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duck-tape99 — Dave Strider God Tier Hood Tutorial

Published: 2011-12-29 18:48:25 +0000 UTC; Views: 63042; Favourites: 804; Downloads: 690
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Description Hope this helps!! Please let me know if there is anything unclear and I will do my best to change it!

If you do use this I would love to know how it turns out!

In case you are having trouble reading the text, here is everything typed out here:
You will need:
4 yards of fabric
Sewing machine
Fabric scissors and paper scissors
Measuring tape
Either newsprint/newspaper/pattern paper
Thread
Yardstick/Straightedge
Iron

1:
trace from the hood of a hoodie onto a piece of newsprint.
After you do that, cut it out with paper scisors and measure at a few points 2 inches around the hood.
Play connect the dots to make the final pattern and cut that out!

Now that that is done…
Measure from where the hoodie hood typically hits your forehead (just above the hairline) and measure to where your eyebrows start (mine is 4 inches).
Use this measurement for the half oval.
You will eyeball the length on the bottom.

Lastly:
To measure for your cape, you will need a bit of help. Hold the tape measurer to your shoulder and have someone read off the number at the back of your knee. Add anywhere between 2-5 inches to this length depending on how long you want this to be! (I added 2 inches)

For the cape…
Experiment with the lengths on the front and go with whatever looks good. Leave a hole for your neck and if all else fails, use these measurements (see image)
Use a ruler as a guideline for cutting these out! You don’t want a crooked knight collar!

2:
Fold your fabric in half, matching the selvages and pin on the hood (2 times; one for the outside and one for the lining), the half-oval, and the front of the cape.
After this is cut, you should have 2 half ovals, 2 front capes, and 4 hood sides.

The back cape is a bit more complicated
First open the rest of the fabric and fold it the opposite way than it was for the first cut.
Then place the front cape pattern at the top and from the shoulders measure your desired length. Connect the two points and make a straight line across the bottom. Use a yardstick or straight-edge to make a straight line from the corner of the top to the corner of the bottom and then cut.

3:
*Be sure that when you are sewing, have the right sides of the fabric touching
*Use whatever length of seam allowance you are comfortable with; I used a quarter of an inch
On all of the hood pieces, sew along the back edge.
Then mark the center of the half circles and line it up with the center seam of the hoods. Pin there and sew along the curve. At this point you should have two hoods with a front on them.

Here is the tricky part:
Flip them both so the right sides are out (no seams are showing)
Put the right sides together and sew along the front seams (NOT messing with the bottom! Only sew at the front of the hood!)

Once you get the hoods sewn together, flip it out using the bottom hole and press the seams. Now place the hood to the side, or on your head. You will not need it again until later.

CAPE:
Sew the cape front to cape back with right sides of the fabric together. (you will do this step twice) Only sew at the 3 inch marks on the shoulder so you do not sew your neck shut.

Once these are sewn together, lay the two finished pieces on top of each other with right sides touching each other. Pin all the edges.

TIPS FOR SEWING THIS PART:
-Sew all of the long directions first (including the spaces on the front). This will save your cape from doing an awkward tuck thing at the corners.
-Leave the seams open from your previous stitch if possible; not a huge deal though

((See Image: Sew the green lines first, and then go through and finish the blue lines. Finish by clipping corners))

When that is all done, flip it outwards using the neck hone, and press the seams.

Finishing Steps:
Mark the center of the back of the cape and line it up with both of the hood back seams. Pin the hood on and sew around.
When you get that all sewn on, stitch the remaining edge that isn’t in contact with the hood (if there is any)

When that is done, be a boss in your little hood!
Related content
Comments: 153

spicydoitsu [2020-01-04 07:29:27 +0000 UTC]

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TheBetterDave [2016-09-11 05:14:34 +0000 UTC]

I have a question about the hood in part 1, where did you get the 11 and a half from? Is it from the hood you used, or something else? It would be a great help if you elaborated!thank you! (I know this post is old, but I hope you respond to this)

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newmoon2711 [2015-10-17 23:42:48 +0000 UTC]

Did you hem the fringe things?
 l_-_-_l   <== that

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Vriskerz [2015-05-20 13:38:42 +0000 UTC]

do you do commissions for these e7e

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WHATSPUPDAWG In reply to Vriskerz [2015-05-23 17:49:29 +0000 UTC]

They couldn't if they wanted to, Hussie has said that nobody can sell anything HS related unless it's from WhatPumpkin and if you see anyone selling anything HS related they're breaking a copyright law.

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Vriskerz In reply to WHATSPUPDAWG [2015-05-23 18:39:08 +0000 UTC]

ooohhhh...that sucks
but er are you sure? where did you learn this?

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WHATSPUPDAWG In reply to Vriskerz [2015-05-23 19:28:37 +0000 UTC]

It's on the MSPA website somehwere here's the link: www.mspaintadventures.com/sale…

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Vriskerz In reply to WHATSPUPDAWG [2015-05-23 19:35:18 +0000 UTC]

oh ok i get it now uvu tysm

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quarpenTine [2015-01-04 07:03:34 +0000 UTC]

What are the exact measurements used on the front of the cape?

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duck-tape99 In reply to quarpenTine [2015-01-12 01:37:18 +0000 UTC]

so the overall rectangle is 16" x 16 7/8" (which can be rounded to 17) with the neck hole going down 6 inches.  More specific measurements can be seen in the tutorial image.

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Anoichan [2014-10-17 15:53:01 +0000 UTC]

This tutorial is awesome! 
Starting my hood right now for halloween- Gonna be the coolest (and only) Dave Strider on the block!  

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

duck-tape99 In reply to Anoichan [2014-10-19 17:50:27 +0000 UTC]

Awesome!  So happy for you.  Don't forget to send me a pic when its finished!

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Anoichan In reply to duck-tape99 [2014-10-21 16:03:34 +0000 UTC]

anoichan.deviantart.com/art/Go…

It is a horrific picture.
And the cape is too light. 
Oh well.

Thanks for making the tutorial, though! It was really helpful!

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

duck-tape99 In reply to Anoichan [2014-11-23 22:11:29 +0000 UTC]

Hey, you gotta start somewhere!  It looks great, you did a fantastic job with it!! 

Thanks for sending me the picture, I'm really glad the tutorial worked for you!

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invalidAbsence [2014-05-13 01:44:01 +0000 UTC]

I just finished making mine, i had trouble understanding the instructions so i ignored them and just used the pictures as a guide and did the rest my own way lol. i'm really happy with how it turned out and wouldn't have been able to do it without this tutorial. thank you.  

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duck-tape99 In reply to invalidAbsence [2014-05-19 03:24:36 +0000 UTC]

Ah gosh thanks for attaching the image!  It looks awesome and I'm so glad this tutorial was able to help you out!!

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misfitforever123 [2014-04-13 05:08:44 +0000 UTC]

Gr8 tutorial by the way  

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misfitforever123 [2014-04-13 05:07:37 +0000 UTC]

Al my good note-taking pens are worn out!!! :0 

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Evvss55 [2014-03-27 22:20:09 +0000 UTC]

Wow... I have to make this for my Knight of Void cosplay... This is gonna be goooood

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clowkeeper [2014-02-14 02:06:50 +0000 UTC]

gonna make this tomorrow...maybe try with the evil that is the sewing machine (only ever sewn my hand) and it will be my first cosplay work XD thanks for the tutorial and i'll let you know how it goes~

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quietlyintheshadows [2014-01-22 00:03:49 +0000 UTC]

ahh thank you for this tutorial. although for my cape I ended up using about 5 yards of fabric and it was great for god tier karkat.

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SoccerStrider01 [2013-11-27 20:35:43 +0000 UTC]

What fabric did you use? I don't knock if I should use felt or fleece. I'm leaning toward fleece because felt doesn't move as well. 

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DistinguishedPhysics In reply to SoccerStrider01 [2014-09-28 19:00:54 +0000 UTC]

I used wool, myself, for a winter-variant. It's my Knight of Space cosplay and I wear it sometimes at all times of the year so gotta stay warm yknow?
I used Cotton for the summer version, and Fleece for the fall-sprint version.
Fleece is by far my favorite, I'd say.

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duck-tape99 In reply to SoccerStrider01 [2013-12-15 03:06:52 +0000 UTC]

If you absolutely HAD to go with either definitely go with fleece.  Cotton is preferred.

For reference: if it's for a costume garment thats not supposed to be a toy solider, don't use felt.  It's not breathable and doesn't move. 


Sorry for the late response!!

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inside-our-mind [2013-10-10 06:11:41 +0000 UTC]

I'm having a small problem. My hoodie/cape is really heavy (I cut it out of a snuggie), and if it's not pulling my wig off my head, it's choking me. How can I fix this without messing up my costume? Attempts to pin it to the shirts seem to just pull the shirts up too.

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duck-tape99 In reply to inside-our-mind [2013-10-13 05:07:29 +0000 UTC]

You could try cutting and stitching in a gusset into the back of the hood, or possibly use sew in snaps between the shirt and hood to keep it in one place.  Use the biggest kind you can find to make sure it stays in tact. 

The only real complete solution I can really think of is to use a different and lighter fabric.  

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MrsEdwardElric1 [2013-09-26 00:24:02 +0000 UTC]

thanks man i'm trying to make my Knight of Rage outfit

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duck-tape99 In reply to MrsEdwardElric1 [2013-09-29 03:18:43 +0000 UTC]

Oh cool, hope that goes well!

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bendrowned16 [2013-08-14 18:41:04 +0000 UTC]

This worked perfectly for my hood! ^^

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duck-tape99 In reply to bendrowned16 [2013-08-15 21:11:56 +0000 UTC]

That is awesome to hear!!  Thanks for the feedback!

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narwalsx100 [2013-07-22 00:51:43 +0000 UTC]

Quick question, when you sew the cape front to the cape back do you do it twice, once for the lining and once for the outer fabric? Then do you just sew them together?

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duck-tape99 In reply to narwalsx100 [2013-07-25 19:04:33 +0000 UTC]

Yes, I would recommend doing that.  and when you do sew them together, be sure that you sew the right sides together and then flip it inside out so no seams are showing.

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narwalsx100 In reply to duck-tape99 [2013-08-01 01:35:00 +0000 UTC]

Thanks a lot!!

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Eve-Alckemyst [2013-07-14 01:28:17 +0000 UTC]

Guess who's going to wear this year-long over their senior year of highschool?

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JinXBunnyy In reply to Eve-Alckemyst [2013-08-27 23:14:49 +0000 UTC]

that makes two of us

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ShadowsSearching [2013-07-08 18:04:35 +0000 UTC]

okay I have another question (sorry if I'm annoying or something, I'm new with this) on part 2, I'm having trouble understanding the part with the back cape. If you could help me understand it a bit better that'd be awesome.

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duck-tape99 In reply to ShadowsSearching [2013-07-13 06:37:11 +0000 UTC]

The back cape -
okay, so you take the measurement from your shoulder to wherever you want your cape to hit (the back of your knees for instance) and write that down.
fold your fabric in half hamburger style, so that both ends of the fabric that are store cut match up. Now lay the pattern piece for the front side on and match the neck and shoulder measurements.

now take your measurement from your shoulder to the bottom of the cape and measure that straight down from shoulder seam.

you can make the bottom of the cape flare out as far as you want, it is all up to you!! just make sure both sides of the cape are the same length!

hope this clears things up for you! Sorry I didn't get back to you sooner on this! If you have any further questions feel free and ask away!!

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ShadowsSearching In reply to duck-tape99 [2013-07-13 18:13:48 +0000 UTC]

thank you so much!!

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ShadowsSearching In reply to ShadowsSearching [2013-07-11 18:14:28 +0000 UTC]

nevermind I figured it out ^^

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ShadowsSearching [2013-06-14 19:39:50 +0000 UTC]

could I sew by hand?

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duck-tape99 In reply to ShadowsSearching [2013-07-06 03:28:37 +0000 UTC]

I would honestly suggest to use a machine. You can sew by hand but it WILL take a while. many of the seams are very long (specifically in the actual cape)

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ShadowsSearching In reply to duck-tape99 [2013-07-06 03:57:49 +0000 UTC]

okay thanks

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2-DimensionalNerd [2013-04-09 06:20:16 +0000 UTC]

Now I gotta get my mom to look at this and make it for me.

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BonzoisAwesome [2013-04-03 00:33:30 +0000 UTC]

How exactly did you find the neckhole size?

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duck-tape99 In reply to BonzoisAwesome [2013-04-04 22:32:16 +0000 UTC]

really you just figure out the largest width around your head. and then add a few inches. At least thats what I did.

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BonzoisAwesome In reply to BonzoisAwesome [2013-04-03 20:11:30 +0000 UTC]

Figured that out, but am confused about the 2nd part of part 3 (sewing the front and back capes together).

Do I sew one part of the back cape to one of the fronts and then do the same for the other?
If so, how exactly do you pin that?

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BonzoisAwesome In reply to BonzoisAwesome [2013-04-04 00:04:21 +0000 UTC]

Nevermind any of what I asked; I finished! DDDD

Here's a few pics: [link]

For my first sewing project ever, I'm proud. :3

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duck-tape99 In reply to BonzoisAwesome [2013-04-15 21:24:32 +0000 UTC]

It really turned out great!! Nice job!!

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BonzoisAwesome In reply to duck-tape99 [2013-04-15 23:54:11 +0000 UTC]

Danke! :3

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Burning-Boxes [2013-03-09 15:39:26 +0000 UTC]

wait no im still lost at step 3

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