City cosplayers stitch their superpowers!
Across the city’s cosplay scene, more enthusiasts are choosing to make their own costumes instead of buying them. Armed with tutorials, thrifted materials and plenty of trial and error, cosplayers say building from scratch adds authenticity, pride and deeper connection to the characters they portray.
TRIAL, ERROR AND 2AM PANICShruti Narayanan, dressed as Spider Gwen, discovered quickly that not everything works the first time. “I thought stitching a bodysuit would be easy. I ruined two fabrics before figuring out the stretch. My sewing machine needle broke twice the night before Comic Con, and I was panicking at 2am,” she said, estimating her total spend at around ₹4,500. Sri Vishnu, a marketing consultant, said sourcing parts alone for his Mandalorian tribute costume required planning. “The helmet cost about ₹10,000 plus customs of around ₹3,900. The rest of the costume around ₹5,000 and the sword about ₹1,300–1,400,” he shared.
Many cosplayers say the real challenge is not just making a costume, but making it durable enough to survive hours of walking, posing and performing in crowded halls.
Ninth-grader Esha Kalingal, dressed as the Mad Hatter, echoed the sentiment. “It was actually really hard to do this,” she said, estimating she spent about ₹1,150, mostly on small accessories.
Budget hacks and jugaadNot everyone spends heavily. Some rely on ingenuity. Praveen Kumar, who came as a Mandalorian, said repurposing materials helped him keep costs down. “The chest plate is actually cut from an old plastic storage box. I sanded it, primed it, painted it. People think everything is bought online, but a lot of cosplay is jugaad, ” he said. Online tutorials, thrifted materials and shared tools within the cosplay community have made the craft more accessible, though time remains the biggest investment.
Why they keep coming backFor many cosplayers , the reward lies in the reaction from strangers. Arjun Menon, a graphic designer attending in cosplay for the third time, said the hours of work fade the moment someone recognises the character. “You’re exhausted, your feet hurt, the glue is still drying somewhere on the costume. But when a kid runs up and says, ‘Can I take a picture?’ that’s it. That one moment pays for all the nights you spent fixing things that nobody will ever notice,” he said.
Months for a momentFor many cosplayers, preparation begins long before the convention is announced. Karthik S, an engineering graduate who cosplayed as Geralt from The Witcher, said his costume took nearly three months to complete. “I started planning in October. The armour alone took three attempts. The first version cracked because I used the wrong foam, the second one looked too bulky. By the time I was done, I had spent close to ₹9,000,” he said. That kind of timeline is common in the cosplay community, where crafting, testing and reworking pieces often take longer than expected.
Others invest even more time. Diwakaran Saravanan, who appeared in an Iron Man Mark 39 suit, said the costume took around six months to complete and cost about ₹45,000. “All parts were 3D printed and postprocessed with sanding, primer, painting and electronics,” he said, adding that he also reduced nearly 20 kilos over the past year to fit into the suit.
Written By: Aashna Reddy
TRIAL, ERROR AND 2AM PANICShruti Narayanan, dressed as Spider Gwen, discovered quickly that not everything works the first time. “I thought stitching a bodysuit would be easy. I ruined two fabrics before figuring out the stretch. My sewing machine needle broke twice the night before Comic Con, and I was panicking at 2am,” she said, estimating her total spend at around ₹4,500. Sri Vishnu, a marketing consultant, said sourcing parts alone for his Mandalorian tribute costume required planning. “The helmet cost about ₹10,000 plus customs of around ₹3,900. The rest of the costume around ₹5,000 and the sword about ₹1,300–1,400,” he shared.
Many cosplayers say the real challenge is not just making a costume, but making it durable enough to survive hours of walking, posing and performing in crowded halls.
Ninth-grader Esha Kalingal, dressed as the Mad Hatter, echoed the sentiment. “It was actually really hard to do this,” she said, estimating she spent about ₹1,150, mostly on small accessories.
Budget hacks and jugaadNot everyone spends heavily. Some rely on ingenuity. Praveen Kumar, who came as a Mandalorian, said repurposing materials helped him keep costs down. “The chest plate is actually cut from an old plastic storage box. I sanded it, primed it, painted it. People think everything is bought online, but a lot of cosplay is jugaad, ” he said. Online tutorials, thrifted materials and shared tools within the cosplay community have made the craft more accessible, though time remains the biggest investment.
Why they keep coming backFor many cosplayers , the reward lies in the reaction from strangers. Arjun Menon, a graphic designer attending in cosplay for the third time, said the hours of work fade the moment someone recognises the character. “You’re exhausted, your feet hurt, the glue is still drying somewhere on the costume. But when a kid runs up and says, ‘Can I take a picture?’ that’s it. That one moment pays for all the nights you spent fixing things that nobody will ever notice,” he said.
Months for a momentFor many cosplayers, preparation begins long before the convention is announced. Karthik S, an engineering graduate who cosplayed as Geralt from The Witcher, said his costume took nearly three months to complete. “I started planning in October. The armour alone took three attempts. The first version cracked because I used the wrong foam, the second one looked too bulky. By the time I was done, I had spent close to ₹9,000,” he said. That kind of timeline is common in the cosplay community, where crafting, testing and reworking pieces often take longer than expected.
Others invest even more time. Diwakaran Saravanan, who appeared in an Iron Man Mark 39 suit, said the costume took around six months to complete and cost about ₹45,000. “All parts were 3D printed and postprocessed with sanding, primer, painting and electronics,” he said, adding that he also reduced nearly 20 kilos over the past year to fit into the suit.
Written By: Aashna Reddy
end of article
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