossplay. We were both very excited.
I had commissioned a Tegan crossplay months before the convention. I obtained all the COTS elements of the cosplay: blouse, pantyhose, pumps, wig, and purse. I just asked the commissioner for a skirt, a belt, a jacket, and the pill-box hat. I hoped it wouldn’t be too hard. I would have done it myself but I didn’t feel up to the measuring and sewing, especially by hand.
Days before the convention my commissioner said she couldn’t do it. She really, valiantly tried, but it was just beyond her. I hold no ill will and have not asked for my money back but the whole event soured me to cosplay. I prepared and prepped for this perhaps once in a lifetime photoshoot and to come up short. It still hurts, to this day.
Today there was a D.C. Cosplay Photo Shoots event in Leesburg, VA. I haven’t been to a photoshoot in years because I have no new cosplays to share but I really wanted to go to the Munchie Squad! I miss all my cosplay and photographer friends, like Rachael, and I go to Leesburg at least once every fortnight, so it would have been no big deal.
But I forgot.
I really miss cosplay. What will you see me as next?
I joined Toastmasters last year to both practice my public speaking and to lear to be a better performer when acting. I enjoyed answering Table Topics and being challenged to come up with a spontaneous speech—at least when I knew what the topic was—but when it came to my own Ice Breaker speech, I kept putting it off.
The thing is, I don’t like talking about myself. I love writing fiction and talking about Science but when it comes to my personal life, I get embarrassed and ashamed. Much of my personal story is really not for public consumption and is rather confounded with emotional difficulty and lack of self-worth. I do hope through Toastmasters, to overcome that, just as I have found Cosplay to help with my self-image, but that journey isn’t the subject of this post.
Instead, I want to talk about my Ice Breaker.
I decided to cover my digital self. As you can see from the side menu in the upper-right corner of my site, I have a lot of social networks accounts! Indeed, the currently 26 or so I have listed there are only a fraction of the dozen or so twitter accounts I have, the half-dozen Facebook pages I run, the three instagram accounts I control, the dozens of meetups I’m in with my two accounts, one professional, one personal. Or even the fact that I have a separate blog for Reston Writers and one for the Affordable Electric Car NOW!
Of course, seasoned ToastMasters will know that your Ice Breaker is actually 4–6 minutes, not 5–7, so my speech ran long. And I did tend to lose my place as I spoke, having had no time to memorize it word for word. Nonetheless, I did my best and delivered my speech and got some great advice from my friends and colleagues at the Loudoun ToastMasters, club 5154. My mentor Jonathan gave me some amazing and helpful advice and I am so thankful to all of my fellow Toastmasters!