Manages, maintains, and organizes all costumes on set — handles fittings and ensures wardrobe continuity.
Technical Details
The Costumer manages 40-150 costume pieces daily on feature film productions and maintains digital continuity logs with timestamped photographs for each shooting day. Their mobile workstation includes steam irons (1800-2400 watts), sewing machines, stain remover kits, and repair kits for textiles, leather, and metal. For period productions, they manage specialized cleaning agents for historical fabrics and drawstrings with defined tensile strengths (8-12 Newtons for corsets). Subtypes include the Set Costumer (directly on set), Background Costumer (for extras), and Specialty Costumer (for stunt and effects costumes).
History & Development
The position was established in 1915 in Hollywood with Cecil B. DeMille's grand productions, when specialized costume teams first became necessary. In 1935, MGM introduced the Head Costumer system, who dressed up to 200 extras daily. With the introduction of Technicolor in 1939, color continuity protocols were added. Digital costume databases revolutionized management starting in 1995: Modern productions utilize iPad-based apps with barcode scanning and cloud synchronization.
Practical Application in Film
On "Titanic" (1997), the Costumer team coordinated 1,500 period costumes daily and documented 47 different garment states for Kate Winslet's survival sequence. The Costumer plans costume change times (2-15 minutes depending on the costume), positions mobile wardrobes a maximum of 50 meters from the set, and coordinates shot-to-shot continuity with Script Supervision. For action sequences, they stock 3-6 identical costumes per lead actor for multiple takes and stunt doubles.
Comparison & Alternatives
Distinction from the Costume Designer: The latter designs and conceives, while the Costumer implements and maintains. The Wardrobe Supervisor plans on a higher level, while the Costumer works operationally on set. In low-budget productions (under 2 million Euros), one person often fulfills both roles. Digital costume tracking systems are increasingly supplementing traditional work but do not replace the manual expertise for adjustments and repairs during filming.