“ Too much?” said Larry Krone, a costume designer.

“I don’t think there’s anything that’s too much,” said Bridget Everett, his model, muse and client extraordinaire.

On a recent sunny afternoon, they were standing in Mr. Krone’s kitsch-crammed studio in the East Village of Manhattan, which doubles as the headquarters of his label, House of Larréon. Mr. Krone was fitting Ms. Everett, the actress, comedian and off-color cabaret sensation, for one of her December engagements at Joe’s Pub with her band, the Tender Moments.

The dress was a red-sequined tribute to the Bob Mackie flame gown that Tina Turner wore in the 1970s. Mr. Krone and Ms. Everett like to name their looks, and this one was a lewd riff on “River Deep, Mountain High.”

Ms. Everett had arrived at the studio, a riot of street furniture finds, vintage glassware and gaudy fabrics, looking somewhat less glamorous. Beneath a puffy winter jacket, she wore a pink tank top and sweatpants. She abstains from bras onstage, but this afternoon she wore a sensible black one.