The Inner Workings of a Chibi.

I’m super excited and honored to announce that tomorrow at 5:30 Princess Mentality Cosplay and I will be teaming up to do a #28DaysOfBlackCosplay panel at A-Kon! She’s a guest at the con and has invited me to be a part of her panel!

I hope to see you there :)

Got a new wig for my Neo Queen Serenity. So ready for con season <3 <3 <3

So I got to write a really fun blog post for “The Curvy Fashionista” about the different ways I cosplay! I’m really excited about it because I absolutely love the blog and have been following it for a while. Feel free to check it out at this link full of my dorky face <3 <3 <3

The post has some of the cosplays pictured above, while the other pics are just me sharing cuz I feel like it :)

I should be a touch bit more specific. I’m overjoyed when I see black cosplay in a positive light. Sadly, I’m used to seeing it in an “I need to defend myself” kind of way. I say that because a lot of the black cosplayers I follow are ones I’ve found through reading an article written about racism in the community, seeing them brilliantly defend themselves from negative comments, or watching supposedly funny memes being shared that reduces their cosplay to tacky black stereotypes because—ha ha, a group of black people must be up to ghetto shenanigans, right? Don’t get me wrong: it’s good to see black cosplayers discuss the issues they deal with. The articles. The posts. The documentaries. The encouragement to go out there and be your wonderful, magical self despite the hate. All of that is amazing, and absolutely necessary. But just like being the lone black voice gets exhausting, it also gets exhausting to see black cosplay highlighted in defense.

That’s not what we came here for.

Just like every other cosplayer out there, we’re here for the fun of it all. We want to run around conventions dressed as the characters we love. We want to pose for pictures, hang out with friends, go to panels, meet guests—we want the full convention-going experience that everyone else gets. And while it’s important to have these diversity talks, it’s a bummer to discover an amazing cosplayer only because someone decided to call them the n-word.

That’s the beauty of #29DaysOfBlackCosplay.

For the entire month of February, black cosplayers are being promoted just ’cause. There’s no mockery. There’s no lack of visibility. It’s just black cosplay. The end.

My piece for #29DaysOfBlackCosplay is here :) 

Welcome To #29DaysOfBlackCosplay: Celebrating Black Excellence In Cosplay

blackgirlnerds:

Welcome To #29DaysOfBlackCosplay: Celebrating Black Excellence In Cosplay

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  It should go without saying, but it always bears repeating: representation is important. When I started looking into cosplay for the first time in 2008, to say I was a bit intimidated would be putting it lightly. I had very few crafting skills to speak of, couldn’t tell a bobbin from a pin cushion and had no clue which characters I could even dress up as – it’s no secret that nerd culture isn’t…

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