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Super Flash Comes to the (Halloween Costume) Rescue

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! No, it’s actually a bird -- and a super one at that! 

Flash stands in a heroic pose in his Super Flash costume with a bright blue face mask that includes gold lightening bolts on each side, a matching blue shirt with a electric atom symbol and gold cape with 鶹ѡ"K" belt and matching gauntlets.

Kent State’s School of Theatre and Dance, and social media teams joined forces to develop a Halloween costume for our favorite mascot. Once we decided this year’s motif for Flash, we swooped into the Costume Shop, which became the headquarters for the League of Halloween Heroes. 

Introducing… Super Flash! 

The costume, which features a custom mask, shirt, belt gauntlets and cape was designed by Victoria Sallot, a senior theatre design technology and production major with a concentration in costumes. Serenity Tate, also a senior theatre design technology and production major with a concentration in costumes, was the 3D artist on this project. 

Student Designers, Flash and Costume Shop director stand in the fitting room during the Super Flash costume fitting

Once charged with the task of creating something super for Flash, Sallot ran with a spark of inspiration -- a flash of electricity! Using the university’s lighting bolt and blue and gold color scheme, Victoria punched up the colors and the shine to give Super Flash an electric feel. If you look closely, the emblem on Super Flash’s shirt even mimics the atoms in an electric charge. 

Anything that was 3D printed, like the incredible lightning bolts on Flash’s mask and the special details on the gold gauntlets were Tate’s handiwork. Working with Sallot’s designs, Tate was able to use her experience with the 3D printer and foam fabrication (we’ll talk a little bit more about that below) to create a something fit for superhero.

The experience was also educational for both Sallot and Tate who were able to use new processes to complete the project. Super Flash’s removable mask was specially fitted using a process called foam fabrication, which -- as Sallot explains -- allowed them to cover a three dimensional form with a two dimensional object. Oh, and this was the first time that either of them had to work on a project for a mascot, so even the sizing and fitting process was a new experience. 

Naturally, to unveil this costume of epic proportions, we wanted to show off what Super Flash could do. 

 

 

A special thank you to Sallot and Tate for their fantastic work on the costume, everyone at the Costume Shop and School of Theatre and Dance who helped bring this heroic vision to life. And the bird, the myth and the legend himself, Flash, for showcasing his powers! 

Have a safe and fun Halloween, Golden Flashes! For other activities on campus be sure to check out our Halloween page

 

UCM Social Team 

POSTED: Friday, October 29, 2021 11:53 AM
Updated: Wednesday, February 28, 2024 10:32 PM
WRITTEN BY:
Deanna Stevens Ulrich