Skip to content

Emerald City Comic Con: The Definition of Geek Chic

Paint. Armor. Glitter. Stilts. Wings. It’s a masquerade ball of super fandom.

By Danielle Barnum March 7, 2025

Person with red hair wearing large, intricately designed blue and gold gauntlets, standing in front of a building with glass windows.
Photo by Danielle Barnum Photography

A growing crowd of characters creates a palpable hum of geeky energy at Emerald City Comic Con, where “too out there” doesn’t exist. 

It’s a heightened world combining all things comics, video games, books, TV and movies, as tens of thousands of attendees come together to revel, admire and celebrate all things nerdy. It’s truly an epic weekend of cosplay show and tell.

The cosplay on display this weekend at the Seattle Convention Center is anywhere from quirky to masterful — handcrafted to the point of looking movie-worthy or requiring a background in mechanical engineering. Some costumes are thrifted and assembled in an hour. Other fans take six months to finish the 3D printing before being painted and fitted.

It’s all about the importance of creative expression.

“I’m normally very shy. But here? Like this? Nope,” a cheerful gnome says with a genuine twinkle. “I can express myself in ways I can’t anywhere else.”

Another cosplayer adds, “It’s nice to be in a place where you can be as weird as you want, and it’s OK. It’s awesome.”

Cosplaying also means connection and camaraderie.

“My favorite part of it is sewing,” one participant says. “My mom taught me how to sew before she passed away, so creating these costumes is my way of still feeling close with her. I also love to perform, so doing this marries the two. It honestly feels good getting complimented, and complimenting other people. It’s such a great community.”

At Emerald City Comic Con, reality bends and creativity reigns. It’s sewn, welded, painted, and paraded for all to appreciate. Here, everyone is included.

All photos by Danielle Barnum Photography

Two people in matching blue and yellow superhero costumes pose outdoors, with convention center signage in the background.Three people in colorful, fantasy-themed costumes with flowers and accessories pose enthusiastically on a wooden deck.   Person in a red outfit with devil horns and a crown holds a staff, standing on a city sidewalk. Person dressed in a wizard costume with ram horns and a staff, standing on a boardwalk with buildings in the background. Two people in colorful costumes stand outdoors. One is in a green and purple outfit with a single eye on the chest, and the other is in a red top and yellow skirt with a tall gray wig. Person with tall, gray hairstyle and glasses, wearing an orange top and pearl earrings, standing in an urban setting. Person in detailed Mandalorian armor cosplay standing in an urban setting, holding a prop blaster. Person with braided hair in a black outfit holds a large sword outdoors, standing in front of a woven structure. Three people in fantasy costumes pose for a photo on a boardwalk. Two wear red body paint, horns, and tails, while the third wears a cape and holds a book. A woman in a purple dress and flower crown stands next to a man wearing glasses and a beige apron. They are outdoors on a wooden pathway with people and buildings in the background. Two people in costume walking on a city street: one in a black top hat and yellow vest, the other in a green suit with question marks and a bowler hat. Person in an elaborate green gown decorated with flowers poses outdoors. A large wooden sculpture and a theater marquee are visible in the background. Person wearing an elaborate purple dress with a tall, floral-adorned hairstyle and glasses, sitting outdoors. Person wearing an orange and black armored suit with helmet and goggles, walking on a street. People in varied cosplay costumes walk on a city street near a box office.

Follow Us

The Art of Home

The Art of Home

Three Seattle designers explore what it means to live with art at Foster/White Gallery.

Inside Foster/White Gallery this month, the familiar white walls of Pioneer Square’s longtime contemporary art space look a little different. Furniture has been moved in and wallpaper lines the walls. The show, Make Yourself at Home, transforms the gallery into a living space where art is meant to be experienced, not just seen. The concept…

Honoring Native Heritage Across Washington

Honoring Native Heritage Across Washington

From Port Townsend’s storytelling trail to Tulalip’s cultural center, these sites invite reflection and honor Indigenous history and living traditions.

Washington State is the Indigenous land of 29 federally recognized Native American tribes, including the Makah, Muckleshoot, and Lummi Nations. In Seattle, we are privileged guests living on the Native land of the Duwamish Tribe. From trails through state parks and landmarks within the city to well-known sites like Snoqualmie Falls (sacred to the Snoqualmie…

Malala Yousafzai Returns to Herself

Malala Yousafzai Returns to Herself

The youngest Nobel Peace Prize winner reflects on college, identity, and what it means to reclaim her story in her new memoir.

Malala Yousafzai’s life was upended at the age of 15 in Pakistan when she was shot on a school bus by the Taliban for speaking out about girls’ education. She was treated for life-threatening injuries and recovered in the United Kingdom, where her family permanently relocated. Catapulted into the public spotlight at a tender age,…

Carrying the Legacy Forward

Carrying the Legacy Forward

Shannon Lee is recognized at the Very Asian Foundation's gala in Bellevue for her work in preserving her father Bruce Lee’s cultural impact.

For film and martial arts icon Bruce Lee, before there was Fist of Fury or Enter the Dragon, there was The Big Boss. The film marked Lee’s 1971 big-screen breakout role. He would tragically die two years later in May of 1973 from a cerebral edema. Now, 52 years later, Lee’s daughter, Shannon Lee, is…