PICS: Australia wins World Cosplay Championship title

Participants dressed in their favorite Japanese "anime" characters pose for a photo during World Cosplay Summit 2019, in Nagoya, central Japan. Picture: Kyodo News via AP

Participants dressed in their favorite Japanese "anime" characters pose for a photo during World Cosplay Summit 2019, in Nagoya, central Japan. Picture: Kyodo News via AP

Published Aug 4, 2019

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Nagoya, Japan - A pair of cosplayers wearing samurai

body-armour costumes from Australia took the crown of this year's

World Cosplay Summit (WCS) held in the central Japanese city of

Nagoya on Sunday.

"We've been so exhausted. We want to take off our costumes as soon as

possible," a male member of Team Australia, said on the stage soon

after the announcement of the top prize.

"It had taken us one year preparing for this championship. We very

much appreciate the big support from our family members and friends,"

he said in Japanese at the 17th annual summit, one of the largest

events of its kind in the world.

The pair had spent months producing the Azure Starlord armour made in

leather from "Monster Hunter World," a female member named A K Wirru

told reporters after the competition at Aichi Arts Centre.

%%%twitter https://twitter.com/hashtag/WCS2019?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#WCS2019 #WorldCosplaySummit pic.twitter.com/7n4nPxXon1

— Madman Entertainment (@Madman)

"We wanted to put what we've been inspired by Japanese culture into

our costumes," she said.

Both had represented Australia before with a different partner.

Coming to the summit, the two have come to get along with other

cosplayers from different countries, the male half of the team said.

"We are just like a big family. We've been cooperating with each

other," he said.

%%%twitter https://twitter.com/AmenoKitarou?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@AmenoKitarou& @K_fufu of Team Australia for getting first place at this year's #worldcosplaysummit! #WCS2019 #WCSTeamAustralia #WCS19 https://t.co/xFSR6RJCT6

— MFM-Photography (@MFM_Photo)

Team USA took second place and also captured the best make-up prize,

while a pair of cosplayers from France, who played characters from

the video game "Hyrule Warriors," came in third.

It took the US cosplayers about 3,000 hours making their costumes

from "Bloodborne," they said.

Garnet Runestar, who played Good Hunter, lives in New York, while J

Hart Design, who had the role of Yharnam, Pthumerian Queen, is in the

state of Utah, but they still got together every three months to get

ready for the competition.

A pair of cosplayers from Germany, Sharina Kimura and Maria Dick,

both from Munich, won the best costume award.

Kimura, a university student majoring in interior architecture,

played Kushana from "Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind," the 1984

Japanese animation film directed by Hayao Miyazaki.

The two had spent "very hectic" weeks in the run-up to the summit as

they had been doing final checks not only on their performance but

also on the "small details" of their intricate costumes, Kimura told

dpa on Saturday.

Their preparations paid off on Sunday in Japan.

"I really enjoy making costumes and giving performances on the

stage," Kimura said.

Her partner Dick, who played the film's title character, said her job

as a graphic designer had helped her draw designs for her cosplay

costumes.

Participants from 24 countries and regions clad in elaborate

hand-made costumes had gathered in Nagoya to compete at the WCS

championship 2019 on Sunday.

Cosplayers from countries including Saudi Arabia, Sweden and

Singapore represented characters from manga, animations, films, video

games and TV programmes.

Contestants are judged by the quality of their costumes, the art

direction and their overall performance on stage, organizers said.

Starting from a pool of 40 teams, eight of the finalists were

selected in the Tokyo round last weekend, where the summit kicked

off, while the other 16 teams were picked in a Saturday round in

Nagoya.

The summit involves about 300,000 participants from around the world.

The 40 teams won preliminaries in their countries and regions.

"So many have come from so many different countries and regions and

gathered here in Nagoya," jury president Toru Furuya said at the end

of the event.

"This is an amazing opportunity to connect with people. We hope that,

through this summit, cosplayers, fans and creators can become even

closer," said Furuya, a voice-over actor.

The event comes just weeks after the arson attack on a Kyoto

Animation building, which took the lives of 35 artists.

Japanese cosplayers participating in public WCS events called for

support for the famed studio.

dpa

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