Sewn in America exhibition at the DAR Museum. Part 1.

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 7 тра 2024
  • In this video, curator Alden O'Brien takes us through her latest exhibition at the Daughters of the American Revolution Museum in Washington, DC. Filmed April 25 & 26, 2024.
    Sewn in America is on view through December 31, 2024.
    Thank you for watching!
    Please like this video and subscribe to my channel.
    xoxo,
    Tara Miller
    The Quilt District
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 34

  • @cynthiahawkins2389
    @cynthiahawkins2389 Місяць тому +8

    Just wonderful. I restored a Cajun themed quilt I found in the trash. Looked like a pack of dogs had been at it. Over the space of three months....I lovingly cut it down, re configured it in a smaller size, imitated the original hand stitching and cannibalized all the pieces to create the same quilt, but winnowed down. Textile art and hand made garments have a place in our cultural history. I am always drawn to these...what a story they could tell......

  • @grumpy_poo
    @grumpy_poo 26 днів тому +1

    I love the stories involved in the underground quilts....

  • @banthony8545
    @banthony8545 2 місяці тому +8

    Thank you so much for showing the dresses inside out- a world of information there for the sewer. The curator, Alden did a informative and entertaining job of narration. Such quality.

    • @QuiltDistrict
      @QuiltDistrict  Місяць тому +2

      Wasn't that brilliant of Alden to show them inside out?? I was thrilled to see it. I had never seen the inside of an antique garment before. It was just wonderful!

  • @jayneterry8701
    @jayneterry8701 Місяць тому +6

    Seeing the inside of garments is on point in our day and age! 👍💗 The curator mentioned the many diaries listing information is wonderful. When she mentioned putting away the basics when company came for the fancier stitching made me laugh . You dont want to be visiting while the husband's drawers are being repaired 😂. Looking forward to part 2 tyfs🩷🍁

  • @effieshead
    @effieshead 17 днів тому

    Such an engaging, informative interview!! Love to hear from a curator who clearly really knows her dress history, and understands and appreciate the skills involved. So often dress exhibits are just about the fashion (which is also interesting), it's refreshing to see such a deep look at the changing roles of sewing & dress in women's lives. Kudos!

  • @christinevanzyl5951
    @christinevanzyl5951 28 днів тому

    I remember my granny in 1960 doing fancy stuff and teaching me embroidery when her guests come. Wonderful video thanks

  • @ParadiseBlue1866
    @ParadiseBlue1866 13 днів тому

    I stumbled across this channel. Wow! Such an interesting and informative talk. Well done to DAR for this exhibition.

  • @jaynewood6714
    @jaynewood6714 29 днів тому +2

    I am a retired seamstress, designer , pattern drafter and very much appreciate all your research. My history (immediate) includes 1 grandmother who taught me the finer ladies ‘ needle arts- the knitting, crocheting, needle point, embroidery that her mother and aunts taught her . My other grandmother, the daughter of generations of farmers, taught me the utilitarian daily sewing skills. Patchwork, darning and dressmaking/shirt making were her weekly chores.

  • @GerriBauer
    @GerriBauer Місяць тому +4

    Absolutely fascinating. Thank you.

  • @BridgeMD
    @BridgeMD 29 днів тому +2

    I went to this exhibit in early April and it was wonderful. Thanks for spreading the word about it.

  • @beckyscheller9358
    @beckyscheller9358 23 дні тому

    As a quilter I loved this. ❤

  • @user-ij2fx8sh5x
    @user-ij2fx8sh5x Місяць тому +3

    Thank you for this marvelous video!

    • @QuiltDistrict
      @QuiltDistrict  Місяць тому +1

      I'm so happy you enjoyed it! I've just posted Part 2...

  • @christiecrawford1907
    @christiecrawford1907 28 днів тому

    As a quilter, and admirer of vintage and to modern quilt making as well as the history of the craft, thank you for sharing this exhibit.I do not come from a background of quiltmakers but my one grandmother was milliner who taught me to hand sew and work with needle and thread.

  • @Riderules73
    @Riderules73 27 днів тому +1

    Surprised this channel has not been discovered by many yet - this is high quality content - thank you so much!

    • @BookZealots
      @BookZealots 27 днів тому

      I completely agree. I just found out about this channel today.

    • @QuiltDistrict
      @QuiltDistrict  24 дні тому +1

      Thank you so much, @riderules73 and @bookzealots !

  • @shirleybewley6646
    @shirleybewley6646 Місяць тому +1

    LOVE that you show the inside!!!

  • @sarahyates6055
    @sarahyates6055 28 днів тому +1

    Very interesting thank you for sharing this. I love your coat/jacket and dress, really pretty. I had to smile when you said way back when the women recycled, restitched, repurposed, the youngsters of today think they “invented” this as a part of the whole “eco-warrior “ /“Greta Thunberg” fad. Whereas women , out of necessity most often did this from the beginning of us wearing clothes really. It’s only really in the post Second World War years that we became such a throw away society. Not all progress in life is a good thing!

  • @karenb1073
    @karenb1073 2 місяці тому +2

    this was wonderful. Thank you!

  • @bwktlcn
    @bwktlcn 26 днів тому +1

    Sewing was the space between the words in the life of women until very recent times.

  • @HKExpat50
    @HKExpat50 Місяць тому +2

    What a wonderful video. Just fascinating. The exhibit looks amazing. And the building. Wow

  • @judyfargo8162
    @judyfargo8162 28 днів тому

    I enjoyed this so much and learned a great deal from it. Thank you for sharing your expertise and the exhibit.I particularly liked seeing the inside of the dresses. I didn't know they were made like that with the extra fabric still there.

    • @QuiltDistrict
      @QuiltDistrict  24 дні тому

      Wasn't seeing the inside amazing?? I had never seen the "way it was made" like that before.

  • @suzannecooke2055
    @suzannecooke2055 28 днів тому +1

    at 6:25: Sheets with center seams. My mom had such a sheet handed down from either her mother or her mother-in-law - my grannies. This was a heavy linen (or matis) sheet that had a felled seam down the center sewn edge to edge (not the right-side-together we all know from home sewing patterns). I would describe that seam as a "baseball" seam. If the center of the sheet became worn or stained, the seam was easily taken apart and then the other (outer) edges could be stitched together to give the linen a longer life as a sheet. When that also became worn, the fabric would become pillow cases, eventually aprons or diapers as the usable bits became smaller.
    I will FOREVER regret that I had no idea of its value either as a family artifact or just as fabric no longer woven. CONFESSION: I cut holes in it and made a ghost costume one Halloween.

    • @QuiltDistrict
      @QuiltDistrict  24 дні тому

      Thank you for sharing that memory! Give yourself some grace... you didn't know. And I'll bet you had a fun Halloween. (Besides, that's also reuse and repurpose, isn't it?)

  • @sherylsims278
    @sherylsims278 Місяць тому +3

    Thank you! Very interesting video! Didn’t servants/enslaved women do a lot of the sewing as well?

    • @QuiltDistrict
      @QuiltDistrict  Місяць тому +3

      They absolutely did. Alden and I discussed that briefly at the very beginning of this Part 1. Servants and enslaved women performed all levels of sewing tasks, from the very plain sewing to the very elaborate and ornate. I'll soon be posting video of my visit to the MESDA exhibit of early bedcoverings on show at the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh, and you'll see there an example of how museums are becoming much more inclusive in their language around this (the DAR is doing this, too, I just didn't capture it on film). It has long been the practice to attribute a quilt or other "fancy" sewing to the "woman of the house," as it were. I'm seeing now much more often an item attributed to "The household of...." when we don't know the names of the servants or slaves, as is often (tragically) the case.
      Thank you so much for your thoughtful question!

  • @DonnaHawkTx
    @DonnaHawkTx 22 дні тому

    Totally missed the opportunity to discuss how the Rational Dress movement had a large part in the evolution to less rigid, less fitted garments in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The direct predecessor of 1920s tubular look as everything was hung from the shoulders instead of the waist.

  • @jeanfletcher3223
    @jeanfletcher3223 27 днів тому

    "Nothing happens in a vacuum"? Dust Bunnies procreate!