Bras I have made, part II! This one is made from real candy and embellished with fringe and rhinestones. If you’re making a candy bra, only use hard candies that won’t melt—chocolate is a bad idea. I glued mine with a hot glue gun cause I was in a hurry but I’d recommend using E6000 glue, which is a lot stronger and less messy-looking than hot glue. I finished it off with a few coats of spray-on polyeurethane gloss, which gives it a nice shiny finish and keeps the candy from feeling sticky.
A few days ago I posted a picture of a Halloween hairstyle I was practicing for a party. This is the tutorial! Whether you’re going for “sexy devil” or “unholy spawn from the deepest pit of hell” you can make your look even more awesome by skipping the horns-on-a-headband thing and transforming your own hair into a pair of demonic horns. (This hairstyle is also practical for scaring boys away year-round.) 
YOU’LL NEED:
DIRECTIONS:








(Sorry for the shitty quality of my photos! Turns out it’s really hard to take pictures of the top of your head and style your hair at the same time.)

Inspired by my insatiable lust for candy, this polish from Sephora, and hours of ogling photos of lolita nails with pretty 3-d elements.
YOU NEED:
INSTRUCTIONS:
Reblogged from katydidnot :
girlmonster party
While we making those lipsticks we also made these face masks and transformed ourselves into slimy girlmonsters

Today I found a recipe online for do-it-yourself lipstick made from crayons, so Katy and I decided to try making some. I’ve been coveting lipsticks in cool and unusual colors, and using crayons lets you easily make almost any color imaginable without having to figure out pigments or dyes. The recipe is really simple and it only took a few minutes to make each lipstick. Almost all the ingredients can be found in a drug store (although you might have to look in a health food store for shea butter) and some of the stuff you might already have at home, like crayons and oil (we substituted olive oil for jojoba oil since we already had some on hand). We had a hard time finding zinc oxide until we learned that it’s used to treat diaper rash and sometimes poison ivy—so look in the baby care isle or with other first-aid ointments. Everything should be pretty inexpensive, except for the shea butter which cost us $11 for a jar. However, even a small jar is enough to yield dozens of different lipsticks so it’s definitely worth it.

The crayons we picked were Crayola Metallic FX, which have a really nice fine silver glitter in them. We followed the basic recipe but added Vitamin E and zinc oxide ointment. We also bought a couple of small baking tins for less than $2 which made it easy to melt our ingredients together.

The best part of this project was the containers we used: day-of-the-week pill storage containers. They cost less than a dollar, are just the right size for the amount of lipstick the recipe makes, come in different colors, and are a really cute way to hold a bunch of different colors. They look awesome and are the perfect way to store your new lipsticks. We both thought these would make a good gift, too.

Here’s myself and Katy lookin fine in our new lipstick:

TOTAL BABES. Enjoy!
(Lipstick recipe credit to belsey)
Quick n dirty sewing tutorial. It’ll take all of 20 minutes.

Okay, so these houndstooth-print grandma pants are found in abundance in every thrift store ever and can be obtained for like a dollar. They are seriously unflattering as pants but can be made into cute high waisted shorts with extremely minimal effort.
YOU NEED:
INSTRUCTIONS:
1. Try on the pants. On one leg, mark where you’d like the top of the cuff to hit. Then decide how wide you’d like the cuff to be. Multiply that by two and add about a quarter inch for a seam allowance. Mark this distance below the first mark you made.

2. Cut off the pant leg at the second mark you made. Fold the pants in half and use the first leg as a guide to cut the second leg so they’re even.

3. My pants had a weird polyester lining on the inside, which I didn’t want. If your pants have this, you can just cut it out.

4. Fold up your quarter-inch seam allowance and press it flat.

5. Fold up the cuff and iron it flat. Pin in place.

6. Using thread in a color that’ll blend in, sew along the top edge of the cuffs. Make sure to keep your seam straight, since your stitching will be visible.
(ALTERNATE LAZY PERSON METHOD: Just do a couple of stitches on the very inside tops of the cuffs, near the crotch, and on the outside, where the side seams are, to hold the cuffs in place. It won’t be as sturdy, but if you don’t have a sewing machine/don’t have a ton of time, it’s easier.)

…That’s pretty much all you have to do. A good beginner sewing project.

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