The Truth about the Fringed Flapper: Making 1920s Evening Dresses

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  • Опубликовано: 4 авг 2024
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    Though the fringe dress and the Flapper have become synonymous, they don't appear to have much of a connection in the 1920s. Why did this change? And if the little fringed mini dress wasn't the beloved icon of the era, what were the evening and party dresses actually like? As for fringed dresses themselves, they certainly did exist in the 1920s, just in a different form than we often see bouncing about on screen. Long fringe dripping over silk gowns was fairly popular throughout the decade, though it was never more so than any other trim or style. Mentions range from chenille, wool, and silk to beads and sequins. Many of which were time consuming to produce or care for, since they were often worked by hand and tangled or broke easily. But change was on the way by the end of the decade with chainette fringe. It allowed for fast application of strips of fringe in any length, while resisting tangles. The revolution for fringe was set- but it didn't happen in the fashion world. Movies and theatre picked up this cheap way to make dresses not only look more expensive, but move with exuberance in musicals and dance sequences. The time of the fringed flapper dress had arrived- 20 years late. And so it continued through movies like Singin' in the Rain, The Great Gatsby, Chicago, and more to form our modern version of the infamous 1920s.
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    00:00 Intro
    03:30 History of Fringe
    13:23 Evening Styles
    19:09 Velvet Construction
    24:45 Gold Construction
    30:31 Reveal
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Комментарии • 358

  • @NicoleRudolph
    @NicoleRudolph  Год назад +25

    Click here bit.ly/3MQmYXo and use my code NICOLER50 for 50% off your first month! It's a simple and easy part of taking care of myself!

    • @lisettegarcia
      @lisettegarcia Год назад +2

      I honestly can't pick a favorite. They all look divine. 👏🥳🎉

  • @lucytownedesigns
    @lucytownedesigns Год назад +588

    My channel actually explores a lot of this misconception. I have my great-grandmother's diaries from the 1920s, and she was a farmer in rural Western New York state. No fancy evening gowns for her--they were wholly impractical for everyday wear. I'm fascinated by her entries where she made all of her family's clothing (4 kids and her husband, and herself). It made me realize that our conception of the 1920s is really based on evening wear, which means our conception of the 1920s is almost solely based on upper middle class clothing--NOT the practical farmwear! In fact, I don't even think she was wearing silks nearly as much as modern costumers seem to think. She raised sheep, so wool would have been available, especially when in her town and nearby Jamestown had mills to process the wool. I imagine she also would have been able to grow flax for linen, but none of it likely was the high quality stuffs available for the upper class. She talks at one point about her sister making her a flowered silk dress, and getting 17 yards of black sateen for 30 cents a yard, but that's it. Her diaries definitely have altered how I have thought about the 1920s dresses.

    • @elainepeters8771
      @elainepeters8771 Год назад +49

      My great grandmother, who was in her 20s in the 1920s wore much simpler looks all throughout the 1920s. He husband worked the railyards, so the party lifestyle just wasn't them either financially or even sought after. They were much quieter people. She needed practical garments as a young mother. Fringe and silk would have been a nightmare.

    • @emryspaperart
      @emryspaperart Год назад +95

      "our conception of the 1920s is really based on evening wear, which means our conception of the 1920s is almost solely based on upper middle class clothing" i've found as i've grown up this is the case for most eras, and it really is a humbling and very connecting-to-the-ppl-of-the-past thing to be able to learn what the average dailywear was really like - especially when thinking about the class you yourself would likely have existed in has we lived at a certain period. your great grandmothers diaries sound like an absolutely wonderful thing to still have access to.

    • @user-el2nh5uo1w
      @user-el2nh5uo1w Год назад +16

      @@emryspaperart I used to frequent civil re-enactments and all the dresses conformed my established ideas of dress. Relative simple designs and muted colors. Then I’d see a bright yellow or pink dress and my head would explode. I never considered the possibility that wealthy people would wear such colors.

    • @denisegore1884
      @denisegore1884 Год назад +21

      The latest fashions only tend to be for younger people. Older women wouldn't have worn anything like what passes for flapper dresses that exposed the knees. I live in an Art Deco city that has festivals every year. It's cringe worthy to see little girls dressed as "flappers". It's so inappropriate but people don't know any better and little girls like pretty dresses.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +30

      This is true of most eras, because regular people's clothes almost always got remade and reused and passed along until it literally wore out, so most of what we see in museums is what rich people could afford to wear to special occasions. And fashion plates are the same: they're what _people who could afford to be on top of fashion trends_ might wear.

  • @alexandrasmith7682
    @alexandrasmith7682 Год назад +36

    My Grandmother was a fully apprenticed and qualified tailoress - actually had her own design business. She was also a 1920's flapper. She was 5' 1" and weighed 94lbs and was considered to have a beautiful figure which was "required" for a true flapper. She taught me to sew and as we boned bodices and hand sewed beads, she talked of the dances and dresses. She kept many of her beautiful silks and shoes. I can only remember two fringes ...... A huge embroidered silk shawl, and a dance dress that had a beaded fringe over one hip. The most interesting thing was that flappers rolled their stockings down to just above the knees .... And often didn't wear underwear - they were young and had survived WWI. She had natural dark red hair, bright green eyes .... My favourite of her dresses was a bright emerald green silk chiffon beaded handkerchief hem dress with a low V neck. Daytime she wore tweed or linen pleated skirts, embroidered or lace collared blouses, cricket cardigans (long hip length). She had an interesting life ..... First fiancee broke off the engagement which was a big thing in those days ...... Because she had her waist length hair bobbed. Husband was a brilliant aeronautical engineer .... And gentleman gambler.
    Apologies, all of that to say .... Nope, she was a flapper but never had one of those fringed dresses 😂

    • @impish750
      @impish750 4 месяца назад +1

      It sounds like your grandmother had a very interesting life! Thank you for sharing!

  • @katwitanruna
    @katwitanruna Год назад +131

    I tried on a couple of my grandmother’s evening gowns from the 20s when I was her same height. The neckline was demure but the back… oh my… the back went down to there and my grandmother went to a Christian University!

  • @cemitchell6496
    @cemitchell6496 Год назад +182

    My grandma was a teen in the 1920s. She and her sisters wore flapper dresses some. Her family lived way out in the country but had an active social life. She told me girls who wore fringe were considered "loose" but then again, she was a bit of a prude!

    • @jaybee4118
      @jaybee4118 Год назад +34

      Lol she would have been horrified by my gran and her twin sister! They were ballet dancers in London at the time, and so very confident of their bodies and loved dancing. My grandma and great aunt used to love regaling me with their antics in 1920s flapper London when I was a kid, it sounded so exciting 😀

    • @dancingnature
      @dancingnature Год назад +11

      My grandmother was between the two of y’all’s. She was a teen in 1920. And she grew up in a huge family in the south. She was a preacher’s daughter but she certainly wasn’t a prude or very narrow minded. I’m just glad I never grew up as a fundie because great grampa was.

    • @ingloriousbetch4302
      @ingloriousbetch4302 9 месяцев назад +7

      My nanny, Gertrude, aka Gertie, and her big sister, Lena Belle, were older teens and young adults in the 20s. Lena says nanny was 'a bit of a sh*t' and papa described nanny as 'a scandalous woman' (picture this being said with a very wide grin forming while he says it). Lena wsd nore practical, get sh*t done kinda gal and nanny was more of a 'lets see how much havoc i can wreak upon the world' type. Nanny taught us how to do the Charleston and lived for practical jokes and pranks. Nanny and lena liced together the last decades of their lives, since about the 60s, and i haven't words enough to describe how much fun it was hanging out with those two and thr BS they got up to.

  • @robinmichel9048
    @robinmichel9048 Год назад +185

    It seems to me that the trends that modern people associate with historic periods has a lot to do with what modern people find attractive. Short, leg baring skirts and the way that fringe enhances movement and accentuates hips and bust is appealing to modern people who are accustomed to women's sexualized garments in film.

  • @Victoriasm31
    @Victoriasm31 Год назад +109

    I actually think that "comfy" style is super flattering and looks so elegant.

  • @TheLonnieMiller
    @TheLonnieMiller Год назад +70

    I was holding my breath for the Singing in the Rain callout. That dream sequence is so bizarre to me because they have relatively accurate outfits in other parts of the movie - but you can’t beat the 50s for overdramatized musical sequences.

    • @nelliewerger5505
      @nelliewerger5505 Год назад +1

      Cyd charisse's green dress isn't fringe. (On my to do list)

  • @anarchyneverdies3567
    @anarchyneverdies3567 Год назад +23

    If any dress had to not exist, the Walmart flapper would be the one I’d choose to yeet out of existence 😂

  • @MizzKittyBichon
    @MizzKittyBichon Год назад +55

    The "robe de style" is probably my favorite non-stereotypical type of dress from the 1920s. I am just really drawn to anything with a full skirt.

    • @lovelydreamingtime9563
      @lovelydreamingtime9563 10 месяцев назад +1

      Same here with basque dresses! Too bad there aren’t any videos on how to construct a 1920s basque dress tho 😢

  • @tjs114
    @tjs114 Год назад +27

    Both of my grandmothers were born before 1900. One was one of the eldest while the other was amongst the youngest and both were from very, large families - 13 and 10 children that lived to adulthood. As such, I have a lot of pictures of both grandmothers and the many sisters from the 1920s and dressed for parties or going out in the evening. And I remember in the 1970s looking at those pictures with many of those ladies and asking if they really dressed like that. After much laughter, they all agreed that many of those dresses were only ever worn for a special event because they were impossible to keep clean or were so delicate that they self destructed if cleaned. They all shared stories about making one or two of those types of dresses.
    The conclusion I came to from their memories is that the fringe dress we all use to define a flapper was more stage costume seen at the follies and cabarets of the time and reinforced by movies that came later.

  • @autumn7143
    @autumn7143 Год назад +52

    My Granny was born in 1924. She lived in the city and was the middle of seven kids for her family. They dressed practically. When my Mom was a kid she made her a flapper costume and it was passed to me and then my daughter. Granny preferred the practical dresses. Her only fancy almost in fashion clothes were church dresses. So this is very cool to learn more about fashions from when she was young. She passed in 2019, and I think she would’ve loved your channel.

  • @DragonGirl1225
    @DragonGirl1225 Год назад +35

    The dress you made with the burnout velvet and swag/sash reminds me so much of Egyptian dress, which makes a lot of sense given the obsession with Egypt in the 1920s!

  • @SanCarpenter
    @SanCarpenter Год назад +106

    I'm sure you have plenty of video ideas, but I'd love to see one about how you pack and travel with these garments, since it seems like they'd be prone to crushing and wrinkling.

    • @joannakasper5486
      @joannakasper5486 Год назад +8

      I am adding my enthusiastic support to this question. Would love to see how you do it.

    • @CraftQueenJr
      @CraftQueenJr Год назад +6

      This is what her most recent patreon live was about, actually.

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Год назад +4

      Not historically accurate (lol), but I like to 'buffer' folds, by putting pieces of bubble wrap inside the folded garments. They do take up more room that way, obviously, but look much nicer, when unpacked.
      And, of course, I take a travel iron or steamer with me.

    • @catrinlewis939
      @catrinlewis939 Год назад +7

      In the past, going by novels written in the 1920s and '30s, one method was to wrap all garments in tissue paper. I assume that means taking a piece as long as the dress or whatever and folding it along with it to keep down the creases. I've never tried it, myself.

    • @brittany45
      @brittany45 Год назад +7

      My great-grandma, a frequent traveller whose journals I have, described something very similar to the Marie Kondo method of packing- rolling, folding, or balling things up depending on the material.

  • @retrocraftdreams
    @retrocraftdreams Год назад +44

    I'm always so fascinated (and entertained) by vintage styles that are actually those eras' representations of even earlier periods. (My favorite being the 80s take on art deco, and I just finished embroidering a crewel kit that is a 70s/80s reinterpretation of 19th century signage.) I had NO IDEA that the iconic flapper dress was in this category! And then the way we reinterpret the reinterpretation - like a style game of telephone! It's just so fun!

  • @studious_nonchalance
    @studious_nonchalance Год назад +71

    Would you consider doing a lookbook video with all your outfits from the cruise? I cannot get enough of these beautiful garments! I love seeing them in motion!

  • @BethAge95
    @BethAge95 Год назад +44

    All the dresses you made look amazing but I have to agree with the people on the cruise - the yellow one is just spectacular! Thanks for clearing up the fringe flapper dress myth, I had no idea!

  • @cheesymice
    @cheesymice Год назад +27

    The fringe flapper dress trope has bugged me ever since I got interested in 1920s history in my 1980s teen years! There were so many more interesting and beautiful designs in reality. I personally have always loved the long tube with a gather of fabric at the hips style like your black and gold dress. Gorgeous!

  • @reptoJane
    @reptoJane Год назад +4

    That rose pink burnout dress with the side decoration is *stunning*! Sure, it's very different from modern dress sensibilities, but holy cow, it is so incredibly beautiful.

  • @AthenaeusGreenwood
    @AthenaeusGreenwood Год назад +6

    Very elegant, if a bit - demure? I recall my very proper Edwardian Nana (b.1900) scoffing @ my mother's 1960s concern about her reaction to the mini-dress w/tights "We wore our dresses down to *here* in front, to *there* in back and hardly a stitch underneath! You girls are covered bottom to top! Don't think you invented sex!" And my Pops grinning and nodding ...

  • @gill8779
    @gill8779 Год назад +26

    It was so lovely to see a picture of a Borzoi dog with one of the flappers. I have always had this breed & have two at the moment, gorgeous dogs.

  • @KHFFSE
    @KHFFSE Год назад +33

    Thank you SO much for linking where you got your fabrics. That second dress fabric looks straight out of a Klimt painting and I'm obsessed. You put so much work into these garments and videos, and it really shows! I hope you had a wonderful time at your cruise!

  • @blktauna
    @blktauna Год назад +16

    My Nan was a flapper (regular person sort) and did not have fringe. Long beaded necklace yes, regular sheath underneath with varying chiffon like fluffy sorts of dresses over, yes :) Several of the outfits you show for early 20s flappers are very much what she wore. Did you drape the purple or use a pattern??? I love it and want one for me. Your gold dress is very flattering on you and very similar to one of my Nan's (hers was sky blue with pale blue chiffon). The black and gold also looks great!

  • @jjez61
    @jjez61 Год назад +27

    I love watching how you transformed your style of hair and makeup to match the era and clothes you've made. I also love how you explain the histories of the garments and shoes you make. Thank you for letting us share in your creative process!

  • @marikotrue3488
    @marikotrue3488 Год назад +10

    My favorite was the gold floral print black gown. It is deceptively simple, but the folds, floral design, swag everything needs to be just right to fall properly and give the evocative appearance of that time period. I always felt that anime and comic-cons weekends went by far too quickly. Cosplay or dressing in period correct outfits needs to be savored over a LONG time not just 1 - 3 days. Although I am not a sailing fan, the idea of wearing costumes for this cruise sounds glorious. I hope that as many attendees as possible post footage.

  • @robintheparttimesewer6798
    @robintheparttimesewer6798 Год назад +2

    My grandparents met in the big city in the 20’s. Before the crash my grandfather and his room mates dealt with dirty dishes by throwing them out the window!! They did this until their landlady caught them! Once the crash hit they were out of a job. My grandmother had a job so they couldn’t get married as married women didn’t work back then. It was an interesting time in history.
    All your gowns are stunning! Hopefully you had an amazing time!

  • @claire2088
    @claire2088 Год назад +6

    I love the gold dress, the layering is exquisite and the skirt has so much drama, the pink velvet one looks so beautiful as you move too!

  • @patriciahoffmann2362
    @patriciahoffmann2362 Год назад +4

    Fascinating! My maternal grandmother, born in 1900, was a Flapper, but I have no details - I imagine for her, it was going out dancing with her future husband, and drinking illegal booze! She did live to 101, but I never thought to ask her what "being a flapper" actually meant!

    • @krisniznik3953
      @krisniznik3953 11 месяцев назад

      My grandmother had stories of speakeasies too. Exciting times! She continued meeting with a couples dance club that began during WWII every month, well into the '80's. People committed to their fun and friendships in those days.

  • @VioletFem
    @VioletFem Год назад +9

    I’m only one minute into this video and Nicole has already blown my mind!

  • @lindaloo5980
    @lindaloo5980 Год назад +4

    My grandmother had a trunk full of 20’s era dresses which I suspect many were her younger sisters’, who died in 1931. My grandparents were married in 1922 and she was a farm wife. I clearly remember seeing a dress with fringe. My dad said his aunt was theatrical and a storyteller, and he used to quote many poems that apparently great aunt Grace had and enjoyed. So they might have been more for special events, I figure?

  • @KbatzReviews
    @KbatzReviews Год назад +7

    Maybe next Halloween you could tackle the "princess" dress and the ubiquitous hennin that really only had a small historical window but is now THE silhouette. 🤣 Love your Historically Accurate info and designs! 👍

  • @DragonriderEpona
    @DragonriderEpona Год назад +14

    I wonder how much of the 1920s stereotype dresses come from 1920s films like Metropolis as well. The whole time I had the picture of Hel, the machine, dancing seductively at the Yoshiwara nightclub. (Only that I thought she wore more clothing than she actually does🙈 )

  • @v.ra.
    @v.ra. Год назад +1

    I'm absolutely obsessed with the Erté opera coat. Not exaggerating, I'm losing sleep over it. What are the chances of Nicole recreating this miracle work again, this time for the camera 😭

  • @spontaneousun
    @spontaneousun Год назад +1

    That black and gold fabric is DIVINE!!!

  • @darthbee18
    @darthbee18 Год назад +7

    OMG you transformed into such a glam 20s lady!!! ✨😎✨
    I love the style of the golden dress, though the fuschia one is also gorgeous too (that feels like the one that would match my own style the best). I highly, highly enjoyed your exploration on the truth of fringe (and flapper) dresses back then. (Just as I expected, movies in the later eras influenced our perception of what people would actually wore in the 20s). I didn't think that fringe dresses didn't exist at all back then, but I did surmise that their frequency was totally overestimated by people in the latter decades (something that you pointed out as well, more or less). Can't never thank you enough for that exploration!

  • @mystic_mimi21
    @mystic_mimi21 Год назад +5

    I would a video on everyday/street wear of the 1920s so many times it’s evening wear or sports which I love but isn’t very viable to translate in my day to day wear.
    Also a tutorial on this hair and makeup. Looks incredible .

  • @rachelfloyd5865
    @rachelfloyd5865 Год назад +6

    That black velvet is absolutely gorgeous, and my personal favorite! Although, my goodness, the gold gown is quite fetching too!

  • @RianShafer
    @RianShafer Год назад +1

    I'm older but love sharing Flapper stories about my Gram. When my grandpa first met her he said he was going to marry her & she flipped the hem of her dress at him & walked away! Her clothing was defiantly shorter but pretty sturdy looking every day wear by her pictures. Not sure she ever wore a slip style or fringe but she may have for dances but they would have been more modestly styled. My mom (b.1930) never got to go to prom etc because they couldn't afford fancy clothes so as a high school teacher, she chaperoned Prom & wore a white Flapper fringe dress that absolutely looked like something Gram would wear. It was awesome. I wish we could share pictures here. I love your recreations.

  • @user-wn5pj9yf4y
    @user-wn5pj9yf4y Год назад +10

    Wonderful, informative as always. I would LOVE to see the ENTIRE wardrobe you created for the cruise. I watched the process but NEED to see the creative conclusion. PLEASE! PLEASE! PLEASE!?

  • @Neophoia
    @Neophoia Год назад +2

    The pink dress that your mother helped out with looks super cozy. I do understand why people complimented the yellow/gold dress, it is really flattering on you and if I didn't know it had taken just 2 days to make I would have assumed it had taken months. The black with gold flecks/patterns is also really nice, even though I find I personally prefer the other two in appearance. 💚

  • @jeannamcgregor9967
    @jeannamcgregor9967 Год назад +5

    I LOVE the fuschia cut silk gown! OMG. The flow is beautiful, perfect fabric choice.

  • @stephaniewilbur9748
    @stephaniewilbur9748 Год назад +4

    What a wonderful informative video! Delightful.
    I used a lot of fringe in my belly dance costumes in the 90s and 2000s. The modern belly dance ‘bedlah’ (adorned bra and hip belt, worn over a skirt) was born in the cabaret, and Egyptian cinema of the 30s and 40s. It was also used to highlight movement.
    I used inexpensive rayon chaînette fringe in my earlier, inexpensive costumes, and then used heavier, more expensive, pre-made beaded fringe or hand beaded the fringe myself in my later pieces.
    I also learned that Vionnet used the weight of fringe to manipulate the fabric (holding a scarf collar in place for example) and in her designs.

  • @patriciabranfman6816
    @patriciabranfman6816 Год назад +1

    I have a picture of my grandmother in a silver fringe dress just like your first shot at 21 years old on Beacon Hill with the classic haircut to match. It was real ! She wore it to speakeasies like the Bull & Finch back room. She met my grandfather there. He caught her when she fell off the table dancing. True story!!!

  • @JadyLester
    @JadyLester Год назад +2

    "Anyone for tennis? This will make them cringe,
    And you’ll knock’em dead at dinner if your gown just drips with fringe."
    I love the silhouette, you're a knock-out!

  • @elizabethhatfield2115
    @elizabethhatfield2115 Год назад +2

    Love the color of the yellow dress! It's beautiful!

  • @thesavingsorceress
    @thesavingsorceress Год назад +5

    I’ve been waiting for this video all my life. There’s been so much conflicting information about the fashion of this era, so thank you for doing the in-depth research. I loved the dancing scene at the end with everyone dressed in their finery!

  • @danicourtnay
    @danicourtnay Год назад +2

    Ok. That cape/coat is definitely a moment. Would love to see more about it.

  • @stellaz2595
    @stellaz2595 Год назад +1

    The black and gold fabric is beautiful, and that dress flatters your figure.

  • @tammiewilson5185
    @tammiewilson5185 Год назад +1

    Beautiful gowns! Thank you for the fashion show!

  • @gwhitcom
    @gwhitcom Год назад

    Can't wait to hear more about their trip - love all the dresses!

  • @SirenaSpades
    @SirenaSpades Год назад

    I appreciate your videos more and more with each one. Brilliant! I love all the old images and the research you put into it.

  • @dalhousiekid
    @dalhousiekid Год назад +1

    My favorite era for fashion. Thank you for being our teacher. 🍎

  • @robinsiciliano8923
    @robinsiciliano8923 Год назад +1

    Dresses turned out stunning! Can’t wait to see more of your trip. Great video as always!

  • @halinakajfoszova4354
    @halinakajfoszova4354 Год назад

    Your dresses look spectacular. I love the footage of the cruise, the dancing event looked like so much fun!!

  • @helmaschine1885
    @helmaschine1885 Год назад

    I love when you model your dresses. Really gives them life, so beautiful and wonderful work!

  • @robinphillips3817
    @robinphillips3817 Год назад

    I am so glad to have found your channel.

  • @loredw20
    @loredw20 Год назад +2

    I'm so glad you got to experience Queen Mary 2 - made the trip in May this year and loved every moment of it. Can't wait to see more of your adventure and obviously what you wore 😊

  • @MichelleSMV
    @MichelleSMV Год назад +1

    Im a bit obsessed with the 20s and I recently bought a pretty thick book with several fashion plates and photos and things from the 20s. That has been a great learning experience so far just seeing all the different styles and trims and the colours (I love colour). I was really inspired to make some 20s day wear and am working on that now. Really enjoy all your 20s videos! They really brought me back to that love of the 20s I had❤

  • @moxielouise
    @moxielouise Год назад +1

    I would love to see the full process of all of those dresses and i hope you continue with more of the 20s/30s theme. Can't get enough!

  • @peggyriordan9857
    @peggyriordan9857 Год назад +2

    Everything came out so beautifully and you truly looked straight out of the '20s. I have a photo of my Grandmother in a beautiful fringed dress from the '20s that she was wearing out for an evening event and I have a photo of my Mother from about 1928 dressed in a flapper dress for Halloween. She was 8 at the time. I think my Grandmother made it for her. The video from the cruise was great and I really hope you had a wonderful time. I hope we get to see more of it! Congrats on all of the dresses and you are a true inspiration to have made all of those, plus the daily wear. Thanks so much for sharing.

  • @KathBorup
    @KathBorup Год назад

    Wow! Loved seeing your 1920s dresses. Beyond fabulous!

  • @tmo.48
    @tmo.48 Год назад

    Your copies are so well done! I would certainly wear that last dress every chance I could ♡♡♡

  • @amandadale9631
    @amandadale9631 Год назад

    Thanks for the video! I love seeing 1920s styles being recreated, but it can be hard to find!

  • @DipityS
    @DipityS Год назад

    I cannot possibly choose which of the gowns I adore more - I love the first velvet but also the others - and the fabrics for all are so glamourous and bam! I think you looked absolutely fabulous!

  • @nanettebromley8843
    @nanettebromley8843 Год назад +1

    YAY sunday night fashion history lesson. I love these videos. History, construction and final garment(s). All the dresses were amazing. I am struggling to pick a favourite. The fuchsia silk velvet looks luscious and silk velvet makes me purrrrrr. The yellow because of the design in the fabric and I adore the dress and coat ensemble of one of your earlier pieces.
    So jealous you got to see all those marvellous costumes in the Leicestershire museum.

  • @remeiagullessimo1586
    @remeiagullessimo1586 Год назад

    I love all the gowns you made for the trip!

  • @elainebye9090
    @elainebye9090 Год назад +2

    I love the black and gold dress best; it's so elegant! But both the others are stunning as well.
    I love your historical research, thanks.

  • @VictorianGentleman
    @VictorianGentleman Год назад +5

    This was really interesting, good to know how real the image of 20s dresses we have is. I'll have to keep that in my back pocket in case someone asks (I do tours through historic homes, including one staged for the twenties). Also, that black dress with the gold leaves looks super nice on you, great work as always!

  • @LoverofHistory
    @LoverofHistory Год назад +3

    I loved this video! It's so interesting to learn more about 1920s fashion and to unpack some of our misconceptions about history. Your evening dresses look absolutely stunning!! Thank you for sharing your journey with us :)

  • @AkumakoCross
    @AkumakoCross Год назад +4

    I’ve been waiting for this video for weeks! I’m gearing up to make some 1920’s-flavored fancy clothes for my mother, and I wanted to see Nicole’s process to help inform my own little adventure.

  • @heidicook2395
    @heidicook2395 Год назад +1

    You look lovely in those dresses. Thanks for sharing the process it took!

  • @historicalgarb8790
    @historicalgarb8790 Год назад

    I’m still waiting to see what your Elizabethan project will be!! I’m so excited to see it!!

  • @brandonriley950
    @brandonriley950 Год назад

    That was a very interesting video & leaned quite alot, you looked absolutely fantastic in those evening dresses truly loved the style. Thanks for the video Nicole

  • @lurindasmith2781
    @lurindasmith2781 Год назад +1

    I love to read Grace Livingston Hill books not because of the romances but her descriptions of the every day problems of working on a home and presentable clothing for lower income people who are often her characters.
    She mentions in one book how difficult it was to create a piece of clothing for a new job when the fashions no longer leave much room for piecing. Instead they would find larger sections of old clothing or material to be remade.

  • @sanctuaryrain2010
    @sanctuaryrain2010 Год назад

    I love the second evening dress, it is just lovely. Thank you for the stream :)

  • @CarePinglo
    @CarePinglo Год назад

    I just found your channel and I’m shocked I haven’t come across it before! This video was amazing and so in depth! You fit so much in 30 minutes but yhe pacing was perfect, I learned a lot. I’ll be binge watching all of your videos while I edit photos today 💕

  • @elizabethclaiborne6461
    @elizabethclaiborne6461 Год назад +2

    I recognize these dresses - from the early 1980’s! Norma Kamala did Paul Poirot - in sweatshirt fabric. The most glorious, comfortable, great looking dresses ever. There were also Victorian takes, amazing clothes. In sweatshirt. Closed with the snap strips the use in onesies. She’s a genius!
    There were also a ton of draped dresses in Quiana, the fabric of the moment. The drape- over -the-hip dress was all over, without the train. Saw 2 at dinner in Beverly Hills in 1985. Didn’t realize they were straight up Twenties repro, but did know the Kamala were.

  • @Noyle91
    @Noyle91 Год назад

    You're such an inspiration! I looove learning from you, both the historic or the sewing side of things 💜
    Also, I now would really love to invite you to dance, you're so good at that too!🖤🖤

  • @karennorris7880
    @karennorris7880 Год назад

    This video was awesome! The twenties (and 40's) are my favorite fashion eras. I so envy your talent. Lucky you!

  • @waterbitten
    @waterbitten Год назад +1

    The dress your mom made looks delicious 👌🏽😩 it looks comfortable and ready to literally sit pretty.

  • @vaderlikestacos8572
    @vaderlikestacos8572 Год назад

    I have to say, the satin evening gown with the purple sash, was by faaar my favourite, it looked so lovely on you! I have a couple of themed weddings and parties coming up in the beginning of next year and have been looking for something I could make that was comfortable and fun to wear but that I would still like the look of, and thanks to your sharing your many marvellous creations I think I have a pretty clear vision. So excited, hope it works out :3

  • @cartograp
    @cartograp Год назад

    Absolutely LOVE the red velvet one! It looks both elegant and sooo comfortable. They are all beautiful dresses but that one is definitely my favorite. Great video as usual!

  • @Apledore
    @Apledore Год назад +1

    As a lifelong fan of Singing in the Rain, I was singing "Beautiful Girl" to myself for the first half of this video. Loved learning more about societal perception vs. reality. Also, that first dress you made is absolutely gorgeous. But that cape! Oh, my word.

  • @RachaelTheRed
    @RachaelTheRed Год назад +1

    It was lovely to meet you on the crossing. These dresses were even more stunning in person, if that's even possible. It was really cool to see the construction process. You mentioned that it always seems to be the garment that is thrown together at the last minute that gets the most compliments and I have to wonder if that's because we don't have time to second guess our instincts when we're in a rush. When you take your time on a project you have the space to agonize over every little detail and possibly doubt your decisions but when you're in a time crunch you have to just go with your first choice and say it will turn out how it turns out and kind of push the doubts away. I think it creates a more creatively authentic garment, if that makes sense, and it's like people can sense that. It always reminds me that I should trust my instincts more even when I am taking my time on a project.

  • @jayneterry8701
    @jayneterry8701 Год назад

    Very enjoyable, I played it 2x! 😀💖 so fascinating the history of clothing and fashion. Erte a favorite for design inspiration! ❣@ 17 I really liked that colour and design on you and the 2 pieces you showed us draping. Another cool part of dressmaking.💗 When I think of all those hours you poured over sewing not only your own pieces but helping Abby I felt a bit of relief ( hope you did too lol) that you had a simple construction! 💓😀 Looking forward to seeing more of your journey.

  • @beatriceojea
    @beatriceojea Год назад +1

    Goddess maker and goddess model! Also loved to recognize the Gonzo trouser lining taking a trip through the ages haha No one does 1920s like you 🤍

  • @druidriley3163
    @druidriley3163 Год назад

    I didn't see you try on the black and gold dress, but the last dress, wow. My mouth dropped open. That is incredible. Well done.

  • @YvonneO
    @YvonneO Год назад +1

    Your research is impressive Nicole 🙂 you are wise and skilled beyond your years. Look forward to video of your cruise✨👀

  • @blueseme
    @blueseme Год назад

    I love the way you did your lipstick for this video!

  • @VRRother
    @VRRother Год назад

    I am planning a 1920's dress for a upcoming cruise. I love the historical clarification on this era. I won't be getting into the detail that you have, but I am in awe of what you have created.

  • @RoderickFernandez-ps5ci
    @RoderickFernandez-ps5ci 24 дня назад

    I'm so glad you addressed this I'm so tired of seeing that awful Fringe dress in every picture of a 20s with the feather stuck in the headband

  • @crazydude1197
    @crazydude1197 Год назад

    This was such an insightfull video!
    I adored it, and learned so much!
    The 1920's were always my favorite decade when it came to fashion (I'm particurally drawn towards the mid to last 1920's fashion, but surelly all of the decade was lovelly). It's amazing to learn more about tne fringe and how it became a part of the "colective idea" of what 20's fashion was, and was thrilled to know how exactally it was used by dress makers during those years.
    But I must confess that I'm more than shocked to find that the "flapper" movement was an early 20's thing, and not a full 20's one!
    I legit thought that it was a movement that ranged from 1920 to 29! So learning that the flapper was proclamed "dead" by 1924 surprised me!
    Thank you for such a lovelly video, keep up the amazing work!

  • @AlessioFangano
    @AlessioFangano Год назад +1

    While researching Archaic-Greece clothing (mostly mythical pieces) I was quite surprised to see how prevalent tassels/fringes were: Athena's Aegis was supposed to be fringed as was Aphrodite's mythical belt for instance. Couldn't find any real representation of this style of clothing on Greek vases so I am still puzzled at what they actually mean but, looking at the Leichestershire museum gown, I got a pretty good idea of what they might have been going for. Very insightful video as always, thanks a lot!

  • @elizathemermaid
    @elizathemermaid Год назад

    All these dresses are absolutely stunning!

  • @sarah.sparkles
    @sarah.sparkles Год назад

    That burnout velvet gown is FABULOUS!!!!! Love the colour combination and the textures. Beautiful!!

  • @stephaniecowans3646
    @stephaniecowans3646 Год назад +1

    Oh my! The black & gold gown is absolutely stunning! And the fabric of the gold gown is glorious! You look like like royalty in that.

  • @fshbulb1
    @fshbulb1 Год назад

    My favourite is the last black one, but the gold one is also stunning. Amazing work!

  • @jacquelinejanewashere
    @jacquelinejanewashere 10 месяцев назад

    The purple burnout gown is stunning I love it 💜

  • @auntiezann5146
    @auntiezann5146 Год назад

    Those evening dresses you made are extraordinary! I love them all, but my favorite has got to be that stunning black and gold column dress. It’s like I’m watching the 1920’s in color. And that yellow and gold: well wow. That fabric is gorgeous and though it’s not my fave shape, it’s so extravagant! Thank you for showing us how you made it!

  • @tengutheterrible8491
    @tengutheterrible8491 Год назад

    The dresses revealed at the end were absolutely DIVINE, and I so appreciated learning about our misconceptions on the "flapper dress." Wonderful video as always, Nicole!