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The phrase "a costume of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing the type or style of a costume, often in relation to a character, theme, or cultural reference.
Example: "She wore a costume of a medieval knight for the school play."
Alternatives: "a costume depicting" or "a costume representing".
Exact(57)
"A costume of Washington," I said.
I devised a costume of an Aladdin type of character on a flying carpet.
A few long strides brought Mrs. Vreeland to a costume of Carole Lombard's.
This wealth led to a costume of magnificent splendour that became the envy of the known world.
The other, Dirty Martini, stripped on pointe in a costume of balloons, popping them with a cigarette.
In 1941 she made her movie debut in Paramount's "All-American Coed," wearing a costume of velvet carrots.
At some point, when preparing this outfit for your child, you must have asked what it was a costume of, and approved it.
That they both appeared as part of a costume of sexual provocation illustrates perhaps how our attitude to revealing clothing has morphed.
She emerged in Juliet at school, with a costume of coloured crepe paper, and then in a navy production of "White Cargo", a pouting beauty wearing nothing but a tan and a sheet she had pinched from the officers' quarters.
With the help of his curmudgeonly pal Peevy, Secord fashions himself a costume of brown breeches, a flying jacket, and a metal-plumed steel helmet and flies into action.
Similar(1)
Know the names an costumes of the different sausages.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com