https://www.savormeditation.com/en-au/blogs/post.atom savormeditation - savormeditation Blog - Festival Fashion and Rave Culture 2024-11-07T13:02:16-08:00 savormeditation https://www.savormeditation.com/en-au/blogs/post/themed-halloween-costumes 2024-09-11T14:30:00-07:00 2024-10-04T13:51:12-07:00 How To Create Group Halloween Costumes Julia Sachs Halloween is coming up and you and your rave fam want to coordinate costumes, but you don’t know where to start. Well, look no further, my friends because this guide will help get those creative juices going.

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Halloween is coming up and you and your rave fam want to coordinate costumes, but you don’t know where to start. Well, look no further, my friends because this guide will help get those creative juices going.

Most themed costumes can be broken down into three categories: classic Halloween, pop culture, and funny. Discuss which kind of vibe you want to bring to your event with your squad first to help narrow down your options.

The Darqueside Costume Set

May The Force Be With You Star Wars Costume

Far Far Away Costume Set

The next step is to consider how many people are in on the theme. Some themed ideas only work with a set amount of people. Is it just the two of you? There are loads of couple’s costume ideas on the internet. Devil and angel, Rick and Morty, the Wicked Witch of the West and Dorothy, an alien and an astronaut, etc. My best friend and I went as peanut butter and jelly one year.

If you have a group of three, there are a bunch of fun themed choices: the three sisters from Hocus Pocus, the Power Puff girls, the Three Musketeers, the Three Little Pigs, etc. For groups of four, you could go as the Hogwarts houses, Teletubbies, Mean Girls, etc.

Bloodlust Skirt and Top

Dark Arts Ultra Crop Top, Top, and Skirt in White

Themes that don’t depend on the number of participants are great for groups big or small. Think Toy Story, Squid Game, Winx Club, Care Bears, Attack on Titan members, different flavors of White Claws, Bratz dolls etc. I even saw a group dressed up as chips and a bag of Doritos, which I thought was pretty great.

Now to the fun part: planning your outfits. Unless your group is going with an idea that is completely out there (I applaud you for your creativity, but also caution that you might get a lot of people asking what you are), odds are there is a costume at a costume store ready for purchase, but to put your own spin on it and make your theme turned rave is where stores like savormeditation come into play.

Start with your base. Try your best to match the colors or patterns to the character you are going for. Next are accessories. Especially with Halloween costumes, accessories can make or break an outfit. Does the character wear a hat? Do they have a signature item they always carry with them? What about jewelry? Every little detail you add to your outfit makes it more and more clear to others who you are trying to portray, just make sure whatever accessory you are adding to your look is allowed into your event.

And last, we have hair and makeup. If the character has a predominant physical trait, like big, poofy red hair or a scar, adding these finishing touches with a wig or some makeup will help solidify your character.

Whatever theme you go with, I hope this post has helped you think about different details of an outfit to consider so your outfit screams who or what you chose to become for the night. You can shop the Halloween collection at savormeditation here for last minute costume ideas. Have a happy and safe Halloween!

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https://www.savormeditation.com/en-au/blogs/post/the-ultimate-guide-to-flow-toys 2021-11-20T13:30:00-08:00 2022-03-04T12:06:55-08:00 The Ultimate Guide to Flow Toys Julia Sachs More

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Flow arts are defined as “the intersection of a variety of movement-based disciplines including dance, juggling, fire-spinning, and object manipulation.” Many forms of flow practiced in the rave community gain origins from traditional flow from various cultures and the circus arts. Below are a brief description of the various types of flow toys you may see at festivals, beginning with the most common and moving on to the lesser known and rarely seen forms.

Types of Flow Toys:

Gloves

If there was a universal Rave Bucket List, getting a light show from a glover would unquestionably be on it. LED gloves consist of white or black colored gloves with led changing lights on the fingertips. Glovers create a visual experience by creating different shapes and patterns with their hands and fingers, hypnotizing the viewer in the process. Glovers learn different skills to improve their art, such as stacking, finger rolls, flails, tutting, whips, and tunnels. Getting a light show from more than one glover at a time is like encountering a unicorn: a magical and unforgettable experience.

Hoops

When hearing someone say they are a hooper, “hula hooping” is the only thing that comes to my mind. While this type of flow does include “hula hooping,” if you’ve ever come across a hooper at a festival or show, you know there is so much more to this art form. Skilled hoopers are able to navigate their hoop from their ankles to their shoulders, around and through their bodies and up into the sky. Some hoopers like to use two (called “twins”) or more hoops in their flow, which significantly increases the difficulty, the must both be ambidextrous and able to control their hands in separate directions.

Poi

Another form of flow you are guaranteed at a festival is poi spinning. Being a member of flow coming from traditional flow arts (namely to the Maori people), there are many variations to the poi. The most common is a weighted ball at the end of a rope with a handle. Poi come in pairs and their mechanism relies on centrifugal force as the user moves the poi in tandem before and about themselves in an hourglass motion.

Fiber Optic Whips aka Pixel Whips

A fiber optic whip is comprised of multiple loose fiber optic strands housed at one end in a handle with LED lights. The light travels along the strands of the fiber optics to the tip of the strands where the light appears as an extra bright pinpoint of radiance. The flow artist uses one hand with the handle to move the fibers, while using the other to help guide the strands around their body and limbs, creating a show that almost appears like mini fireworks as the strands silently crack through the air. An alternative way some users like to hold their whip is by the strands themselves, using the handle as a weight and the mechanism becomes like that of a dart (see below). More advanced users are able to employ more than one whip at once.

Orbiters

Orbiters work by the user twisting and pull on two strings causing the led disk housed in between to spin in a tornado of light. Users spin shapes and trails before and around themselves, wrapping themselves in a cocoon of light.

Levitation Wands aka Levi Wands

A levi wand looks similar a baton with a delicate string attached to one end with a small loop at the end of the string. The loop is placed on the flow artist’s middle finger of their dominate hand. The levi wand is moved vertically around the user while their nondominant hand follows the wand as if pushing the wand without touching it, like magic.

Contact Juggling

A contact ball is a softball-sized acrylic crystal ball. The flow artist can manipulate the ball along their body, primarily their arms and hands, causing the ball to appear as if it is just floating across the body with a mind of its own.

Staff

Contact staff is derived from the ancient Chinese art of Fei Cha. The principal of flow for contact staff, a long rod with weighted ends, is being able to manipulate the staff around the body without relying on the use of the hands. Artists utilize inertia to rotate the staff around their neck, arms and shoulders, and along their torso.


Similar to Contact Staff is the Dragon Staff, a long rod with perpendicular which uses many of the same principles as contact staff,

Fans

Silk Fans look like your standard hand fan with long lengths of a lightweight fabric attached across the width of the fan. The flow artist holds a fan in either hand and, while using their thumb and fingers to keep the fans open, move their wrist or forearm up and down creating a fluttering movement of the fabric. This form of fan flow focuses on the movement of the fabric rather than movement of the fans themselves.


While still in the fan category, Russian or Tech fans have a much different mechanism than silk fans. These kinds of fans do not have any fabric attached to them, but instead have a hole in the handle where the user can put their fingers for manipulation. Russian grips have a larger hole for all of the fingers to fit than tech which only allows two or three. This form of fans uses a similar concept of flow as off-body twin hoops during dynamic movements, while also focusing on mirroring the two fans to each other during stationary manipulation.

Buugeng aka S-Staff

‘Buu’ meaning “martial arts” and ‘geng’ meaning “illusion,” Buugeng are a pair of large S-shaped blades held gently in the middle and uses the wrist to rotate the blades before and behind the artist while keeping the blades on a vertical plane parallel to the user. A skilled buugeng artist easily hypnotized their audience with their circling, arced blades.

Rope Dart

Also deriving from Chinese martial arts, the rope dart employs a large, heavy ‘projectile’ at the end of a long rope. The user hold the end of the rope in their nondominant hand, while using their dominant hand to move at different lengths of the rope to spin and throw the dart in a plane parallel to their bodies. Skilled users can wrap the rope around their bodies and untangle themselves within moments, allowing them to throw the dart in an incredible dance.

Sunwheel

Based on the Indian martial arts weapon Vadda Chakkar, the sunwheel is likely the least known flow toy on this list. Made of a medium-sized wheel with a rod through the center surrounded by ‘petals’ of rope weighted with colorful plastic pieces forming what looks like a sun when spinning. The artist rotates the wheel in either direction to gain momentum to do their tricks, including spinning the wheel on their palm. This form of flow is typically done on the vertical plane, but with proper manipulation, can be done on the horizontal. An example of this form can be seen on TikTok by the user @space_squidd.

Besides the mesmerizing skill of the artist, one of the most special parts of the flow arts is that there are always new forms and variations emerging. If you have been thinking about picking up a flow art, I encourage you to try out a few. Once you become skilled in one, you will find many of the same concepts translating over to the others. Each new prop will then just become an extension of yourself and how beautiful its expression can be.

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