Also: there is variation in this and just because I say a certain shape was popular does NOT mean you can’t wear it if you don’t look that way- Don’t change your body to fit a trend!
Well.......as a big girl myself self who doesn't even like the retrend on skinny girls or back in the 90's........ can someone please tell fellow big girls that we DO NOT look good in crop tops! Seriously. It's our life choices that have made us so, and having a big O fat tummy hanging out jiggling is NOT flatter and does not look good. Stop listening to these "body positivity" stuff. Those people are lying and making you be degraded. It makes you like trash and stealing your child's shirt. I am really embarrassed for them. Looks good on Winnie-the-Pooh but ONLY on him. When you have a tummy, you have to just accept the fact some things do not look good nor flatter your figure.
Hey, thanks for the lovely video. If you don't mind me asking, do you know your kibbe body type? My shape is exactly like yours and I haven't been able to figure out mine yet :/
Reminds me of that 40 year rule where fashion tends to “repeat” itself. In the 60s we saw a similar silhouette to the one that was popular in the 20s, the natural silhouettes in the 70s had a glimpse of those that were in the 30s, the 80s is similar to the 40s, etc.
@@dolphinswilltakeover I did too! When I was in elementary school in the later 90s, everybody wore bell bottoms. Well, we called them “flared jeans” but they were big and a lot of them had cute, happy, little embroidered things on them like ☀️suns but with a smiley face and flowers and butterflies. Anyway, when we’d go shopping, my mom would always say “you guys are wearing the same pants I wore to school in the 70s!”
As a male who has almost no sense of fashion or dresses, this was very fascinating to see the change just a single dress could change the whole silhouette.
Right give me a pair of jeans and a T-shirt. Jorts and a T-shirt in the summer. In either case, gotta have a dope gold chain and some badass shoes though. Jordans, BKs, AND1, FUBU, etc...
@@marcusbruns9729pants, T-shirt and shoes are the way to go for me... Jacket if it's cold... Brand does not matter I guess my good looks have to compensate for my fashion sense 😂
A lot of people get this confused with fashion history, it is the SILHOUETTE that was popular, not the body type. In the 1920s although the dresses were boxy and straight, women like Clara bow were considered beautiful and she was a thicker cuvy woman. As time passes, it's not until the 90s that the body type is more valued due to the concept of undergarments is gone, in the sense of not petticoats, girdles, bullet bras, corsets, or any of the sort. Due to people in the 90s usually just wearing a bra and underwear, they had to rely upon the body type more to achieve the right silhouette.
I think this change crept into the zeitgeist more slowly than that, and a lot earlier. Probably around the 1960s-1970s as plastic surgery became more sophisticated and accessible....60s and 70s clothes are a LOT less structured and supportive than previous styles, you were just supposed to be waifish enough to carry them off
@@Aria-ny1ucIt’s actually the right word here, it means the vibe of a particular era like how hippies are part of the collection of things society associates with the 60s. Hippies are in the cultural zeitgeist of the 60s.
I love the fifties, I wish the dresses like that would be more popular 😢 now all the people I see almost always have the floppy floral and I hate florals and floppy clothes 😖😞
But it feels like we’re no longer trying to attain that figure through clothes, but forcing our bodies to fix that shape and wear clothes that show that off instead
yep people don't realize how many layers of undergarments or padding and what not people in the past used, they see the pictures and assume much like i did growing up they were made/shaped that way already and so people try to change their bodies to match not realizing most of it is clothing even today with layering its billed as wearing many colorful tank tops/camisoles under a sweater or something since the 1990s as a fashion trend or billed for warmth/comfort, but they dont tell people that many girls and women actually also use layering to achieve their figures and growing up in the 1980s and 1990s around lots of women born between the 1920s and 1940 or 1950s they would all tell you that "foundation garments" are the most important thing to look "presentable" "lady-like" etcetera or basically to achieve the look you wanted...garters girdles corsets bustles bustiers, hoop skirts, petticoats, under shirts, bras or longline bras panties, slips full or half, hip pads, bust enhancers, shoulder pads, back braces, whether corsets had support or stays or were just slimming/shaping/decorative, whether bras were just to sleep/lounge in or were made to support or lift, every little thing tip and trick of the trade made a difference they would say. whether things needed ironed or starched or pressed or bleached, whether the fabric was stiff or slightly bendable/pliable or soft/loose or gentle/airy/breezy/gauzy/flowy...etcetera...
So back then men also knew that it's all fake. I mean how would they know if someone has real thing or just padding unless that see them naked😂. You saw a curvy women and fell for her then on wedding night you see something else @@isabellaereshki
thank you for talking about this! I used to do a support group for preteen girls where we talked about stuff like mental health and body image. Their minds were blown when I explained how historically beauty standards change and it is often linked with trying to sell women more things
Yeah, I'd say the idea of the "ideal body type" has to do with the men in your locale and that doesn't change much. Guys don't care about fashion all that much either so much trends in fashion and beauty are profit oriented aiming to take advantage of women trying to compete with each other.
@mrpsclas thank you and I am very sorry to hear about that. I hope that society can have these convos with any age but especially preteens when the issues often start. talking openly about it like you did can help break the stigma
To add ontop of that, most Bodystandards also derive from what culture itself deems valuable. Back in the middle ages for instance, being a bit plumpier was considered peak attractive - it meant you were able to feed yourself enough that its not a problem for you to get thicker. Same for skin tone - where now plenty people think being a bit darker skin is good, back in the middle ages having snow white skin showed you didnt have to toil in the sun all day. Comparatively, nowadays we like a slimmer body more because food is relatively easily attainable, both in and out of season. So being plumpy doesnt mean "oh, they can afford to eat so much food" its just more seen as "Oh they are unhealthy" in the collective mind. And being tanned is seen as a beauty standard nowadays, god bless the tourism industry.
when i think about dressing up or being dressed for an occasion or going out or remembering grown ups being dressed to go to the play or stage show or theatre or nice restaurant or dancing or something, that is the sort of dress i picture, that dress that just looks mysterious and you can't ever quite fully tell at a glance if its velvet or velour type cloth or just cloth/cotton or mostly normal dress, and it just looks so very elegant and classy and warm and loving and reminds me of winter and hot tea or cocoa and a warm comfortable 75-80 degree home with no drafts to speak of and just a feeling of being cared for loved, beloved, treasured valued respected and feeling safe secure stable and just like enveloped in warm soft loving caring soothing energy and love.
go back just over 100 years or so and blue was a girls color and pink was a boys color and yet its reversed to the opposite throughout at least the 50s til even now in the 2020s somewhat go back like 300 years or so to like 1700s france i think it was and heels began as french men trying to imitate the asian steppe/middle eastern/persian/turkish/mongolian/scythian horseback riders who wore heels to help keep them in the saddle on horseback and it became a decorative fashion item instead and then somehow it wound up a women's fashion thing instead after a few decades or something
@@isabellaereshkithe French trend of heels began because king Louis XIV wore them, he did that because he was short and the whole court men started to do it since the king is of high influence
It's not the ideal body, it's the ideal fashion. Women change styles every decade accentuating or downplaying parts of their body but the feminine body ideal has been around for millennia.
@emro164I’ve read that the average celebrity back in the 50s was not much smaller than the average woman. Now, there is a huge difference between the ideal shape and size and the average woman. It makes it incredibly unrealistic today to strive for that versus in the 50s.
And that is why nobody should never compare themselves to the beauty standard. Be healthy , and be the best version of yourself you can possibly be, but always know your body is NOT the problem it’s society. ♥️
@@stickmouse5002 I'm sorry, but what does born on the correct body mean? I think we shouldn't compare beauty by physical look, sometimes people are (I'm sorry) born with phocomelia and stuff, but that doesn't mean they're not pretty
@@stickmouse5002saying you arent born in the correct body just means you dont love yourself. Being the best version of yourself doesnt mean artificially changing your body, it means being healthy and working out, like humans are meant to. Doing that will help you and/or most people become or stay mentally stable. Telling yourself that you arent mentally stable also doesnt help. you need to love yourself the way you are.
Realizing that my body was the desired shape of multiple decades heals my wounded 12 year old who had been told that their shoulders were way too broad. And it heals my nineteen year old self to gear that i don't have to be ashamed of my small butt and broad shoulders! All bodys are beautiful!! And mist of us need to learn that all bodies includes our own❤
No sé porqué pero vídeos como estos tan simples me hacen entender que el problema no es mi cuerpo , mi cuerpo no es feo , simplemente nací en una época en la que mi tipo de cuerpo no es el "buscado"
This is the perfect example that your body isn’t the problem, its just the super strict standards people want to be “beautiful” (btw im not saying its wrong to want that kind of body but its just a reminder for those who need it :) )
For real. Any time a woman's bones were visible, it was attractive. Basically every girl in elementary school was "dieting" to melt away every scrap of flesh on their bones. It was awful.
It's so interesting to me how so many of us still refer to 1920s as THE 20s. We are in the middle of the 20s. What makes 1920s so memorable that they take priority in our minds over our PRESENT.
people will argue that beauty standards have changed so much throughout history but looking historically at what aspects of their body people wanted accentuated, the ideal has always been skinny
Not for everyone. For middle-class people, being a bit fat would show that you were rich enough to eat as much as you wanted, whereas being skinny meant you were poor (I know it was the case in the XIXth century but I don't know about other time periods). I've read it is still the case in some southern islands (though I don't know if the reasons are the same) but I can't remember exactly where.
Not particularly. In more ancient times being thicker meant that you had access to richer, more nutritious foods and that you didn't have to work a lot which signified attractiveness. It depends -like all beauty standards - on the place and the culture
that’s not true…in the 1800s it was desirable for a woman to be “plump” because it showed wealth. also, in places like africa curvier bodies are seen as the most beautiful and to be too thin is considered ugly. plus, she’s mostly talking about american fashion here, not the whole world.
@@valentinecorein the 1800s the only women available for modeling were plump, pampered women. It's not that the beauty standard was plump, it's that normal people weren't at leisure to sit still for paintings etc.
You know throughout all of history this is how it was lol 😂 fashionable shape instead of size! Here’s a secret for the ladies! The women didn’t have those body types throughout any part of history lol 😂 after 1920s we get more “realistic” body types but 1915 and before was padding and corsets. Our grandmas could be a 32A and walk out in 1903 with a stylish 32D pigeon front bust with a bustle padded skirt and S bend corset for the fashionable S curve ❤️
Thank you for that!! I am trying to find out which vintage decade I can start to wear because I cannot wear hourglass clothes with my boxy, shortwaisted figure 😂
I'm new to the fashion world, so I'm really amazed to see how much different clothing can emphasis different aspects of the body, or change the silhouette! Also this helped me feel like beauty standards matter less, due to them changing so much 😊 so thank you for the video
Ideal body type? What nonsense. That’s just the consumerist mindset speaking. Reality is different. There are indefinite variations on styles regardless of the decade. 😂😂😂
1 million percent! That “ideal” was definitely set by the fashion industry hoping to sell specific silhouettes to women! I find that body shape and clothing silhouettes are inexplicably connected.
i love to see a take on this videos idea (showcasing ideal body types through history) that has the same person for every decade. it really emphasizes how much the clothing itself creates different silhouettes and that the body someone has can still look great according to current trends even if it’s not “perfect”. i’m struggling to articulate just how wholesome this feels me, but i just love it
If you watch historical dress videos on UA-cam (CrowsEyes Productions is a great channel), you'll realise how much the shape is created by foundational garments (like corsets, etc.) whereas now we are expectated to go ridiculous lengths to achieve the 'ideal body'. If you figure out what looks good on you that's half the battle.
Also: there is variation in this and just because I say a certain shape was popular does NOT mean you can’t wear it if you don’t look that way- Don’t change your body to fit a trend!
I love this video so much!
Well.......as a big girl myself self who doesn't even like the retrend on skinny girls or back in the 90's........ can someone please tell fellow big girls that we DO NOT look good in crop tops! Seriously. It's our life choices that have made us so, and having a big O fat tummy hanging out jiggling is NOT flatter and does not look good. Stop listening to these "body positivity" stuff. Those people are lying and making you be degraded. It makes you like trash and stealing your child's shirt. I am really embarrassed for them. Looks good on Winnie-the-Pooh but ONLY on him. When you have a tummy, you have to just accept the fact some things do not look good nor flatter your figure.
Hey, thanks for the lovely video. If you don't mind me asking, do you know your kibbe body type?
My shape is exactly like yours and I haven't been able to figure out mine yet :/
😅😅@@BeadedbySunset.Co19
@glorygracek.1841 talk about judgemental. There aren't any crop tops in this video. Why did you feel it necessary to talk about them?
The dresses from the 70s and the 90s are sooo beautiful looove them😭💕
SAME
Even 40ss
The dress from the 90’s reminded me of my freshman homecoming dress (1994). Mine was a similar shape but black velvet.
Came here to write this!
Me too
Props to this lady’s skincare. You can’t even tell she’s been filming for 104 years
underated comment😂😂
hahaha
😂😂😂😂
Ya...she looks soo young even though her age is 100+.....she should make a video about her skincare routine...
😂😂😂😂😂
Reminds me of that 40 year rule where fashion tends to “repeat” itself. In the 60s we saw a similar silhouette to the one that was popular in the 20s, the natural silhouettes in the 70s had a glimpse of those that were in the 30s, the 80s is similar to the 40s, etc.
This is easily my favorite example of it too! Everything comes back eventually!
Yea I would say there’s been a 20-40 year rule since the 1970s.
I'd love to see a revival of the 70s and 80s in the 2020s
I thought it was 20 years?
@@dolphinswilltakeover I did too! When I was in elementary school in the later 90s, everybody wore bell bottoms. Well, we called them “flared jeans” but they were big and a lot of them had cute, happy, little embroidered things on them like ☀️suns but with a smiley face and flowers and butterflies. Anyway, when we’d go shopping, my mom would always say “you guys are wearing the same pants I wore to school in the 70s!”
At the end when she did her last jump, she was all, "finally done with this crap" 😂
What do you mean 😊
I noticed that too😂
damn she’s beautiful
For real
She is isn't she?
Then again, 95-99% of young women are.
As a male who has almost no sense of fashion or dresses, this was very fascinating to see the change just a single dress could change the whole silhouette.
Right give me a pair of jeans and a T-shirt. Jorts and a T-shirt in the summer. In either case, gotta have a dope gold chain and some badass shoes though. Jordans, BKs, AND1, FUBU, etc...
@@marcusbruns9729pants, T-shirt and shoes are the way to go for me... Jacket if it's cold... Brand does not matter
I guess my good looks have to compensate for my fashion sense 😂
What I want to know is how she changed her chest haha
@bryantb3391 ah yea the magicalness of what a single different bodice can do to the silhouette
I didn't listen to a word she said💀
A lot of people get this confused with fashion history, it is the SILHOUETTE that was popular, not the body type. In the 1920s although the dresses were boxy and straight, women like Clara bow were considered beautiful and she was a thicker cuvy woman. As time passes, it's not until the 90s that the body type is more valued due to the concept of undergarments is gone, in the sense of not petticoats, girdles, bullet bras, corsets, or any of the sort. Due to people in the 90s usually just wearing a bra and underwear, they had to rely upon the body type more to achieve the right silhouette.
I think this change crept into the zeitgeist more slowly than that, and a lot earlier. Probably around the 1960s-1970s as plastic surgery became more sophisticated and accessible....60s and 70s clothes are a LOT less structured and supportive than previous styles, you were just supposed to be waifish enough to carry them off
@@peakdelvalle197 what the fricken hell does "zeitgeist" mean? Goofy ah word
@@Aria-ny1ucIt’s actually the right word here, it means the vibe of a particular era like how hippies are part of the collection of things society associates with the 60s. Hippies are in the cultural zeitgeist of the 60s.
@@Aria-ny1uc my dad told me about it and i didnt believe it was an english word- i guess it is
@@chocookie0123 Yeah it's originally a German word I guess
The 70's blush dress is BREATHTAKING ❤
YES.
That fifties dress is beautiful!
Isn't it!
I love the fifties, I wish the dresses like that would be more popular 😢 now all the people I see almost always have the floppy floral and I hate florals and floppy clothes 😖😞
But it feels like we’re no longer trying to attain that figure through clothes, but forcing our bodies to fix that shape and wear clothes that show that off instead
yep people don't realize how many layers of undergarments or padding and what not people in the past used, they see the pictures and assume much like i did growing up they were made/shaped that way already and so people try to change their bodies to match not realizing most of it is clothing
even today with layering its billed as wearing many colorful tank tops/camisoles under a sweater or something since the 1990s as a fashion trend or billed for warmth/comfort, but they dont tell people that many girls and women actually also use layering to achieve their figures
and growing up in the 1980s and 1990s around lots of women born between the 1920s and 1940 or 1950s they would all tell you that "foundation garments" are the most important thing to look "presentable" "lady-like" etcetera or basically to achieve the look you wanted...garters girdles corsets bustles bustiers, hoop skirts, petticoats, under shirts, bras or longline bras panties, slips full or half, hip pads, bust enhancers, shoulder pads, back braces, whether corsets had support or stays or were just slimming/shaping/decorative, whether bras were just to sleep/lounge in or were made to support or lift, every little thing tip and trick of the trade made a difference they would say.
whether things needed ironed or starched or pressed or bleached, whether the fabric was stiff or slightly bendable/pliable or soft/loose or gentle/airy/breezy/gauzy/flowy...etcetera...
@@isabellaereshkiI love your explanation
Exactly!
Most people these days are just making their bodies fat
So back then men also knew that it's all fake. I mean how would they know if someone has real thing or just padding unless that see them naked😂. You saw a curvy women and fell for her then on wedding night you see something else @@isabellaereshki
thank you for talking about this! I used to do a support group for preteen girls where we talked about stuff like mental health and body image. Their minds were blown when I explained how historically beauty standards change and it is often linked with trying to sell women more things
I love that! What a cool thing for them to learn
Yeah, I'd say the idea of the "ideal body type" has to do with the men in your locale and that doesn't change much. Guys don't care about fashion all that much either so much trends in fashion and beauty are profit oriented aiming to take advantage of women trying to compete with each other.
@mrpsclas thank you and I am very sorry to hear about that. I hope that society can have these convos with any age but especially preteens when the issues often start. talking openly about it like you did can help break the stigma
All the while, this has nothing to do with what men want 😂 just what the corporations want… profits
To add ontop of that, most Bodystandards also derive from what culture itself deems valuable.
Back in the middle ages for instance, being a bit plumpier was considered peak attractive - it meant you were able to feed yourself enough that its not a problem for you to get thicker. Same for skin tone - where now plenty people think being a bit darker skin is good, back in the middle ages having snow white skin showed you didnt have to toil in the sun all day.
Comparatively, nowadays we like a slimmer body more because food is relatively easily attainable, both in and out of season. So being plumpy doesnt mean "oh, they can afford to eat so much food" its just more seen as "Oh they are unhealthy" in the collective mind.
And being tanned is seen as a beauty standard nowadays, god bless the tourism industry.
30's blue was stunning.
when i think about dressing up or being dressed for an occasion or going out or remembering grown ups being dressed to go to the play or stage show or theatre or nice restaurant or dancing or something, that is the sort of dress i picture, that dress that just looks mysterious and you can't ever quite fully tell at a glance if its velvet or velour type cloth or just cloth/cotton or mostly normal dress, and it just looks so very elegant and classy and warm and loving and reminds me of winter and hot tea or cocoa and a warm comfortable 75-80 degree home with no drafts to speak of and just a feeling of being cared for loved, beloved, treasured valued respected and feeling safe secure stable and just like enveloped in warm soft loving caring soothing energy and love.
30s,70s,80s
70s looked so freaking flowy and comfortable. That was my favorite outfit of the video. It was gorgeous.
That last dress SNATCHES you!
It’s so weird how it’s change so much over only 100 years
go back just over 100 years or so and blue was a girls color and pink was a boys color and yet its reversed to the opposite throughout at least the 50s til even now in the 2020s somewhat
go back like 300 years or so to like 1700s france i think it was and heels began as french men trying to imitate the asian steppe/middle eastern/persian/turkish/mongolian/scythian horseback riders who wore heels to help keep them in the saddle on horseback and it became a decorative fashion item instead and then somehow it wound up a women's fashion thing instead after a few decades or something
@@isabellaereshkithe French trend of heels began because king Louis XIV wore them, he did that because he was short and the whole court men started to do it since the king is of high influence
It's not the ideal body, it's the ideal fashion.
Women change styles every decade accentuating or downplaying parts of their body but the feminine body ideal has been around for millennia.
@emro164I’ve read that the average celebrity back in the 50s was not much smaller than the average woman. Now, there is a huge difference between the ideal shape and size and the average woman. It makes it incredibly unrealistic today to strive for that versus in the 50s.
Now changes every week with TikTok lol
And that is why nobody should never compare themselves to the beauty standard. Be healthy , and be the best version of yourself you can possibly be, but always know your body is NOT the problem it’s society. ♥️
easy to say when you're mentally stable and born on the correct body...
@stickmouse
“W-w-w-what ab-b-b-bout m-me?”
@@stickmouse5002 I'm sorry, but what does born on the correct body mean?
I think we shouldn't compare beauty by physical look, sometimes people are (I'm sorry) born with phocomelia and stuff, but that doesn't mean they're not pretty
@@stickmouse5002saying you arent born in the correct body just means you dont love yourself. Being the best version of yourself doesnt mean artificially changing your body, it means being healthy and working out, like humans are meant to. Doing that will help you and/or most people become or stay mentally stable. Telling yourself that you arent mentally stable also doesnt help. you need to love yourself the way you are.
It s important to be part of your era as well. U can t dress like shit or look like shit and expect people to like you.
The 70s dress is so beautiful, it has 'run in a castle in it' vibes ❤
Omg you look amzing in all those dresses
Thanks ❤️
the deep colours of the 30's, 80's and 90's dresses are so stunning, and the fabric texture works so well with them!
the 30s, 70s, and 90s dresses are all ones i would kill for omg 😭
Girlie be changing her body shape every second
The 40's and 70's are so pretty...
As per me she slayed in every look 🎀💗
Why isnt more people talking abt how freaking beautiful she is ❤
you have my dream body you're so perfect omg
Yea she blessed
You have a great shape💯 The 30s,40s,50s,70, and 80s dresses are beautiful👗
Realizing that my body was the desired shape of multiple decades heals my wounded 12 year old who had been told that their shoulders were way too broad. And it heals my nineteen year old self to gear that i don't have to be ashamed of my small butt and broad shoulders! All bodys are beautiful!! And mist of us need to learn that all bodies includes our own❤
all of them are beautiful
No sé porqué pero vídeos como estos tan simples me hacen entender que el problema no es mi cuerpo , mi cuerpo no es feo , simplemente nací en una época en la que mi tipo de cuerpo no es el "buscado"
I've never been able to put it into words wow
Loved cassies video on this where she says "just a reminder, your bodies aren't fast fashion so don't treat then that way!"
I love the 50's dress! Its very pretty on you ❤
Oh the velvet dresses are so pretty!! The 70s dress is so lovely and modest
I am not even a woman.. But that blue dress on 30s was sp beautiful👗
the dresses from the 30s and the 80s are so beautiful 😭😭🙏💞
❤️❤️
Nobody is talking about the 50s dress! It’s beautiful!!
That 30s dress is so gorgeous 😍
Définitivement 30s and 2000❤❤❤
the 70s dress is amazing ❤
The 40s was definitely my favorite of this video. The shape was really nice and doesn't look exaggerated, also I would KILL for that outfit oh my gosh
This woman is shockingly more beautiful than the kardashians.
That jump at the end💀
This is the perfect example that your body isn’t the problem, its just the super strict standards people want to be “beautiful” (btw im not saying its wrong to want that kind of body but its just a reminder for those who need it :) )
OK BODY GOALS
Wow, you look great in the last dress!
I mostly go for personality over looks
I love your videos!!!
That 90s dress is to die for i need to know the brand immediately 😭😭
The 90’s favored Heroin-Chic
It was about being pale, thin and having your rib cage bones poke out
It’s why they LOVED Kate Moss
Yeah growing up in the 90s definitely doesn't do a number on a girl's relationship with her body!
For real. Any time a woman's bones were visible, it was attractive. Basically every girl in elementary school was "dieting" to melt away every scrap of flesh on their bones. It was awful.
@@amouramariewell i would’ve been amazing in that era of life, i look like that naturally 😂
All of those dresses were so pretty!
The plum dress for the 90s looks stunning on you and I love your explanation of fashion throughout history
The dress from the 70s is ethereal!
It's so interesting to me how so many of us still refer to 1920s as THE 20s. We are in the middle of the 20s. What makes 1920s so memorable that they take priority in our minds over our PRESENT.
I wonder if they called it "the 20s" during that time though
We'll most likely call it then 20's in the next century
That 90s dress is to die for!!!!
That purple dress was absolutely beautiful 💯💯
Thanks! 💜💜
The 30's, 40's and 90's dresses were so beautiful 😍
Love the 40's ,70's and 2010's best. It suits my hourglass figure the most!
people will argue that beauty standards have changed so much throughout history but looking historically at what aspects of their body people wanted accentuated, the ideal has always been skinny
Not for everyone. For middle-class people, being a bit fat would show that you were rich enough to eat as much as you wanted, whereas being skinny meant you were poor (I know it was the case in the XIXth century but I don't know about other time periods). I've read it is still the case in some southern islands (though I don't know if the reasons are the same) but I can't remember exactly where.
Not particularly. In more ancient times being thicker meant that you had access to richer, more nutritious foods and that you didn't have to work a lot which signified attractiveness.
It depends -like all beauty standards - on the place and the culture
@@janjanbinks1710 yeah, so most people didnt look like that
that’s not true…in the 1800s it was desirable for a woman to be “plump” because it showed wealth. also, in places like africa curvier bodies are seen as the most beautiful and to be too thin is considered ugly. plus, she’s mostly talking about american fashion here, not the whole world.
@@valentinecorein the 1800s the only women available for modeling were plump, pampered women. It's not that the beauty standard was plump, it's that normal people weren't at leisure to sit still for paintings etc.
So interesting! Can’t wait to see what the next decades bring us. Personally I would love to see more of a 40s vibe. Feminine but strong 💪
It makes me so anxious when that jump happens in the video
The velvet dresses of the 30s and 90s took my breath away!! And you look fab❤
That dress from the 70s is stunning
scared me when you said "childlike flat thin rectangular shape" 😭 childlike..?
You know throughout all of history this is how it was lol 😂 fashionable shape instead of size! Here’s a secret for the ladies! The women didn’t have those body types throughout any part of history lol 😂 after 1920s we get more “realistic” body types but 1915 and before was padding and corsets. Our grandmas could be a 32A and walk out in 1903 with a stylish 32D pigeon front bust with a bustle padded skirt and S bend corset for the fashionable S curve ❤️
That last sentence might as well have been in a different language for me lol
I love the fifties dress 😍 it's just so pretty
My mother was a teen in the 60's and I was able to fit into one of her dresses from that time and this video explains the style SO well.
Always a punch in the gut seeing my body type being described as boyish and childlike when I’m a grown woman
70s ✨SLAYYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDD✨
i bet no one gon like dis😢
Thank you for that!! I am trying to find out which vintage decade I can start to wear because I cannot wear hourglass clothes with my boxy, shortwaisted figure 😂
have you tried on a Jackie O dress from the 60's?
@@shelleybarrows7880 not yet but I will keep it in mind :) thank you so much!
The 90s dress is SO PRETTY!!
You pull all of them off super well
i never see any comments on how your body is GORGEOUS???? first thing i think everytime i see your videos like omg
back in midevil days, it was good to be overweight because it meant you were wealthy and could afford food, let’s bring that back🙏🏼
Medieval
let’s not bring any back because it all causes the same issue, that we’re all different in size.
The bounce never goes out of style
Every single dress is fabulous, especially that 60's orange & cream stripe!❤
The 30s and 70s dresses were so pretty, I loved them a lot!
I NEED That 30s dress
I lovvvveeee.
Ma lawd, this beauty has a sleeper build
I'm new to the fashion world, so I'm really amazed to see how much different clothing can emphasis different aspects of the body, or change the silhouette! Also this helped me feel like beauty standards matter less, due to them changing so much 😊 so thank you for the video
You looked so beautiful in all eras. This made my day
That is so kind!
This really made me realize that the body i want is just a trend and it will change in a few years
Fr. I jus focus on being healthy now. Not slim, not thic. I jus wanna be healthy and confident
Ideal body type? What nonsense. That’s just the consumerist mindset speaking. Reality is different. There are indefinite variations on styles regardless of the decade. 😂😂😂
1 million percent! That “ideal” was definitely set by the fashion industry hoping to sell specific silhouettes to women! I find that body shape and clothing silhouettes are inexplicably connected.
EVERY body style is beautiful except obesity.
😂
And Anorexia
@@Cupcake_Royale they are less than ideal but stop deserve basic human respect
I absolutely love the outfit front the fifties, it's beautiful
Looking adorable in 100 years of different styles. 😍 💖
The 1st dress looks like something my grandma would wear
50s was my favorite. I love the princess look
Love that blue velvet number. The purple one too!
All these dressescare gorgeous
I absolutely love the dress from the 30’s the color + material is just amazing
That 90's dress! Oh my gosh so pretty🖤
I fr thought you gave us the finger for the 2000s and I freaked out 😂
your body shape is insane. so gorgeous. I'd kill for that waist to hip ratio
i love to see a take on this videos idea (showcasing ideal body types through history) that has the same person for every decade. it really emphasizes how much the clothing itself creates different silhouettes and that the body someone has can still look great according to current trends even if it’s not “perfect”. i’m struggling to articulate just how wholesome this feels me, but i just love it
If you watch historical dress videos on UA-cam (CrowsEyes Productions is a great channel), you'll realise how much the shape is created by foundational garments (like corsets, etc.) whereas now we are expectated to go ridiculous lengths to achieve the 'ideal body'. If you figure out what looks good on you that's half the battle.
THE 70S DRESS WAS SO PRETTY
Wow! Stunningly beautiful
Girl your body is so perfect like genuinely your so pretty
TJE FIFTIES DRESS IS SO PRETTY
That dress used for the 30s looked so good on her. The color and texture of the fabric and her figure? Gorgeous.
the 90's dress is BEAUTIFUL