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Recommend New Interview With The Hunger Games: The Ballad Of Songbirds & Snakes Costume Designer Trish Summerville From Vogue + Costume Concept Illustrations (Email)

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In a new interview with Vogue Magazine, The Hunger Games: The Ballad Of Songbirds & Snakes costume designer Trish Summerville breaks down the inspiration behind some of the most inspired looks from the film. The article included some gorgeous concept drawings by costume illustrator Gloria Kim.

 

The looks in The Hunger Games prequel, The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, had to live up to the most memorable fashion image from the original series: Katniss Everdeen's wedding dress in Catching Fire, which burned off to reveal a black, birdlike gown beneath. But costume designer Trish Summerville was up to the task because she was also the woman behind the original outfit. 
The prequel—which takes place 64 years before the start of The Hunger Games trilogy, though still in the far-off future—exists in a Panem entirely unrecognizable for fans of the original series. The film, out November 17, follows a young Coriolanus Snow (the villain of the original series) before his dictatorial days, as he mentors the District 12 tribute, the vaudevillian Lucy Gray Baird, in the 10th annual Hunger Games. But that stark difference allowed Summerville to create a different, retro-futuristic world with the characters' clothing. 
Hunter Schafer as Tigris Snow
Tigris Snow's Pink Suit at The Hunger Games Exhibition in Vegas
When it came to the Capitol, she and director Francis Lawrence decided to pull from the postwar 1940s and '50s for inspiration. "They still have the nicest clothing, the nicest jewelry, everyone's hair is styled, and they all have makeup, but it's a much more classic Americana look," she says. Still, Summerville uses the clothing to broadcast the characters' various challenges. Hunter Schafer, who plays Snow's cousin Tigris, became a representative of the Capitol.
"She makes her clothes, but she's keeping them alive because they're running out of money," she says. In a pink, Balenciaga-inspired skirt suit with a structural pointed shoulder, "we sewed all the seams outside, and I frayed all the edges, so it looks like they're coming apart." 


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