I recently watched two programs here on Golden Spider Silk and Lotus Flower Silk. AMAZING. Just FYI they're on YT "Why It's So Expensive."Thank you for this Ms. Rudolph. Lisa Rae Rousseau
Ok, why is the internet telling me Mulberry Silk is the real thing? I mean, I'm certainly not holding you responsible for the internet, but it does seem to conflict. I'm not fussed about historical accuracy, but I like to know what I'm purchasing. And, when it comes to synthetics especially, I like to know because I love rayon, I like nylon, but I cannot tolerate polyester. Your videos are such a pleasure to watch and even just to listen to. And your wardrobe is fabulous. Thanks for sharing your insight and talent with us Nicole. I always look forward to your next one.
Rayon is a great fabric if you live in an area that has hot, humid weather and that can also have dry weather. I live in Oklahoma and wear a lot of it year around.
@@camerashycoco There are two ways to get a fiber out of mulberry trees: feed the leaves to silkworms OR make fiber out of the wood (like the "bamboo" cloth which is rayon made from bamboo instead of any other source of cellulose. And, some fabric sellers lie about their products, or don't test them.
Seeing you handle the silk really helps understand how it should look and move and what the names actually mean in relation to the different types. Another really useful and informative video, thank you.
As someone who is just beginning on not only my historical costuming journey but my sewing journey period.... this was so very helpful. Thank you so much for explaining this in such an easy to understand manner. I would love to see you make a series of this focusing on different fibres. When you're just getting started it can be so overwhelming trying to figure out what fibres and what weaves to use for what purposes.
Yes, this! I'd love to see a similar video on wool - I just look at all the different ways wool fabric can be made and shudder and then walk away confused.
I had no idea that so many of our fabrics that are plastic now, started life as silk. I worked at a fabric store for about 2 years, and have handled all of these in the plastic version, but did not know that they were all silk based at one time. Thank you for this (now these) education. What a wonderful gift of your time.
I really enjoyed this video as it filled a few gaps in my knowledge of western silk. So many of them have several names for one kind of fabric. Eastern Asian silks are something I know well and grew up with as all Sunday, holidays, and formal occaisions were hanboks made of silk. Cotton was used for funerals. Some silks you've mentioned in this video, I've gone and machine washed and dried but that was mostly to shrink the fabric or remove sizing that causes me to have skin rashes. I like to find as many ways to use raw silk in projects. I tend to use it in place of linen or lighter canvas.
This was INCREDIBLE!!! I loved that you showed a sample and crushed it (WITH THE SOUND). This was incredibly telling. It gives a sense of the hand of the fabric. Good Resource Video!!
I have a silk taffeta waistcoat. It’s one of the few silk things that I have. A bird pooped on it. I had to have it dry cleaned. Exactly what you said would happen, happened. It lost some of its sheen and became wrinkled. I’ve been able to iron it, but it will never look quite how it did originally.
@@AdelaideBeemanWhite Ah, yes, pets are like babies, they're going to make a mess out of the nice stuff -- the ratty old dress gets nothing, the best dress gets the worst of it.
Nicole, you are truly a natural teacher! The level of detail, depth and your way of explaining it all in a way that is actually understandable is just....*chef's kiss"😙👌🏻 I CANNOT WAIT to learn about any and all other types of fabric. Thank you. 💗
Thank You Nicole for sharing all of your knowledge. I consider myself fortunate in that there have been no new additions to my wardrobe in the past 25 years that are not natural fibres. Well, a couple of my ‘70’s DVF dresses are acrylic but they live on by their own merit. I live on the Texas Gulf Coast where it’s hot as hell and humid. If I have any guests in the summer that haven’t lived here before, the first thing we do is shop for her some comfortable clothing items. I am so happy for the refresher course in fibres and fabrics you’re offering. Yeah, I could read and remind myself but you’re voice and method of speaking is soooo much nicer. Cotton, silk, wool and linen are the way to go here. And they feel almost naughty against the skin!
I'm similarly avoiding synthetic fibers. I'm in Central Iowa, which isn't quite as hot as Texas, but our summers are so humid, it feels like you're breathing soup. I spent last summer avoiding polyester at all costs and only wearing cotton, linen, or rayon, and mostly wore dresses. I was the most comfortable I've ever been in winter, despite having an inefficient air conditioner.
I recently moved to San Antonio and my Colorado wardrobe doesn't cut it. Which stores do you take your guests to? What do you encourage them to get? I love my Eddie Bauer V-neck tshirts, but I have no clue what the fabric is! 😆
Omg that Erte coat!! Its probably a lot but I think many of us would love a video of you going through some of your favourite makes! They're all gorgeoussss
This fabric series is a godsend! You are very good at giving a concise but very in depth description of all these different textiles. Also, I would love a video on how the style of silk damasques have changed over the centuries please rant on forever
Thank you so much for this!!! For the layperson who doesnt have an extensive history of fabric knowledge and basically no clue on the differences, this is a goldmine! So thank you so much and I look so much to this series.
*Thank you* for explaining the difference between woven threads and sewing threads. There's a myth in some historical sewing circles that you can just pull threads out of your fabric and use them to sew. I've tried to explain that all that really does is make an inherently weak seam, but your explanation is so much more eloquent than mine!
I’m sure that there is a small grain of truth in the belief. Maybe emergency repair of a garment darning would be less evident if done that way. It might maybe work with a different fabric though I doubt it would have been for sewing actual seams.
@@robintheparttimesewer6798 I also want to add that there are cases where either the warp or weft threads will be stronger than the other (I can’t remember which it is rn) and then that would also be ideal for darning. I have no idea if this is the case for woven silk, but perhaps this is the origin of the myth?
I can't speak for other brands, but I've washed the Mood organza with really good results. I wash by hand, and it retains its stiffness after thoroughly drying. I thought I'd ruined it the first time, since it gets flowy while wet, but after it's dry, it's back to being nice and crisp. I think it's a good option if you're like me and hate having to go to the cleaners for everyday items.
Greetings, feeling immensely grateful for your truly knowledgeable contribution at making humanity greatly educated on silk. Indeed you have full command and deep understanding of silk. Your video is spot on. Thank you for a genuine and solid video. Indebted to you forever. Thank you for your generosity in sharing your knowledge so selflessly. Heartfelt prayers for your even greater health, happiness, success and prosperity. Godspeed ❤️❤️
I should have taken notes while watching, but I don't mind. This video is worth watching multiple times. Thank you for a very informative video - and all those gorgeous fabrics
I don't work with fabrics or clothing in any way (except for..like.. wearing clothes) and I find this video sooooo educating and entertaining. Not only do you have a beautiful and calm voice to easily entertain someone for more than 30 min, but this excursion into all the different types of silks there are and how they differ is so utterly fascinating. I have no idea if a similiar video makes sense (meaning there are enough different types of another fabric to elaborate on them) but if so, I would love to learn more about other fabrics as well. Thank you for this great content and for educating me.
This video is incredible! Whenever I am looking to buy fabric of any kind, I get so overwhelmed by the number of options available and the minuet distinctions between different types of fabrics. This was so helpful and informative, it cleared up a lot of questions I had and I am now way less intimidated by the idea of buying silk!
Goodness, you're so knowledgeable! And you not only share all this amazing knowledge, you also show the absolutely scrumptious fabrics and gorgeous, gorgeous outfits!
I'm a drapery designer . I've been in this business for 35 years. When I was a child the movie Gone With the Wind where Scarlett made a dress out of the velvet drapery stuck with me .. I'm a fabric fanatic. You are speaking my language . I love your chanel. You must go to Lyon France and see the old silk mills .. what an experience .
I wash every fabric, even taffeta and organza, because the factory sizing is really really bad to have against your skin and can cause medical problems, especially if you have asthma. It takes a much longer time to re-size/startch them after washing, but it's so much safer for you.
@@Yan-ri2jg If you want to wash wool, you can; HOWEVER, make sure you use the cold/cold (or at most warm/cold) setting on the washer, and the "knit/delicates" or "hand wash" setting--any setting that turns off the agitator of the machine. If you have access to a front loading washer, even better. DO NOT put it in the dryer; hang it up and let it air dry, iron it dry--anything but the dryer. Wool felts due to the combination of heat and friction and soap and water speed up the process. (My mutti accidentally felted her first pair of hand-knit socks by wearing them with nubby-soled slippers, no water required.) All that said, I would still HIGHLY recommend only washing a sample of your fabric first, instead of taking a risk with a whole cut of nice wool.
@@Yan-ri2jg I always do, but wool cna be temperamental. Avoid temperature shocks (hot to cold or cold to hot) and agitation while wet if it's not superwash, as that will cause felting and shrinkage. I usually wash gentle cycle on cold, and then air dry until it's mostly dry. I finish up with a pressing with lots of Best Press to bring it back to a nicely workable hand.
@@nicolemulready6329 I use Best Press or Faultless Starch, but that's probably because the theater I worked for was sponsored by Faultless so that was the brand we always used. I assume any spray starch will do. Homemade ones work, but they spoil quickly if not used.
This is STELLAR content, I so so so hope you make this a whole series. I, like so many others, am just starting out in my own journey as a clothes-maker and content like this is super helpful as well as interesting.
Thank you so much for this. I don't do historical costuming, but it's not easy finding different types of silk in person and I didn't know the terminology well enough to feel comfortable shopping online. I'm saving the video for future reference.
This is unbelievably helpful and much appreciated. As a newbie I am quite intimidated and nervous about using silk. There is so much to know and figure out. But after watching this, I feel much better about using it in the future. On an interesting note, when I lived and taught in South Korea, we took the kids on a field trip to a museum about the harvesting and making of silk. Everyone got a silkworm cocoon and was shown how to pull the thread free and into a little ball. It was fascinating.
Perfect timing on this video as I needed to know the differences of SILK this weekend!! Especially silk taffeta versus dupioni/shatung and it’s function. Also, I’m trying to make my first corset and determine which silk to use for the outer fabric. Thank you!!
As a longtime spinner and beginning weaver this was fascinating to me. Silk is an amazing fiber to work with from the cocoon all the way to the finished garment.
I am delighted by all the knowledge in this video! Also looking forward to your series on man made fabrics especially rayon vs polyester imitating silk
This is really excellent, and I salute you for explaining the fiber-to-fabric process in such a clear way! Spinning is not the easiest of topics to explain, nor is weaving.
Thank you! This is very helpful (I especially appreciate that you have the words written down, because sometime it's hard to guess how things are spelled). I have a hard time looking for fabric locally (and add to that that I often have to translate the fabric name, because some things are named differently here (e.g. rayon is called viscose here)), so this is a great resource to come back to and actually see the different fabrics move before I go buy them online.
Viscose is actually a particular type of Rayon! So rayon itself can be far more general (there are even some types that are apparently slightly combustible...)
@@NicoleRudolph That'll be the cellulose. I've been working with rexine recently, used widely in automotive applications as a cheap alternative to leather up to the 1950s, and it seems that it was replaced by petrochemical based vinyls because they were cheaper and more fire retardant. Cellulose seems to have been the go-to for 'proto synthetics' (for want of a better description) and pops up all over the place in the early 20th century for everything from buttons to fabrics to camera film, I wonder if it was the inspiration for the Flanders and Swann song The Wompom.
This is awesome! Liziqi has a sericulture video if anyone wants to see how much hand work goes into it. She was making bedding for her grandmother but it’s a great overview of the process. I ruined a silk blouse my dad had brought back from Singapore. Got something on it and it was ruined with washing. I won’t use it now without prewashing the fabric so I can hand wash it. Thank you for this, I knew many of these fabrics by name only.
This is the most comprehensive and best explained fiber/textile overview I have ever seen, heard, or read! Excited for future topics in this series. Only way it could be improved would be small graphics or drawings showing zoomed-in diagrams of the weave structures as you explain them (which is a lot more effort on your part since you are using all original content! Maybe a pen-and-paper drawing or little photo of a demonstration with colored strings of the various weave types would be doable).
I work at a big name fabric store and I've had a vague understanding of a lot of these terms and it's so interesting learning where they come from and what they mean.
This series is SOOO helpful; thank you! I’ve always struggled finding good sources to help me understand the difference between the different kinds of fabrics, and having a video with explanations has been so incredibly useful. Thank you for taking time to make these!
So helpful! There's nearly no silk in the stores where I live and I wanted to order samples online but didn't know whoch kinds of silk I should pay more attention to according to my sewing plans. I was also suprpised at the end! I was under the impression that silk is flowy and breathable fabric and whenever I was hot in commercial silk garments I though "bah! it's because of all the synthetics added! If only it was natural fibers!" Turns out I was onloy partially right
This is excellent! For those wondering, I've had good results washing silk satins and silk crepes - I think the main issue with washing silk is removing the sizing Nicole mentioned and the satins and crepes don't really have it. Just make sure you wash them on a gentle cycle with delicates detergent. I utterly ruined some dupion once by dyeing it in the machine - it lost its lustre and went all crinkled up. I'm surprised that you say silks are hot and don't breathe, because I would have thought as a natural fibre they'd breathe Ok. I haven't worn any taffeta yet but I've been happy enough with silk satins and crepes in the hot weather. I wore a silk crepe dress in Thailand, which is very hot and humid, and found it to be very comfortable.
Thank you, thank you, thank you! As a sewer on a tight budget for most of my life, I haven't ever worked with silk. Now that I am able to spend more money on my fabrics, I have started to look at silk. Yet I am very intimidated by it, as I have never dealt with it. This video has lessened some of that fear! I had recently purchased some silk from Burnley and Trowbridge and can see myself actually sewing with it. Now I just need to figure out what I want to make!
At your recommendation, I downloaded The Golden Thread and am listening to it at the moment. Being a history of fabric I'm so glad you're doing this series! 👏👏👏
I just want to let you know that this video has made my life sooo much easier, I've been looking for a silk for a gown for 2 weeks now and without being able to go into stores and see them in person its been a giant stress. Thank you for explaining everything in such detail with so many examples.
It’s like you read my mind! I was hoping to learn more about silk and this is an amazing resource. I genuinely feel like I should be paying for this as a masterclass.
That was sooooo helpful! I'm new to the sewing/costuming world and it's great to have all these explanations in one spot. I hope there's going to be other videos like these about different fibers and fabrics. And your videos are always a pleasure to watch! ❤
This was so educational!! I have only owned one outfit made of silk. I felt like a grown up! I was bought it at about age 10. I miss it! I think eventually I will save up for another outfit. :)
Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU for making this video. I've always loved and been fascinated by silks and NOW I have a much better understanding of the types, weaves, weights, etc. of my favorite fabric. And SUPER thanks for the break down of each in the description area!!! You ARE AWESOME!!!
I really want to thank you. I was trying to identify a type of tissus to reproduce one of my favorite dress. Books made poor descriptions of the different weaving than i cannot fing the rigth one. Now I can. Thanks again.
Unbelievable, how much I’ve learned from your videos, that I didn’t even know I didn’t know! Your depth of knowledge is unbelievable, thank you so much for sharing all this! That’s what YT (should have been) made for ❤️
Thank you for making this video! I’m familiar with many of the heavier weaves, but the lighter ones, like charmeusse, Georgette, and China Silk, have had me perplexed. Being able to see examples of each was incredibly helpful. I’d love to see a video on Rayon, particularly with the influx of “natural” or naturally sourced rayon. A lot of yarn purveyors are using that verbiage to describe rayon made from bamboo...but it’s still a synthetic fiber, correct? It confuses my poor wittle brain. Thank you again for sharing your wealth of knowledge! Be well, and have a joyous week.
Yeah, bamboo rayon is just rayon. There’s even some legal thing that happened with that. Once you break down the source of the cellulosic fiber to the point of processing it’s not any different no matter it’s source. Basically it’s man made but it’s not plastic 😂. I’ll definitely do more on that in the future though!
@@NicoleRudolph Rayon is one of the most perplexing fabrics to me also. I live in the Southern US where it's to hot for synthetics, I call polyester the Devil's fabric because it's hot as Hades. I'm trying to avoid making/wearing any plastic anymore. I'd noticed differences in the silk, cotton and that confusing rayon during the last couple summers. Thank you for this video it's going to be a reference for me many times.
Rayon is never really "natural" the way a fiber like cotton or linen is, since it can't be created without specialized chemical processes. But all rayon is naturally sourced - it's made from plant cellulose, whether that's bamboo or something else. The original form of rayon that was invented was viscose, which is made from wood pulp.
Rayon is considered a semi-synthetic fiber! It's made of wood pulp, making it a cellulose fiber at the end of the day, and it has similar properties to cotton in terms of stretch and moisture absorption. However, rayon was originally invented, iirc, as a silk mimic, so it's often woven similarly to silks of various kinds. It tends to be much more sleek than an equivalent cotton weave, and it's usually quite soft. It's rarely starched in the way silk would be. I will note, though, that the reason it's called a semi-synthetic fiber is that the wood pulp from which rayon is made has to undergo a lot of different chemical processes to become a viable fiber. So it's not the most environmentally friendly fiber out there. But, when I'm picking between rayon and polyester, it's rayon all the way. It breathes better and it's at least somewhat biodegradable.
So many thanks for this series. Showing the hand of the various fibers & weaves is incredibly helpful to me, as I can no longer physically sew but am exploring virtual clothing as a way to continue my passion. Seeing how the fabrics move, both the hand & the garments is great for determining fabric weighting in virtual worlds. As a former recreationist moving into the digital world, this is (runs out of superlatives!). Nicole, you are a goddess!
OMG, this is such a wonderful video. It’s so hard to learn about textiles without getting to touch everything. This was wonderfully helpful to see all the types and swatches and how they behave. Thank you!
This is an amazing video particularly for fashion students since not all programs go into this great of detail. Also, I'm slightly envious of your bolt collection of so many silks! Thanks Nicole for the continued education of your followers.
Listening to Nicole, and then seeing her handle samples of the various fabrics, is like walking through a historical novel. I could always look at a historical painting or photo and see garments resembling what the characters are wearing, but understanding from a root-source perspective the characteristics of Jane Austen's dimity or Laura Ingalls Wilder's calico or Dorothy L. Sayers' "crepe de chine demi-evening gown, three years out of fashion' is even better. This (and the linen programme I watched yesterday) is terrific, so thanks Ms Rudolph!
I feel like I have to watch this at least 6 times to absorb all of this info. It was fascinating!!!! (and, as someone one a v strict budget, I also really appreciate the brief synthetic silk info at the end)
Thank you so much for making this video! I'm relatively new to historical sewing (and sewing in general) and I find it so overwhelming going into a fabric store and not having a clear idea of what kind of fabric of the plethora out there are the best for my project. This helps so much. Please keep making more videos like this about other types of fabric. I'd really appreciate it. For example, I'm working on a pair of combinations right now that the pattern recommended I use batiste woven cotton. I don't fully understand what that is (a nice lightweight cotton?), but I order some through etsy (because none of my local fabric stores don't have a great selection of natural fiber fabrics) and it's so much nicer than what I found in my local stores. I would love it if I understood why and had the language to find what I'm looking for in my projects. Thank you so much again! This resource is truly wonderful.
This episode has some of the most amazing information. Thank You. I am not a historian... But sometimes have a very hard time figuring out a fabric of a piece I want or am buying. This is wonderful. Thank you.
I'm at last making my way through your Sewing 101 playlist. I feel so grateful for the knowledge that you have shared. The silk video, in particular, has helped me understand what types of silks to use for my projects.
This is an absolute gold mine! Seeing examples of the fabrics together with their name and such an informative description, as a self taught hobby sewist I am in heaven! 😍
Very informative and I'm actually kinda glad you released this, I needed something good to listen to while painfully hand stitching an entire wrap cape.
I feel like this is the beginning of a very long rabbit hole that I hope you continue with so so much. This video is hitting all of my geek out, must-know-all-the-things-about-the-thing buttons and I am so excited to learn more. I am a fiber artist who specializes in heritage breed sheep wools and I am beginning to branch off into sewing. As someone who cares way too much about all of the fiber/fabric properties, this video hits ALL of the vibes. Who knew there was so much to know about something that we literally walk around in every single day (textiles, I mean, not silk...even though that would be awesome)?
Wow the Erte coat featured here is exquisite. Would love to see more of it in a future video. I'm really enjoying your videos. I'm currently binge watching some while I'm hand sewing my current project 😊
Oh my gosh , i just have to say, your research is amazing. I was trained to become a weaver in my first apprenticeship for 3 years and to be honest this video whould cover a lot more then i had learned from my teachers. Awsome work.
Thank you for putting this info together in such a clear manner! I hope you make videos about every fabric in this way. This is not only interesting as heck but so practical for people learning to sew without institutional knowledge. Understanding the terminology to search for, the qualities, and the uses of fabric that are available is so crucial to prevent a sewing disaster (as you said because of the textile's fault not your own.)
Very helpful video.I found the crinkle test, and shown-in-a-garment views particularly helpful. Obviously a lot to retain and digest here, and a great reference to go back to again and again. Thanks, great job!
thank you for not bashing on people who may need blends or polyester! i feel like the historical costume community can be very harsh on those for being 'costume-y' or inaccruate. but truly, if we're taking the time to make personal historical clothes, than whatever conditions and criteria i personally need are the most important! sometimes it's hard for myself to believe that so hearing that there was helpful! :)
For someone looking to use silk for a project this has help so much thank you 🤗 I am having to make my own cloths again simply because I’m tired of poor fitting clothes but also I’m not able to wear manmade fabrics due to the cause of static build up they cause me tired of getting zapped when trying to pick things of the shelf when shopping😹😹😹😹 When I was at collage doing my fashion and pattern making course they never explained anything about the types of fabrics out there that could be used this is something that would have been very useful to have learned all those years ago😹😹😹😹 Thank you for the links to some of your favoured suppliers I have found that in many cases learning how they list their fabrics has helped me to find suppliers here in Australia 😹😹😹 I love the fact one is never too old to keep on learning new skills and much more 🤗🤗what’s that old saying 😹😹😹 “ I wish I knew then of what I know now”😹😹 I love your RUclips I have learned so much in the short time you have been here and your level of skill in so many areas has been nothing but short of stunning to watch and learn 🤗🤗I find that it has been fun waiting for each new video 🤗🤗 Thank you🤗🤗🤗
Your knowledge & experience of fabrics is encyclopaedic! ~ what an incredible & fascinating resource, Nicole ~ thank you. I had no idea that silk was so crease-resistant ~ most samples you scrunched sprang straight back into shape. The period garments you have made in silk, and beautifully modelled, are simply stunning ~ particularly the ones that give a dynamic two-tone shimmer according to drape/fall of light, and movement.
I have a chunk of silk velvet and was really curious about what it actually was (I realised it was silk, but it confused me). I'm glad I now know how it works and, that since it's mostly rayon, I shouldn't worry about using it since it's not that fancy!
I learned all this in school but I was so nice to be reminded of it and see the fabrics that you own. Im working a lot with damask at the moment and would definitely watch a video on that! Thank you!
Fabulous video!! I always questioned why silk wasn't designated as a "washable" fiber, now it makes so much sense. Thank you so much for taking the time to explain!!
First, thank you for this wonderfully informative video!!! Second, OMG! I am FANGIRLING over your Erté coat! It is gorgeous. I rewatched the few seconds of video when you wear it just to get more aesthetic coat content. LOVE IT!!!!!!
Thank you so much for putting this together, Nicole! I always get so confused about fabric types, but you laid it out really clearly! Also, petition to create an ASMR video of you crinkling fabric :D
I’ve been trying to identify my damaged silk top for 3 days so I can attempt repair, thank you for finally explaining all the different kinds! I believe what I have is a Crepe de chine silk. Thank you soooo much.
If you want a clear list of attributes for each fabric or a short list of my favorite silk sellers, check out the extended description!
I recently watched two programs here on Golden Spider Silk and Lotus Flower Silk. AMAZING. Just FYI they're on YT "Why It's So Expensive."Thank you for this Ms. Rudolph. Lisa Rae Rousseau
Ok, why is the internet telling me Mulberry Silk is the real thing? I mean, I'm certainly not holding you responsible for the internet, but it does seem to conflict.
I'm not fussed about historical accuracy, but I like to know what I'm purchasing. And, when it comes to synthetics especially, I like to know because I love rayon, I like nylon, but I cannot tolerate polyester.
Your videos are such a pleasure to watch and even just to listen to. And your wardrobe is fabulous. Thanks for sharing your insight and talent with us Nicole. I always look forward to your next one.
Rayon is a great fabric if you live in an area that has hot, humid weather and that can also have dry weather. I live in Oklahoma and wear a lot of it year around.
@@camerashycoco There are two ways to get a fiber out of mulberry trees: feed the leaves to silkworms OR make fiber out of the wood (like the "bamboo" cloth which is rayon made from bamboo instead of any other source of cellulose.
And, some fabric sellers lie about their products, or don't test them.
Amazing, super informative video. Thank you!
Best part in a fabulous video: seeing all the different historical garments she has made...especially the different 20s evening gowns
Finally I half-understand silks. This was both informative and digestible, really good job.
Seeing you handle the silk really helps understand how it should look and move and what the names actually mean in relation to the different types. Another really useful and informative video, thank you.
As someone who is just beginning on not only my historical costuming journey but my sewing journey period.... this was so very helpful. Thank you so much for explaining this in such an easy to understand manner. I would love to see you make a series of this focusing on different fibres. When you're just getting started it can be so overwhelming trying to figure out what fibres and what weaves to use for what purposes.
Yes!! I am in this camp as well!!
I second this!
I was just thinking the exact same thing! (am also a newbie at all this)
I third and fourth this.
Yes, this!
I'd love to see a similar video on wool - I just look at all the different ways wool fabric can be made and shudder and then walk away confused.
Thank you so much for explaining WHY not to get most silk wet or wash it! I've been wondering forever
AWESOME video!!! And I love how you did a "wrinkle grab/test" for each fabric. Thank you SOOO much for this guide.
Yes, agreed.
I had no idea that so many of our fabrics that are plastic now, started life as silk. I worked at a fabric store for about 2 years, and have handled all of these in the plastic version, but did not know that they were all silk based at one time. Thank you for this (now these) education. What a wonderful gift of your time.
I really enjoyed this video as it filled a few gaps in my knowledge of western silk. So many of them have several names for one kind of fabric.
Eastern Asian silks are something I know well and grew up with as all Sunday, holidays, and formal occaisions were hanboks made of silk. Cotton was used for funerals.
Some silks you've mentioned in this video, I've gone and machine washed and dried but that was mostly to shrink the fabric or remove sizing that causes me to have skin rashes. I like to find as many ways to use raw silk in projects. I tend to use it in place of linen or lighter canvas.
You are the only RUclipsr I watch with a pad to take notes on at hand. Thank you for all the wonderful videos.
This was INCREDIBLE!!! I loved that you showed a sample and crushed it (WITH THE SOUND). This was incredibly telling. It gives a sense of the hand of the fabric. Good Resource Video!!
THAT ERTE COAT! You looked like with walked out of a 1920's print! I want to see how you make THAT!
Oh Nicole, how you bring us all life with your wisdom
I often find myself confused by fabric types, and this was WILDLY useful. Thank you so much.
I have a silk taffeta waistcoat. It’s one of the few silk things that I have. A bird pooped on it. I had to have it dry cleaned. Exactly what you said would happen, happened. It lost some of its sheen and became wrinkled. I’ve been able to iron it, but it will never look quite how it did originally.
It Almost makes you want to go bird shooting!!
i hope you sent the bill to the bird in question, and they paid compensation. if not it may be worth considering suing them!
OH NO! Adelaide! How terrible! Was the waistcoat one you made? Or was it an antique?
@@michellecornum5856 - It was indeed the one that I made. When I discovered that, it was one of the few times when I got very angry at my bird.
@@AdelaideBeemanWhite Ah, yes, pets are like babies, they're going to make a mess out of the nice stuff -- the ratty old dress gets nothing, the best dress gets the worst of it.
Nicole, you are truly a natural teacher! The level of detail, depth and your way of explaining it all in a way that is actually understandable is just....*chef's kiss"😙👌🏻
I CANNOT WAIT to learn about any and all other types of fabric.
Thank you. 💗
Thank You Nicole for sharing all of your knowledge. I consider myself fortunate in that there have been no new additions to my wardrobe in the past 25 years that are not natural fibres. Well, a couple of my ‘70’s DVF dresses are acrylic but they live on by their own merit. I live on the Texas Gulf Coast where it’s hot as hell and humid. If I have any guests in the summer that haven’t lived here before, the first thing we do is shop for her some comfortable clothing items. I am so happy for the refresher course in fibres and fabrics you’re offering. Yeah, I could read and remind myself but you’re voice and method of speaking is soooo much nicer. Cotton, silk, wool and linen are the way to go here. And they feel almost naughty against the skin!
I'm similarly avoiding synthetic fibers. I'm in Central Iowa, which isn't quite as hot as Texas, but our summers are so humid, it feels like you're breathing soup. I spent last summer avoiding polyester at all costs and only wearing cotton, linen, or rayon, and mostly wore dresses. I was the most comfortable I've ever been in winter, despite having an inefficient air conditioner.
I recently moved to San Antonio and my Colorado wardrobe doesn't cut it. Which stores do you take your guests to? What do you encourage them to get? I love my Eddie Bauer V-neck tshirts, but I have no clue what the fabric is! 😆
Omg that Erte coat!! Its probably a lot but I think many of us would love a video of you going through some of your favourite makes! They're all gorgeoussss
This fabric series is a godsend! You are very good at giving a concise but very in depth description of all these different textiles. Also, I would love a video on how the style of silk damasques have changed over the centuries please rant on forever
Thank you so much for this!!! For the layperson who doesnt have an extensive history of fabric knowledge and basically no clue on the differences, this is a goldmine! So thank you so much and I look so much to this series.
*Thank you* for explaining the difference between woven threads and sewing threads. There's a myth in some historical sewing circles that you can just pull threads out of your fabric and use them to sew. I've tried to explain that all that really does is make an inherently weak seam, but your explanation is so much more eloquent than mine!
Yes, very important point!
I briefly considered it but then I tried to do the pulled thread method to cut linen and yeah that quickly put me off that idea.
I’m sure that there is a small grain of truth in the belief. Maybe emergency repair of a garment darning would be less evident if done that way. It might maybe work with a different fabric though I doubt it would have been for sewing actual seams.
@@robintheparttimesewer6798 I have heard of that for emergency seams, but yeah definitely not something to do regularly
@@robintheparttimesewer6798 I also want to add that there are cases where either the warp or weft threads will be stronger than the other (I can’t remember which it is rn) and then that would also be ideal for darning. I have no idea if this is the case for woven silk, but perhaps this is the origin of the myth?
I can't speak for other brands, but I've washed the Mood organza with really good results. I wash by hand, and it retains its stiffness after thoroughly drying. I thought I'd ruined it the first time, since it gets flowy while wet, but after it's dry, it's back to being nice and crisp. I think it's a good option if you're like me and hate having to go to the cleaners for everyday items.
Aaaaahhhhh this is literally the video I've been needing foreverrrrrrr! Thank you! I feel like such a more confident shopper already!
Greetings, feeling immensely grateful for your truly knowledgeable contribution at making humanity greatly educated on silk. Indeed you have full command and deep understanding of silk. Your video is spot on. Thank you for a genuine and solid video. Indebted to you forever. Thank you for your generosity in sharing your knowledge so selflessly. Heartfelt prayers for your even greater health, happiness, success and prosperity. Godspeed ❤️❤️
I should have taken notes while watching, but I don't mind. This video is worth watching multiple times. Thank you for a very informative video - and all those gorgeous fabrics
That’s why I saved it! I will definitely want to watch again and find it easily!
I don't work with fabrics or clothing in any way (except for..like.. wearing clothes) and I find this video sooooo educating and entertaining. Not only do you have a beautiful and calm voice to easily entertain someone for more than 30 min, but this excursion into all the different types of silks there are and how they differ is so utterly fascinating.
I have no idea if a similiar video makes sense (meaning there are enough different types of another fabric to elaborate on them) but if so, I would love to learn more about other fabrics as well.
Thank you for this great content and for educating me.
This video is incredible! Whenever I am looking to buy fabric of any kind, I get so overwhelmed by the number of options available and the minuet distinctions between different types of fabrics. This was so helpful and informative, it cleared up a lot of questions I had and I am now way less intimidated by the idea of buying silk!
Goodness, you're so knowledgeable! And you not only share all this amazing knowledge, you also show the absolutely scrumptious fabrics and gorgeous, gorgeous outfits!
I'm a drapery designer . I've been in this business for 35 years.
When I was a child the movie Gone With the Wind where Scarlett made a dress out of the velvet drapery stuck with me ..
I'm a fabric fanatic. You are speaking my language
. I love your chanel. You must go to Lyon France and see the old silk mills .. what an experience .
I wash every fabric, even taffeta and organza, because the factory sizing is really really bad to have against your skin and can cause medical problems, especially if you have asthma.
It takes a much longer time to re-size/startch them after washing, but it's so much safer for you.
Fellow asthmatic here
So I should wash my wool before sewing from it do I?
@@Yan-ri2jg If you want to wash wool, you can; HOWEVER, make sure you use the cold/cold (or at most warm/cold) setting on the washer, and the "knit/delicates" or "hand wash" setting--any setting that turns off the agitator of the machine. If you have access to a front loading washer, even better. DO NOT put it in the dryer; hang it up and let it air dry, iron it dry--anything but the dryer.
Wool felts due to the combination of heat and friction and soap and water speed up the process. (My mutti accidentally felted her first pair of hand-knit socks by wearing them with nubby-soled slippers, no water required.)
All that said, I would still HIGHLY recommend only washing a sample of your fabric first, instead of taking a risk with a whole cut of nice wool.
@@Yan-ri2jg I always do, but wool cna be temperamental. Avoid temperature shocks (hot to cold or cold to hot) and agitation while wet if it's not superwash, as that will cause felting and shrinkage. I usually wash gentle cycle on cold, and then air dry until it's mostly dry. I finish up with a pressing with lots of Best Press to bring it back to a nicely workable hand.
How do you starch them or get the proper texture back?
@@nicolemulready6329 I use Best Press or Faultless Starch, but that's probably because the theater I worked for was sponsored by Faultless so that was the brand we always used. I assume any spray starch will do. Homemade ones work, but they spoil quickly if not used.
This is STELLAR content, I so so so hope you make this a whole series. I, like so many others, am just starting out in my own journey as a clothes-maker and content like this is super helpful as well as interesting.
Thank you so much for this. I don't do historical costuming, but it's not easy finding different types of silk in person and I didn't know the terminology well enough to feel comfortable shopping online. I'm saving the video for future reference.
This is unbelievably helpful and much appreciated. As a newbie I am quite intimidated and nervous about using silk. There is so much to know and figure out. But after watching this, I feel much better about using it in the future. On an interesting note, when I lived and taught in South Korea, we took the kids on a field trip to a museum about the harvesting and making of silk. Everyone got a silkworm cocoon and was shown how to pull the thread free and into a little ball. It was fascinating.
Perfect timing on this video as I needed to know the differences of SILK this weekend!! Especially silk taffeta versus dupioni/shatung and it’s function. Also, I’m trying to make my first corset and determine which silk to use for the outer fabric. Thank you!!
As a longtime spinner and beginning weaver this was fascinating to me. Silk is an amazing fiber to work with from the cocoon all the way to the finished garment.
Omg I'm so excited for this series! It's so hard to find information on different fabrics like this
I am delighted by all the knowledge in this video! Also looking forward to your series on man made fabrics especially rayon vs polyester imitating silk
This is really excellent, and I salute you for explaining the fiber-to-fabric process in such a clear way! Spinning is not the easiest of topics to explain, nor is weaving.
Thank you! This is very helpful (I especially appreciate that you have the words written down, because sometime it's hard to guess how things are spelled). I have a hard time looking for fabric locally (and add to that that I often have to translate the fabric name, because some things are named differently here (e.g. rayon is called viscose here)), so this is a great resource to come back to and actually see the different fabrics move before I go buy them online.
Viscose is actually a particular type of Rayon! So rayon itself can be far more general (there are even some types that are apparently slightly combustible...)
@@NicoleRudolph That'll be the cellulose. I've been working with rexine recently, used widely in automotive applications as a cheap alternative to leather up to the 1950s, and it seems that it was replaced by petrochemical based vinyls because they were cheaper and more fire retardant. Cellulose seems to have been the go-to for 'proto synthetics' (for want of a better description) and pops up all over the place in the early 20th century for everything from buttons to fabrics to camera film, I wonder if it was the inspiration for the Flanders and Swann song The Wompom.
@@NicoleRudolph Is that slightly combustible in the same way a doctor says "You're going to feel a little pinch"
@@michellecornum5856 omg that gave me such a good laugh 😂
This is sooooo helpful! Thank you so much
This is awesome! Liziqi has a sericulture video if anyone wants to see how much hand work goes into it. She was making bedding for her grandmother but it’s a great overview of the process. I ruined a silk blouse my dad had brought back from Singapore. Got something on it and it was ruined with washing. I won’t use it now without prewashing the fabric so I can hand wash it. Thank you for this, I knew many of these fabrics by name only.
This is the most comprehensive and best explained fiber/textile overview I have ever seen, heard, or read! Excited for future topics in this series. Only way it could be improved would be small graphics or drawings showing zoomed-in diagrams of the weave structures as you explain them (which is a lot more effort on your part since you are using all original content! Maybe a pen-and-paper drawing or little photo of a demonstration with colored strings of the various weave types would be doable).
I work at a big name fabric store and I've had a vague understanding of a lot of these terms and it's so interesting learning where they come from and what they mean.
Well, this video came at the perfect time. Kind of ominous actually. Thanks Nicole, as always!
This series is SOOO helpful; thank you! I’ve always struggled finding good sources to help me understand the difference between the different kinds of fabrics, and having a video with explanations has been so incredibly useful. Thank you for taking time to make these!
So helpful! There's nearly no silk in the stores where I live and I wanted to order samples online but didn't know whoch kinds of silk I should pay more attention to according to my sewing plans. I was also suprpised at the end! I was under the impression that silk is flowy and breathable fabric and whenever I was hot in commercial silk garments I though "bah! it's because of all the synthetics added! If only it was natural fibers!" Turns out I was onloy partially right
This is excellent! For those wondering, I've had good results washing silk satins and silk crepes - I think the main issue with washing silk is removing the sizing Nicole mentioned and the satins and crepes don't really have it. Just make sure you wash them on a gentle cycle with delicates detergent. I utterly ruined some dupion once by dyeing it in the machine - it lost its lustre and went all crinkled up.
I'm surprised that you say silks are hot and don't breathe, because I would have thought as a natural fibre they'd breathe Ok. I haven't worn any taffeta yet but I've been happy enough with silk satins and crepes in the hot weather. I wore a silk crepe dress in Thailand, which is very hot and humid, and found it to be very comfortable.
Thank you, thank you, thank you! As a sewer on a tight budget for most of my life, I haven't ever worked with silk. Now that I am able to spend more money on my fabrics, I have started to look at silk. Yet I am very intimidated by it, as I have never dealt with it. This video has lessened some of that fear!
I had recently purchased some silk from Burnley and Trowbridge and can see myself actually sewing with it. Now I just need to figure out what I want to make!
At your recommendation, I downloaded The Golden Thread and am listening to it at the moment. Being a history of fabric I'm so glad you're doing this series! 👏👏👏
Oh my god I'm finally going to get an answer to my "what the heck is silk dupioni" question. Thank you!
This is the most detailed video about silks I've ever watched.
Oh gosh Nicole, that antique brocade is just wow
I just want to let you know that this video has made my life sooo much easier, I've been looking for a silk for a gown for 2 weeks now and without being able to go into stores and see them in person its been a giant stress. Thank you for explaining everything in such detail with so many examples.
It’s like you read my mind! I was hoping to learn more about silk and this is an amazing resource. I genuinely feel like I should be paying for this as a masterclass.
I've anted to make some silk slips for a while so I was thrilled to see Nicole take on this topic...hugely informative...
I am so excited to see this fabric series! Beyond cotton and linen, I need a guide for garment fabrics.
Noil/Matka is one of my favorite fabrics for all time. Not for historical reasons, just for my love of it.
Goodness, what a wonderful and informational video. Always excited for an upload from you, you are thoroughly entertaining 😄
That was sooooo helpful! I'm new to the sewing/costuming world and it's great to have all these explanations in one spot. I hope there's going to be other videos like these about different fibers and fabrics. And your videos are always a pleasure to watch! ❤
This was so educational!! I have only owned one outfit made of silk. I felt like a grown up! I was bought it at about age 10. I miss it! I think eventually I will save up for another outfit. :)
I love how much we can learn through your videos. thanks for sharing
I could watch this over and over. The tremendous amount of details! I just love this video! Thank you 😊
Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU for making this video. I've always loved and been fascinated by silks and NOW I have a much better understanding of the types, weaves, weights, etc. of my favorite fabric. And SUPER thanks for the break down of each in the description area!!! You ARE AWESOME!!!
I really want to thank you. I was trying to identify a type of tissus to reproduce one of my favorite dress. Books made poor descriptions of the different weaving than i cannot fing the rigth one. Now I can. Thanks again.
Unbelievable, how much I’ve learned from your videos, that I didn’t even know I didn’t know! Your depth of knowledge is unbelievable, thank you so much for sharing all this! That’s what YT (should have been) made for ❤️
Thank you for making this video! I’m familiar with many of the heavier weaves, but the lighter ones, like charmeusse, Georgette, and China Silk, have had me perplexed. Being able to see examples of each was incredibly helpful. I’d love to see a video on Rayon, particularly with the influx of “natural” or naturally sourced rayon. A lot of yarn purveyors are using that verbiage to describe rayon made from bamboo...but it’s still a synthetic fiber, correct? It confuses my poor wittle brain.
Thank you again for sharing your wealth of knowledge! Be well, and have a joyous week.
Yeah, bamboo rayon is just rayon. There’s even some legal thing that happened with that. Once you break down the source of the cellulosic fiber to the point of processing it’s not any different no matter it’s source. Basically it’s man made but it’s not plastic 😂. I’ll definitely do more on that in the future though!
@@NicoleRudolph Rayon is one of the most perplexing fabrics to me also. I live in the Southern US where it's to hot for synthetics, I call polyester the Devil's fabric because it's hot as Hades. I'm trying to avoid making/wearing any plastic anymore. I'd noticed differences in the silk, cotton and that confusing rayon during the last couple summers. Thank you for this video it's going to be a reference for me many times.
Rayon is never really "natural" the way a fiber like cotton or linen is, since it can't be created without specialized chemical processes. But all rayon is naturally sourced - it's made from plant cellulose, whether that's bamboo or something else. The original form of rayon that was invented was viscose, which is made from wood pulp.
Yep, there is rayon made from banana leaves, corn, even milk proteins!
Rayon is considered a semi-synthetic fiber! It's made of wood pulp, making it a cellulose fiber at the end of the day, and it has similar properties to cotton in terms of stretch and moisture absorption. However, rayon was originally invented, iirc, as a silk mimic, so it's often woven similarly to silks of various kinds. It tends to be much more sleek than an equivalent cotton weave, and it's usually quite soft. It's rarely starched in the way silk would be.
I will note, though, that the reason it's called a semi-synthetic fiber is that the wood pulp from which rayon is made has to undergo a lot of different chemical processes to become a viable fiber. So it's not the most environmentally friendly fiber out there. But, when I'm picking between rayon and polyester, it's rayon all the way. It breathes better and it's at least somewhat biodegradable.
So many thanks for this series. Showing the hand of the various fibers & weaves is incredibly helpful to me, as I can no longer physically sew but am exploring virtual clothing as a way to continue my passion. Seeing how the fabrics move, both the hand & the garments is great for determining fabric weighting in virtual worlds. As a former recreationist moving into the digital world, this is (runs out of superlatives!). Nicole, you are a goddess!
OMG, this is such a wonderful video. It’s so hard to learn about textiles without getting to touch everything. This was wonderfully helpful to see all the types and swatches and how they behave. Thank you!
Thanks Nicole! Fascinating and comprehensive guide to silk textiles!
Love it 😍
Going to watch this again and again until it all sinks in. Thank you so much Nicole!
This is an amazing video particularly for fashion students since not all programs go into this great of detail. Also, I'm slightly envious of your bolt collection of so many silks! Thanks Nicole for the continued education of your followers.
Listening to Nicole, and then seeing her handle samples of the various fabrics, is like walking through a historical novel. I could always look at a historical painting or photo and see garments resembling what the characters are wearing, but understanding from a root-source perspective the characteristics of Jane Austen's dimity or Laura Ingalls Wilder's calico or Dorothy L. Sayers' "crepe de chine demi-evening gown, three years out of fashion' is even better. This (and the linen programme I watched yesterday) is terrific, so thanks Ms Rudolph!
I feel like I have to watch this at least 6 times to absorb all of this info. It was fascinating!!!! (and, as someone one a v strict budget, I also really appreciate the brief synthetic silk info at the end)
Thank you so much for making this video! I'm relatively new to historical sewing (and sewing in general) and I find it so overwhelming going into a fabric store and not having a clear idea of what kind of fabric of the plethora out there are the best for my project. This helps so much. Please keep making more videos like this about other types of fabric. I'd really appreciate it. For example, I'm working on a pair of combinations right now that the pattern recommended I use batiste woven cotton. I don't fully understand what that is (a nice lightweight cotton?), but I order some through etsy (because none of my local fabric stores don't have a great selection of natural fiber fabrics) and it's so much nicer than what I found in my local stores. I would love it if I understood why and had the language to find what I'm looking for in my projects.
Thank you so much again! This resource is truly wonderful.
This episode has some of the most amazing information. Thank You. I am not a historian... But sometimes have a very hard time figuring out a fabric of a piece I want or am buying. This is wonderful. Thank you.
I'm at last making my way through your Sewing 101 playlist. I feel so grateful for the knowledge that you have shared. The silk video, in particular, has helped me understand what types of silks to use for my projects.
This is an absolute gold mine! Seeing examples of the fabrics together with their name and such an informative description, as a self taught hobby sewist I am in heaven! 😍
Very informative and I'm actually kinda glad you released this, I needed something good to listen to while painfully hand stitching an entire wrap cape.
I feel like this is the beginning of a very long rabbit hole that I hope you continue with so so much. This video is hitting all of my geek out, must-know-all-the-things-about-the-thing buttons and I am so excited to learn more. I am a fiber artist who specializes in heritage breed sheep wools and I am beginning to branch off into sewing. As someone who cares way too much about all of the fiber/fabric properties, this video hits ALL of the vibes. Who knew there was so much to know about something that we literally walk around in every single day (textiles, I mean, not silk...even though that would be awesome)?
Wow the Erte coat featured here is exquisite. Would love to see more of it in a future video. I'm really enjoying your videos. I'm currently binge watching some while I'm hand sewing my current project 😊
Oh my gosh , i just have to say, your research is amazing.
I was trained to become a weaver in my first apprenticeship for 3 years and to be honest this video whould cover a lot more then i had learned from my teachers. Awsome work.
Thanks for this! I love how you have examples in motion. That red 30s dress is gorgeous!❤💃
Thank you for putting this info together in such a clear manner! I hope you make videos about every fabric in this way. This is not only interesting as heck but so practical for people learning to sew without institutional knowledge. Understanding the terminology to search for, the qualities, and the uses of fabric that are available is so crucial to prevent a sewing disaster (as you said because of the textile's fault not your own.)
Very helpful video.I found the crinkle test, and shown-in-a-garment views particularly helpful. Obviously a lot to retain and digest here, and a great reference to go back to again and again. Thanks, great job!
thank you for not bashing on people who may need blends or polyester! i feel like the historical costume community can be very harsh on those for being 'costume-y' or inaccruate. but truly, if we're taking the time to make personal historical clothes, than whatever conditions and criteria i personally need are the most important! sometimes it's hard for myself to believe that so hearing that there was helpful! :)
For someone looking to use silk for a project this has help so much thank you 🤗 I am having to make my own cloths again simply because I’m tired of poor fitting clothes but also I’m not able to wear manmade fabrics due to the cause of static build up they cause me tired of getting zapped when trying to pick things of the shelf when shopping😹😹😹😹
When I was at collage doing my fashion and pattern making course they never explained anything about the types of fabrics out there that could be used this is something that would have been very useful to have learned all those years ago😹😹😹😹
Thank you for the links to some of your favoured suppliers I have found that in many cases learning how they list their fabrics has helped me to find suppliers here in Australia 😹😹😹 I love the fact one is never too old to keep on learning new skills and much more 🤗🤗what’s that old saying 😹😹😹 “ I wish I knew then of what I know now”😹😹
I love your RUclips I have learned so much in the short time you have been here and your level of skill in so many areas has been nothing but short of stunning to watch and learn 🤗🤗I find that it has been fun waiting for each new video 🤗🤗 Thank you🤗🤗🤗
Thank you Nicole this was so thought through! I have learnt so much from your channel already, can't wait for more like this 😊
Your knowledge & experience of fabrics is encyclopaedic! ~ what an incredible & fascinating resource, Nicole ~ thank you. I had no idea that silk was so crease-resistant ~ most samples you scrunched sprang straight back into shape. The period garments you have made in silk, and beautifully modelled, are simply stunning ~ particularly the ones that give a dynamic two-tone shimmer according to drape/fall of light, and movement.
I have a chunk of silk velvet and was really curious about what it actually was (I realised it was silk, but it confused me). I'm glad I now know how it works and, that since it's mostly rayon, I shouldn't worry about using it since it's not that fancy!
I learned all this in school but I was so nice to be reminded of it and see the fabrics that you own. Im working a lot with damask at the moment and would definitely watch a video on that!
Thank you!
Iam compelled to praise your work and knowledge as all these comments I read,you're freaking awesome 🥰🥰🥰😎😎
Also, WOW that taffeta close-up and scrunch shot! I had no idea, it looks like the most delicious wrapping paper or candy wrapping.
I love your informative videos. And the fact that you acknowledge the limitations of your (very extensive) knowledge. Thank you!
I am so excited for videos on other fabrics. This was unbelievably helpful for a novice sewer who has a huge amount to learn.
Fabulous video!! I always questioned why silk wasn't designated as a "washable" fiber, now it makes so much sense. Thank you so much for taking the time to explain!!
Thank you! I am enthralled.
First, thank you for this wonderfully informative video!!! Second, OMG! I am FANGIRLING over your Erté coat! It is gorgeous. I rewatched the few seconds of video when you wear it just to get more aesthetic coat content. LOVE IT!!!!!!
This is perfect! I really appreciate the work you've put into explaining all the differences.
Thank you so much for putting this together, Nicole! I always get so confused about fabric types, but you laid it out really clearly! Also, petition to create an ASMR video of you crinkling fabric :D
I’ve been trying to identify my damaged silk top for 3 days so I can attempt repair, thank you for finally explaining all the different kinds! I believe what I have is a Crepe de chine silk. Thank you soooo much.