Examining an Original Circa 1914 Bodice- Antique Edwardian Blouse Study and Pattern Application
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- Опубліковано 10 лип 2024
- Looking at an original period garment. This garment was bought from What Once Was on Etsy *(sorry, I misspoke in the video) www.etsy.com/shop/WhatOnceWas...
The pattern suggestion is the Wearing History Blouse and Guimpe pattern, and that's available on: wearinghistory.etsy.com and wearinghistory.clothing.
More 1910s period articles can be found on wearinghistory.etsy.com
Thanks for watching! - Навчання та стиль
These videos are always so useful. The unexpected things you find, like hidden closures and secret collar stays. LOVE IT!
This was so interesting and I especially enjoyed the part where you drafted the pattern! It really helped me understand the shapes better and how the garment fit together
Yes!! Thank you for both sharing the antique garment and analyzing the pattern shapes and discussing construction. We would love more of anything you have to share and more of these would be awesome too!
This was amazing...When I make fitting adjustments, I often worry about making them a even back to front etc.
Seeing you draw out the (not to scale) pieces explaining the bits and relating it back to the garment is amazing. As interesting as seeing the garment visually, your drawing And clear explanation is amazing
Very interesting! It would be interesting to also hear more about the picot-edge machine sometime 🤗
Thank you so much for this “tour” of a truly gorgeous bodice! So interesting and informative.
Fascinated by this video. I am working on Edwardian to the teens fashions as an ongoing project and have found the information in this most helpful. And Yes!.. I know I would greatly appreciate more of these type of research videos. Thank you for sharing.
That bodice is so gorgeous!
Absolutely fascinating! Thank you for sharing your insights snd observations!
Great video, this was lots of fun to watch!
Thanks. Really enjoyed this
It makes me think "historical crop top". it's a really beautiful piece.
This was so interesting to watch...even though I may not attempt to replicate this exact shape/style, it was super helpful to watch you reverse engineer it (even via just sketches!). Ty so much; would love to see more like this, if you have other pieces in your collection with interesting or unusual details/construction!
(Also, wouldn't that sleeve shape be a dolman rather than raglan? Or am I missing something?) ❤️
Darn it, I always get those two mixed up. Thanks for the correction! And encouragement for future videos ❤️