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Secrets of an Edwardian closet: Check out a complete bridal trousseau from 1901-1908 

The Sewlo Artist
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20 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 133   
@marymary5494
@marymary5494 11 месяцев назад
A dream trousseau like you said. All my ancestors were Irish farm girls so unfortunately they didn’t have such luxuries, but just like today I’m sure they had their aspirations. ☺️
@thesewloartist
@thesewloartist 11 месяцев назад
Definitely very aspirational, but it’s fun to pretend! 🥰
@SupremeViola
@SupremeViola 11 месяцев назад
For certain! I looked back through my family's history, and none of my female ancestors was married in a white wedding dress. My mom and both my grandmothers wore suits! My mom's was ivory and definitely wedding-intended, but my mom's mom's was blush pink (with matching shoes and hat; I remember her showing me the shoes once and talking about how pretty she felt) and my dad's mom's was pearl gray - Sunday best for both of them, dressed up with veils pinned to their hats.
@MaxVelocity-er1kz
@MaxVelocity-er1kz 11 месяцев назад
Hello, it’s nice to meet you here How are you doing?
@wyldelf2685
@wyldelf2685 11 месяцев назад
​​@@thesewloartisthey Sewlo , you made so many great costumes, so much talent , tell us has Hollywood Studios or Georgia Studios or New York Studios ever approached you yet for costuming some "old timey" Movies and or TV shows ???
@JazzlynnRoscoe
@JazzlynnRoscoe 11 месяцев назад
As much as I love these videos and their clothes with all their layers, wearing just one layer of clothes where I live is still extremely hot.😂
@michdie1046
@michdie1046 11 месяцев назад
Edwardians in the fanciest dress ever: "Don't let anyone catch you dead in this"
@heatherinde
@heatherinde 24 дня назад
😂
@jenniferfriesen7691
@jenniferfriesen7691 8 месяцев назад
One f my favorite parts of the Little House series was reading about Laura and Ma sewing her trousseau.
@juliejohnson497
@juliejohnson497 4 месяца назад
Me, too., aged 77.
@teachergirl41
@teachergirl41 10 месяцев назад
When I was little, reproduction department store catalogs were popular for coffee table reading. I believe ours was from the early 1900’s. I used to pore over them, marveling at the prices and many pieces for ladies wear. Your videos always bring me back to those days!
@alaskacosplay
@alaskacosplay 7 месяцев назад
Im not a married lady yet but I already am working on my bridal trousseau, including evening and ball gowns, afternoon dresses, walking suits, tea gowns, comfortable wrappers, and a wedding gown or two as the bodice is cut in the princess line for the ceremony and an evening bodice for the reception ball. Basically covering everything, including the partridge in a pear tree.
@denisegallant4647
@denisegallant4647 2 месяца назад
I love white with blue ribbon. These are beautiful.
@ulvesparker
@ulvesparker 10 месяцев назад
I enjoy your videos. I was, in my younger years, a Victorian era re-enactor and have had an enduring fascination with the turn-of-the-century period through the Edwardian era (Chicago expo, Russo-Japanese war, SF earthquake, Panama Canal, Evelyn Nesbitt/Stanford White, Teddy Roosevelt, Titanic, Pan-Pacific Expo, etc). I am also a sewer and former costume designer (for ice shows) so I appreciate your craftsmanship and effort. I especially like how you point out the subtle changes in fashion from year to year as I used to lump them all together into broad categories.
@henrikmadsen6446
@henrikmadsen6446 10 месяцев назад
I dont know why youtube started recommending this channel. I want to put it out there; you and your clothing are simply beautiful.
@suzannemckenzie2873
@suzannemckenzie2873 9 месяцев назад
The going away suit is lovely. And the hat is perfect. Silk charmeuse. Lovely for a wedding gown.
@bonniehuh
@bonniehuh 11 месяцев назад
With how often I drip and make a mess when I eat (I'm 35, not a child, just a clumzy slob), I cant imagine wearing such light and beautiful cloth--especially the one at 3:30
@donneverae3050
@donneverae3050 8 месяцев назад
I'm writing a novella set in 1911-1913 and this is sooo helpful. Thank you for creating it.
@bohemiansusan2897
@bohemiansusan2897 11 месяцев назад
I'm so glad to see you back! I missed you. Much of the middle class couldn't afford to have the recommended wardrobe listed in the magazines. The upper could do it but with planning. Many sort of combined outfits to get the most. A house dress to wear to get things done and then a nicer dress to interact with others outside. A tailored suit to formally call on folks. What I was told over 40 years ago by someone in their 90s. Being working class, one had maybe three outfits and a Sunday dress. Not too long ago, I posted the average wardrobe for middle class in the late 40s. Jaws dropped at how small the wardrobe size was. They thought my contemporary wardrobe was extremely small, which it isn't.
@vbrown6445
@vbrown6445 11 месяцев назад
From the small closets in my house that was built in the 1940s, I very much believe that wardrobes were small for most people even then. We have gotten so used to fast/cheap clothing that allows us to have such large wardrobes now.
@MiljaHahto
@MiljaHahto 7 месяцев назад
​@@vbrown6445 Absolutely. Then again, quality was a bigger issue when acquiring clothes that it is nowadays. Sadly, these days many people do not even recognise quality and do not care for the longevity of their clothing.
@texasgal3903
@texasgal3903 14 дней назад
Wonderful wardrobe, I just love those old fashion clothing. I love the hand muff!
@thereseremus6849
@thereseremus6849 10 месяцев назад
I was addicted to Murdock Mysteries. Set in 1898 and the dresses were wonderful. Thank you for your wonderful videos.
@fenixrhyserindoherty-kirby
@fenixrhyserindoherty-kirby 11 месяцев назад
This is really interesting! I love how you can make these! Most of my sewing projects are me yelling at simple skirts and petticoats
@julianyc422
@julianyc422 9 месяцев назад
I just love the closeups and details you show. And you are so wonderful at posing and showing the clothing. Such lovely expressions to show off the feeling of the clothes. Amazing work.
@Antony-ng9yj
@Antony-ng9yj 10 дней назад
You just like to make beautiful clothes and it shows. I am glad that you made a statement at the end about H. Bazaar being idealized. I used to purchase their magazine in the 70's and 80's and they were very high end. You know since you have good skills, I would like to see you recreate fashion from the 70's and 80's like Gunne Sax dresses to Ralph Lauren English inspired pieces. No one that I know of even talks about these fashions. They were elegant even for day wear. Your episode with edwardian button shirt and puffy sleeves (the one with blue skirt) would have been a hit in the late 1970's paired with jeans .
@KAMAKAZE_ZC
@KAMAKAZE_ZC 10 месяцев назад
Hello there, I'm one of your probably few male subscribers. I would really like to see an origin story video (if you don't already have one) about how you got into making clothing. If you could throw in a little starters guide for aspiring artists that would be cool too.
@thelaundress11
@thelaundress11 11 месяцев назад
I see a lot of your videos are from last years or even two years ago. I just found your channel and can’t get enough! So I hope you make some more long-form videos!!❤ I just binged all of your shorts! 💜💜💜💜
@YELLTELL
@YELLTELL 11 месяцев назад
DITTO
@GrantValdes
@GrantValdes 11 месяцев назад
Did you ever move to Portland? We did, same time, into an Edwardian.
@rynrose81
@rynrose81 11 месяцев назад
Love this deeper dive! Your shorts are excellent and your video making the 1890s secret pants was super helpful when I made my first pair (I have like five now lol) 💚
@_historical_fashion_7567
@_historical_fashion_7567 11 месяцев назад
Charming! I have read the magazine via the link on your instagram story and interestingly enough, the mourning toques featured before the trousseau page resembled a lot the one worn by Madeleine Astor after her husband's funeral, and considering the magazine is from April 1912, it's even more fascinating lol.
@purplewingbackreadingchair
@purplewingbackreadingchair 11 месяцев назад
This gives me so much help with a story I'm writing. Thank you for making the past come to life!
@user-oj5bw7sl8p
@user-oj5bw7sl8p 11 месяцев назад
1. You are a pure vision of loveliness. Just saying. 2. This video is excellent! 3. I wonder, if I can find somewhere a bridal photo of my great-greatgrandmother, who was married to a nobleman, but not a rich one, - he was a high ranked army doctor. I saw her picture from La Belle Époque, where she wears a fancy winter outfit, - a handsome coat of either fur or rich thick velvet, and a beautiful hat! I am not sure, if it was a part of her bridal trousseau, or she has got it from her husband, when they got married. I heard, he was a good chap.
@juliejohnson497
@juliejohnson497 4 месяца назад
Thank you for your channel. I especiallt enjoyed your going to the triuble of reading the budget article in the same Haroer's issue and then analyzing it and translating that to today's dollars. And when you realize that it included the wedding dress, it was all a great bargain! I loved the blue /white afternoon dress best too.
@emilyanna4667
@emilyanna4667 6 месяцев назад
Great video! Interesting tidbit I remembered from reading "Age of Innocence" by Edith Wharton in a college English class...it was considered appropriate, at least in New York Society, for a bride to wear her wedding gown during the first year of marriage. I think that book took place in the late Victorian era, but it still makes sense. Frankly, it seems like something we should bring back today, especially given how much people can spend on their wedding dresses.
@lightowl4345
@lightowl4345 10 месяцев назад
I love this era. What beautiful dresses you made. Thank you for sharing.
@johnb7499
@johnb7499 11 месяцев назад
I love your Edwardian dresses. You are obviously very talented
@reubenrosenberg7715
@reubenrosenberg7715 11 месяцев назад
Very lovely! Thank you for such a deep dive into an “ideal” bridal trousseau!
@BladerBabez
@BladerBabez 11 месяцев назад
Omg! I was just looking at your channel wishing for a longer video. This is awesome girl!
@akashanumberfive199
@akashanumberfive199 11 месяцев назад
Honestly 3 grand is not bad for a " full wardrobe of well made garments, even if the cloth itself is cheap. There are millions dropping 200 -500 on a pair of shoes. Not to mention two dresses that are meant to be worn basi ally daily
@patriciatinkey2677
@patriciatinkey2677 11 месяцев назад
Thank you so much. This featured my favorite fashion era. Lovely! 💐😊
@pippaseaspirit4415
@pippaseaspirit4415 11 месяцев назад
What a treat to see so many of your beautiful dresses in one video!
@queentasha5364
@queentasha5364 11 месяцев назад
Love this could you do more video like this for other periods ad I've learned loads 😊
@melodybucker3803
@melodybucker3803 11 месяцев назад
So cool! I loved seeing all of your beautiful examples. Thank you for sharing 😊
@jojocrater1
@jojocrater1 11 месяцев назад
Oh I love love love this video!! Thanks for sharing your passion with us ❤
@CaitlynGo
@CaitlynGo 11 месяцев назад
So cool! I just love learning about historical fashion!
@user-iz9oc6gy4p
@user-iz9oc6gy4p 10 месяцев назад
Loved this video! My beloved Nan was wed in November, 1912. I’m sure her trousseau was not a fancy as this but she would have had several beautiful dresses as she was a professional dressmaker who had made dresses for court presentations in England before emigrating to Canada c.1910. Her stitching was perfect. I still have one entirely handmade doll dress from my childhood which was so pretty that one of my young friends tried to appropriate it for her own doll’s wardrobe 😮. A little chat between our mothers resulted in its return. 😊
@mmkvoe6342
@mmkvoe6342 7 месяцев назад
I grew up seeing my .ok enjoy house dresses often enough and it took me until my thirties but I acquired two this past year and have worn them more than anything else really, as they accommodate the working schedule and lifestyle I had this year. But as the magazine suggests, I have learned that I should have bought three, so another one is on the shopping list. Thanks for mentioning numbers etc. And in general, the composition of this wardrobe is like Anne of Green Gables or even more her daughter, Rilla of Ingleside, but it all most reminds me of the descriptions of life and clothes and everything in the Betsy-Tacy books.
@GEMelleeMaynopenottoday1133
@GEMelleeMaynopenottoday1133 10 месяцев назад
You are very talented and I love every single outfit you have made and shown us. At times I feel I was born in the wrong era. I also love the 40's and 50's fashion also. 😁
@YT4Me57
@YT4Me57 Месяц назад
I inherited my aunt's hope chest (it was empty), but even though she married in the early 1930s, I seriously doubt she would have collected an extensive wardrobe. As the eldest of 5 girls of a working class dad and a stay at home mom, in a country gripped by the Great Depression, her trousseau would have been very modest.
@susangavaghan
@susangavaghan 8 месяцев назад
This was the year the Titanic sank. Fascinating to see what type of clothes a middle class woman would have worn.
@sarahvandester9589
@sarahvandester9589 Месяц назад
No, this is 1901 - 1908. Titanic sank 1912. Very close!
@libbybeliveau7506
@libbybeliveau7506 9 месяцев назад
The details! and *the* *shoes* make me drool!
@X99-h6r
@X99-h6r 11 месяцев назад
you really need to do cosplay. Pandora hearts's lottie and sharon gowns would suit you so much.
@bellemeri8155
@bellemeri8155 11 месяцев назад
Per my understanding as a historian - cavat, not a dress historian, but just a historian, the "Afternoon Dress" was literally any dress worn at home between the time you finished your chores in the wrapper and when - if you were upper middle class or upper class - the time you "got dressed" for dinner as dinner dresses were more formal, especially if you were having guests over. It was worn for "recieving" visitors, tea, your "handwork" at home, and those kinds of things. It's not really a dress for the working classes - most of whom wore simpler, yet stylish dresses all day - but one for people who had enough money to have perhaps a single housemaid to help with chores around the house giving the "lady of the house" more leisure time.
@Nessi-dances
@Nessi-dances 11 месяцев назад
Thank you for the video! I've missed your longer form videos! 💜
@karenbuchert3377
@karenbuchert3377 7 дней назад
Thank you! I love your channel!!
@yuelianghaizi9276
@yuelianghaizi9276 10 месяцев назад
This is quite insightful. Thank you. By the way, and interesting outfit to make might be a hanfu from China. It is an older traditional outfit. I am curious how your would look if you made one. I am sure it will be lovely just like all of your many creations.
@HeatherLewis1700
@HeatherLewis1700 11 месяцев назад
Thank you so much. This so amazing dresses... all for you! ❤
@EWard101
@EWard101 11 месяцев назад
Someday you'll have to do a video on what an elegant grandmother would wear.
@makeda6530
@makeda6530 11 месяцев назад
Such an adorable wardrobe~.
@daniellabra4186
@daniellabra4186 9 месяцев назад
No doubt, Harrison Fisher would have loved to have you as a model for his illustrations... And Sargent too, for his paintings...
@SamLizziesmom
@SamLizziesmom 8 месяцев назад
I suspect many pieces may have been handed down, or altered. If I remember correctly, Even in 1912, they had separates, so perhaps have a "afternoon dress" made in a color that works in all seasons, and in a style that can be layered by a fashionable under shirt...
@krism.9363
@krism.9363 9 месяцев назад
This is so interesting & I learned so much! All those dresses are so beautiful. ❤
@sarahmacdougal2117
@sarahmacdougal2117 11 месяцев назад
I want a wardrobe like this.
@seattlegirl2077
@seattlegirl2077 11 месяцев назад
Lovely. Thank you so much!
@Donelikedinner
@Donelikedinner 7 месяцев назад
Edwardian era is my most favorite especially tea dresses.
@cheecheetara
@cheecheetara 9 месяцев назад
Ummmmm $14.00 in 1913 was $435 today….. soooo yeah. I was thinking to myself, well maybe there stuff cost a bit more but they didn’t have as many outfits. The inflation calculator proved that wrong!! I don’t know anyone middle class who owns a dress (not even an outfit we are just taking the dress) over $300. Sure rich people do. But not middle class. That’s about the same price as my wedding dress & I had it custom made!! Edit: I commented before the end 🤦🏽‍♀️ I’m so fascinated by your content & appreciate it sooo much. My mother & I have been trying to keep up a Victorian garden & wow! It’s a lot! I also have to say I NEED the house dress to come back. So gorgeous & low effort. Thank you for what you do you really make history relatable!
@MiljaHahto
@MiljaHahto 7 месяцев назад
People used more money on single outfits, but they had far fewer ones of them and they were made to last long (and they altered them as well, as fashion changed). Their clothing budget wasn't necessarily much bigger than these days.
@MiljaHahto
@MiljaHahto 7 месяцев назад
But actually, I've had outfits that cost 300€. A good quality jacket + skirt/pants and shirt (for work, compare it to a walking suit) can easily cost that much - cheaper ones tend to not fit as well, not be as comfortable due to material choices, and have shorter lifespans. Clothes are not supposed to be for 1-2 years only. I also have a winter coat that alone cost me 270€ - 10 years ago. It has gotten a lot of use and I still intend to use it for another 10 years. I had planned on using less before I came across it, but it's been a damn good investment if you calculate the price per times used. And I'm definitely middle class and not even on the higher end per my income.
@MiljaHahto
@MiljaHahto 7 месяцев назад
And around here you won't get a wedding dress custom-made with 300€. That's like the ultimate sale, the last dress that's totally out of style that nobody really wants anymore, and then you'll add the price of alterations. Heck, you can barely even rent a wedding dress with that price. A typical middle class wedding dress prices tends to start at 500€ at least. 1000€ is nothing unique.
@cheecheetara
@cheecheetara 7 месяцев назад
@@MiljaHahto I tried on a top I really wanted, but it was $1000, so I found it used online without the beading (which I like better anyway), for $100. I found a high low tulle skirt at Ali express for $40. Then I purchased machine embroidery patterns for like $5 (I used them for my invitations too) I designed a belt that someone custom made for $80. My seamstress put it all together & added ribbons to the corset for a bit over $100. So I guess it was a little more than $300. It was really beautiful & I know no one has one like it! I think my seamstress gave me a deal though, because she was excited for the project, apparently people used to design their wedding dresses all the time & it’s become rare. It was a really fun experience.
@MiljaHahto
@MiljaHahto 7 месяцев назад
@@cheecheetara mostly just altering items is of course less expensive. Having the whole dress made to you from start to finish would cost a lot more - even just the amount of work would certainly cost more than the whole price of your dress. (I don't trust Ali express one bit. It's totally a question of luck whether you get what was promise...)
@sandraryan9403
@sandraryan9403 11 месяцев назад
Such an interesting video the clothes are stunning 😊
@DAGOBE57
@DAGOBE57 7 месяцев назад
Un trousseau de rêve magnfiquemenr présenté !
@mikado_m
@mikado_m 14 дней назад
'Afternoon gown' sounds like tshirt and jorts kindof dressed level.. Wrappers are like.. pjs and a cardigan? I think they overall make a lot of sense in the use reasoning.. even if it doesnt seem to make any inherrent sense ig.. but we still do that
@julialoughlin645
@julialoughlin645 4 месяца назад
Hello I’m really interested in this style of dressing especially the undergarment essentials they would typically wear daily. As someone who doesn’t know how to make there own clothes I’m wondering what practical pieces would be suitable to mimic these pieces and what fabric to look for. There names and such Also highly looking into learning how to sew now 😅
@kingkarlxivjohanofsweden4746
@kingkarlxivjohanofsweden4746 11 месяцев назад
very nice video, thank you !
@Jessiebes
@Jessiebes 11 месяцев назад
They are all lovely.
@RAAAAGGHHH
@RAAAAGGHHH 11 месяцев назад
I love your videos! ❤❤❤❤
@suzannemckenzie2873
@suzannemckenzie2873 9 месяцев назад
I so enjoy your videos. I too did reproduction clothing for a while. Mostly Civil War clothing, as I and my younger daughter did re-enacting for a couple years. It was such fun. I live in Oregon too. On a farm outside of Molalla. My son, his wife and three boys moved. Here a couple years ago. God bless you!
@pnr
@pnr 11 месяцев назад
Can you please make a video about laundry? I suppose the inner layers are washed more often than outer layers. I suppose cotton was washed more often than wool. But what about dry cleaning, and what about social classes, affordability of laundry, etc.?
@MiljaHahto
@MiljaHahto 7 месяцев назад
Less fortunate families probably used less white in visible layers as it is rather unforgiving and requires a lot of work to stay spotless.
@amandapurplekeys3922
@amandapurplekeys3922 11 месяцев назад
So interesting. Thank you ☺️
@EngRMP
@EngRMP 8 месяцев назад
67 yo man here, so please bear with me. Old homes have tiny closets, so how much clothes could a house store? I'm sure the man would have a few pairs of pants, shirts and shoes. Smaller garments could certainly go in chest of drawers, but suit jackets and women's dresses would need to be hung, wouldn't they? And, (from your other videos) if fashions are changing year to year, and clothes are expensive, how were your out-of-fashion, custom made wardrobes dealt with in an economic way? BTW, it's fascinating to see the engineering marvel of women's fashions through the ages... great videos... we're so lucky to have people like you that are both good at sharing information, but also willing to take the time to make the videos.
@foamer443
@foamer443 5 месяцев назад
They would have probably supplemented the closets with freestanding wardrobes.
@EngRMP
@EngRMP 5 месяцев назад
@@foamer443 Thanks for that info. Does that imply that we should see lots of antique wardrobes today... do we see lots of them?
@foamer443
@foamer443 5 месяцев назад
I guess that might depend where you are and what used furniture or antique dealers may have. For the lower classes they were probably quite lightly constructed and may not have lasted.
@EngRMP
@EngRMP 5 месяцев назад
@@foamer443 That's a good point. A wardrobe wouldn't have to be THAT strong... it just had to support hanging clothes, hats on top and shoes on a bottom shelf. And, the heavier it is, the harder it is to transport from the store and when/if you move. So, maybe they were too "flimsy" to hold up over time. I'm not an antique collector, so I have no idea how many are around. Maybe another reason that small closets were acceptable is that with a growing population, older garments could be handed down to make room tor newer fashions.
@foamer443
@foamer443 5 месяцев назад
I have minor first hand knowledge as my wife had, and we still have and use, one she owned when we met. The construction is clearly of lesser grade material, sturdy enough, though light weight and two even smaller people, unloaded, can easily move it. The other thing that occurs to me, is in NA a century plus ago probably far fewer people owned where they lived so being able to move easily was likely always in mind. Also I believe that were quite a period in NA house building closets just weren't a thing. Mainly because houses didn't have any services. No plumbing, no electricity, no ductwork, Just rooms, hallways and stairs. Closets, I suspect mainly came about because trades needed a means to get those services from one level to another and thus came riser spaces, which took a chunk out a room. So sometimes this resulted in a odd space leftover and rather than waste it they put a door on it and a rod cross it and Ta Da.
@lunawolf23
@lunawolf23 9 месяцев назад
What a fun insight!
@cherylrosbak4092
@cherylrosbak4092 11 месяцев назад
The jacket on that grey and black walking suit is amazing. Is there a place I can find the pattern or is it yours?
@thesewloartist
@thesewloartist 11 месяцев назад
You have to scale it up but it came out of a book called The Voice of Fashion.
@cherylrosbak4092
@cherylrosbak4092 11 месяцев назад
@@thesewloartist thanks!
@Ladypuppy510
@Ladypuppy510 11 месяцев назад
Fun video. Very enjoyable Thanks
@EleneriPenneth
@EleneriPenneth 11 месяцев назад
This is lovely!
@mzlww
@mzlww 11 месяцев назад
I would love the working women / lower class women version
@donnajeanbrettnacher3349
@donnajeanbrettnacher3349 8 месяцев назад
Beautiful ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@tessajohnson8351
@tessajohnson8351 8 месяцев назад
But how would they store everything? Are petticoats folded and put away? Did they worry about wrinkles?
@1020bronwyn
@1020bronwyn 3 дня назад
Hello, I too live in a Portland, Portland Oregon. Is this where you live I am into historical dress from 1900 thru to 1950. I have just started to learn to sew any tips?
@francislematt7079
@francislematt7079 11 месяцев назад
Were those dresses stored folded in the chest of drawers, or meant to be hung in the wardrobe, with some sort of dust covers?
@aldakendall4921
@aldakendall4921 11 месяцев назад
So beautiful
@Kornholeeoo
@Kornholeeoo 10 месяцев назад
Beautiful!
@naomi.j.m.
@naomi.j.m. 8 месяцев назад
Commenting again to ask, would she not have had a tea gown? We’re they not as common among the middle class, or was it assumed that she’d already have one?
@thelaundress11
@thelaundress11 11 месяцев назад
Ok- final comment….. could you remake some of the beautiful day dresses I see the Crawley ladies wearing in Downton Abbey?
@NREnger
@NREnger 7 месяцев назад
@The Sewlo Artist Such a helpful video thank you. And if one wanted to start sewing Victorian/Edwardian clothing, where would they start & with what?
@MiljaHahto
@MiljaHahto 7 месяцев назад
I'm starting with a walking skirt. For starters I can wear it with an ordinary shirt, but a shirt with that era with a modern skirt doesn't look as good. Also with the winter here I really like the idea of a full-length skirt. I'm doing a mock-up and will use that as a petticoat. And then I contemplate on sewing a waistcoat to go with the skirt, meaning I'll buy enough of the same fabric for that, too.
@MiljaHahto
@MiljaHahto 7 месяцев назад
People did use knit underwear as well, and I think basic, old-fashioned underwear (I'm thinking of camisoles and granny panties) which you can still find will do for starters, you don't have to sew everything at once.
@cimalurie
@cimalurie 8 месяцев назад
Did you have a pattern for the reception gown or did you recreate it just from the photo of the original ? I'd like to recreate it as well so as much help as possible would be great, same for the undergarment
@elt.214
@elt.214 6 месяцев назад
Where did the white with black design stockings come from?
@cor3944
@cor3944 11 месяцев назад
very appreciated video but the price if "real" materials on votton, linnen, silk and laces are actually much higher. We shouldn't forget the natural nature of the the fabrics if those times. thx ❤
@delindalumpkin1171
@delindalumpkin1171 11 месяцев назад
Wonderful video…..You are just Lovely!
@luditebreaker5065
@luditebreaker5065 2 месяца назад
did the american fashion follow the edwardian styles?
@warmhearthandhearts6785
@warmhearthandhearts6785 11 месяцев назад
I need all of these in patterns 😅 lol
@zerocool1ist
@zerocool1ist 11 месяцев назад
Ah the Victorian era and the “doctrine of separate spheres.” The dark ages for women and fashion. God bless The flapper movement.
@flightforlight157
@flightforlight157 13 дней назад
Nowadays the only thing i hear about in closets are tshirts and shorts... Can we all make the decision to storm the fashion industry?😂
@lavenderflowersfall280
@lavenderflowersfall280 11 месяцев назад
I would just say it's a dress. What does or matter if they ask why I'm outside in my wrapper
@YELLTELL
@YELLTELL 11 месяцев назад
BY THE WAY, YOUR MUFF IS GORGEOUS! 5:08 THAT'S WHY SMALL PISTOLS ARE SOMETIMES REFERRED TO AS MUFF GUNS; CAUSE THAT'S WHERE WOMAN KEPT THEM, IN THEIR MUFF!
@carsonmcarthur9382
@carsonmcarthur9382 11 месяцев назад
Have you ever been to mackinac island in Michigan
@ryancook8549
@ryancook8549 11 месяцев назад
You could go to someplace in your Victorian clothes at night and fool people into thinking you're a ghost.
@baharpiena9246
@baharpiena9246 11 месяцев назад
Ok, were do you get the patterns from? Or are drafting patterns your self?
@thesewloartist
@thesewloartist 11 месяцев назад
Most of them are self drafted I’m afraid :( but the red wrapper is an Angela Clayton pattern from McCalls!
@thelaundress11
@thelaundress11 11 месяцев назад
Not to be weird and inappropriate, but could you show a bit closer of your under garments you’re wearing with some of your costumes during GRWM? Often we just see from the waist up and I’m curious about the floofy split drawers vs the cuffed more balloon shaped pantaloon type bottoms. Were they worn under a shift also? Do you wear a separate top or were the bottoms always worn as combinations? And tell us really- do you wear contemporary western underwear under your costumes?
@thesewloartist
@thesewloartist 11 месяцев назад
Ohh, this comment is a little ✨spicy✨ lol. I usually show from the waist up because I am often wearing split drawers + something underneath for modesty and it would just look weird. A lot of those garments are really sheer so you gotta be careful on camera! I usually wear modern undergarments + a chemise. Maybe I’ll do a tour of my underwear drawer sometime if that’s not too weird haha.
@raynonabohrer5624
@raynonabohrer5624 11 месяцев назад
This was not the dress. The poor women in the country. Farmer's wives went lucky if they had four dresses. And everybody in my family got married in black. Including my mother.
@thesewloartist
@thesewloartist 11 месяцев назад
Yeah this video is definitely not about farmers wives! If you watch all the way to the end I give more context on what kind of person would own these things :)
@YELLTELL
@YELLTELL 11 месяцев назад
GOD MAN I WISH WOMEN HAD CLASS LIKE THEY USED TO BACK IN THE DAY. MEN AS WELL. MEN WOULDNT EVEN GO TO GET A PAPER WITHOUT A SUIT ON. NOW PPL WEAR PJ PANTS THAT THEY NEVER WASH EVERY WHERE THEY GO. PPL DO NOT TAKE PRIDE IN THE WAY THEY PRESENT THEMSELVES LIKE THEY USED TO...
@primalizard8466
@primalizard8466 10 месяцев назад
Is she normal?
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