Brass-Heeled Dollyboots
May. 4th, 2009 07:16 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Reading 'The Difference Engine' that phrase stuck with me so when it came time that I needed nifty shoes for my new outfit, I decided to incorporate the idea.

These began life as a pair of women's ice skates that I got on Ebay for $5 plus shipping. I unscrewed/pried off the runners (A LOT more work that I had thought it would be) and filled the remaining holes with E-6000 cement.

They took 5 coats of Tarrago Self-Shine Color Dye (#26 Burgundy), which was about half the bottle. I then masked off the heel and toe caps and did 2 coats of #18 Black on those. The packaging that I got has a little bottle of the dye and a same-sized bottle of "Preparer" which you use first with a green scrubbie to take off the glaze/dirt/polish before coloring. There is a paintbrush-like thing that you can use to work the color into crevices and seams, and a sponge applicator for the main coloring. I'd never used the stuff before and was reasonably pleased with the results.
The dye took fairly well on the eyelets but ran a bit on the lacing hooks. I ended up using a black acrylic paint to even those out. Then 2 coats of Testors enamel for the heels. All in all, it was a bit more labor- and time-intensive than I had thought it would be - you really DO need the full 5 hour drying time between coats or the dye just starts to take off the previous coat - but I'm pleased with the results.
Also in the pic are my glasses. They were $5.95 on E-bay and I added the silver wire grid pieces to suggest goggles without actually being goggles.

These began life as a pair of women's ice skates that I got on Ebay for $5 plus shipping. I unscrewed/pried off the runners (A LOT more work that I had thought it would be) and filled the remaining holes with E-6000 cement.

They took 5 coats of Tarrago Self-Shine Color Dye (#26 Burgundy), which was about half the bottle. I then masked off the heel and toe caps and did 2 coats of #18 Black on those. The packaging that I got has a little bottle of the dye and a same-sized bottle of "Preparer" which you use first with a green scrubbie to take off the glaze/dirt/polish before coloring. There is a paintbrush-like thing that you can use to work the color into crevices and seams, and a sponge applicator for the main coloring. I'd never used the stuff before and was reasonably pleased with the results.
The dye took fairly well on the eyelets but ran a bit on the lacing hooks. I ended up using a black acrylic paint to even those out. Then 2 coats of Testors enamel for the heels. All in all, it was a bit more labor- and time-intensive than I had thought it would be - you really DO need the full 5 hour drying time between coats or the dye just starts to take off the previous coat - but I'm pleased with the results.
Also in the pic are my glasses. They were $5.95 on E-bay and I added the silver wire grid pieces to suggest goggles without actually being goggles.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-05 12:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-05 12:42 am (UTC)I'm having fun with this new genre - more room for creativity without having to worry about "costume guidelines" or doing a specific reproduction.