Hatsune Miku Cosplay
Vocaloid's iconic digital diva, built around four instantly recognizable details: the floor-length teal twin-tail wig, the grey school-uniform top and pleated skirt, the detached black sleeves, and the headset with mic. This is an intermediate build where the wig is the star component, and every garment has a signature teal trim. Includes 7 components, 16 materials with cost estimates, a 14-step build plan, and a realistic 5-week, $100 to $300 budget.
5 weeks
14
16
7
See the whole look before you start.
References, materials, budget, and build order for Hatsune Miku.
Timeline
5 weeks
Color refs






Materials
16 items
Budget
$100 - $300
save the visual refs
Full reference board
The preview above is curated for scanning. This is the working board you clone into your own build, with notes, colors, product images, and extra references intact.
Images are sourced from around the internet to help you get started. Use the web clipper to build your own reference library.
Build guide
I built my first Miku cosplay for MomoCon two years ago, and I learned every hard lesson so you do not have to.
Let me start with the wig, because the wig is the entire build. Those floor-length teal twin tails are heavy. Without internal support, the wig cap slides backward and slips off by lunch. Nearly every Miku cosplayer has experienced this.
The fix that worked: build a foam core skeleton inside each tail. Cut craft foam into tapered wedges, wrap them in teal fabric matching the wig, and stitch them inside the tail wefts. Then stub the wig, cut the long wefts short at the cap, and seal the ends with fabric glue so the tails sit on a firm platform instead of pulling from loose fibers. Underneath, use a silicone wig grip band from EpicCosplay for about $8 and SAKUMETA claw clips to distribute the weight across your scalp. I paid $45 for a 60cm raw teal wig from Arda Wigs. A pre-styled Miku wig runs $80+, and the tails are always too short. Doing it yourself saves money and looks better.
Matching Miku's teal across five different trims is its own headache. The community has debated the color for over a decade. The most commonly referenced hex codes are #1EC4B6 and #00f0f9, but what you see on your screen will not match what arrives in the mail. Order fabric swatches first. I chose a shade slightly more blue than green, which reads truer on camera under convention lighting. Buy all your teal ribbon and trim from the same dye lot. I used teal on the top, skirt, tie, sleeves, and boot covers, and they all need to match. Mismatched teals make the whole outfit look sloppy.
The grey sleeveless top and pleated skirt are straightforward if you have sewn a few garments before. Buy pre-pleated grey fabric instead of measuring pleats by hand. It saves a whole evening and the result is more uniform. I spent about $30 on grey fabric and $8 on teal trim, and finished both pieces over two weekends. The detached sleeves need elastic at both ends to stay up, and if you are adding the clear vinyl pockets, use a longer stitch length. I broke two needles before switching to a stretch needle with longer stitches. You have been warned.
For the thigh-high boots, skip real boots. They cost $150, slide down to knee-highs by mid-afternoon, and destroy your feet. I made boot covers from $22 of black faux leather with a 14-inch boot zipper. They zip over comfortable flat shoes and look identical from three feet away. You can stand on the con floor all day.
The headset will not stay on wig fiber. I hot-glued alligator clips to craft foam earpieces and clipped them through the wig wefts directly into the cap. Solid for eight hours. Miku's red clips go under the twin tails at the temples, and they are easy to lose. Build them from lightweight craft foam so they do not add drag, and pin them into the wig cap. I bumped one loose by hour four. Fashion tape does not grip wig fiber. Next time I am using magnet-backed clips.
Budget $100 to $300. Block out 5 weeks, with at least two wig sessions. The first session for the internal structure and the second for final shaping. The garment work fits in two weekends. Do a wear test before the con because the long tails tangle against your body and sleeves. Bring a wide-tooth comb and detangler spray in your con bag.
Components
Teal twin-tail wig
Grey sleeveless top
Grey pleated skirt
Teal neck tie
Black detached sleeves
Black thigh-high boots
Headset with mic
Materials list
16 itemsEstimated total cost
$100 - $300
Milestone timeline
5 weeks- 1
Collect reference images of Miku's classic design and color scheme
Research
- 2
Source the long teal wig and confirm length matches reference
Materials
- 3
Buy fabrics, trim, and garment construction materials
Materials
- 4
Source headset base and boot cover materials
Materials
- 5
Draft or buy patterns for top, skirt, sleeves, and boot covers
Patterning
- 6
Cut fabric pieces for top, skirt, and sleeves
Construction
- 7
Sew grey top and attach teal trim at neckline, armholes, and hem
Construction
- 8
Sew grey pleated skirt and attach teal trim at hem
Construction
- 9
Sew teal tie and construct detached sleeves with elastic bands
Construction
- 10
Sew boot covers from faux leather and install zippers
Construction
- 11
Build and paint the headset prop
Construction
- 12
Install wire supports and style the twin-tail wig
Finishing
- 13
Assemble hair accessories and do a full fit check
Finishing
- 14
Full suit-up, test mobility with the long wig, and take photos
Wear test
Frequently
asked questions.
Related tools and guides
Plan your build, estimate costs, and get ready.
Budget Calculator
Estimate your build cost before you start buying materials.
Convention Checklist
88-item packing checklist. Check off items as you pack.
Prop Scaling Calculator
Scale reference images to your body measurements.
How Much Does EVA Foam Armor Cost?
Real build budgets with specific products and dollar amounts.
Cosplay on Costumary
Templates, tools, and workspace built for cosplay makers.
Browse all templates
Explore build plans across 10 craft verticals.
Debut your cosplay build
Upcoming conventions where you could wear this. Dates, checklists, and budget tools included.
Start this build free
Clone this template into your workspace. Track materials, milestones, budget, and build progress in one place.
More from this series
Qifrey Cosplay
5 weeks · 12 milestones
Qifrey's elegant white-robed silhouette is built around three signature elements: the tall pointed hat with the bent tip and black ribbon, the flowing white cape with the brass brooch closure, and the asymmetrical pince-nez glasses with one dark lens hiding his scarred eye. This is an intermediate build that needs more structural crafting than sewing. The hat and glasses demand the most attention, while the cape is a manageable garment project. The glasses and the hat are the make-or-break details, and this template walks you through both. Includes 7 components, 15 materials with cost estimates, a 12-step build plan, and a realistic 5-week, $95 to $280 budget.
Gojo Satoru Cosplay
5 weeks · 11 milestones
Jujutsu Kaisen's strongest sorcerer, built around three signature details: the black high-collar uniform jacket, the blindfold, and the white spiked hair. This is an intermediate build that leans on one well-made garment plus wig styling, so it reads instantly on the con floor without months of work. The collar and the wig are the make-or-break details, and this template walks you through both. Includes 6 components, 11 materials with cost estimates, an 11-step build plan, and a realistic 5-week, $90 to $240 budget.
Coco Cosplay
6 weeks · 12 milestones
Witch Hat Atelier's apprentice witch in her full outfit: the tall pointed hat with ornamental band, a dark cloak with decorative hem trim, a layered tunic-dress, boots, and her drawing implements. The hat is the signature piece and the hardest to get right. 7 components, 13 materials, ~6 weeks at $120-280.
Wonder Woman Cosplay
8 weeks · 12 milestones
The DCEU Gal Gadot warrior: a sculpted Worbla breastplate over a red corset base, layered leather tasset skirt, gold bracers, knee-high armored greaves, a forehead tiara, and the Lasso of Truth. This is an intermediate-advanced build combining thermoplastic armor shaping with leather work and metallic finishing. Covers 7 components, 12 materials with cost estimates, a 12-step plan across 5 phases, and a realistic 8-week, $180 to $450 budget.
