Costume Porn



This trope is about extremely detailed clothing, either seeing it or (ahem) describing it. Seems to be more as a form of Author Appeal or Fan Service than for any important details to the plot (but not always). Seems to be most common in stuff aimed at girls and women.

This trope is usually written (especially with Purple Prose), but if the clothing is elaborate enough, it can be shown visually. This was especially true when royalty invokes the Ermine Cape Effect, or in period drama films from the Golden Age of Hollywood. With both, the point was in the fanciest, flashiest clothing possible.

Shows up a lot in Mary Sue stories, where it tends to be a pretty blatant display of Author Appeal. Most have at least one scene describing the character's outfit as if the clothes were part of the supporting cast.

A Super-Trope to:
 * Battle Ballgown
 * Bling of War (regardless of the gender of the wearer)
 * Fairytale Wedding Dress
 * The Fashionista
 * Fashion Shop Fashion Show
 * Frilly Upgrade
 * "Happy Holidays" Dress
 * Impractically Fancy Outfit
 * Kicking Ass in All Her Finery
 * Nice Hat
 * Nice Shoes
 * Pimped-Out Cape
 * Pimped-Out Dress
 * Requisite Royal Regalia
 * Sexy Santa Dress
 * Stylish Protection Gear
 * Virtual Paper Doll

Sister Tropes include:
 * Conspicuous Consumption
 * Costume Drama
 * Ermine Cape Effect
 * Everything's Sparkly with Jewelry
 * Fashion Magazine
 * Fashion Show
 * Fluffy Fashion Feathers
 * Gem-Encrusted
 * Gorgeous Garment Generation
 * Gorgeous Period Dress
 * Hollywood Costuming
 * Impossibly Cool Clothes
 * Pretty in Mink
 * Unlimited Wardrobe

Compare: Description Porn, Scenery Porn, Technology Porn.

Contrast: Modest Royalty; Impossibly Tacky Clothes (making it clear the detailed outfit is bad).

Not to be confused with porn costumes, which tend to be a single layer to provide an excuse for the actors to strip.

Anime and Manga

 * Trinity Blood combines this with Scenery Porn: all characters dress breathtakingly cool and the locations look like a tourist ad for wherever in Europe they happen to be.
 * Vision of Escaflowne is slighly guilty, especially, with Allen's costume.
 * Code Geass:
 * Lelouch's elaborate and nigh-ridiculous . Nice Hat too.
 * Everyone else is not far behind either, especially C.C. getting a complete makeover, new hairstyle and a new ridiculous costume out of nowhere for one episode in Season 2.
 * Not to mention the art books.
 * Ronin Warriors loves showing off how complex and intricate the various armors are. A lot of the Stock Footage revels in showing off the heroes suits from every conceivable angle.
 * Due to the pretty blatant Author Appeal, Ai Yazawa sometimes devotes endless panels and splash pages to showcasing the costumes her fashion designer characters create from every possible angle. Yukari modeling the Pimped-Out Dress from Paradise Kiss is probably the worst offender, but it happens many other times both in that series and Gokinjo Monogatari.
 * Yuuko Ichihara's wardrobe is a veritable catalog of of ludicrously orgasmatastic clothing designs.
 * Special points to xxxHoLic here because the first and only time Yuuko ever wears the same outfit twice is once in a dream sequence and once in real life, yet it is STILL memorable enough that Watanuki comments on it.
 * Since
 * Similarly, anything Tomoyo makes for Sakura in Cardcaptor Sakura. Really though, just CLAMP in general.
 * The splash pages of many CLAMP manga are used primarily as an excuse to dress the characters up in elaborate and exquisitely detailed costumes. Pick up any of their artbooks and see.
 * Gankutsuou takes this trope to eye-bleeding extremes.
 * Rose of Versailles revels in this. (See the pictures on the Pimped-Out Dress and Requisite Royal Regalia pages for just an idea.)
 * Likewise, Oniisama e... had the main charas changing clothes very regularly. (The only exceptions would be Rei and Kaoru).
 * The Bride of the Water God has a vast array of beautiful Korean costumes.
 * Pet Shop of Horrors, both [[media:725354a784ee2b890d76de99e56f749d1239297264 full.jpg|D]] and [[media:062403 petshop02.gif|the]] [[media:kirin-1.jpg|pets]].
 * Most Magical Girl anime tend to have at least a little of this, but Prétear takes it above and beyond normal usage. Every one of the seven Leafé Knights transform with the Magical Girl and give her a new costume based on their Elemental Powers. . In fact, considering the Transformation Sequence with the knights is packed full of Does This Remind You of Anything?, you might consider it literal Costume Porn. The tagline when ADV Films brought the show over to America was "Wearable Bishounen!"
 * Most of the outfits in Black Butler. Special mention goes to the gown Ciel wore at a ball when cross-dressing.
 * Ditto Pandora Hearts.
 * Taken Up to Eleven in the manga A Kiss To The Prince.
 * Glass Fleet could be considered hardcore costume porn, with some of the most off the wall outfits of any show.
 * Mihara Mitsukazu's mangas (Dokuhime, The Embalmer) are filled with this, which is unsurprising since she's published in a Gothic Lolita magazine.
 * The works of Miyabi Fujieda tend to run into this fairly frequently. But it's so worth it.
 * The Storas of Amuri in Star Ocean are essentially personalized space-suits that look like very elaborate (and rather revealing) Magical Girl costumes. They also enhance and control the powers of their wearers, generate blunt projectiles seemingly out of thin air, as well as undress their users and neatly store their clothes away before covering them up again.
 * In Ouran High School Host Club, the costumes that the titular host club wear for special Cosplay events are as stylish and drool-worthy as can be expected of a rich kids' club.
 * Umineko no Naku Koro ni features this. Nearly every character has a fancy elaborate outfit.
 * Reimei no Arcana also features this.
 * AKB 49 Renai Kinshi Jourei features intricate costumes for idol group members performing on stage, and a single performance will involve multiple costume changes as well.

Comic Books

 * Katy Keene actually encouraged this, with fan submissions that the artists would adapt into the actual comics.
 * Millie the Model also did fan submissions adapted into the comics.

Fan Works
"I went to the wardrobe closet and selected a low cut pink dress with long selves and the Triforce symbol over my right breast.A pink feathery lace ran underneath my breasts. And a crisscross pattern held the back together. I pulled my hair into a bun and went downstairs."
 * Half the text of My Immortal, the infamous Harry Potter Fanfic, is the Mary Sue in question describing her "goffic" clothing and that of her friends. All descriptions are nearly identical.
 * The best the description of the "Black Leather Pajamas".
 * Pfff, "black leather bar."
 * The Zelda fanfiction "My Inner Life" has loads of this when describing the lovely new dress and hairstyle Jenna currently has. Bonus points for the fact that some of the things she wears would look just horrid if drawn or worn in real life.

"I was wearing a cream-colored blouse with bright purple polka dots, a fleece jacket with pink and red horizontal stripes and an olive green mini. I was wearing lavender flip-flops with lime green tube socks over my mustard yellow tights. I also had on a bra and panties, but they were under the rest of my clothes so you couldn't see them. I had dyed my hair blue and put it in buns like Princess Leia from Star Wars. All the boys stared lustfully at me while most of the girls looked incredibly jealous."
 * Becoming Female does this:

""Joey lounged on a couch that had been spray-painted gold, wearing a blue leopard print tunic with a pink bobbed wig. With all the reflective objects and Joey's second skin of body glitter, the downstage area seemed to be bathed in light....All the audience would be able to see was the glow-in-the dark face and body paint worn by Joey....Glittering sparks shot out of holographic badges behind the two birthday hats on Joey's pectorals.""
 * The Yu-Gi-Oh fanfic, Decks Fall Everyone Dies, tries to hide the clothing descriptions by breaking them up, but they're still detailed descriptions:


 * A Growing Affection has a handful of extended clothing descriptions, but most notably:
 * The main portion of 's gown was a shimmering, medium-weight, pure white silk mikado. The edges of the fabric were all stitched with a golden filigree of small, overlapping triangles. The bride's dress was strapless like those of her attendants. But the pale beauty's bodice was so perfectly fitted it almost appeared to be paint instead of fabric. It clung tightly to every curve of her exquisite breasts, dipping slightly between her cleavage. The gown wrapped around her toned stomach, revealing the slight indent of her navel. The upper portion of the dress also had short sleeves connected under her arms, covering from the middle of her biceps to just above  's elbows. Unlike her friends, the young woman wore no gloves, and her engagement ring shone brightly on her finger. The ivory material split just below the waist, creating a wide slit in front while the rest of the dress flared out dramatically, flowing around her in vertical pleats. A cape-like extension off the back of the bodice and sleeves added an additional layer to the back of the gown. The silk ended a full six-inches above the floor. Underneath there was an underskirt of pale lavender, but unlike the white silk this part of the dress had a matte finish. The second layer went all the way to the floor, and as was also visible through the gap in the front. The bride wore a simple silver circlet on her head, with a veil of lace hanging out of the headpiece down to just below her chin.

Film

 * The entire Elizabeth Taylor Cleopatra was one huge orgy of this.
 * Queen Amidala of Star Wars. Each of those dresses is based on a Real Life cultural dress, by the way. One of the most iconic outfits is based on a Mongolian wedding dress.
 * There was a point to this, but All There in the Manual. As Queen, she's not supposed to be a person but a living symbol of her people's culture and traditions. They went over the top on traditional designs and makeup so people would first think Queen of the Naboo, not Padme Naberrie. Even the neat little mark on her lower lip was symbolic. It's the Mark of Remembrance to serve as a constant reminder of Naboo's bloody past.
 * It did have a plot purpose because she is supposed to be in disguise as a handmaiden on Tatooine and not revealed to be the same person until later in the movie.
 * When Padme's "just" a senator (and even in private) her clothes continue to be elaborate and beautiful; I recall a tie-in website written as a Corruscant news site where a fashion critic gushed over her outfit.
 * Also averted. While Padme's (massive) wardrobe gets plenty of time onscreen, the costume department also dedicated tremendous effort to outfitting extras that only got about 3 seconds of screentime during a crowd scene. Case in point: Opula Deget.
 * Curse of the Golden Flower pays special attention to the ridiculously opulent costumes and stylized armor worn by every character in the film. At one point, the king beats someone to death with his solid-gold belt.
 * Averted in Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings. According to Bernard Hill (King Theoden), many of his costumes had elaborate golden embroidery that was too detailed to ever be appreciated (or even noticed) on the camera. The meticulous costume designers added it anyway in order to help him get into character. The armorers even added an elaborate gold design to the inside of his breastplate, which they justified as a protective thing.
 * The above can be seen in the appendices included in the DVD release of Return of the King, where the costume designers show some of their work, including Gandalf the White's undershirt which has elaborate gold embroidery despite being completely concealed by the rest of his clothes in every scene, and a dress that Arwen wears for a single sequence lasting no more than a minute, yet the dress itself is so beautifully stitched and made of such exotic materials (including silk shipped in from India) that it seems like a tremendous waste of money.
 * This is true for almost all the costumes and props made for the films; Jackson could frame his shots ad lib and not accidentally capture someone whose sword was made of cardboard wrapped in tinfoil.
 * The Mordor Orcs in the third movie have very elaborate armor and banners, but you will hardly notice it.
 * Since the Bagginses are relatively wealthy, Frodo's clothing is made from richer materials, though of the same style as that of the other Hobbits.
 * This doesn't quite make sense, since the Tooks are richer than Bagginses, and Brandybucks at around the same level, yet Merry and Pippin still wear simpler materials than Frodo.
 * Both of those families are quite large; there is only one Baggins at Bag End, at that point in the story.
 * The armour that Aragorn wore when Gondor and Rohan marched to Mordor was beautiful, featuring silver threaded embroidery in the shape of the Tree of Gondor. Let that sink in. They embroidered boiled leather with silver thread. There is not an appropriate metaphor to convey how difficult that is to do.
 * The armour that Sauron wore in the beginning of the film was only onscreen for about 45 seconds, but the whole thing was covered in an extremely subtle poison ivy motif engraved and acid etched into the steel.
 * The Fifth Element. Costumes by Jean-Paul Gaultier!
 * Zeffirelli's 1968 version of Romeo and Juliet. The Renaissance costumes are absolutely breathtaking and absolutely period-accurate, with hundreds of yards of elaborately pleated cotton velvet on the women and raunchy, colourful tights and codpieces on the men. It deservedly won an Oscar for Best Costume Design that year.
 * The Duchess. Keira Knightley wore a new dress every single scene!!!
 * In general, anything with Keira Knightley will follow this trope.
 * Special mention must go to that damn gorgeous green dress she wore in Atonement. It outranked Audrey Hepburn's Little Black Dress and Marilyn Monroe's iconic white number on a list of most beautiful dresses ever used in film!
 * Marie Antoinette films. The Sofia Coppola one in particular set out to deliberately invoke the trope.
 * Dangerous Liaisons, the 1988 film. The costumes were so amazing you see them popping up in later historical dramas, too.
 * Another huge fashion show was from the pages of Vogue in The Devil Wears Prada.
 * Xerxes's entire gold ensemble in Three Hundred.
 * The 1936 musical The Great Ziegfeld. Good gods and demons, the film is loaded with it.
 * Some Hammer Horror. Definitely.
 * Coppola´s Dracula was a feast of fruitcake, opulent costumes.
 * The Cell, outfitted by the same designer, took Dracula's costumes Up to Eleven due to being set mostly in a psychotic Living Doll Collector's Mental World.
 * Mirror Mirror, by the same director, is this "dialed down" for a kid's movie.
 * W.E., about Prince Bertie's brother's affair with Wallis Simpson. Not surprising since Wallis was more glamorous than Elizabeth and the film was produced by Madonna.
 * The kimonos in Memoirs of a Geisha.
 * A few gowns in Ever After, most notably the gown Danielle wears to the masquerade ball.
 * Giselle makes her own costume porn, for the most part; the evil queen's outfit is just ridiculous.
 * Coraline proves that with sufficiently careful art direction, mundane everyday clothes can look just as good if not better than the most elaborate dresses.
 * Spoofed beautifully in What A Way To Go.
 * The Lana Turner vehicle Love Has Many Faces is less well-remembered for its paper-thin plot than for its exorbitant “million dollar wardrobe” (courtesy of legendary Hollywood costumer Edith Head, no less). Some have jokingly referred to the film as Love Has Many Costume Changes.

Literature
"Salome was clad in the barbaric splendor of a woman of Shushan. Jewels glittered in the torchlight on her gilded sandals, on her gold breast-plates and the slender chains that held them in place. Gold anklets clashed as she moved, jeweled bracelets weighted her bare arms. Her tall coiffure was that of a Shemitish woman, and jade pendants hung from gold hoops in her ears, flashing and sparkling with each impatient movement of her haughty head. A gem-crusted girdle supported a silk shirt so transparent that it was in the nature of a cynical mockery of convention"
 * Gossip Girl and The Clique do this a lot.
 * Every outfit in The Time Traveler's Wife is described. In detail.
 * Sara Crewe's shopping trip with her daddy at the beginning of A Little Princess.
 * According to a reviewer, the description of the heroine's gorgeous 17th century clothes in the historical romance Forever Amber is quite impressive.
 * Parodied in The Princess Bride book, where supposedly pages of such description were redacted from the "original version".
 * Likely to occur with anything William Marsh is wearing in Darkness Visible - azure silk waistcoats and nice hats abound.
 * The Wheel of Time. Suffice to say that if one removes all the gratuitous clothing descriptions from the novels, the total page count would likely go down at least 40%.
 * Occasionally the more elaborate outfits worn by the Hawkbrothers in the Heralds of Valdemar series will get this treatment. One particular example of this was during the many ceremonies held toward the beginning of Owlknight, with each of the participants wearing a separate costume for each one, all described in detail.
 * Mercedes Lackey also goes into enough detail on Tudor and Elven attire in the four-novel series about the young (Queen) Elizabeth that reproducing the outfits for a costuming competition would be child's play.
 * And in her Tales of the Five Hundred Kingdoms series, where the female protagonist's Gorgeous Period Dress (and most of the rest of her wardrobe) gets a loving description.
 * And in her Elemental Masters series, which transcribes the basic details of fairy tale plots into urban Victorian London.
 * And in... well. Suffice it to say Mercedes Lackey really loves this trope.
 * The novel The Vampire Lestat's protagonist always goes to great length to describe his wardrobe.
 * The same's true for Anne Rice's other books "written" by Lestat, as well as in The Vampire Armand (narrated by the title character), possibly the purplest of the Vampire Chronicles.
 * The short story The Eye of Argon would periodically skid to a halt to describe a character's clothing in elaborate Purple Prose. This would happen whether the character in question was a Main or merely a Mook who would be killed off seconds after being introduced.
 * While it can of course be overdone costume description, if done well can contribute to characterization and atmosphere. A writer that tends to use it very well is Barbara Hambly.
 * In every single Gossip Girl book (and all of its copycats) the author spends paragraphs discussing what each character is wearing down to the shoes and the lingerie, so much so that if a character is wearing a jeans and t-shirt it begins to sound opulent.
 * Twilight often gets into this, especially when Bella is whining about some spectacular designer outfit Alice forced her to wear and of course whatever beige ensemble Edward is wearing at the moment. Admittedly, Meyer manages to tone it down by the last book by staggering the descriptions instead of creating walls of text.
 * This is done in the book version of American Psycho, but partially in a subversion: while the narration makes it sound like the '80s businessmen are clad in the most powerful of power suits, if one were to actually look at the items in question, they'd realize they look absolutely ridiculous.
 * At the end of The Man Who Was Thursday Chesterton places each character in ceremonial garb meant to personify the days of the week. They are all described, though not in excruciating detail - it only takes up a few pages.
 * Comes up a lot in the Earth's Children series. Ayla was raised by a Clan who did not decorate their clothing, and is impressed by and eager to learn other groups' methods for beading and embroidery. Because Jean Auel did lots of research, this is one way she shows her work.
 * Laurell K. Hamilton abuses this no end, especially when Jean-Claude and his sexed-up get-ups make an entrance. Parodied excellently here.
 * The Hermux Tantamoq Adventures includes vivid descriptions of the characters' luridly-coloured clothing, particularly the bizarre outfits worn by Rich Bitch Tucka Mertslin.
 * Jerry B. Jenkins, 'co-author' and actual writer of the Left Behind books, spends more time in Tribulation Force describing Hattie and Steve's new Antichrist-approved outfits than he ever spent describing the scenes of horror that surely must have been unfolding in the first book following the disappearance of a third of the world's population in the Rapture.
 * The Mabinogion brings us the early-medieval Dream of Macsen Wledig, which is stuffed full of characters who turn up only to get the beautiful colors and magnificent materials of their clothes, armor, and horses described. Oh, and drop off messages.
 * This is theorized to have happened mainly because the story was composed when 'writing stuff down' was just making a comeback in the British Isles. Somebody thought it was orgasmically awesome to be able to put in this many details and be able to get them right next time without killing your brain. An amazing memory was an important necessity to the job, but remembering many long stories was much more important than getting one right after days of wandering around madly muttering, 'green...blue...red...sable...no, yellow, then sable...'
 * In his anthology The Man From The Diogenes Club, Kim Newman writes what can only be described as costume gorn. Occult detective Richard Jeperson wears only the most eye-searingly hideous of '70s fashions, and Newman describes his outfits in detail every story.
 * In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight the clothing worn by both of the title characters is described in loving detail.
 * Much of the elaborate description of costume is left out of modern translations of The Tale of Genji as modern readers are unable to interpret the delicate social nuances, key to characterization, that would have been obvious to Murasaki' Shikibu's contemporaries.
 * Older Than Feudalism: The description of the staggeringly elaborate decorations on the Shield of Achilles in The Iliad goes on for several pages.
 * The Bible has lovingly exact specifications for the garments of the priests in the Book of Exodus.
 * The Marquis de Sade's 120 Days of Sodom has as many detailed descriptions of the characters' costumes as it does their depravities.
 * The Hunger Games, anyone? Examples include costumes that are on fire.
 * Somewhat justified, since looking good to the viewers gets a tribute more sponsors, which in turn gives them a better chance of surviving.
 * In Robert E. Howard's Conan the Barbarian story "A Witch Shall Be Born", Salome goes in for this.


 * The descriptions of the kimonos in Memoirs of a Geisha have been described as the best part of the book.
 * Judy from Daddy Long Legs often describes dresses she bought with allowances from the titular character in detail.
 * In the Time Scout series, small mistakes in costume downtime can be deadly. For some reason, the characters never end up in a place where drab, simple clothes are the norm. Instead they end up mingling with high society in Victorian London. Coincidence. Yeah.
 * George R.R. Martin can spend paragraphs describing the clothing and heraldry of his characters. The greater the detail, the greater the chance the wearer will be/do/experience something significant by the end of the chapter.

Live-Action TV

 * Occasionally Project Runway, unsurprisingly.
 * The Tudors
 * Chairman Kaga in Iron Chef.
 * The current (late 2009) TV ads for BBC Radio One
 * Stargate SG-1 has its fair share of this, with the different clothing styles on the various planets they visit. This is especially true in the early seasons, when they were trying to show off, and in the later seasons, when they had a huge budget.
 * Hockey Night in Canada host Don Cherry wears, uh... very flamboyant outfits.
 * Jason King, on both Department S and Jason King.
 * Doctor Who had an episode of this in the form of "The Girl in the Fireplace". Not just Reinette's gorgeous period dresses, but the outfits the clockwork robots were wearing.
 * Doctor Who has done this from the start. Tom Baker's famous bohemian outfit and the Time Lords' exuisitely layered robes and headdresses were designed by James Acheson, who later went on to win three Oscars for his stupendous costumes for Hollywood movies. Check out The Masque of Mandragora and The Deadly Assassin for his best work on the series. Also, Amy Roberts designed some rather gorgeous pieces for the stories she worked on (Image of the Fendahl, State of Decay, The Keeper of Traken, Mawdryn Undead and the Ainley Master's velvet costume).
 * About half the costumes on Merlin probably qualify. Gwen's purple dress is probably the best example, but Merlin's every day clothes manage to be impressive just by how natural they look. The detailing on Arthur's armor is also pretty much invisible in everything except high-res promo shots. And that's not even touching on what Morgana wears...
 * Alias has a lot of this, partly justified by Sydney's need to blend in. Costumes involved range from traditional style kimono to outrageous party outfits.
 * Sex and the City
 * Gossip Girl
 * Pretty Little Liars
 * Blackadder The second and third series in particular had very detailed costumes. Queenie's dress from the second series, Prince George's clothes (especially the trousers) and all of Blackadder's clothes were exquisitely detailed.
 * Noah's Arc: The fashion show, which has some wildly elaborate outfits even by fashion show standards.
 * Dr Lucy Worsley in her history documentaries just loves dressing up in period costumes and will get through at least half a dozen in a typical episode, along with a similar number of natty modern-day outfits in between.

Music

 * Visual Kei
 * Liberace
 * Elton John
 * Madonna
 * Britney Spears
 * Christina Aguilera
 * Lady Gaga
 * Nicki Minaj
 * Kiss, of course.
 * And now care of America's Got Talent, Prince Poppycock. Liberace may have some competition if he takes a few lessons from Alexander Bui...
 * David Bowie, especially during his Glam Rock period in The Seventies (Ziggy Stardust, et.al.) and the Earthling era in The Nineties (which featured Alexander McQueen-designed frock coats).
 * Revo from Sound Horizon has taken to wearing elaborately embroidered Awesome Anachronistic Apparel just about any time he makes a public appearance.
 * Namgar

Professional Wrestling

 * Rey Mysterio is famous for all his unique outfits and masks that we wonder who comes up with them. He has a tradition of wearing a unique costume every Wrestlemania. XIX he wore a Daredevil costume, XX he dressed as The Flash etc. His most recent addition was a Na'vi inspired costume from Avatar.
 * Macho Man Randy Savage was known for his flamboyant clothes and hats.
 * Ric Flair had a thing for frilly, sparkly and flamboyant robes which he wore during his entrances.
 * Most of the WWE divas tend to wear fancy and extravagant wrestling attire so that when WWE has as many divas in the ring as they can fit, the overall effect is a bunch of multi-colored outfits bouncing around that could probably cause a few TVs to explode.
 * The entrance attire of Japanese legend Keiji Mutoh's alter ego, The Great Muta, is this in spades.
 * Even though The Undertaker dresses mostly in black, his more elaborate outfits, especially those for Wrestlemania, definitely qualify for this trope.
 * Christian Cage used to wear an assortment of shiny hooded jumpsuits from 2004-2009 (although he did usually keep the hood off his head for the jumpsuits he started wearing as the Instant Classic in '07).

Tabletop Games

 * Depending on how skilled you are with a paintbrush, the Bling of War in Warhammer Fantasy Battle and Warhammer 40,000 can get downright ridiculous. Most of the signature characters have incredibly detailed models that are an amateur painter's nightmare.
 * Of course, you can just paint on a few basic colors, use something different for the bling, and slap on some DEVLAN MUD.

Theatre

 * Takarazuka Revue productions. The costuming budget on those things must be higher than the gross domestic product of many third-world countries.
 * Galadriel in the Toronto production of Lord of the Rings. It was the headdress that did it. Notably, they changed her costume for the London production, but it was still quite opulent.
 * Cirque Du Soleil shows, to the point that the company's 25th anniversary book (2009) was a retrospective of costumes from all the shows over the years! Especially costume-riffic shows include Alegria, "O", and KA.
 * Most productions of The Phantom of the Opera turn out like this (including the film), particularly during the "Masquerade" song.
 * Shrek: The Musical, Exhibit A

Video Games

 * Virtually every Final Fantasy character, at least going by their original designs.
 * Anything that's non-Stripperific designed by Satoshi Urushihara for Growlanser and Langrisser.
 * Castlevania Judgment
 * On that subject, Ayami Kojima's art for Symphony of the Night features some very detailed clothing. Let's take Alucard for example. The inside of his coat (not his cape) has an extreme amount of detail.
 * Dwarf Fortress allows you to create this trope through decoration, randomly determined between menacing spikes, hanging rings, encircling bands, and images, with no regard to practicality. Entirely described through text, no less.
 * Artifacts have many diverse materials as decoration, usually covering all the above decorations. Some even have images of themselves on them.
 * In Pokémon Diamond and Pearl, the outfits worn by Team Galactic are otherworldly and elaborate. Gym Leaders and other major bosses in general may also fall into this category.
 * The Dynasty Warriors series by Koei, the eastern version of Satoshi Urushihara's works in terms of extreme pornography. Even when someone has a plain and basic outfit there's an 80% chance of Nice Hat after Nice Hat after... It seems the only place they skimped on the clothing was for the create-a-character 'edit generals'. See also: Kessen and Romance of the Three Kingdoms, but DW is where they save the most fantastical designs for.
 * Ragnarok Online's Maestro.
 * Assassin's Creed II goes its way to show off the opulent outfits of the Renaissance period, unusually focusing mainly on the male wardrobe. The Assassin's uniform is of course the most notable example, and a major departure from the simple robes of the first game.
 * Ezio takes it Up to Eleven in Brotherhood. He shouldn't even be able to walk in this outfit, let alone fight and climb in it!
 * That costume is loosely based on the Renaissance fashions, and should accommodate walking and possibly even semi-formal duelling. However, there's no way that anyone could run or climb in it without the loose cloth sticking to every nook imaginable.
 * In Lusternia, trademasters can periodically submit a number of cartel designs. The result is extreme customization of everything from robes to platemail to furniture. Your character can be as richly (or as drably) attired as you desire. And - like the Dwarf Fortress example above - this is achieved entirely through text!

Online Role Playing Games

 * In text-based chat rooms used for online role-playing, many players adopt the habit of using a cut-and-paste "description drop" for their character, either upon entering a room, or if a new player arrives and requests a quick description of who is already there. While most players will keep it to a short summary of what a casual appraisal would reveal, a significant portion indulge in extreme Costume Porn. Not only are the outfit and physical attributes described in excruciating detail, but often bits that are completely unseen (such as tattoos and piercings in areas not available for public consumption) are included, as are historical notes that no casual observer could know. In extreme cases, these will even go so far as to exceed the chat-room's character limit, forcing the player to split it into two or more posts.

Web Original

 * In his review of Darksiders, Yahtzee Croshaw of Zero Punctuation claims that this is a problem in World of Warcraft, Warhammer 40,000, and the game being reviewed. He goes at length here.
 * Need one yourself? Use this handy generator

Western Animation

 * As seen in the page picture, Disney Princess costumes can be very elaborate.
 * Note that usually the Costume Porn is on the merchandise instead of the movies, since the more elaborate and detailed the costume, the harder it is to animate.
 * The Barbie films are full of this. Good Lord are they ever.
 * The Anastasia movie is full of this. Most notable examples would have to be Anya's yellow silk Dream Sequence dress, the svelte navy and sparkly Parisian Opera dress, her blue court dress at the beginning of the movie, and her yellow court dress at the end of the movie.
 * The My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic episode "Suited for Success" is very much a display of Costume Porn, featuring Rarity's creative efforts in designing evening wear for her friends.

Real Life

 * Marie Antoinette gets associated with this, when she actually tried to make dress at Versailles more modest (although she was still required to wear the most elaborate dresses). Other Queens and Empresses have fit this trope far better, owning up to thousands of dresses.
 * Imelda Marcos's Shoe Porn.
 * The traje de luces worn by bullfighters.
 * One really cool rig you can make yourself. Take a Victorinox belt clip. Hook on the end of the chain a collector's edition knife (they have really cool collector's editions by the way). The effect is great. Not really Bling of War despite being called a Swiss Army knife (though Victorinox does sell to the military those knives would look different). More "bling of craftsmanship". But it looks great, anyway.
 * This may be more for pleasing oneself. There are places where people might look askance at carrying a knife however harmless it is.