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Tonight on a whim I decided to take a real crack at putting together a drag look. I've wanted to do it for a while now, but thus far the only practical progress I'd made was ages ago. But I saw a really cool drag king look on the Internet and it inspired me, so tonight I brought my developing drag persona, Alexander Brandy, out to play for the evening.
Since I cut my hair, that issue with the look was taken care of. What I really needed to practice was the makeup. I'm familiar enough with the principles of drag makeup— use dark colors to make features recede, and light colors to make features stand out —but I don't have much practice, and the bit I do have I'd only done previously in the service of beauty makeup. So I watched a tutorial of a drag king doing his paint and roughly followed along. I went darker than I usually do, in an effort to broaden and deepen my features, in an effort to carve away the softness and make things a little coarser in a way we associate with masculinity. In my effort I darkened my eyebrows, widened my nose and forehead, carved out my cheeks, extended my sideburns, and broadened my jaw. It's always tricky for me to make contouring not look like just dirty smudges on my skin, but it tends to show up better in pictures than in person.






I also put on my men's clothes, which are unfortunately too large for me, but tried to take them in a little bit with pins— enough to make them appear to fit, but not so much they emphasized my feminine body shape. I'm not exactly a curvy girl, but my waist definitely pulls in. There is also the issue of my decidedly unmasculine proportions. While Phoebe likes her petiteness, Alexander is a bit self-conscious of his size. So to make him look a little more manly, we made an attempt to pad.
I didn't bother to bind my breasts, just smushed them with a sports bra, since they're not that obvious anyway, but my chest seemed weirdly hollow for a man. I have NO pecs, which while a bit surprising given the kind of workouts I do, I actually am quite pleased with; I like the look of how I have kind of big arms and a very small, narrow chest. But it looked wrong on Alexander, so in an effort to make him a little more swole, I stole one of the bustle pads out of the Hawking costumes and stuffed it into the sports bra just under my collarbones. (That thing has been an ass and now a chest!) I'd already had the padded bra I cut in half for shoulder pads and put them in as well. I'm not sure how well-balanced they were together, but I think it's the right direction to work in. A vest and tie completed the look. Nothing fits great, though, and I think I look a bit too "hippy" in the full-length shots.


I am vain enough that if I'm going to look like a guy, I want to be a cute guy. I just do not have the proportions to be the kind of guy I find attractive, even with the pads. Also what I find most beautiful in women (which I shoot for in my regular look) tends to be pretty diametrically opposed to what I find most beautiful in men. I may be able to shoot for that "delicate chiseled modelesque" kind of handsome, but my makeup skills will have to improve.
I also tried the look with facial hair, defaulting to the goatee with the jawline beard, a look I often like on men. I was aiming for something a little more Tony Stark-esque. Instead I seem to have turned myself into a young Hans Gruber. Not what I was expecting, I have to say.




Guess we know who I'd have to do for Snatch Game. Or whatever the drag king equivalent would be. "Chust anotha American cowboy who's seen too many movies?"
Since I cut my hair, that issue with the look was taken care of. What I really needed to practice was the makeup. I'm familiar enough with the principles of drag makeup— use dark colors to make features recede, and light colors to make features stand out —but I don't have much practice, and the bit I do have I'd only done previously in the service of beauty makeup. So I watched a tutorial of a drag king doing his paint and roughly followed along. I went darker than I usually do, in an effort to broaden and deepen my features, in an effort to carve away the softness and make things a little coarser in a way we associate with masculinity. In my effort I darkened my eyebrows, widened my nose and forehead, carved out my cheeks, extended my sideburns, and broadened my jaw. It's always tricky for me to make contouring not look like just dirty smudges on my skin, but it tends to show up better in pictures than in person.






I also put on my men's clothes, which are unfortunately too large for me, but tried to take them in a little bit with pins— enough to make them appear to fit, but not so much they emphasized my feminine body shape. I'm not exactly a curvy girl, but my waist definitely pulls in. There is also the issue of my decidedly unmasculine proportions. While Phoebe likes her petiteness, Alexander is a bit self-conscious of his size. So to make him look a little more manly, we made an attempt to pad.
I didn't bother to bind my breasts, just smushed them with a sports bra, since they're not that obvious anyway, but my chest seemed weirdly hollow for a man. I have NO pecs, which while a bit surprising given the kind of workouts I do, I actually am quite pleased with; I like the look of how I have kind of big arms and a very small, narrow chest. But it looked wrong on Alexander, so in an effort to make him a little more swole, I stole one of the bustle pads out of the Hawking costumes and stuffed it into the sports bra just under my collarbones. (That thing has been an ass and now a chest!) I'd already had the padded bra I cut in half for shoulder pads and put them in as well. I'm not sure how well-balanced they were together, but I think it's the right direction to work in. A vest and tie completed the look. Nothing fits great, though, and I think I look a bit too "hippy" in the full-length shots.


I am vain enough that if I'm going to look like a guy, I want to be a cute guy. I just do not have the proportions to be the kind of guy I find attractive, even with the pads. Also what I find most beautiful in women (which I shoot for in my regular look) tends to be pretty diametrically opposed to what I find most beautiful in men. I may be able to shoot for that "delicate chiseled modelesque" kind of handsome, but my makeup skills will have to improve.
I also tried the look with facial hair, defaulting to the goatee with the jawline beard, a look I often like on men. I was aiming for something a little more Tony Stark-esque. Instead I seem to have turned myself into a young Hans Gruber. Not what I was expecting, I have to say.




Guess we know who I'd have to do for Snatch Game. Or whatever the drag king equivalent would be. "Chust anotha American cowboy who's seen too many movies?"