I love these videos. I was just thinking, it would be a funny joke, perhaps for April Fools’ Day or something, to do one of these in the same serious tone but for modern day dress.
"The shirt is made of a simple cotton blend that provides warmth but doesn't stifle her. She sniffs it first to make sure it hasn't been worn too many times already"
Why not? I mean, if you can wear tattooos and piercings and all kinds of hairstyles and everything, then why not something old-fashioned? I do not mean the full thing, but why not alter some items in this direction? There is a vid on youtube somewhere, where a seamstress made a walking skirt for modern times, it was awesome, how it worked out, being old fashioned and not "crazy" at all at the same time.
i think i would die cause im the type of gal to take on and off my scarf on a hot summers day because a few seconds in the shadow with a breeze will make me cold, or when the indoor aircon is way hotter or colder than outside. i cant commit to a shirt let alone an entire outfit how do you do it?
Unless it was a reinforced wig, I'm curious to know what kinds of products they used back in the day to make her hair stand so rigidly, and how long the process actually took.
The only constant in my life is the linen chemise and the stocking tied with a ribbon garter below the knee that I experience at the beginning of everyone of these videos
One of the reasons is the popularity of slimness and clothes being form fitting. If you have pockets full of wallets and keys it makes everything bulky and ruins the whole form fitting visual. Things like dresses aren’t big/puffy/and multilayered like they used to be all those factors made pockets easy to hide, pockets on dresses are really obvious now-a-days, so therefore again pocket bulges ruins the look
Rae Smith well it just wouldn’t give the desired shape. In our time it’s unappealing (and uncomfortable) to have a big blocky thing sticking out of your behind or on your sides. Also capitalism.
Clara Grace I was almost thinking that those pockets need to be brought back. If designers nowadays don’t want to give us deep enough pockets, then at least give us slits in pants or skirts so we can use our own, thanks.
Maggie E I am seriously considering adding a belt and a drawstring pouch á la medieval fashion to the dresses that can’t have a pocket. Just need to make some suitable pouches in pretty fabrics first.
@@maggiee639 I have a couple of circle skirts that have shallow pockets that I am considering deepening. The challenge is that the pocket is between the top skirt and the lining/built-in petticoat.
They didnt leave the house really during those times. for that reason. throught out history women have free bled, used rags, or sat on a pot. but for the longest of times, you just didnt do shit.
Melvin Sally well not just wombs. You’re really adding a feminist flare to it. But women during those times were pregnant all the time. Contraceptive pills are a quite new invention after all.
It depends on the weather , area and status . Any women from any status was able to be a working woman and actually was a working women and certain women no matter what status wasn't.... Cause they just wasn't . It also depends if they worked indoors/outdoors and the job they have.
@@personalpersonal9356 What are you talking about? High status ladies couldn't work. It was unheard of in polite company. They couldn't own property or businesses. That's why their economic position was so tenuous. Jobs were reserved for the poor, like working in a factory, or in the fields, at a mill, or as a servant. Wealthy women just didn't work, on average. There are exceptions to every rule, of course, but they are just that: exceptions.
Grace good luck! Sewing clothes is fantastic! Check out Bernadette banner, and Catherine hat on UA-cam. They’re both inspirations! Don’t compare yourself, just watch and enjoy! You can do it for a living, I promise, I would pay for someone else to make me an outfit! 😜
I’m currently attempting to do a historically accurate colonial stays for my felicity American doll(I made one with a pattern I did without thought to accuracy, hotglue and no sewing, but it isn’t terrible ) it’s so difficult, but it’s not going terribly so far. I’ll then move onto a bum roll, and maybe a new dress(I have a lot of her dresses as well the dress my sisters it for her Elizabeth doll(they were friends in story so similar fashions, just higher class English fashion) that are for the most part accurate to fashion, class, political stance(English loyalists and colonial patriots), silhouettes, and fabrics
@@squidneythesquid2487 wow that's so neat! yes stays are so difficult! I made my own pair and they fit me okay but are a bit crooked. Pretty good for a first try. I'm finish my first English gown right now and I've sewn a petticoat, bum roll, and handmade 18th century chokers. at the moment (literally at I'm typing this, I am making an 18th century disk hat
Grace thank you, and good luck on your hat. The project I’m planning to do soon is my Halloween costume (Arya Stark), I figured it’d be cheaper or even equal in price to buy fabric and a pattern, and have it look, feel, and fit better than if I were to run to spirit Halloween and grab it. I even found a pattern that is literally the outfit I want to replicate. I can make a sword out of paper, I can go thrifting for anything that could be modified and turned into a good prop.
Anthony Malesys fabric back then was a lot more breathable as it was all natural and houses weren’t as well isolated as they are now, so it woudn’t be that hot
I actually wear floor length skirts all the time, and if they’re natural fabric (cotton, linen, etc) they breathe really well. Also air circulated under them really well so you don’t get super hot. As long as you can cool your pulse points (for instance using a fan to evaporate any sweat around your face and neck) you still stay relatively cool. 😊
Yuri Gacha-Chan Tight lacing was actually very rare and quite shocking to the people of the time. Only very few aristocratic and high class women did it,but most,especially working class women,wore their corsets comfortably to give them a fashionable silhouette and support,much like bras today. I’m not an expert by the way,this is just what I’ve gathered.
Noor Azraq Even those few who did tightlace generally only did so for fancy occasions. There is at least one surviving example of a wardrobe where the lady’s morning gowns were four inches larger in the waist than her ball gowns.
@@yurigacha-san1367 tight-lacing then was like botox now: very very very few did it, and everyone talked about how ridiculous it was, and marveled that anyone would do it. It really wasn't common whatsoever. It's a shame that is so commonly-believed. :(
ok, let me just say, this is by far the most frickn beautiful thing ever. I honestly like this type of dress so so so much better than modern clothing like jeans and stuff.
Loved this! Thank you so much for sharing! I’ve always wondered about those tight little sleeves. Now that I see that the two parts are separate it opens my world for making garments!
Ladies!! We can still wear like this! We can bring all these back again, all over again from any era. Well, to a limit. As far we are wearing and acting respectfully and elegantly, that's all that matters!! All the best to each and everyone of you! God's bless! 😊
The amazing thing is how any woman would look good in such beautiful clothing. Beautiful garments have an extraordinary way of making the homeliest of women look beautiful themselves.
Being in 2022, where I can wear panjamas outside and I still hate going out... I would never ever step foot outside the house if i have to dress like that. But it's so beautiful 🥰
That's fantastic! I think the petticoat would benefit from a ruffle and matching ruched trim. I too wore mine for the first time with a plain petticoat, because I was so exhausted from making all of those pieces. Later I added a wide ruffle and trimmed it with ruched trim matching the jacket. Mine is a colonial blue watered silk. Love it!
I love watching these videos. It gives me ideas for a novel I am watching of how my characters (at least my female characters) would dress. Or would complain about the fashion trends at the time. xD
Gorgeous video and great work as always! Imagine how harsh it was to travel great distances in coaches back then! In some letters left by Mozart, he complains of the hard wooden seats of the Fiaker when travelling (coaches pulled by horses are still called Fiaker in Vienna.) Would you please consider doing a video on the fashion of Spanish women at the change of the 18th and 19th century? For what I've researched, it seems the French Directoire style had already influenced the Spaniards clothing at that point, but there were still elements of local tradition in their garments such as the mantilla. I'd greatly appreciate it! I love your channel!!
Lovely and I love the pockets I don't know why woman ever stopped using them for any time. Ok but no under drawers. I mean even the Romans and Greeks had subligaculum, a basic loincloth.
@@debbieboring3422 I recently invested in a pair of Levi's jeans for the first time and while checking the fit in front of the mirror I put my hands to the pockets without thinking about it and HOLY SHIT
If you are wearing corsets, especially if there are multiple layers of petticoats, getting underpants up and down is a PITA, if not impossible. Leaving them off, or (later) wearing split drawers that didn't need to be pulled down was much more practical, and with so many layers, a lady's modesty wasn't at risk...
They didn't have a problem with that. He undoes his fly, she tosses up her skirts, and they're good to go. The mistake you make is thinking you have to get undressed. (grin) The clothing was certainly no impediment to me conceiving my oldest son at a reenacting event.
Would it be cruel of me, as a mother in the future, to dress my daughter(s) in clothing similar to this? I would love to sew dresses for my little girls one day. Though I'm not a devout Catholic, I admire the idea of being a wife and mother, staying home doing the usual house work (of course, I'd have a job and my husband would be sharing the house work load). I also love the idea of dressing up with my daughter(s) and generally just being there with them unlike my childhood that wasn't quite enjoyable.
I have been going down the 19th century course the tree rabbit hole so glad I found this video I had no idea that they had two part sleeves I am a seamstress but I have never seen this
I love these videos. I was just thinking, it would be a funny joke, perhaps for April Fools’ Day or something, to do one of these in the same serious tone but for modern day dress.
"Women commonly wore what was referred to as "booty shorts" to attract the male gaze" 😂😂
An absolutely wonderful idea!
That's a great idea.
Haha, I wonder how long they could stretch that out? Otherwise it may be a 30s video
"The shirt is made of a simple cotton blend that provides warmth but doesn't stifle her. She sniffs it first to make sure it hasn't been worn too many times already"
Pockets *were* an important means of carrying small personal belongings.
that is usually what pockets are for.
In the next few years we women wont have pockets at all
@@Mureirsa i am a young adult female c:
I read this comment the exact moment I heard it in the video
Carrying*
You can call me crazy...but I wouldn't mind dressings like this...so pretty :-)
Right? I need an excuse to dress like this without looking crazy
Elise Scarpa not crazy!
I'm going to start wearing capes in the winter. I don't care what other people think of it.
Why not? I mean, if you can wear tattooos and piercings and all kinds of hairstyles and everything, then why not something old-fashioned?
I do not mean the full thing, but why not alter some items in this direction? There is a vid on youtube somewhere, where a seamstress made a walking skirt for modern times, it was awesome, how it worked out, being old fashioned and not "crazy" at all at the same time.
i think i would die cause im the type of gal to take on and off my scarf on a hot summers day because a few seconds in the shadow with a breeze will make me cold, or when the indoor aircon is way hotter or colder than outside. i cant commit to a shirt let alone an entire outfit
how do you do it?
The contrast of the model’s fiery red hair and her dress’ deep lapis blue is so pleasing to look at
Unless it was a reinforced wig, I'm curious to know what kinds of products they used back in the day to make her hair stand so rigidly, and how long the process actually took.
The only constant in my life is the linen chemise and the stocking tied with a ribbon garter below the knee that I experience at the beginning of everyone of these videos
and prior attire's videos, i appreciate the familiarity of it lol
Sooooo you wear a chemise and stockings? Neat. Doesn't that get warm?
That and the constant reference in the comments to not having pockets in modern day fashion LOL
And that no one wore underwear. When did we stop airing and start wearing?
and linen closed at the back with tapes
Why can't designers put actual pockets in women's clothing anymore?!
So we will buy purses to hold those things. As for me, I shop in the men's section for my trousers and short pants.
Because if they do, they can't sell you purses.
Bulkiness
One of the reasons is the popularity of slimness and clothes being form fitting. If you have pockets full of wallets and keys it makes everything bulky and ruins the whole form fitting visual. Things like dresses aren’t big/puffy/and multilayered like they used to be all those factors made pockets easy to hide, pockets on dresses are really obvious now-a-days, so therefore again pocket bulges ruins the look
Rae Smith well it just wouldn’t give the desired shape. In our time it’s unappealing (and uncomfortable) to have a big blocky thing sticking out of your behind or on your sides. Also capitalism.
Back when women’s pockets were actually deep enough to hold things. 😪
Clara Grace ikr 😢😢😢
and they're gorgeous! I would seriously tie them round the belt-loops of my jeans and be so happy!
I know right guys are so lucky!!!!😒
If you have some basic sewing skills and some scraps of fabric you can always extend your pockets!
Clara Grace I was almost thinking that those pockets need to be brought back. If designers nowadays don’t want to give us deep enough pockets, then at least give us slits in pants or skirts so we can use our own, thanks.
Me: puts on a shirt underwear sweatpants hoodie
Her: AM I A JOKE TO U
Lilydachile Paparika Bhahahaha true
😂 also I love your username (had to bring that up sorry 😂)
Yah, hahaha!!!Hello Draco from Slytherin~~
Sksksksksks and I oop
same
I love how they did pockets back then. The whole outfit is beautiful. What a great series!
Bcz they always thought about convenience
Old skool pockets are where it’s at! Can you imagine the connivence of not having to carry a purse? I love a good bag but I hate that I NEED it
Maggie E
I am seriously considering adding a belt and a drawstring pouch á la medieval fashion to the dresses that can’t have a pocket. Just need to make some suitable pouches in pretty fabrics first.
Nillie yea and figure out how to add the pocket opening without ruining your dress/ skirt
@@maggiee639
I have a couple of circle skirts that have shallow pockets that I am considering deepening. The challenge is that the pocket is between the top skirt and the lining/built-in petticoat.
How did they deal with periods? You should make a video on that.
Usually they just let it run or used pieces of cloth to stop the blood.
@@aestheticcat8976 but wouldn't that be uncomfortable to where or just let it go down your leg? and wouldn't it smell too?=_=
They didnt leave the house really during those times. for that reason. throught out history women have free bled, used rags, or sat on a pot. but for the longest of times, you just didnt do shit.
@@faflamingo2193 could you tell me more?
Melvin Sally well not just wombs. You’re really adding a feminist flare to it. But women during those times were pregnant all the time. Contraceptive pills are a quite new invention after all.
I would love a video on what working class women would have worn during this era - though I suppose it was the same type of dress, only less fancy.
They already have a video for that. ua-cam.com/video/nUmO7rBMdoU/v-deo.html
@@karlijns4816 And the maid in this is the woman from that video! The Lore gets even deeper.
It depends on the weather , area and status . Any women from any status was able to be a working woman and actually was a working women and certain women no matter what status wasn't.... Cause they just wasn't . It also depends if they worked indoors/outdoors and the job they have.
They're girlfriends
@@personalpersonal9356 What are you talking about? High status ladies couldn't work. It was unheard of in polite company. They couldn't own property or businesses. That's why their economic position was so tenuous.
Jobs were reserved for the poor, like working in a factory, or in the fields, at a mill, or as a servant. Wealthy women just didn't work, on average.
There are exceptions to every rule, of course, but they are just that: exceptions.
The maid from this video is the same person, who dressed up in a video about working women
*Change my mind*
Yes, look for her too in the summer version of 18th century working dress - haymaking!
that’s because she is lol.
I-
THE LORE GETS DEEPER
Her hair is gorgeous 😍
Clare Right? And I love red hair so much!
True!
You can’t buy that colour in a bottle she’s very lucky ❤️
@@fuzzyx2face Well, it is very beautiful, but her hair is definitely dyed, with henna.
ikrrrr
Is no one gonna talk about how pretty the model is
@Expastelline ♡ yea she does
Crowseye videos: required for all time lords in training.
Miriam D Yessss!!!!
Omfg. I thought i was the only one to think that
Yess!
That's exactly why I watch them
Gummyqueen Doesstuff same!
You know what? I want those dresses to be a trend. Imagine seeing everyone in those clothes... i would be in love
stunning! I am sewing and studying 18th century fashions currently, in hopes of doing so professionally one day, as a career
Grace good luck! Sewing clothes is fantastic! Check out Bernadette banner, and Catherine hat on UA-cam. They’re both inspirations! Don’t compare yourself, just watch and enjoy! You can do it for a living, I promise, I would pay for someone else to make me an outfit! 😜
I’m currently attempting to do a historically accurate colonial stays for my felicity American doll(I made one with a pattern I did without thought to accuracy, hotglue and no sewing, but it isn’t terrible ) it’s so difficult, but it’s not going terribly so far. I’ll then move onto a bum roll, and maybe a new dress(I have a lot of her dresses as well the dress my sisters it for her Elizabeth doll(they were friends in story so similar fashions, just higher class English fashion) that are for the most part accurate to fashion, class, political stance(English loyalists and colonial patriots), silhouettes, and fabrics
@@squidneythesquid2487 wow that's so neat! yes stays are so difficult! I made my own pair and they fit me okay but are a bit crooked. Pretty good for a first try. I'm finish my first English gown right now and I've sewn a petticoat, bum roll, and handmade 18th century chokers. at the moment (literally at I'm typing this, I am making an 18th century disk hat
@@kitdubhran2968 thank you! I am opening an Etsy shop to sell some of my clothing and hats so I really appreciate the encouragement!
Grace thank you, and good luck on your hat. The project I’m planning to do soon is my Halloween costume (Arya Stark), I figured it’d be cheaper or even equal in price to buy fabric and a pattern, and have it look, feel, and fit better than if I were to run to spirit Halloween and grab it. I even found a pattern that is literally the outfit I want to replicate. I can make a sword out of paper, I can go thrifting for anything that could be modified and turned into a good prop.
As a history buff who is learning to sew and design, these videos are valuable treasures! Thank you!
Also, that model was absolutely stunning!
Imagine being dressed like this during a hot summer..
Anthony Malesys fabric back then was a lot more breathable as it was all natural and houses weren’t as well isolated as they are now, so it woudn’t be that hot
They wouldn't be. This is something you'd wear when it's colder
When it came to summer,they wore lighter materials and a bit less layers
I actually wear floor length skirts all the time, and if they’re natural fabric (cotton, linen, etc) they breathe really well. Also air circulated under them really well so you don’t get super hot. As long as you can cool your pulse points (for instance using a fan to evaporate any sweat around your face and neck) you still stay relatively cool. 😊
These are winter clothes! =)
For those of you doesn't know all of this is breathable and they would wear less clothing in the summer.
Corsets aren't technically breathable since people used to pull them really right so they could hardly breathe in them
Yuri Gacha-Chan Tight lacing was actually very rare and quite shocking to the people of the time. Only very few aristocratic and high class women did it,but most,especially working class women,wore their corsets comfortably to give them a fashionable silhouette and support,much like bras today. I’m not an expert by the way,this is just what I’ve gathered.
Noor Azraq
Even those few who did tightlace generally only did so for fancy occasions. There is at least one surviving example of a wardrobe where the lady’s morning gowns were four inches larger in the waist than her ball gowns.
@@yurigacha-san1367 tight-lacing then was like botox now: very very very few did it, and everyone talked about how ridiculous it was, and marveled that anyone would do it. It really wasn't common whatsoever. It's a shame that is so commonly-believed. :(
@@annedavis3340 I didn't know that... That's what I was taught but clearly the teacher was wrong. Guess it's not just doctors that suck in Poland :(
I'm dying to see man and women getting dressed from about 1660 for courtiers of Louis XIV.
Simon Macomber yeah I thought that as well, same with the petticoats that tie in the back
@@laurarose8481 And unable to raise the upper arms due to the tight neckline.
Even with all the elaborate layering, this ensemble feels surprisingly practical, for both its purpose and the period.
It’s almost therapeutic watching these 😍
Notice how the maid is wearing the outfit modeled in the “getting dressed in the 18th century-working women” video?
i'm so glad this narrator is back. there is something so unique about her voice.
Women in 18 century:
Woman 1: "Nice dress!"
Woman 2: "Thanks. It has pockets in it!"
This is as if Felicity Merriman (American Girl Doll) grew up!
Iw as thinking the same thing 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
ok, let me just say, this is by far the most frickn beautiful thing ever. I honestly like this type of dress so so so much better than modern clothing like jeans and stuff.
Beautiful narrator's voice and beautiful music. Amazing as always!
Can you please do a medieval/15 th century vid . I love these
ua-cam.com/video/tUsZQobX3Uw/v-deo.html ✌🏻
I just love these kinds of videos, so amazing and surprisingly calming to watch
Accidental ASMR...
so no one's gonna talk about her beauty?
Pretty English rose, happy?
She is amazing!
Loved this! Thank you so much for sharing! I’ve always wondered about those tight little sleeves. Now that I see that the two parts are separate it opens my world for making garments!
How majestic! She literally looks like as if she stepped out of a fashion plate.
I've seen all of the videos so many times and they never tire!
I'm waiting for the Tudor era one :D
She is so beautiful. Her skin is like milk and her hair is like fire 🔥.
Is white skin your only idea of beauty?
What on earth would make you ask that question?
@@housewifehoneybee2784 what on Earth would make you think that skin like milk is the only idea of beauty?I'm just asking,just a general question.
Nobody said that though.
@@housewifehoneybee2784 ohk,I just asked.
The sleeves are absolutely gorgeous! I think I’m in love 💖
Ladies!! We can still wear like this! We can bring all these back again, all over again from any era. Well, to a limit. As far we are wearing and acting respectfully and elegantly, that's all that matters!! All the best to each and everyone of you! God's bless! 😊
This is so lovely! I love that dress - especially the colour.
Thank you for all your amazing videos! They are precious to any costume-oriented career and history-lover ♥
Watching this from Brunswick (Australia)!
Watching this from Brunswick (Germany) 😀😀👋
Brunswick, Ohio!
Watching this from the toilet in my bathroom
Brunswick gets around!
Pia Pips me too! Hi😊
The under clothes are a full outfit and a half by today's standards
Come now.. that's at least 3 outfits considering what folks wear now 😂
If you want to make modern clothes from the fabric you could get a full wardrobe
These are all done so beautifully! I love watching them 💕
The amazing thing is how any woman would look good in such beautiful clothing. Beautiful garments have an extraordinary way of making the homeliest of women look beautiful themselves.
I would love to see a Victorian era (preferably 1870s to 1880s) Getting Dressed.
Check out Priorattire channel on UA-cam. She is amazing ❤
One of my favourites.. So Wonderful!
Nice work.⚘
I can't get enough of this series! It's so well done. Please keep the videos coming.
Being in 2022, where I can wear panjamas outside and I still hate going out... I would never ever step foot outside the house if i have to dress like that. But it's so beautiful 🥰
Thank you for spotlighting such a unique garment! Lovely video as always
*I finally watched the video after constantly being in my recommendations, it was a great video.*
That's fantastic! I think the petticoat would benefit from a ruffle and matching ruched trim. I too wore mine for the first time with a plain petticoat, because I was so exhausted from making all of those pieces. Later I added a wide ruffle and trimmed it with ruched trim matching the jacket. Mine is a colonial blue watered silk. Love it!
I'm just thinking imagine going to school and having to dress up like that every morning that would be hell 😂
Heeehee.
That wouldn’t have been much of an issue back then. Females didn’t go to school.😢
@@marciawaldstreicher3966 They did in other countries. They didn't go in Europe that often. In Ancient Egypt a female could be a doctor
Can’t we talk about how much gorgeous is the actress?
your narrator has the most lovely voice
I love watching these videos. It gives me ideas for a novel I am watching of how my characters (at least my female characters) would dress. Or would complain about the fashion trends at the time. xD
She looks fabulous!!!
There is something on 18th century that always captures my heart....
It's so elegant! She's very beautiful, I would love for this style of attire to become popular again!
Her hair though? I was hoping to see how that was done
We plan to make a separate film on creating 18th Century hairstyles with Liv Free and model Kate Fenwick.
dressing in these fashions is one of the only reasons i would ever want to be an actress in a period piece movie
Such a beautiful and informative video! I love these so much!! 💕
This is so beautiful! I miss styles like these..
Im from germany😄 watching this made me really happy thanks🌸
I can't stop watching these they are soo good :) and can I say how beautiful the red hair girl is
Very interesting and informative. Beautiful model and beautiful garment.
I was fortunate to have regularly worn tights with a thin inner skirt, along with a main long skirt, when I was younger. Boy that was fun. 👍🏽
It feels like the music people behind this show wants to play "Wuthering Heights" by Kate Bush on repeat but can't due to copyright reasons
🎶How could you leave me
when I needed to
possess you?
I hated you,
I loved you, too🎶 😄
She has the most beautiful skin, flawless.
brilliant and informative as always
Gorgeous video and great work as always!
Imagine how harsh it was to travel great distances in coaches back then! In some letters left by Mozart, he complains of the hard wooden seats of the Fiaker when travelling (coaches pulled by horses are still called Fiaker in Vienna.)
Would you please consider doing a video on the fashion of Spanish women at the change of the 18th and 19th century? For what I've researched, it seems the French Directoire style had already influenced the Spaniards clothing at that point, but there were still elements of local tradition in their garments such as the mantilla. I'd greatly appreciate it!
I love your channel!!
I want Karolina, meme mom, to react to this.
That blue dress was GORGEOUSSS!!!
What a stinking model. Her red hair is so gorgeous.
I think you meant striking.
Watching this makes me want to wear this stuff I just love these videos dressing from the 18th century
Okay but the blouse is a full mood and i want 20
I love dresses like this. History and very beautiful. Could not imagined in a hot summer. Would be interesting for winter.
How did you do the lady's hair style! It's gorgeous!😍😘
So beautiful ! I’d wear this outfit! And the voice is calming. Thank you for your videos!
Isnt it funny that even now we all say 'I love my dress...it has pockets!'...unless thats just me 🤣
At 3:42 it ressembles so much to Edwardian style !! 200 years before !
Lovely and I love the pockets I don't know why woman ever stopped using them for any time. Ok but no under drawers. I mean even the Romans and Greeks had subligaculum, a basic loincloth.
It was a fashion thing during the regency era, to carry a small handbag.
Pockets never really fully returned in fashionable dress
@@VicvicW That is most likely why woman started to wear men's jeans in the 50's. My said she would steal her brothers all the time.
@@VicvicW handbags used to be worn by men, but like high heels became a symbol of femininity...
@@debbieboring3422 I recently invested in a pair of Levi's jeans for the first time and while checking the fit in front of the mirror I put my hands to the pockets without thinking about it and HOLY SHIT
If you are wearing corsets, especially if there are multiple layers of petticoats, getting underpants up and down is a PITA, if not impossible. Leaving them off, or (later) wearing split drawers that didn't need to be pulled down was much more practical, and with so many layers, a lady's modesty wasn't at risk...
The model is so beautiful!
Me: hooks bra, pulls on underwear, throws maxi dress over head, steps into sandals
Let's go!
I’ve always loved these videos!!! Thank you so much for creating these and helping to provide for my interest in historical fashion.
* Issa bout to bang *
"Wait dear I shall ask my maidens to help me take these off"
They didn't have a problem with that. He undoes his fly, she tosses up her skirts, and they're good to go. The mistake you make is thinking you have to get undressed. (grin)
The clothing was certainly no impediment to me conceiving my oldest son at a reenacting event.
I love her voice😍 it's so nice and soothing!
Was the hood on the coat considered a suitable replacement for a cap/hat at the time, or was the lady in the video being scandalous?
Yeah! It was fine to wear, and was quite common at the time.
I think that hairstyle excludes most caps and hats.
Excellent video! The hood is the part that really surprises me - I had always assumed those completely disappeared after the late medieval period.
I feel like my mother would love to dress me like this as I tried wearing an outfit similar to this and she thought it 'suited' me and was 'lovley'
Wow after all those underlayers the final skirt and coat are gorgeous!
I like these videos, so interesting and I love these feminine clothes 😍😊
I love it so much! Nice camera shots, nice job! Please could you do video about dressing in 15th century (germans)? I would love that!
That's so beautiful but thank God I was born in the 21th century, it's just pretty easy to get dressed now.
Very classy , elegant , stylish more than a modern time
Would it be cruel of me, as a mother in the future, to dress my daughter(s) in clothing similar to this? I would love to sew dresses for my little girls one day. Though I'm not a devout Catholic, I admire the idea of being a wife and mother, staying home doing the usual house work (of course, I'd have a job and my husband would be sharing the house work load). I also love the idea of dressing up with my daughter(s) and generally just being there with them unlike my childhood that wasn't quite enjoyable.
You don't have to be of a specific religion to be a housewife! If that's the lifestyle you want to carry, go for it. 😊😊
That was a beautiful outfit. I wish women still dressed that way, it’s so elegant
I kind of wish styles like these survived.
I love watching these videos! I would love to dress up like this one day just for fun. I’m so glad I discovered this channel.
Brianna is that you? Lmao. ♥
I have been going down the 19th century course the tree rabbit hole so glad I found this video I had no idea that they had two part sleeves I am a seamstress but I have never seen this