


Archive for the 'Design' Category
What about goggles?
Goggles are often encountered in steampunk clothing and imagery, creating the misleading impression that they are somehow fundamental to the “steampunk look.” However, this does not mean that all steampunk outfits include goggles. Accessories such as scarves, driving coats, ray guns, aprons and overalls, goggles are a piece of fashion that can help give life to a steampunk world. Unique and creative goggles can be found worn by the airship aviator, inventor, scientist and explorer. Hans Meier is a creator of some of these custom made models.

“The Victorian esthetic, attracts me to Steampunk to some degree. But I think what attracts me most, is the merger of old and new. Things that we think of as modern technology, computers, submarines, things like that, built with Victorian era ability. Along with the inserting of fantastical technology, Time Machines, Aether Travel…it makes for a wonderful mishmash of old and new, modern and antique. I’ve always loved combining era’s. One of my favorite movies (not Steampunk at all) is ‘A Knights Tale’.

I like to make things that function, primarily. If it has a light, it should light, gears should move (at the very least), triggers should pull and cause something to happen. Everything I make functions to some extent. I can’t just glue a gear onto something and call it Steampunk, or cobble bits and pieces together. There are some really cool looking items out there, but I always feel a little let down if the trigger on the gun doesn’t move, and it make noise, or shoot a dart. But that’s me.

In 2008 I stumbled across the music of Abney Park. I was immediately enthralled by it and commenced to drag all my friends along with me. To my surprise I found out that they were a local Seattle Band, and, that they were even going to be having a show in town, a few months away. I found that it was customary for people to dress up to attend the shows. My friends and I, being costumers mostly, were readily able to put together Victorian (or pseudo-Victorian) garb. What we lacked, were goggles. It had been many years since I was even remotely able to be creative, and with joyous emails, I informed all my friends that were going to the show, that, I would provide them with goggles to wear, for the evening. And with that, began a journey that has taken me from Seattle to New Jersey, and many other places. A journey that I didn’t, couldn’t, foresee on that fateful night.

When I started making goggles and guns for the public, I figured I would sell one or two a month, on ETSY. I also decided that I would go to some of the, now forming, Steampunk conventions. With every convention I attended I realized I would have to increase my production….and then I went wholesale. To my (giggling) amazement, my goggles are now found on a number of different websites, not just my own. I have a number of vendors that carry them, and have even been able to add a few store-fronts, even one in San Francisco.

I still do Steampunk conventions now and then, with March and April of next year looking very busy with Wild Wild West Con in Tucson, Nova Albion Steampunk Exhibition in Santa Clara and The Oklahoma Steampunk Exhibition in Oklahoma City, along with whatever orders will come in for the vendors and stores. It’s been an interesting ride, and I’ll hang on to it as long as I can. You can find me and my creations at http://www.phfactor.ws , yeah… I know…I tried for a .com or .net, but that was the only domain left with my name…
Find Hans on:
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I’m primarily a music photographer so I photograph live bands and promotional work. It’s a good thing I really enjoy doing it because there’s not much money in it, especially when shooting live shows. Between photographing concerts and promotional materials for artists I do some work with models on the side but not as much as I would like to.

I am somewhat picky about models and would rather work with a few really good models than a whole lot of bad ones. Living in Maine it’s difficult to find many actual models here that are more than just a Model Mayhem or Myspace account taking their clothes off for guys with cameras or ‘pretty girls’ thinking that just because their friends told them they should model. A former mentor of mine once told me “You are who you shoot.” so any time I start thinking I should shoot whoever I just remind myself of that.

Before this shoot, I had only caught a glimpse of a few examples of actual Steampunk themed work and found it interesting. I have shot Elena as a burlesque performer a few times and when she approached me to be involved in documenting her clothing line I was more than happy to participate. Elena had the location already scouted so all I needed to do was shoot it, easy right?! Well it was a little more challenging than I anticipated, especially not having an assistant with me.

Setting up lighting in the right places to give me options to shoot in was the most challenging part of the evening, aside from that the room was basically narrow grated walkways, step anywhere else and you would be submerged in liquid metal ooze that’s probably been stewing on the ground for 100+ years. I thought for certain one of my lights was going to take a plunge but fortunately none did.

I’m hoping to do more work in this genre, I really enjoyed shooting it and I’m psyched with the results. Of course I couldn’t have done this without the amazing talent of Elena! As well as the great models we had that waited around patiently for their turn inside a steamy hot boiler room. Much appreciation to all of them!

Promo/Contact info-
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http://www.tomcouture.com
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http://facebook.com/couturephotos
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http://twitter.com/tomcouturephoto
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Fashion for Tom’s Steamshoot was provided and designed by Elena Sanders:

This collection was inspired by the Steampunk genre. I call it “Steampunk Super Villains” and each outfit is for a specific character. I imagined a gang of people joining forces after a catastrophic time traveling adventure that landed them in a post apocalyptic world. A world that I imagined to look much like this boiler room that I accidentally discovered. When I extended the collection from 5 to 13 pieces i did variations of some of the characters because I thought they needed friends. There are a couple of mutants, a couple of aristocrats, a spy, a mad scientist, and a couple of assassins. and automatons built by the scientist and his friend.
Find Elena at her website: www.elenasanders.com

Are you a Steampunk artist or writer? You can be featured on OverburyInk’s SteamTuesdays – Check the SteamTuesday page and contact us with your info. Got a Steampunk Blog? Join the tour!
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This week’s tour:
O.M.Grey’s Caught in the Cogs Steampunk Spotlight:

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Join Mike Perschon for his Steampunk discussions on The Steampunk Scholar

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For French Steampunk

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New and Interesting posts from Matthew Delman at Free The Princess.com
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My Wife, Lora and I have a passion for Steampunk and all things Gothic and Neo-Victorian. We own an Etsy shop called London Particulars which is named after the heavy fogs which used to shroud Victorian London, as mentioned by Charles Dickens in Bleak House.
Our shop mainly carries handmade Steampunk Jewelry (by Lora) and my whimsical Neo-Victorian artwork, which is loosely based on Victorian Silhouettes.
I‘m from London and after I met Lora we soon relocated to America. Before leaving England, we spent a lot of time exploring London, the major attractions as well as the less frequented places. We soon discovered London’s secret and often missed history and we took a lot of photographs on these explorations.
Whilst settling into my new home in Seattle, I spent a day idling and browsing through our photographs of London and I found a particularly bewitching shot of Primrose Hill, a place referenced in Mary Poppins, War of the Worlds and a Blur song (For Tomorrow). The landscape was timeless and the image of a gentlemen cycling along on a Penny Farthing, pursuing a cat flying away on balloons soon materialized in my mind’s eye (as it will)…

The Gentlemen on his Penny Farthing is Professor Thistlequick and his cat goes by the name of Happiness. The Professor is in hot pursuit of Happiness after her balloons took her adrift whilst they were out taking the air. Their journey across London is portrayed in a series of seven pictures, including a dash over the gothic splendor of the House of Lords:

Professor Thistlequick is inspired by mad Victorian inventors and whilst the imagery might be more whimsical than a lot of Steampunk art, the novel I’m writing is much darker, with leanings to a more gothic, Dickensian London.
Through our love of all things vintage, strange and bizarre, we were drawn to the burgeoning Steampunk revival and Lora turned her creativity to fashioning Steampunk Jewelry.

Whilst a lot of our Steampunk Designs are unadulterated clockwork pieces, we also likes to add color, a flash of crimson and a dash of deepest blue and whilst the original clockwork mechanisms look beautiful and unique in their own right, it’s nice to compliment them with a hint of color.

The “Cthulhu” necklace, a reference to the fearsome old God from HP Lovecraft’s hugely influential and odd tale “The Call of Cthulhu”. Whilst the tales of HP Lovecraft proceeded the Victorian age, they still conjure the strange and peculiar which ties in with the ethos of London Particulars.

As one of the most unique and beautiful of men’s fashion accessories, Steampunk Cufflinks are one of our biggest sellers. Often purchased for weddings, we always strive for the “perfect match” when pairing our cuff links…a befitting detail on your big day!

The Victorians were known for their fascination with all things occult and esoteric, hence the creation of the Steampunk Scarab necklace. The Egyptians used the symbol of the Scarab (which symbolized rebirth) on a lot of their magical seals and amulets which were used as protection from evil spirits. Whilst we can’t promise our customers protection from evil, every little helps!

I think part of the allure of Steampunk Jewelry is that every piece of clockwork jewelry is completely unique. When you’re hunting for new watch movements and stripping away the old watch covers, you never know what you’re going to find. The people that made vintage watches were true artisans, I really appreciate their craftsmanship and it’s wonderful to think that rather ending up as landfill, these old watches are given a new lease of life, reborn as Steampunk Jewelry.

Steampunk is such a fluid art form, there are no particular rules; you can make whatever you like, the only limit being your imagination. This Steampunk Bee is one of my favorite pieces; I’d love to have a whole hive of them buzzing around the garden!
You can find out more about our Steampunk Jewelry and artwork, by visiting us at:
Etsy shop: LondonParticulars
www.steampunkjewelry.ffxoh.com/
http://professorthistlequick.com/
London Particulars Facebook page
Twitter @Steampunkshoppe
I am a newly established photographer but a lifelong lover of both photography and fashion and costuming. I’ve been following all manner of alternative fashion and historical and creative costuming since I did my first search for a corset online in ’96. Everything from goth and lolita to reenactment garb to bellydance costuming to fetish fashion to cosplay peaks my interest. I first heard the term “steampunk” in 2001, when it began to crop up in discussions within the neo-victorian and US elegant gothic aristocrat fashion movements. I’ve been hooked ever since.
In early 2008 I decided to take up photography as a hobby and that December I shot a series of “steamhunk” portraits of author Emmy Jackson at the historic Sloss Furnaces in Alabama.
I became equally hooked on portrait photography, and I’ve spent the last year and some change gaining skills more specific to that trade and creating a body of work as Lex Machina that I hope appeals to fans of the aesthetic.
Fashion photography and steampunk portraiture combines my love of all of these wonderful garments and accessories, my more than 10 years of retouching and graphics experience and making people look and feel cool, which I love almost as much as I love clothes. I enjoy shooting regular everyday steampunks just as much as professional models and performers. Each expects something different from me, as an artist and I enjoy the challenges and rewards each provides.
In ’09 I was able to travel extensively and work with some amazing steampunks, both pillars of community and supporters of it. Some noted steampunk personalities I’ve captured include The League of STEAM, Parliament and Wake, and most recently a set with Evelyn Kriete and G D Falksen, which I’m working on now.
While I frequently style my own shoots and many of the garments and accessories in my images are from my personal wardrobe, I can only shoot and reinvent my own pieces so many times before my viewers are as tired of them as I am. So far I’ve had the pleasure of working with incredible companies and creators like Lastwear Clothing, Clockwork Zero, Atelier Choklit, EJPCreations, TotusMel, and Miss Monster to name a few. I’m a huge fan of handmade garments and accessories and always looking for designers to collaborate with.
I am currently shooting steampunk events, creative portraiture, alternative, and of course steampunk fashion in and around Detroit, MI while traveling for shoots, art shows, and conventions as much as possible throughout 2010.
Lex Machina can be found on
Deviant Art
Facebook
Twitter
Website: Lex Machina Photography
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The Impossible Place is a graphic web novel…. of sorts. We currently publish two (ongoing) narrative storylines which combine illustration and text, either prose or dialogue. It’s a pretty loose format, the rule so far is that there are no rules.
Launched just over a year ago the blog itself is an experiment in creative work in progress using free online publishing mediums.
Ultimately it is about giving my husband (artist and illustrator Chris Worfold) and I (Nikki Curtis, writer amongst other things) the opportunity to collaborate on a project that incorporates the things we love. In this case, stories, art and design.

The longer term goals of the project include editing and paper publishing the stories as well as small scale manufacturing of designed objects. But The Impossible Place as a blog enables us to float ideas and stories as we create them. In its own tiny little way the work can live, breathe, fail, succeed prior to or regardless of destination. It’s liberating to release draft work and flattering when anyone reads it.
To an extent the stories in The Impossible Place are about this – life in progress. In the Impossible Girl storyline the characters have pretty much exceeded their goal expectations but now their everyday is making them miserable. It’s the choices that they make, or have made, that have created this.
It’s the same for the character of Reece in the Evinrud story. Although he tends not to bang on so much about it. Reece is an action man who is only just beginning to question where the hell he is at and how he got there in the first place.

As a writer (artist, creator) you tend to focus on the things that interest or absorb you most. For me appreciation, love, moral choice and responsibility are those things. I’m an incredibly obstinate creature, you can tell me what to do (and depending on the situation I may do it) but you can’t tell me how to feel. Truth to me can’t be told, it needs to be found. (Although I am happy to accept scientific facts once proven).
Clearly as an artist you need to distance yourself (or your own current beliefs) from your work for it to remain uncontrived. In this sense the characters in The Impossible Place are on their own (I take no moral responsibility). Like in all fiction, judgement and personal opinion belongs individually to the reader.
The stories in The Impossible Place all have some sort of ‘fantasy’ theme. It’s nice to be able to remove the characters from the everyday, to make them less (or more) than normal. And apparently it’s more fun to draw.

Impossible Girl has a ‘vampire’ subtext. A year and a half ago when we started drafting the characters there definitely wasn’t as many nouveau vampire stories/movies/tv shows around as there is now. I’m not sure whether we would have changed it if we had known. There is something very appealing about the blood sucker myth. The whole moral conundrum of feeding from something else in order to survive (and prosper) is very powerful. Impossible Girl (and boyfriend Rowan) were never meant to be Vampires in the traditional sense. They’re not immortal, they have a disease, contracted sexually, which makes them both more potent and more vulnerable. And as I mentioned earlier, it’s apparently fun to draw!
The Evinrud story is pure science fiction/action and the new story we will launch later in the year has a mythological subtext.
The illustrative component of The Impossible Place has given Chris a chance to rediscover his childhood love of drawing. It’s Chris’s love of comic books and graphic novels that really inspired the development of The Impossible Place as a blog and project.
As an artist his exhibitions career (in Australia and Asia) has predominantly revolved around painting. As an arts educator he has taught drawing for many years but rarely had the time to draw for himself. The Impossible Place is Chris’s excuse to draw – a lot.
The drawings for The Impossible Place have been rendered on coated paper, skateboard decks and in sketchbooks. They range in size and medium from behemoth two metre square pieces using ink and paint to A4 sized pen sketches.

As a very hands on textural artist, he is not hugely competent technically but does use Photoshop to crop, frame and occasionally recolour aspects of the illustrations for visual use on the blog.
You can read/view both Impossible Girl and Evinrud by clicking on the individual label in the side bar and scrolling (or clicking) backwards and beginning at post one.
www.theimpossibleplace.blogspot.com
Nikki Curtis is a creative writer (at this stage unprofessional but if someone offered me a job or project that paid enough I’d probably take it) who works for cash as a communications and business development consultant. She has a Bachelor degree in Business Communications and an extensive portfolio in extreme partying and fun management.
Chris Worfold is an artist, illustrator, educator and curator with an extensive exhibition history. He is a graduate from the Queensland College of Art and the Queensland University of Technology in Visual Arts and Education. He has been co-director of a commercial gallery, curated numerous exhibitions, written for catalogues and publications. He has completed public art projects and illustration commissions, served on arts committees and taught Visual Arts for over 10 years in Australia. He is dedicated to arts practice and teaches at the Southbank Institute of Technology. Chris is also a dedicated follower of his wife’s fun management regime.
Together, they live on eight steep (unusable except for plonking a massive studio and party deck on) acres of Australian eucalypt forest about 50km from Brisbane central and 40km from the Gold Coast with their dog Caleb and cat Rada (Muffin, Kitty really, she hasn’t been called Rada in years). They are relocating for a brief stint in New York later in 2010.

SteamTuesday is a weekly feature showcasing and promoting individuality in Steampunk, but where are we going? No one wants to follow a set aesthetic that will find its way into the local WalMart or HappyMeal. By supporting artists, designers, musicians, actors, writers and photographers we take out minds out of our daily lives and into worlds of imaginations. A broken watch becomes jewellery and a beat up table becomes a writing desk. The broken and discarded is given new life and purpose. This week we feature artist MaryAnn Kaufmann, with her lovely repurposed watches, monocles and compases.

I make a variety of hand crafted magical items for every day life including jewelry, wands, prayer beads, steampunk jewelry, crystals and other mystical things.

Crafting has taken on a whole new meaning with the advent of the Steampunk genre as it becomes more mainstream. The varied and ingenious offerings being put forth by Steampunkers on hundreds of websites across the internet is incredible. Some of these crafters are reinventing the wheel, not with new ideas, but with old ones.
I found myself fascinated with the medium and have started making jewelry pieces with gears, watch movements and all manor of steampunk regalia. If it’s old, if you might find it on a Jules Verne vessel, if it has gears, wheels, or produces steam, you can incorporate it into any number of designs that can be called Steampunk.

I love doing altered art pieces. I like the idea of being able to recycle vintage items and turn them into something entirely different and maybe even a little bizarre. I find this style of design unusual and intriguing.

I am always looking for old and interesting things to add to my inventory that can be made into jewelry or personal items. For years I have been making jewelry as a hobby, but this is the first time I have wanted to produce items for other people to wear and enjoy on a larger scale. Steampunk has called to me in a way that no other style ever has.

Although I try to eliminate all sharp edges, some of my pieces may still retain edges due to the nature of the objects used in the jewelry such as gears, etc. I have to wonder if this is part of the attraction for the jewelry – the mild danger of wearing it.
You can see my jewelry designs and find more information at the websites below:
Etsy Store
My Mystic Gems Website
Deviant Art Page
Follow me on Twitter
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My name is Kate Lambert but most people know me by my nick-name “Kato”. I was born and raised in Wales, UK and emigrated to California four years ago.

I’ve been drawing and illustrating since I could hold a pencil and began designing clothing when I was about eleven years old but wasn’t satisfied that I was worthy of the title “clothing designer” until I’d wrapped my head around the complexities of the sewing machine in my early twenties.

I decided to house my designs under the name Steampunk Couture in May 2005 after a friend introduced me to the term “Steampunk” when describing the way I dressed and my style of illustration. In just over a year since I began offering custom clothing to people I’d designed and created over 400 items of clothing and accessories.

Before I was able to make a comfortable living from making clothes and selling my art, I served coffee and worked a cash register, cleaned hotels and nursed the elderly for several years. All the while grabbing any free moment I had to myself so that I could sketch out an idea for a dress or write a note about a new design.

Having your creativity locked up is extremely detrimental to one’s health and I could only put up with so much of this until I simply had to take the leap, leave everything behind and begin what I’d wanted to do since I was a child.

As it’s been such a rough, unsupportive journey to get to the point where I adore what I do for a living, I’m happy to spend the rest of my life working the way I do now and have no desperation to carve a name for myself in the industry or grow my business into some big, expensive self-validating brand. I’m something of a workaholic hermit who loves life’s little things and so long as I have my chickens, my garden and my sewing machine I’m a happy bunny. A happy Steam bunny.

Life is about creating and following your dreams. If you ruthlessly pursue that which you feel most passionately about, you’ll find that doors will open for you.
Find Steampunk Couture at Kato’s Website:
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A unique find for certain – but a working gear calling card, made of paper – I just love it. It’s already made of brass and leather in my mind. Let me know if you make one and I’ll post it.
Things – Adam Mayer Digitally Designed Geared Business Cards from Bre Pettis on Vimeo.

The trend in the shared steampunk imagination seems to be toward a fantastically re-envisioned late 19th century replete with improbable technologies and a populace composed almost exclusively of airship captains. This is the world that you can visit at comic book and steampunk conventions in the conference rooms of Holiday Inns across the country – assuming you’re willing to fake an accent and pretend your name is actually Captain Lulu van Hebenstein instead of Jane Smith. These conventions even have panels (because what could be more punk?) in which “authorities” on this shared imagination will tell you how you ought to dress, to behave and even how you ought to imagine.

We went. We even listened. Then we rejected it out of hand. James isn’t V or Wake, and Kate isn’t the Lady of Rook or Parliament. We’re James and Kate, a doctor and an archaeologist in the early twenty-first century who often dress in a fashion that looks like what would happen if a Neo-Victorian watched the Dino De Laurentiis Flash Gordon too many times. If you meet us at one of those conventions, that’s how we’ll introduce ourselves. But then we’ll offer you a business card and invite you, in unaccented American English, to visit a different world – one that isn’t an alternate-history 19th century.

We have a modest fantasy – that there are worlds that rest on edge to our own reality which are not so bereft of magic and wonder as ours. Those worlds, those Edges, are as infinite as the imagination and just as wondrous, and as deadly. At the heart of the Edges, or at least the human Edges (because aliens surely dream and write as well), there is a place called the Perpetual City which extends through human civilization from the first fire-warmed cave-hearth to the far post-human future.

The City sits at the foot of the World Tree and is as fluid as it is Perpetual. Some days Governance is carried out beneath the shadows of pyramids, others within glistening skyscrapers. But the City has certain constants. Foremost amongst these are the Independent Companies. Some are little more than influential guilds, others, like Elgin & Faraday or Cyrocko & Symoombe transcend space and time having become embodiments of archetypical concepts like Industry or Trade, respectively.

Parliament & Wake is one of these Legendaries too – but that story is still being told. Beyond the City there are wonders and there are horrors. The former are exploited by the Independents in their great ships and explored by the likes of the famed gazetteer, Archibald Leicester, and the lascivious cryptozoologist, Tiffany von Hazlett. The latter are beaten back, or at least held at bay, by the mighty Fleets. And if one travels still further, to the very fringes of the Edges, one will find the (Meta)Phor Wall, the place from which the magic that suffuses the Edges springs.

The Parliament & Wake you find on the internet is an ever-expanding collection of stories set in the Edges. The site itself is designed to represent a dreamlike library containing entries from the inventory of Cyrocko, the diaries of the lords of Parliament & Wake, the dispatches of von Hazlett and of Leicester, the secret police files of the Peacocks and writings from a dozen other sources.

It also houses images from the Edges – drawings and sculptures by us and by guest artists, and photographs of events and fashions from the Perpetual City and beyond the Phor Wall. In these you will find plenty of familiar steampunk motifs, but there’s as much Road Warrior and Dune in there as there is Wild Wild West and at heart we’re bigger fans of Diamond Age than Difference Engine.

We’re not sure if we write the stories and craft the images, or if we just channel them; but you’re welcome to visit any time. Bring something. Take something. But never let anyone sitting on a panel in a cheap hotel somewhere tell you what steampunk has to be.

Parliament & Wake can be found at:
website: parliamentandwake.com
email: parliamentandwake(at)gmail.com
Facebook Group: Parliament & Wake
(we prefer our Facebook group to our fan page – that latter seems so arrogant, we’d rather have colleagues than fans)
All images are property of Parliament & Wake and used with permission
Are you enjoying our SteamTuesday features? Leave a comment! Are you a Steampunk artist / designer / writer / creative who would like to be featured? Let me know!
SteamTuesday is overdue to explore the world of Steampunk fashion. The Enigma Fashion designers bring elegance and style this genre of fantasy couture.
I established Enigma Fashions in 1998 so that makes it almost a full 12 yrs. My mission has always been the same…. I wanted to produce a quality higher end product and a reasonable price. Each item is custom made to order which explains our longer wait times but well worth it the wait. We have excellent testimonials =).

I have a fairly wide selection of period inspired gowns from renaissance to 40′s glamour. My particular favourite has always been Victorian. From the pre hooped days to natural form and even into the more Edwardian/Nouveau days. I love the intricate work involved and have gone through many test patterns trying to capture the essence of it without the hoops and bustles for a more practical and comfortable approach. I think I achieved it with Addair!

Addair is perfect to wear both in a more period elegant fashion or can be easily steam up with the right gear. Meet Addair. Addair was a designed to similate a more natural form Victorian gown. She has always been a big hit but due to the collaboration of wonderful team we were able to steam her up. Taking her to new heights in air balloons and blimp ships. She has been on the book covers for Gail Carriger novels and new cover coming soon. Cover on Goth Magazine and featured in other publications. Used numerous times for Victorian weddings by clients, etc.

I have always been creative and love fantasy. I think that’s why I’m so drawn to Steampunk and all the like. I wake up to fairies and celestial/mystical beings, soar through the air in hot air balloons and futuristic crafts during the day, dine with kings and queens and prowl the night with vampires.
Find us at:
www.enigmafashions.com
www.myspace.com
Twitter @EnigmaFashions
Facebook Fan Page
Phone:619 621-3-8310

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