Prequel trilogy costume designer: “Around three quarters of all Padmé dresses have got a touch of Scottish vintage”
From ITV:
“A gown worn by Natalie Portman in Star Wars: Attack Of The Clones is to go on display at the new V&A Dundee museum.
Film and fashion fans will be able to view the embroidered dress modelled by Portman’s character Padme Amidala when the £80 million attraction opens its doors on September 15.
The outfit was created by costume designer Trisha Biggar and features an ornate copper plated headdress and burgundy silk cloque coat.
Known as the travel disguise costume, it was worn by Padme as she secretly travelled with Anakin Skywalker to her home planet of Naboo.
The gown is being loaned to V&A Dundee for six months from The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, currently under construction in Los Angeles.
Biggar, from Glasgow, said she took inspiration from a Paisley pattern swatch she found in her home city.
She said: “By the time we were constructing the costumes for Star Wars I had collected a large quantity of vintage fabrics and trims, a lot sourced in Glasgow, to decorate and embellish the elaborate pieces being created.
“The textile design of this gown was inspired by a vintage Paisley pattern swatch. Around three quarters of all Padme dresses have got a touch of Scottish vintage on them somewhere.”
The designer added: “Everything for every planet and culture was being created anew.
“We used references and drew on a multitude of influences from all over the world, from every culture, country, civilisation and period, mixing them up to shape new fashions.
“By reinterpreting ideas and drawing on history the audience would – albeit subliminally – recognise and identify with the myriad of Star Wars styles.” […]
Joanna Norman, director of the V&A Research Institute and lead curator of the Scottish Design Galleries, said: “This dress is fascinating, like all of Trisha’s Star Wars costumes, because it includes so many different elements and draws on a range of influences to convey the otherworldly qualities of the Star Wars world through its costumes.
“Many visitors to the new museum will have no idea that the costumes for the Star Wars prequel trilogy were designed by a Scottish designer, or that they include references to the country’s rich design heritage.””


0 Comments
Alexrd
This reminds me that I’ve waited to long to buy ‘Dressing a Galaxy’ (as a guy, it was never on the top of my most wanted list), and now the copies of that book cost a fortune…
Alexrd
*too long
lovelucas
Dressing a Galaxy is superb! I have the hard cover version and it’s so worth the money. Trisha Biggar deserved so much more recognition. The costumes for the prequels are stunning and so much thought went into each one. I learned too late that she attended Star Wars Celebration II. I have since attended every one of them but, alas, she has not returned. She should have received at least one Oscar (each film deserved recognition) but she wasn’t even nominated! Retaliation for aligning herself with George who the Academy does not admire. I love her work so much and George repeatedly let the world know he does too.
Joe
The Academy is a joke i mean they added a new category for popular film shows how desperate they are for ratings
Marshall
They did that because they snubbed Wonder Woman (which, like the Prequels, DEFINITELY deserved a nom for Best Costume), people tuned out in protest and they realized how out of touch they are with the public.