making pith helmet cat ears - advice?
-
Please help me:a) procure 2-5 pith helmets (natural straw type), inexpensively;b) procure material to make matching cat ears;c) add cat ears to pith helmets, in "airplane ears" or "listening behind" position, because cat safari is serious business.Found $15/helmet source for (a), but wonder if there's a less expensive way. For (b), I have no real clue - what should I even buy? Very thin chair caning supplies? Tiny willow branches from a nearby tree? Any ideas? My neighbor and friend has been active in feral cat trapping/neutering/releasing, and has accomplished a lot. She's been very devoted, going out many evenings after work to retrieve cats, bringing a lot of kittens into the local animal rescue organization, etc. She's moving away soon, and her mentor is throwing a little party. The whole idea of going out to strange places to find and trap hidden wild cats is probably not as romantic as I'm making it out to be, and it's not like she gets to use a tranquilizer gun or march for days under the sweltering sun with native porters, but there's no reason not to add a bit of celebratory panache. I'd love to make her a "cat safari" hat, along with one or two more to her mentor, who will feel her loss and will need to look hard to find more volunteers. My efforts to find ways to make cat ears yielded mainly textiles. I want this to look like part of the hat (made of a straw-like material), to be a little understated so that it won't be too embarrassing to wear in public, and to be less cute than is the norm for kitty cat ears on the head. Ear shape should, I think, be like "airplane ears" -- ears extended to the sides, not laid flat back. Maybe a little back, as though listening to something behind.
-
Answer:
Window screen mesh spray painted to match the straw colour might work for ears. And as a bonus it wouldn't fray at all. You can buy the stuff by the yard at hardware stores (or at least you can according to this http://www.designsponge.com/2012/07/diy-project-mesh-screen-beach-bag.html). I'd spraypaint both sides of the mesh to match the hat, then cut out squares, and oragami fold them into cat ears by: -Fold square in half into a triangle (so it looks like a mountain) -Fold both the sides of the triangle up towards top of the big triangle, so it becomes a smaller square. -Fold the tip-flaps and the top of the mountain in half inwards. It'll end up looking like the triangle you had after the first step but with all the edges inside and just a fold down the centre which would become the inside of the ear when you attach them to the hat (probably with colour-matched embroidery floss or hot glue)
amtho at Ask.Metafilter.Com Visit the source
Other answers
http://www.orientaltrading.com/api/search?Ntt=pith+helmet has straw pith helmets.
SuperSquirrel
It's not clear to me what you mean by matching ears. If mean the ear material should be similar to the helmet material, then buy an extra pith helmet and use the material from that helmet to build ears that are an exact materials match. If it's flexible, with the aid of a glue gun you should be able to use pieces to fold and reinforce into ears. Are the ears meant to look like ears, or is it meant to be a helmet for someone with cat ears, and so the helmet has cat-ear-protectors, rather than cat ears?
-harlequin-
Your best bet on the ears might be to buy a standard widebrim straw beach hat (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B007EH82M0/metafilter-20/ref=nosim/) and cut the ears out of that. Refer to cloth patterns that you've seen so far to get an idea of a good shape to cut. Cut a test ear out of paper, and curl it around, trim it, etc, until you get a nice shape, then use that as a pattern for the straw material. You'll need to bind the edges; either a machine zigzag stitch, or a ribbon tape binding to cover the raw edge, or maybe you can figure out a nice way to fold it that presents the ear edges as creases, and all the cut edges point down toward the helmet. Depending on what the helmet's like, you may be able to cut a slit in the outer cover to tuck the ear base down into and glue it all with hot glue, or you may have to glue on the outside. Feral cats probably have gunk inside their ears anyway.
aimedwander
I mean similar material, and they should look like ears. http://candyapplecostumes.com/j20624.html is the least expensive seller I've found, at $15.99 per hat. I know I said straw, but this is the kind of thing I'm envisioning -- I don't know what the constituent material is called, though.
amtho
Related Q & A:
- Do consumers do more research before making an expensive purchase than before making a cheaper purchase?Best solution by answers.yahoo.com
- Which snowboard helmet to buy?Best solution by overstock.com
- How to make a cheap helmet camera?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
- What goggles fit with a Giro helmet so that there is no goggle gap?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
- What's a good helmet cam?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
Just Added Q & A:
- How many active mobile subscribers are there in China?Best solution by Quora
- How to find the right vacation?Best solution by bookit.com
- How To Make Your Own Primer?Best solution by thekrazycouponlady.com
- How do you get the domain & range?Best solution by ChaCha
- How do you open pop up blockers?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
For every problem there is a solution! Proved by Solucija.
-
Got an issue and looking for advice?
-
Ask Solucija to search every corner of the Web for help.
-
Get workable solutions and helpful tips in a moment.
Just ask Solucija about an issue you face and immediately get a list of ready solutions, answers and tips from other Internet users. We always provide the most suitable and complete answer to your question at the top, along with a few good alternatives below.