Costume for Theatre, TV & Film FdA Costume for Theatre, TV and Film

Full Time Professional Training Courses

Costume for Theatre, TV & Film FdA

Key Information Apply Now Term Dates

This is an intensive, vocational and highly practical course covering all aspects of costume work.

Course Overview

This includes pattern drafting (flat and on the stand), costume construction, corset making (flat and on the stand), millinery, ruffs and rebatos, foundation wear, stretch wear and body padding, basic tailoring techniques, hand and machine embroidery, tutu construction, printing techniques, dyeing, distressing and costume enhancement.

The supervisory elements include costume supervision, costume assisting and the various roles within the costume department. This includes hiring and buying to budget, wig care, basic make up, organising fittings and keeping an accurate and up-to-date costume bible, shopping to specific briefs as well as liaising with designers and directors.

You will work to given designs, drafting, fixing and making for, and dressing the School’s public productions and TV shoots, which typically number between twelve and fourteen per year.

Students who successfully complete the FdA Costume for Theatre, Television and Film may apply to the one year BA (Hons) Costume for Theatre, Television and Film top-up award.

Costume student dressing a show Photography - Mark Dawson Photography

Student Placements

Recent theatre placements have included Angels Costumiers, Cosprop Costumiers, Bristol Costume Services, The National Theatre, Scottish Opera, Watford Palace, Royal Opera House, English National Ballet and English National Opera.

TV placements have included Avenue 5 (HBO), Poldark, Bridgerton, Sanderton, Vanity Fair (Mammoth), The Father Brown Mysteries, The Crystal Maze, Six Minutes to Midnight.

Costumes on mannequins and pictures

Graduate Show

The graduating students from the two-year FdA and the one-year BA top-up will have an exhibition of their course work, either in a physical location or online, dependent on circumstances.

This exhibition is regularly attended or viewed by a range of industry professionals, who are often in a position to offer our graduating students employment.

  • I have loved collaborating with other departments in the School, including the MA Performance Design students. As a costume maker, you get presented with the challenge of creating an outfit for a specific show, working to the designer’s brief. You work together during initial fittings and pattern drafting. It’s great to think you’ve made their design come to life, then seeing it on stage with the set and other costumes is really rewarding.

    Amber, Third year, BA Costume
Embrace your individuality. The School is looking for each artist’s nuances and seeks to nurture and strengthen them when you study here. Éloïse Richmond, MA Screen Acting Student