MS Fall Costumes Kid Friendly 9 18
MS Fall Costumes Kid Friendly 9 18
MS Fall Costumes Kid Friendly 9 18
Fall Festival
Middle School Division
You will be helping DTASC create better directions for students to follow. Thank
you.
Fall Festival — Middle School Division
Costumes/Makeup
Are we supposed to make costumes?
• No. You draw the costumes.
• However, you may assemble one or two fully realized costumes by using
clothing you buy (within your budget for this event) or borrow from
someone, even yourself.
• Fully realized means you have all the pieces of the costume that the
audience will see.
• You may not rent a costume or any of its pieces.
• You will need swatches (small pieces of fabric) for each design, to show what
material you would make it from. (You do not need swatches for the fully
realized costumes.) These are glued or stapled to the page.
6. You must have the Costume Verification Form and Costume Checklist
(together on a page in this pdf).
• Print a copy of the Verification Form and Checklist.
• Fill them out and get the page signed before festival.
• Put the page into the back of your notebook.
7. You must have a detailed list of expenditures in your notebook.
• A Sample Expeditures Page is in this pdf.
• It shows you:
! how to figure costs
! how to get fair market value if something is donated
! what to do if you lose a receipt
! how detailed you need to be
• The expenditures page is the last page of your notebook.
8. You must include receipts or proof of fair market value.
• See the Sample Expenditures page for examples of this
• You can add these to your notebook by putting them in an envelope
fastened to the inside back cover.
• It’s okay to glue or staple pages of receipts for your notebook, but the
envelope is easier.
9. You must have a presentation team of 1 to 6 persons to tell the judges about
your work.
• The presentation can take up to 8 minutes.
• At least one member of your team should be confident enough to do the
talking, and know why you made the choices you did.
• The judges may or may not ask questions after your presentation.
III. RESEARCH
The following are recommendations of things to include in this section. Include as few or
as many as are appropriate for each entry.
A. State specific design choices and explain in more detail how they help to
communicate the practical needs, as well as meanings, emotions, and stylistic goals
stated in the introduction.
B. Drawings/sketches/renderings/models/plots (Explain in more detail how they
support the play based on the characters, their actions, the time period, script
requirements, and authentic research)
C. Practical choices — cost, time, materials, ease of use, ease in staging
D. Artistic choices — color, texture, line, shape, composition, silhouette, balance,
terminal accents, special effects
E. Artistic license — unique choices based on an artistic vision (visual metaphors)
F. Special design problems faced and how you resolved them
G. Changes that you would make a second time and why
H. Your greatest successes/personal rewards and why
IV. Expenses page, Verification Form and Checklist page, Receipts or proof of fair market
value of items. (see E3–27)
COSTUME CHECKLIST
___ 1. Notebook is ready for judges. It has these items in this order:
��� Title Page: School Code, Division, Title of Play & Playwright (or Theme)
��� Concept Paper, following all the guidelines
��� Research section:
��� details of our research___ costume renderings___ fabric swatches
��� makeup charts ____ choices made ___ problems solved
��� our choices communicate practical needs, meanings, emotions, style goals
��� how all of these support the play _____ changes for next time
��� greatest successes or personal rewards gained from this project
��� Verification Form and Checklist (this page)
��� Expenses Page, showing how we spent our money
��� Receipts and/or other proof of money spent
___ 2. We have built the required number of costumes for our division:
��� Varsity: at least 1 fully realized costumes (could have 2)
�� JV: at least 1 fully realized costume (could have 2)
��� MS: fully realized costumes are not required, but we could have 1 or 2
___ 3. We have the required number of costume renderings, including fully realized:
��� Varsity: 5 ____ JV: 3-4 (4 if 2 are fully realized)
��� MS: 3-4 (4 if we have NO fully realized costumes)
___ 4. We have a makeup chart for each costume.
___ 5. We identified each rendering with character's name (plus act & scene if needed)
___ 6. We have spent no more than $100 for our entire entry, including realized costumes.
___ 7. All the work on this tech project has been done by students.
___ 8. Our group will be able to answer any questions the judges might ask.
If there are several in the group, others of us could choose to answer.
___ 9. I will report on time for my tech presentation, with all my materials and all members of
my group.
___ 10. Varsity ONLY: I will find out what section we're in, and be on time for that section.
I understand that sections will be announced after roll is taken in our tech room.
DTASC Handbook September 2018 E3 — 27
http://cetoweb.org/dtasc/handbook/
Technical Theatre Expenditures Report
This is an example of how to create the Expenditures Report for your tech
notebook.
The items listed here show you
• how to list and explain items
• how to figure costs
• how to prove the amount you’re claiming on expenses.
TOTAL $ 84.30
Research
1. What were your sources for your research? (Internet, books,
paintings, previous shows, etc.?)
2. How did your research influence your design?
3. How much time did your research take?
Pattern/Fabric/Color Choices
1. Did you find a commercial pattern or draft it yourself?
2. What type of fabric did use and why did you choose that for your
costume?
3. Explain the color choices that you made for your costume?
Costume Design
1. Explain your design. Is it historical or contemporary?
2. Why did you decide to use this interpretation?
Costume Construction
1. How did you construct your costume?
2. What was the biggest construction challenge you faced and how did
you overcome it?
3. Is there anything you’d do differently with what you learned from
your experience?