Super Vocaloid Costume, Your Taste to Cosplay?
Such a cute and hot Hatsune Miku characters creation were released, and the China Vocaloid Costumes version was designed already! I love this Chinese Hatsune Miku appreance, more exclusive and exotic than the original ones, what you think about it? At present, Hatsune Miku and Future Stars: Project Mirai’s art style is heavily Nendoroid-inspired, so naturally, Sega are collaborating with the Good Smile Company to promote the game. This is being done in the form of a Project Mirai café, GSC’s Mikatan reveals via the company blog, along with photos of the café itself.
Depending on where you’re seated, you’ll see different Vocaloid characters with distinguished Vocaloid Costumes on the tables. You don’t get to pick where you’re seated, though. A monitor displays one of the films from Project Mirai, and music from the game is played in the background at the café which also features a menu based around Miku and Luka, and there are plans to have the menu change every so often. Up above are two examples. The Miku drink is a lemon soda with blue curacao and vanilla ice cream. The Luka drink is a strawberry au lait with vanilla ice cream. This is really awesome.
The costumes above are from the “Daughter of Evil” and “Servant of Evil” songs. The Good Smile Company went back and forth with Sega on the game’s design to make sure the Vocaloid costumes looked like their Nendoroid versions. Hatsune Miku is computer generated, based on a voice-synthesizing programme developed by the company Crypton Future Media that allows users to create their own music.
But now, its extended followers overcome its basic range of just music, yeah, it expanded to cosplay, game, and even doodle. This Vocaloid cosplay is kind of stuff that both boys and girls are into, not like girlish Lolita Cosplay Costumes, or D.Gray-Man Cosplay. surprised by the population of Vocaloid followers, Hatsune Miku have a great success globally.
Hatsune Miku with different version Vocaloid costumes has a following that would make most Japanese pop stars green with envy, with thousands of fans at every concert and a big international following. She never misses a beat, fluffs a line or messes up a step. But then she doesn’t really exist. Her image was produced by the company, but her music is a creation of her fans, her best songs — the ones headlined at her concerts — have emerged from more than 20 different people.
Source from: http://www.cosplayerclub.com/blog.html/Super-Vocaloid-Costume-Your-Taste-to-Cosplay/