HELLO FRIENDS!! the williamsburg x safiya x abby x nicole collab is finally nigh!! i hope you guys enjoy it & please make sure to check out abby, nicole, and cheyney's youtube channels linked in the description! ps - for legal reasons, the panty thing is a joke 🌝 what did you guys think of my final look?? xoxo, saf (btw - CW = colonial williamsburg lol)
You should watch Abby Cox’s video: I took Safiya Nygaard to study 1700s gowns & stays at Colonial Williamsburg! There’s a black dress in the collection that’s pretty neat.
@englishatheart lol I've seen you replying in many comments just whining, complaining, being offended, and miserable. Stop replying if you're going to be so damn miserable and annoying to people who share their opinions without hurting you or anyone bruh like damn. Saf LOVES black and op was just pointing that out dude damn.
So there’s a candle company that has a scent for every us state. She should combine all 50 states to find the scent of America. It’s called homesick candles! Copy and paste if you agree and want her to do this!!!
I have been looking for the one I made for my daughter to be L R R H for Halloween when she was 15. Made of pink carnation silk velvet... I need to wear it for my own costume now! Where did it go? ? You've reminded me of it's glory!
Hey! Did you know God is three in one!? The Father, The Son, and The Holy Spirit! Bless them! Jesus died for our sins, rose from the dead, and gives salvation to everyone who believes in him and follows his commandants! Have a blessed day, everyone! ❤
Blown away by how thoughtful your explanation of understanding the context of history was at the beginning. Will always be impressed by your integrity and intellect - you’re such a valuable and unique voice on RUclips.
i was a boy. they were 138 girls. can i make it any more obvious? thats right, i had a crazy dream last night. HAHAHAHAHA!!! im the funniest youtube star ever. youre welcome for laughing dear j3n
I can't imagine how hard it would be to decide to take on a re-enactment role of an enslaved person. The history needs to be remembered though and the culture that was born through such pain and suffering. Mad respect to these people that take on these roles.
It's less of a burden to take on and more of an honor to show the strength of the people in that time. That way we can understand and appreciate the strength that we have now. A whole culture of people lived and worked and created families in a time that they were demeaned and abused. And then survived, and inspired movements and laws to change and colored people in our government. My mother played the first educated slave in a reenactment museum like this and there was so much power in the lessons that she taught people. How in America, even now, you can do anything.
@@michaelajordan4189 Nah it can definitely be a burden. Some guests are disrespectful and use the reenactment opportunity to be rude and dehumanize slave and working class reenactors.
@chocotasties that's true, but people are ignorant everywhere about everything. Teachers get made fun of, but they still know they have a job to do. I would rather people be educated and rude then uneducated and oblivious because at least if they know then there's no other reason for them being rude then them just being a disrespectful person. And I promise you most actors like myself and my family, don't care about the opinions of ignorant people
Yes, as well as the lands that belonged to Indigenous Peoples that everyone is THRIVING on. While we Died and struggled, to today. Thank you @Safiya Nygaard for mentioning this once in this video.
Cheyney McKnight (ex-CW interpreter) has a great video about just this. She loves doing interpretation about the lives of enslaved people but she had to quit CW because of the emotional toll and harassment and disrespect from guests
Safiya’s full outfit, hat & shawl/cape, does sort of look like if little red riding hood grew up to be a courtiers poison maker. It’s a vibe and I love it
Vintage clothing, not vintage values! YES! One of my favorite people says "if I want to look and dress like a 1959s housewife while simultaneously acting the exact opposite then that's my perogative"
@@roseg2239 did you stretch before you made that leap???? CLOTHING has nothing to do with the values of the person. Clothing is societal and everyone in the past wore these clothes. If you can't see a difference between clothing and morals you need help. And don't you DARE make that comparison to me again. I like wearing 1950s clothes. I'm not a n@zi. My cousin was in Auschwitz. I know all too well the horrors they committed. I listen and I learn and I try to do better every day. HOW I DRESS HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH THAT.
Rachel Maksy made a video on this! She got so many people on to say this kind of thing. I loved it. It's called "Born in the Wrong Era" & Other Misconceptions about Dressing Vintage.
Some vintage values are bad but there were also alot of people that were good people with good values, just like today and every nation and race has bad past too, some things are still going on but hidden. Vintage values can also be good, why not shine a light of the good values a lot of people had, like family values, hard work, life skills, modesty, helping elderly, etc....there was alot of good people too and good things in our past too.
Even though I'm not a history buff/expert I've always gravitate towards the fashion aspect of it. I wouldn't mind at all going there as part of a vacation it's very fascinating ❤!
Just a neat little thing I’d love to mention! As someone who’s worked at the Renaissance Festival before, we have a somewhat very similar way of running things! No modern words, many hot layers, and no modern technologies or inventions in sight (my cloak helped with hiding SO much “contraband”!). Everything is just in the Elizabethan period, so just a hundred or two hundred years older than Colonial Williamsburg! It’s such a fun place to work and everything that happens between the cast is always story-worthy! You should totally make a video on visiting a Renaissance Festival sometime soon!
yes! i'm a faire brat raised by rennies, and am always hiding contraband in my boots or my cloak lol. my favorite thing is making up silly faire names for objects; magic sundial = watch, box of fairies = fan in the booth, scrying mirror = phone etc.
fun fact: similar to colonial shoes, pointe shoes (the hard ones ballet dancers wear) are also not made for a left or right foot specially and are broken in for each foot as they’re worn!
@@ryebread375_6 oh shit i didn’t know that! i mean i don’t think mine personally could be bc my fitter made some foot-specific adjustments to each shoe but for ppl who go through them fast that’s handy
What's even more amazing (for me) is after the video with Saf, Abby and Nicole, I come across this comment from Morgan with a response from Angela.... all my faves in one place! If only there had been more than a split second of Bernadette it would be perfection!
Why does Safiya finally getting back to Colonial Williamsburg feel like a series finale of a tv show? Like I feel like this is the climax we have been waiting for for years.
I appreciate how thoughtful you are about contextualising historical fashion. I love fashion history and sewing, but i see so many people refusing to acknowledge the economic disparity and slavery without being so aggressively defensive. Great video as always saf!
Exactly! I'm glad you agree, I've seen some nasty comments around, which is kind of unusual on Safiya's channel. As she said herself, we can appreciate vintage clothing without conforming to the vintage values
wow, a youtuber who acknowledges anything 1700 including the lives of the poor or enslaved people during the period and eductate the viewers about their everyday lives. not suprising for a queen like saf
All the people she mentioned and worked with in the video who are also on RUclips talk about that stuff too. Abby Cox has some downright fascinating videos about feminist issues as well.
As someone who was born and raised in Williamsburg, had friends who were junior interpreters, dated someone in the fife and drum, the whole nine yards, this is the best video to come across. I really appreciate someone who loves my home town lol
As someone who spent several years as a historical interpreter (at Conner Prairie in Indiana, living it up 1836-style), the "hide your non-period stuff in your apron" thing is so real. Also, crotchless underwear. That.
I've gone to Conner Prairie several times since that was what was closest to us and I loved it every single time! I would get so intrigued and drawn into how life was back then. Thanks to you guys who worked there and brought it back to life! Thank you!
Oh hey! I live in Noblesville! We stan Conner Prairie, y’all do important work and I wanted to work there as a child so badly that I begged to be homeschooled so I could (didn’t work)
I cannot express how much I've missed half hour chunks of Saf and Ty talking about very interesting things. I know it's a lot more work than the livestream, and I enjoy those too, but I have ADHD and the short videos with facts packed in really speak to me. I also am FASCINATED with fashion history. This was WONDERFUL.
I loved the looks of the fancy dresses from pretty much anything 1930s and earlier, but never thought I was interested in fashion history UNTIL I started watching this channel. Honestly, it's like Magic School Bus for adults if it focussed on clothing instead of science
Thankyou for pointing out that stays are not meant to give people a tiny waist and that all classes of women wore them everyday, Bernadette Banner would be proud.
I feel like we have been waiting for this moment for years. Surprised Saf wasn’t screaming in the intro out of excitement. I mean it’s Williamsburg! Edit: really appreciate the enthusiasm for American history, lovely vid and Saf you looked gorgeous! Also DYING at Nicole’s crab walk at the end
@@micahthemessy so many nods! I wish Safiya could meet Morgan Donner and Bernadette Banner, too, to learn more about their favorite periods of dress. I also wish we could see Nicole teaching Safiya while Saf attempts to make herself a pair of shoes.
My parents were professional colonial re-enactors and this brought back sooo many memories! From the age of 3-13 I would go with them to all sorts of locations around the US and Canada. We made all our own clothes, using authentic patterns and materials, and being that I was a kid when they started, I got to experience a wide range of outfits from little girl style to the more grown-up garments that a teenager would have worn. When we were doing a show, we would literally camp out in the exact style of tents that they would have used during the American revolution, and we would cook on an open hearth outside, making recipes from the times. (They’re actually pretty tasty!) We camped out at Williamsburg several times and I remember our tent was right in that green you showed in this video! Such good times. Also, yes my dad is a history buff and he absolutely had a Gettysburg phase when I was a late teenager/in college! We used to go every summer! I’ve seen civil war battlefields all over the country lol
I'm literally crying at the shout out of historical context. It was beautifully done. Genuinely I cringe at how praised this era is while glossing over the horrendous realities of it. But it is also a key part of our (all Americans) history and culture that deserves to be explored. Context is key. And Adding that context made this video feel so safe to watch. Great Job guys👍🏾
It was not until the last minute of this video that I realized that “CW” stood for colonial Williamsburg and not the TV network. I was like wow CW must be sponsoring this video. I was thinking like stylists from the vampire diaries were there 😂
HONESTLY I thought the same thing, I was so confused, I was like the cw hasn't been profitable since it began, how? and then I realised oh they don't mean the network spn aired on
Im native american but can say, i love the fashion from then as well.. it was an aweful time period for our people but its our history. We cant change that. So we embrace it.
We cannot keep living with a victim mentality that’s exactly what the government wants so they can be able to manipulate us, they do it for division. We are all immigrants in the country that’s what’s the beauty of it because of all cultures.
Every race has gone through an awful period, every nation, even tribal natives to other tribes as well...everyone has sin in their past. I have Sioux in my blood also Jewish in my blood, along with all sorts of European but of course that doesn't matter my European blood, cuz somehow they are untouched(which they aren't untouched)but society lets me mention the past of my POC ancestors and their oppression, but guess what I wasn't there, neither was you, so why should I allow it to bug me to a point I have to mention it while enjoying learning about things I like from the past?
@@totesmegoatscrystal9688 You can't tell facts in today's society. Just like you can't point out that every race has enslaved (including black people, as Africa was enslaving its own people long before anyone else did, and they're the ones who sold/traded their own people to others), and every race has been enslaved (including white people). You can't point out how Native Americans suffered way worse in the US than other races, you can't point out how every race has racists in it and every race can experience racism. People refuse to acknowledge any history that shows that white people aren't the only ones to commit atrocities and have suffered atrocities themselves. We should of course acknowledge the horrible things that have happened throughout history, but all of it should be acknowledged and taught, not just specific areas.
@@englishatheart OK so this is a out peeve and I don't want to get deep into politics but African slavery was really different than American slavery. In African slavery slaves could make their own money and buy their freedom, and often if you were a slave it was because of debts you owed and could hopefully one day pay off. And historically everyone was a slave, or at least there were a few people who felt they owned everyone else. Mideveal Europen lords taking your taxes and your crops was nothing like what America did. Slavery is always wrong, but what old Americans did was not the usual sort of wrong.
Most things people think of as corsets in historical fashion (including corsets) were actually made to support the bust--they were essentially what women wore before bras came along. So, yes, they were sturdy, foundational garments, but not always meant to squish waists.
This was simply awesome! Come down to New Bern, NC and visit the Tryon Palace! New Bern is known as the Colonial Capitol! I honestly cannot express how much I LOVED this! It's nice to know there are others like me in the geek department!
I grew up in the same county as New Bern so seeing this comment really shocked and pleased me. Glad to see the Crystal Coast getting some recognition. I always loved the classical look of New Bern and visiting the small shops in town is always on my to-do list when I go there! Also Tryon Palace is soooo pretty, I loved the garden.
on my last trip to the States 2017 (Aussie here) I was doing an Outlander tour of Nth/Sth Carolinas following the Jamie/Claire trail...Tryon's Palace was one of the locations visited..got some lovely pic's in your gardens there.. we stayed overnight in one of the B&B's in the historical buildings...my bedroom had a wall of samplers hung from different ages..the oldest one was dated in the 1700's.. funnily enough, we found we were on the right path by the various links we found along the way like a few Brianna's, a pink quartz turtle charm in an Op shop (thrift store) and dragonfly garden chair in one of the historical places we visited and so forth.. we visited the battle field that Jamie went to that had a marshy river...they created a boardwalk through it and on that day it was drizzling, which added to the atmosphere of the area, I took some footage so you could hear the rain coming through the vegetation and how soreal it felt..
The moment you said “I’m gonna leave it to you guys to wonder whether I’m wearing something underneath or not” I immediately thought: “We’re talking about Safiya here. It’s obvious she committed to this 1000% and is /definitely/ not wearing anything underneath.” 🤣
I think that this is my favorite video you’ve ever done. I grew up in Williamsburg, and was a junior interpreter at Colonial Williamsburg for three years (junior interpreters are middle and high school age volunteers and the application process is intense). This was such a blast from the past for me! The last time I saw the inside of the costume warehouse was when I turned in my costume three days before I moved away. My 7th grade history teacher used to be the blacksmith. I used to carry all my contraband in my folded up apron, and my mom and I used to stop in that Wawa on our way home! This video was so much fun for me. A few differences in experience: my shoes for my costume were a similar design, but leather, not wool. My costume was meant to be a poorer person than your costume because of the house I worked in, so I didn’t have to wear stays or petticoats, just a cotton shirt that went over my shift and a cotton or wool skirt depending on season. They didn’t make us pomade our hair (thank god) and the break room was stocked with Gatorade (or hot chocolate, depending on the season) to pour in our official-issue colonial mugs and some pretty unhealthy snacks. It was such a fun experience for me that I’m so grateful for, and I’m glad you had such a good time too!!
@@safiya The viking village is located at Avaldsnes near the city of Haugesund and the Iron Age farm is at Ullanhaug, near the city of Stavanger😊 Would love to ser you explore your inner viking in a video there someday!❤️
The statement directly acknowledging the social atrocities committed during that time and the direct effect on the fashion instead of ignoring it. 👏🏻 10/10
It's one of the reasons I love dress history so much- it really shows just how interconnected everything is. Like, the growing popularity of cotton and how that was die to both slavery in the US and the British occupation of India and stealing how to process cotton form Indians (and then sometimes breaking their thumbs so they wouldn't have the competition from the skilled Indian artisans). But that is what led to the increased use of cotton at the end of the 18th century, and to it now being the most common of the natural fibres (even though it's also the worst of the natural fibres). I find that with looking into dress history, you can see how it all comes together into whatever the fashion of the time was. And also how fashion itself shaped geopolitics, and how one fashion trend leads to another. It's a fascinating subject! Though admittedly, I'm biased. It's also much more hands on and much less "great man theory" than a lot of other areas of historical study. You get a feel for what the average person felt, ad you feel a lot closer to them, because you're wearing what they wore, feeling the same sort of support and structure, moving the same way they moved. Memorising Generals and troop movements has nothing on dress history, imo
Oh this was just incredible. I absolutely adore learning more about historical clothing, and I'd say Safiya did a wondrous job at explaining everything. Especially the part about stays and corsets not being restricting and faint-inducing. Also I may have realized that I would be considered hot in 1770 standards. So that was nice. What a lovely video.
I appreciate you taking time to emphasize the crimes committed against various people because that is also a part of history and not just the intersting fashion elements. I have to agree with Tyler about you killing it, granny vibes and all.
Fun fact. I lived in Williamsburg 15 years ago and seeing the people dressed in colonial attire: pumping gas, talking on a cellphone, .etc. Happened, A LOT. 😂 Now I'm 30 min south, but visit regularly. Love that area.
thanks for the explaining what exactly Colonial Williamsburg is! As a Canadian, I thought it was just a small, maybe few buildings, living history museum. I didn't realize how vast and intricate it was.
I adore you! Started with the wedding videos as I am getting married in June and they just popped up. Then I got hooked on your Asian tour and totally loved the McDonald's wedding video. You are so funny and eclectic in the best of ways. Seeing you and Tyler together is beautiful, you two are so made for each other. I'm sorry to hear about your cat. I'm close to 60 in age, so I might not be typical, but who knows, of most of your subscribers. You just make my day.
i LOVE that you worked with actual dress historians, interpreters and costumers for this. it's always nice to see history being explained by the general and less niche side of media but i was super worried about a ton of misinformation in this, and thankfully i was proven wrong!! AND of course the inclusion of Black costumers when learning, since they played a HUGE part of the society and yet get actively ignored often enough that people just simply "didn't think they existed" before 1910. well done to both of you, your williamsburg team and to the shout outs mentioned!!
Yeah, the fact that she links us to look at people of colour for educating ourselves better, instead of pretending like she knows everything, is great. She's so good at the way she delivers information in her videos
Not only does historical give you a glimpse of the time period, it teaches you how quality garments were constructed with really cool techniques not seen in average clothing anymore. When you learn about new patterns/styles/fabrics/techniques it can open your mind (and wardrobe) to styles that may suit your body better AND be more comfortable than today's clothing. Natural fabrics are so much more comfortable on the skin and should definitely be a part of anyone's modern wardrobe.
Honestly I am sooooooo jealous of those shoes! They sound so nice in that they conform to your feet and become a left or right foot, it's almost meditative in a weird way.
as an abby cox, morgan donner, and bernadette banner fan, i love this video!!! you did such a good job explaining the historical context AND not villianizing stays. please do a victorian video with bernadette next!
I think she mentioned in her "dressing like it's 1967" video that the 1960s evening gown she wore belonged to her grandmother back in India. Her great uncle was in the United States and sent back fabric and a pattern so she could take it to a tailor to get it stitched. (Which was common for a lot of Indians who wore American/European clothing at the time. My grandmother did the same thing but she got her patterns from family in Australia)
@@cronchybo Pffff neolithic? All those new forms of stone tools? Nah, gimme some classic Mesolithic fashion. I would have gone further to Palaeolithic but we have surviving textile fragments from the Mesolithic period, whereas Palaeolithic so far it appears to have just been utilising animal skins, and a lot of the specific animals they'd have had access to are extinct so it would have to be closest possible. I guess she could do fallow deer skins. Not quite as awesome as the megafauna version (Megaloceros) but I guess she could make do.
One of my favorite videos you have ever done. I LOVE both "Not Your Mammas History" and "Nicole Rudolph" so much. It's amazing you got to work with them!
As someone who is a fan of you, CW, Abby AND Nicole, this feels like a video made for me and I am DELIGHTED. I loved Abby and Nicole's videos, so it was only a matter of time before the trio of videos was complete! Huzzah, indeed!
I'm sure people say this all the time, but you have an excellent narration voice. Every time I watch one of your videos, I'm instantly comforted and intrigued. Also really loved to see the subject of this one! I went to CW as a teen and loved it - this was so much fun to watch!
To me the smell of a Colonial Williamsburg gift shop is Leather, paper, and some specific type of maybe lye treated wood? So good. Hope you took some good whiffs for us. I LOVE these sorts of collabs. This is fantastic!
I'll never forget visiting sovereign hill, the Australian equivalent of colonial Williamsburg for a school camp and getting to dress up like an 1880s child and attend 1880s style schooling for 3 days, it was to this day the best thing I've ever done
Omg did you go to Yarrabee too? It was like a school in the 1800s or early 1900s, and you got to sit in a recreation of an old primary school and tour it for a day, it was so cool!
You are so lucky! I went as a girl to Williamsburg, VA. I was so fascinated by the actors and the clothing. One of the actors was shucking corn. She asked me to join her. She then asked where I lived. I told her New Orleans, and she said, "Oh, the Spanish Colony! Yes, I know it. What a great, far way for you to have traveled." Mind was blown. I thought I was time traveling for real there.
I'm just so thankful to that CW employee that sent that email. Without them I don't think Saf would have ever broken Tyler down enough to get back there.
Janae is so kind-when I visited last year, she talked with me for almost an hour about the history of their millinery shop and the process of it coming to be as part of CW. I had been looking forward to the millinery shop so much and she absolutely made it the highlight of my entire vacation! From one historical interpreter to another, it was one of those encounters that really drove home what I love about this work: the people and the passion behind it.
Loved your message at the beginning of the video about not Idealizing past life times but more remembering their past fashion trends! As a black woman I really appreciated this note so thanks!
Thank you for not being afraid to address the history of enslaved people as it relates to this video. Too often people feel like talking about it makes it too controversial but it’s important to talk about!
The first vintage RUclipsr I ever watched was Rachel Maksy. She opened the door to so many other vintage channels, like Bernadette Banner and Karolina Zebrowska. I adore them all so much for highlighting the “vintage style and not vintage values” motto 💕
I'm glad to hear that CW is continously addressing the ugly side of the history it portrays, and in a good way for its staff. I used to volunteer the Dickens Christmas Fair in San Francisco that is now going through a boycott for, among other things, not being a safe environment for its BIPOC performers. The San Francisco Chronicle did an article in its Datebook on 12/4/2021 for anyone who wants more information on the situation, but please don't do to Dickens Fair unless the people who run it get it together and listen to their performers.
@@Vix2066 ….but the BIPOC that WORK there feel differently, so I’d be inclined to believe them . When people talk about mistreatments, saying “but I enjoyed it/had a good time” is dismissive .
@@Vix2066 also, the op provided a source, which if you looked it up, is from San Francisco . I’m not saying this to be mean, but to say looking things up before you speak on them is important.
The fact that bots can respond to _the_ verified RUclips account's comment solidifies the idea that they're turning a blind eye to the bot issue. Fix the comments section RUclips 🤦🏻♀️
Oh my goodness! When our children were young, we took them to Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown several times. (I taught them history during those years using the American Girls books and resources as part of our curriculum!) Cutest thing was that my eldest were about nine years old- boy/girl twins. She wore the Felicity costume during our touring day(s) and he enthusiastically joined in on the “Felicity’s Tour”. We were with another brother/sister pair of similar age, and while the other boy was hanging back in embarrassment, our son joined in on the sewing of a pin cushion, learning to dance 18th century dances, and taking tea. When touring, our guide asked us why there were ladders leaning on the houses. History son (who had been listening to the Felicity books) said, “because they needed to be able to stop fires that a chimney’s spark might drop onto the thatched roof!” He surprised us all and made such a fun memory for me. He’s all-guy- ex Minor League Baseball player, but still loves to learn. And sister? She’s now teaching 2nd grade- the age she was when being taught and touring Williamsburg, VA. Thank you for letting me share and for bringing up these wonderful memories!
As someone who is moving to Mackinac Island in three days to start my first job as a historic interpreter, this came at the perfect time as someone who also took many a childhood trip to historic sites (including one very memorable trip to Colonial Williamsburg, which is kind of a dream job for me). I appreciate the shoutout at 0:58 :) I was also an American Girl obsessed kid, so that tracks. Also, my dad never left his Gettysburg phase. The 3 hour audio tour tape? It took us 6 HOURS. I think it was his version of Disney world.
Awesome! Mackinac Island is my happy place, heading back again this summer. Do you know which part of the island you'll be working at? The Fort, or another spot?
That's so incredible! I'd gladly sling fudge all day if it meant I could be on Mackinac Island. I visited with my partner and he had to drag me off (he knew he would as I am a historical costuming enthusiast, I made my entire bridal party and wedding dress historically correct mid Victorian dresses a couple years before) but I've vowed to return.
The smuggling of the food is what really took me astral projecting back to my days with Historical Reenactment. The amount of time I have drunk soda out of a medieval clay cup? Uncountable.
You lived the 12 year old me’s life dream to get to have a Colonial Williamsburg makeover! Must have been a tween girl in the mid-2000s thing (all the American Girl and Dear America books must have played a part!)
„It just smells like the gift shop at Colonial Williamsburg!“ - Saf melting every candle from Bath & Body Works together (2018) This video was so long in the making 😂
4:34 not me crying at how compassionate, considerate, lovely and kind they are to make this a key point in the video- and thinking back on comments they made about editing the footage, I know it was really important for them to have this message. It makes me so happy. Thank you for sharing your life with us, Safiya and Ty. 🥰
HELLO FRIENDS!! the williamsburg x safiya x abby x nicole collab is finally nigh!! i hope you guys enjoy it & please make sure to check out abby, nicole, and cheyney's youtube channels linked in the description! ps - for legal reasons, the panty thing is a joke 🌝 what did you guys think of my final look?? xoxo, saf (btw - CW = colonial williamsburg lol)
your videos have helped me in some of my darkest times. thank you so much for the laughs!
Making my 4 hour turned into a 8 hour train ride more fun!
i love that you know what libertys kids is!! it was my whole childhood!!!
I love your videos so much! I’m so glad I found your channel.
@@mak710 yeah me too. Especially the one about your cat. My dog died in January and so it made me feel not alone going through that.
Thank you Safiya for the shout out, and for shining a light on historical interpreters and tradespeople! 😍
SO happy you got a shoutout in her video! I love your work.
So happy Saf knew about your work and your fun and informative videos!
I was so excited to see you featured here Cheyney! Much love from Michaela Desimone from Keeler Tavern 🥰
Subbed!
I love your videos! It seems like time-travel!
Alternate title: Tyler following Safiya and her new friends back in time.
@Exposing The Lies 😂
YOOOO SHE LIKED MY COMMENT LESSS GOO!!! Been subbed for years☺️
Aka - Outlander.
Lol
the fact that Safiya still managed to fit the color black into her outfit is insane
It's honestly impressive. Can't say she isn't dedicated!
When there's a will Safiya finds a way
You should watch Abby Cox’s video: I took Safiya Nygaard to study 1700s gowns & stays at Colonial Williamsburg!
There’s a black dress in the collection that’s pretty neat.
How? Black is a prominent color. It isn't hard to find articles of period clothing that have the color black.
@englishatheart lol I've seen you replying in many comments just whining, complaining, being offended, and miserable. Stop replying if you're going to be so damn miserable and annoying to people who share their opinions without hurting you or anyone bruh like damn. Saf LOVES black and op was just pointing that out dude damn.
So there’s a candle company that has a scent for every us state. She should combine all 50 states to find the scent of America. It’s called homesick candles! Copy and paste if you agree and want her to do this!!!
lmao she better be paid cause that would be a litteral ad
wowowowoowowowow WOAH
Homesick candles are SOO EXPENSIVE THOUGH!!!
Dude that's a really cool idea!
Marylands scent is prob freaking old bay
On Wednesdays we wear ye Clokes o' carnation Velvett 💅
Salutations Bernadette! The costubers are truly all here 😄💚
Of course it’s you leaving sassy adorable comments! ✨💖✨
I have been looking for the one I made for my daughter to be L R R H for Halloween when she was 15. Made of pink carnation silk velvet... I need to wear it for my own costume now! Where did it go? ? You've reminded me of it's glory!
the crossover we needed but don't deserve 😍
Yaaaas!!!
Safiya saying “colonial Williamsburg” would be a dangerous drinking game.
Ooooh! This is nice!
Hey! Did you know God is three in one!? The Father, The Son, and The Holy Spirit! Bless them!
Jesus died for our sins, rose from the dead, and gives salvation to everyone who believes in him and follows his commandants!
Have a blessed day, everyone! ❤
Mwahaha!
Safiya is not at all responsible for any poisonings via alcohol incurred from reckless drinking games 👩⚖️
@@iwillsmiteyall hahaha
Blown away by how thoughtful your explanation of understanding the context of history was at the beginning. Will always be impressed by your integrity and intellect - you’re such a valuable and unique voice on RUclips.
Same thoughts during the intro.
i was a boy. they were 138 girls. can i make it any more obvious? thats right, i had a crazy dream last night. HAHAHAHAHA!!! im the funniest youtube star ever. youre welcome for laughing dear j3n
I have always been tempted to visit but the historical context discussed always bothered me...interestingly this has given food 4 thought
The historian in me was so excited to see time given to this context! Thank you Safiya and Tyler for this thoughtful move.
Couldn’t agree more!
I can't imagine how hard it would be to decide to take on a re-enactment role of an enslaved person. The history needs to be remembered though and the culture that was born through such pain and suffering. Mad respect to these people that take on these roles.
It's less of a burden to take on and more of an honor to show the strength of the people in that time. That way we can understand and appreciate the strength that we have now. A whole culture of people lived and worked and created families in a time that they were demeaned and abused. And then survived, and inspired movements and laws to change and colored people in our government. My mother played the first educated slave in a reenactment museum like this and there was so much power in the lessons that she taught people. How in America, even now, you can do anything.
@@michaelajordan4189 Nah it can definitely be a burden. Some guests are disrespectful and use the reenactment opportunity to be rude and dehumanize slave and working class reenactors.
@chocotasties that's true, but people are ignorant everywhere about everything. Teachers get made fun of, but they still know they have a job to do. I would rather people be educated and rude then uneducated and oblivious because at least if they know then there's no other reason for them being rude then them just being a disrespectful person. And I promise you most actors like myself and my family, don't care about the opinions of ignorant people
Yes, as well as the lands that belonged to Indigenous Peoples that everyone is THRIVING on. While we Died and struggled, to today.
Thank you @Safiya Nygaard for mentioning this once in this video.
Cheyney McKnight (ex-CW interpreter) has a great video about just this. She loves doing interpretation about the lives of enslaved people but she had to quit CW because of the emotional toll and harassment and disrespect from guests
This was such a fun time and I can’t wait to hang out and plot more historical clothing shenanigans with you 😭❤️🎉
Same!
The crossover of the {18th) century!! ✨✨
I for one am for said shenanigans!
333rd like woah
Would love if you guys did a workshop in Portugal!
27:37. There is just something about a full grown lady acting like a crab in colonial Williamsburg attire that really cracks a girl up 💀
Hahha I didn't even notice that omg I love it
I loved that part!
AND IT WASNT EVEN SAF
I saw this comment before I watched the video and 100% thought it was our girl saf lol. im shocked LOL
i had to pause when i saw thattt
You know Abby is a fan when she says the word "Murkin" in front of Safiya. Gosh I love her for that.
It’s the cutest thing really. She is such a fan
Safiya’s full outfit, hat & shawl/cape, does sort of look like if little red riding hood grew up to be a courtiers poison maker.
It’s a vibe and I love it
This is an excellent description and I applaud you.
Perfect description.
I could never thought of better description
Aquatofanaaaaa....
I'd love to read a story like that.
Vintage clothing, not vintage values! YES! One of my favorite people says "if I want to look and dress like a 1959s housewife while simultaneously acting the exact opposite then that's my perogative"
@@roseg2239 did you stretch before you made that leap???? CLOTHING has nothing to do with the values of the person. Clothing is societal and everyone in the past wore these clothes. If you can't see a difference between clothing and morals you need help.
And don't you DARE make that comparison to me again. I like wearing 1950s clothes. I'm not a n@zi. My cousin was in Auschwitz. I know all too well the horrors they committed. I listen and I learn and I try to do better every day. HOW I DRESS HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH THAT.
Rachel Maksy made a video on this! She got so many people on to say this kind of thing. I loved it. It's called "Born in the Wrong Era" & Other Misconceptions about Dressing Vintage.
Some vintage values are bad but there were also alot of people that were good people with good values, just like today and every nation and race has bad past too, some things are still going on but hidden. Vintage values can also be good, why not shine a light of the good values a lot of people had, like family values, hard work, life skills, modesty, helping elderly, etc....there was alot of good people too and good things in our past too.
Your commentary, inclusion, and highlighting of the African American experience, as well as the makers and historians gave me so much joy,
As a lover of history, historical fashion, and museum, I cannot described how jealous I am.
I’m not even that much of a lover, more like an average enjoyer, but even I’m jealous
i love museum
Even though I'm not a history buff/expert I've always gravitate towards the fashion aspect of it. I wouldn't mind at all going there as part of a vacation it's very fascinating ❤!
Same
@PlagueDoctor love your username hun😂😘
No because every single joke Tyler just casually dropped made me GASP for air laughing every single time lmao
“Fungus-core” and “carriage force ones” absolutely sent me
@@tonya_michelle TOTALLY LOLLLL
Regina George III took me a second but then I cackled. He was on a roll!
Safiya being a Liberty Kids fan honestly makes sense that rap part of the theme song captures her energy perfectly
I miss Liberty Kids!
I honestly forgot about that show until she mentioned it. Blast from the past for sure!
Liberty Kids was my childhood
I love Liberty’s Kids. I ship James and Sarah I ship them like Fed Ex 😂
@@ashleycarr9589 yeah I hated they never got together
The best! So excited that we got to help out on such a fun trip! Only a few hundred more decades to drag you into next❤
Idk what the Zoidberg dance was about but I loved it. Once again, 5⭐ to those beautiful shoes!
You ladies all rocked those 18th century looks ❤
loved the shoes Nicole!
Just a neat little thing I’d love to mention! As someone who’s worked at the Renaissance Festival before, we have a somewhat very similar way of running things! No modern words, many hot layers, and no modern technologies or inventions in sight (my cloak helped with hiding SO much “contraband”!). Everything is just in the Elizabethan period, so just a hundred or two hundred years older than Colonial Williamsburg! It’s such a fun place to work and everything that happens between the cast is always story-worthy! You should totally make a video on visiting a Renaissance Festival sometime soon!
Well met! I too am a retired Rennie and got a giggle out of the similarities of the situation.
yes! i'm a faire brat raised by rennies, and am always hiding contraband in my boots or my cloak lol. my favorite thing is making up silly faire names for objects; magic sundial = watch, box of fairies = fan in the booth, scrying mirror = phone etc.
UP UP SO SAF CAN SEE THIS
fun fact: similar to colonial shoes, pointe shoes (the hard ones ballet dancers wear) are also not made for a left or right foot specially and are broken in for each foot as they’re worn!
Thank you! I learned something new :)
Yes! And they can be switched to last longer in the toes
If only pointe shoes lasted as long as colonial shoes...
@@ryebread375_6 oh shit i didn’t know that! i mean i don’t think mine personally could be bc my fitter made some foot-specific adjustments to each shoe but for ppl who go through them fast that’s handy
@@adamuffoletto7869 mine i’ve had since december, then again i only do pointe once a week and it’s my first pair
YESSSSS, THIS IS AMAZING
it is.
I love it when my favourite RUclipsrs comment watch each others videos I love your content by the way!
Yes it is! I think I speak for everyone when I say a medieval makeover would be amazing too 👀
@@AngelaCostumery
Great idea! Perhaps a trip to a Renaissance fair? Or more like Medieval Times?
What's even more amazing (for me) is after the video with Saf, Abby and Nicole, I come across this comment from Morgan with a response from Angela.... all my faves in one place! If only there had been more than a split second of Bernadette it would be perfection!
Why does Safiya finally getting back to Colonial Williamsburg feel like a series finale of a tv show? Like I feel like this is the climax we have been waiting for for years.
Safiya should’ve been invited to the 2022 met gala
They don't deserve her.
Yes
She would steal the runway
@@erinnichols4866 She would be the runway.
Frfr, her and Billie Eilish would be the only ones who would fit the theme
I LOVE that slight delayed "YOU DO!" when she said she looked like her mother. You two are hilarious.
"You can appreciate vintage style without idealing vintage values" YES THANK YOU QUEEN
So much yesssss!
The pattern of the dress is a little "felicity" which makes me, who had the doll back in the 90s, very happy.
That was my first thought. It looked exactly like Felicity's old dress. Can't remember if she got a new dress or not.
I appreciate how thoughtful you are about contextualising historical fashion. I love fashion history and sewing, but i see so many people refusing to acknowledge the economic disparity and slavery without being so aggressively defensive.
Great video as always saf!
Exactly! I'm glad you agree, I've seen some nasty comments around, which is kind of unusual on Safiya's channel. As she said herself, we can appreciate vintage clothing without conforming to the vintage values
wow, a youtuber who acknowledges anything 1700 including the lives of the poor or enslaved people during the period and eductate the viewers about their everyday lives. not suprising for a queen like saf
All the people she mentioned and worked with in the video who are also on RUclips talk about that stuff too. Abby Cox has some downright fascinating videos about feminist issues as well.
Safiya found her people in this video - Abbe, Nicole, and Cheyney matched her energy and enthusiasm perfectly✨ history nerd girls for the win👏🏻
My thoughts exactly!!!!
I was thinking the same thing!! They fit together so well
The background crab walk at 27:38 absolutely destroyed me.
This entire collaboration was such a delight and worth the wait!
I was searching the comments to see if anyone else noticed that.
I would’ve commented my own timestamp if I didn’t see this comment soon 😆
@@Lifealope Why wouldn't other people notice it?
@@englishatheart Cause its kinda in the background and is not really adressed.
I WAS LOOKING FOR THIS COMMENT TO SEE IF ANYONE ELSE SEEN THAT 😂💀
As someone who was born and raised in Williamsburg, had friends who were junior interpreters, dated someone in the fife and drum, the whole nine yards, this is the best video to come across. I really appreciate someone who loves my home town lol
As someone who spent several years as a historical interpreter (at Conner Prairie in Indiana, living it up 1836-style), the "hide your non-period stuff in your apron" thing is so real. Also, crotchless underwear. That.
I've gone to Conner Prairie several times since that was what was closest to us and I loved it every single time! I would get so intrigued and drawn into how life was back then. Thanks to you guys who worked there and brought it back to life! Thank you!
I've wanted to go there since I saw the Townsends videos about it!
Oh hey! I live in Noblesville! We stan Conner Prairie, y’all do important work and I wanted to work there as a child so badly that I begged to be homeschooled so I could (didn’t work)
SAFIYA I'M GLAD YOU GOT TO EXPERIENCE THIS. Also, thank you so much for not glossing over the fact that slavery was a thing during colonial times.
I cannot express how much I've missed half hour chunks of Saf and Ty talking about very interesting things. I know it's a lot more work than the livestream, and I enjoy those too, but I have ADHD and the short videos with facts packed in really speak to me. I also am FASCINATED with fashion history. This was WONDERFUL.
ruclips.net/video/p14c6f5zQ7g/видео.html
OMG same brain struggles! These shorter videos are worth the wait. 👍🏼🥰
Sameeeee. I loveeeee.
Same! I do so much better with these videos. Lives have too many pauses that set my ADHD off and to a new world
I loved the looks of the fancy dresses from pretty much anything 1930s and earlier, but never thought I was interested in fashion history UNTIL I started watching this channel.
Honestly, it's like Magic School Bus for adults if it focussed on clothing instead of science
How much Tyler loves Saf is cute and all.. But the way he gets into her nerdy fantasies is beyond amazing
Thankyou for pointing out that stays are not meant to give people a tiny waist and that all classes of women wore them everyday, Bernadette Banner would be proud.
She didn’t want to feel the wrath of meme mom 💀
Did they really help with posture?
@@joelle4226 yes, the whalebone made it hard to slouch
@@joelle4226 yes! Way better than bras. They help if you have back pain as well.
I feel like we have been waiting for this moment for years. Surprised Saf wasn’t screaming in the intro out of excitement. I mean it’s Williamsburg!
Edit: really appreciate the enthusiasm for American history, lovely vid and Saf you looked gorgeous! Also DYING at Nicole’s crab walk at the end
IT'S HAPPENING.🤩
Right 😻😻😻😻
That crab walk was like the perfect little happy bomb thrown into the ending of so much happy already.
I missed the crab walk the first time so adding it here for those who don't want to scroll through the video to find it lol 27:36
Safiya, Nicole, and Abby Cox?! A DREAM COLLAB! AND a nod to "Not Your Mama's History"? I AM SO HAPPY!
@@micahthemessy so many nods! I wish Safiya could meet Morgan Donner and Bernadette Banner, too, to learn more about their favorite periods of dress. I also wish we could see Nicole teaching Safiya while Saf attempts to make herself a pair of shoes.
Right? I was watching the clips in the beginning and was like, "Subscribed to her. And her. And her. Not him, but I know him. Yup. Yup."
My parents were professional colonial re-enactors and this brought back sooo many memories! From the age of 3-13 I would go with them to all sorts of locations around the US and Canada. We made all our own clothes, using authentic patterns and materials, and being that I was a kid when they started, I got to experience a wide range of outfits from little girl style to the more grown-up garments that a teenager would have worn. When we were doing a show, we would literally camp out in the exact style of tents that they would have used during the American revolution, and we would cook on an open hearth outside, making recipes from the times. (They’re actually pretty tasty!) We camped out at Williamsburg several times and I remember our tent was right in that green you showed in this video! Such good times.
Also, yes my dad is a history buff and he absolutely had a Gettysburg phase when I was a late teenager/in college! We used to go every summer! I’ve seen civil war battlefields all over the country lol
I'm literally crying at the shout out of historical context. It was beautifully done. Genuinely I cringe at how praised this era is while glossing over the horrendous realities of it. But it is also a key part of our (all Americans) history and culture that deserves to be explored. Context is key. And Adding that context made this video feel so safe to watch. Great Job guys👍🏾
ruclips.net/video/p14c6f5zQ7g/видео.html
It was not until the last minute of this video that I realized that “CW” stood for colonial Williamsburg and not the TV network. I was like wow CW must be sponsoring this video. I was thinking like stylists from the vampire diaries were there 😂
Same. I was wondering how the CW was involved 😂
@@abigailwren1741 same 😩
I’ve found my people 🤣
i thought it was meant to say content warning
HONESTLY I thought the same thing, I was so confused, I was like the cw hasn't been profitable since it began, how? and then I realised oh they don't mean the network spn aired on
Im native american but can say, i love the fashion from then as well.. it was an aweful time period for our people but its our history. We cant change that. So we embrace it.
Natives are forever grateful towards my life and family
We forever respect you all :)
We cannot keep living with a victim mentality that’s exactly what the government wants so they can be able to manipulate us, they do it for division. We are all immigrants in the country that’s what’s the beauty of it because of all cultures.
Every race has gone through an awful period, every nation, even tribal natives to other tribes as well...everyone has sin in their past. I have Sioux in my blood also Jewish in my blood, along with all sorts of European but of course that doesn't matter my European blood, cuz somehow they are untouched(which they aren't untouched)but society lets me mention the past of my POC ancestors and their oppression, but guess what I wasn't there, neither was you, so why should I allow it to bug me to a point I have to mention it while enjoying learning about things I like from the past?
@@totesmegoatscrystal9688 You can't tell facts in today's society. Just like you can't point out that every race has enslaved (including black people, as Africa was enslaving its own people long before anyone else did, and they're the ones who sold/traded their own people to others), and every race has been enslaved (including white people). You can't point out how Native Americans suffered way worse in the US than other races, you can't point out how every race has racists in it and every race can experience racism. People refuse to acknowledge any history that shows that white people aren't the only ones to commit atrocities and have suffered atrocities themselves. We should of course acknowledge the horrible things that have happened throughout history, but all of it should be acknowledged and taught, not just specific areas.
@@englishatheart OK so this is a out peeve and I don't want to get deep into politics but
African slavery was really different than American slavery. In African slavery slaves could make their own money and buy their freedom, and often if you were a slave it was because of debts you owed and could hopefully one day pay off.
And historically everyone was a slave, or at least there were a few people who felt they owned everyone else. Mideveal Europen lords taking your taxes and your crops was nothing like what America did.
Slavery is always wrong, but what old Americans did was not the usual sort of wrong.
25:30 "Hey What's Up! What do you buy?" ABSOLUTELY KILLED ME!! The attitude and the head bob was sooo funny!!
I cackled at that part lmfao
I love that Safiya got to track the scent of her childhood. Now she must make a frankencandle of that exact scent 😄
Reminds me of the SNL skit “Sticky Bun”-- where they keep saying “WILL YOU EAT?”
Most things people think of as corsets in historical fashion (including corsets) were actually made to support the bust--they were essentially what women wore before bras came along. So, yes, they were sturdy, foundational garments, but not always meant to squish waists.
This was simply awesome! Come down to New Bern, NC and visit the Tryon Palace! New Bern is known as the Colonial Capitol! I honestly cannot express how much I LOVED this! It's nice to know there are others like me in the geek department!
New Bern is where Pepsi originated. The pharmacy is still there.
@@reuben854 indeed it is! Caleb Bradham’s pharmacy is still here and it’s like a little Pepsi museum and gift store.
Oh my gosh. I live in Sneads Ferry and so this is such fun info! I told my husband “we have to go to New Bern!”
I grew up in the same county as New Bern so seeing this comment really shocked and pleased me. Glad to see the Crystal Coast getting some recognition. I always loved the classical look of New Bern and visiting the small shops in town is always on my to-do list when I go there! Also Tryon Palace is soooo pretty, I loved the garden.
on my last trip to the States 2017 (Aussie here) I was doing an Outlander tour of Nth/Sth Carolinas following the Jamie/Claire trail...Tryon's Palace was one of the locations visited..got some lovely pic's in your gardens there..
we stayed overnight in one of the B&B's in the historical buildings...my bedroom had a wall of samplers hung from different ages..the oldest one was dated in the 1700's..
funnily enough, we found we were on the right path by the various links we found along the way like a few Brianna's, a pink quartz turtle charm in an Op shop (thrift store) and dragonfly garden chair in one of the historical places we visited and so forth..
we visited the battle field that Jamie went to that had a marshy river...they created a boardwalk through it and on that day it was drizzling, which added to the atmosphere of the area, I took some footage so you could hear the rain coming through the vegetation and how soreal it felt..
I have never been this jealous of anyone. What I wouldn't pay to hang out with Abby & Nicole and get custom-made Nicole shoes. Like DUDE.
Respect for the amount of history always embedded in Safiya's videos...and I will be checking out "NotYourMommasHistory" immediately.
It’s a very good channel !
It's awesome
Saf being exasperated at Tyler's bad jokes is seriously the best representation of long term relationships I've ever seen
That was definitely among my favorite parts in this video! 😂
The moment you said “I’m gonna leave it to you guys to wonder whether I’m wearing something underneath or not” I immediately thought: “We’re talking about Safiya here. It’s obvious she committed to this 1000% and is /definitely/ not wearing anything underneath.” 🤣
you are most likely correct!! 19:58
I think that this is my favorite video you’ve ever done. I grew up in Williamsburg, and was a junior interpreter at Colonial Williamsburg for three years (junior interpreters are middle and high school age volunteers and the application process is intense). This was such a blast from the past for me! The last time I saw the inside of the costume warehouse was when I turned in my costume three days before I moved away. My 7th grade history teacher used to be the blacksmith. I used to carry all my contraband in my folded up apron, and my mom and I used to stop in that Wawa on our way home! This video was so much fun for me. A few differences in experience: my shoes for my costume were a similar design, but leather, not wool. My costume was meant to be a poorer person than your costume because of the house I worked in, so I didn’t have to wear stays or petticoats, just a cotton shirt that went over my shift and a cotton or wool skirt depending on season. They didn’t make us pomade our hair (thank god) and the break room was stocked with Gatorade (or hot chocolate, depending on the season) to pour in our official-issue colonial mugs and some pretty unhealthy snacks. It was such a fun experience for me that I’m so grateful for, and I’m glad you had such a good time too!!
I love that Safiya got to track the scent of her childhood. Now she must make a frankencandle of that exact scent 😄
ruclips.net/video/p14c6f5zQ7g/видео.html
I am LIVING for Tyler's jokes here, "Code KINGGEORGE", "Carriage Force Ones", fantastic
"It's dead, Jim"
regina george the third!!!!! i'm WHEEZING!!!!! XD
Tbh this could pass as behind the scene for 2022 Met Gala's and I won't be mad
Met gala could never honestly
wrong decade but Safiya would’ve done so well if she was invited
it’s 100 years too early, but i have no doubt safiya would have done amazing at the met
Definitely closer to the 2022 theme then the majority of those actually at the event
It would still be the wrong time period for the met gala theme but it’s a whole lot closer to the theme than what the actual attendees did
I used to work at a viking village and Iron Age farm here in Norway where we wore viking and Iron Age attire. This sure bring back memories
Tusenfryd:)?
@@Miamia_01 Nei, vikinggården på Avaldsnes og jærnaldergården på Ullanhaug.
tell me more... 🧐
@@safiya The viking village is located at Avaldsnes near the city of Haugesund and the Iron Age farm is at Ullanhaug, near the city of Stavanger😊 Would love to ser you explore your inner viking in a video there someday!❤️
@@safiya *interested ancestor noises*
The statement directly acknowledging the social atrocities committed during that time and the direct effect on the fashion instead of ignoring it. 👏🏻 10/10
*white hand emoji* lol
It's one of the reasons I love dress history so much- it really shows just how interconnected everything is. Like, the growing popularity of cotton and how that was die to both slavery in the US and the British occupation of India and stealing how to process cotton form Indians (and then sometimes breaking their thumbs so they wouldn't have the competition from the skilled Indian artisans). But that is what led to the increased use of cotton at the end of the 18th century, and to it now being the most common of the natural fibres (even though it's also the worst of the natural fibres). I find that with looking into dress history, you can see how it all comes together into whatever the fashion of the time was. And also how fashion itself shaped geopolitics, and how one fashion trend leads to another. It's a fascinating subject! Though admittedly, I'm biased.
It's also much more hands on and much less "great man theory" than a lot of other areas of historical study. You get a feel for what the average person felt, ad you feel a lot closer to them, because you're wearing what they wore, feeling the same sort of support and structure, moving the same way they moved. Memorising Generals and troop movements has nothing on dress history, imo
@@katherinemorelle7115 !
@@heyryanisonx3141Made me lol too 😂
I got the notification and immediately said PLEASE LET HER BE IN COLONIAL WILLIAMSBURG I was not disappointed
same!,!
"I invoke the right of parley." & "It has pockets." My two favorite quotes from this video! Hahahaha!
I love that the universal sign of “this is my outfit” is “It Has Pockets!”
Oh this was just incredible. I absolutely adore learning more about historical clothing, and I'd say Safiya did a wondrous job at explaining everything. Especially the part about stays and corsets not being restricting and faint-inducing. Also I may have realized that I would be considered hot in 1770 standards. So that was nice. What a lovely video.
I absolutely here for all of Tyler's jokes lmaoo I died at "Regina George III" and "Use code George Washington" 🤣
Me too. I had to hold my laugh and snort cause my fam are asleep. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
He's a GEM
I appreciate you taking time to emphasize the crimes committed against various people because that is also a part of history and not just the intersting fashion elements. I have to agree with Tyler about you killing it, granny vibes and all.
Fun fact. I lived in Williamsburg 15 years ago and seeing the people dressed in colonial attire: pumping gas, talking on a cellphone, .etc. Happened, A LOT. 😂 Now I'm 30 min south, but visit regularly. Love that area.
thanks for the explaining what exactly Colonial Williamsburg is! As a Canadian, I thought it was just a small, maybe few buildings, living history museum. I didn't realize how vast and intricate it was.
It’s like an upgraded version of Upper Canada Village
Yes didn't realize how it was a complete town vs a few different houses and some basic community places. Like blacksmith and schoolhouse
Finally!! The Colonial Williamsburg Collab we have been waiting for!!!!
Dreams really do come true ❤️
I adore you! Started with the wedding videos as I am getting married in June and they just popped up. Then I got hooked on your Asian tour and totally loved the McDonald's wedding video. You are so funny and eclectic in the best of ways. Seeing you and Tyler together is beautiful, you two are so made for each other. I'm sorry to hear about your cat. I'm close to 60 in age, so I might not be typical, but who knows, of most of your subscribers. You just make my day.
how was your wedding!!
i LOVE that you worked with actual dress historians, interpreters and costumers for this. it's always nice to see history being explained by the general and less niche side of media but i was super worried about a ton of misinformation in this, and thankfully i was proven wrong!! AND of course the inclusion of Black costumers when learning, since they played a HUGE part of the society and yet get actively ignored often enough that people just simply "didn't think they existed" before 1910.
well done to both of you, your williamsburg team and to the shout outs mentioned!!
!!!!!
Yeah, the fact that she links us to look at people of colour for educating ourselves better, instead of pretending like she knows everything, is great. She's so good at the way she delivers information in her videos
Not only does historical give you a glimpse of the time period, it teaches you how quality garments were constructed with really cool techniques not seen in average clothing anymore. When you learn about new patterns/styles/fabrics/techniques it can open your mind (and wardrobe) to styles that may suit your body better AND be more comfortable than today's clothing. Natural fabrics are so much more comfortable on the skin and should definitely be a part of anyone's modern wardrobe.
Honestly I am sooooooo jealous of those shoes! They sound so nice in that they conform to your feet and become a left or right foot, it's almost meditative in a weird way.
as an abby cox, morgan donner, and bernadette banner fan, i love this video!!! you did such a good job explaining the historical context AND not villianizing stays. please do a victorian video with bernadette next!
And Karolina Zebrowska
Next, please get a Victorian makeover! It would suit you so great and I love your style/makeover videos!
How did it take me this long to know that Safiya's mom was from India?! That's so cool! The pictures of your mom and dad together are so sweet
Yup! Danish and Indian!
I didn’t realize either. When Tyler said she looks like her mother it hit me that she absolutely looks Indian
I think she mentioned in her "dressing like it's 1967" video that the 1960s evening gown she wore belonged to her grandmother back in India. Her great uncle was in the United States and sent back fabric and a pattern so she could take it to a tailor to get it stitched. (Which was common for a lot of Indians who wore American/European clothing at the time. My grandmother did the same thing but she got her patterns from family in Australia)
She had a video back in buzzfeed days about learning how to drape a saree- being half indian and such
I’m a historian earning my PhD, I appreciate you fully acknowledging and appreciating the wider history of different periods. You’re badass!
By God we've done it. We've gone even FURTHER BACK. When are we getting "I got an 8th century makeover"
I'd keep watching yes.
Well, given she now has contacts in the dress history community, it's possible.
waiting for the neolithic makeover (/j but that would actually be really cool)
fuck it. safiya give us bronze age makeover when!!!
@@cronchybo Pffff neolithic? All those new forms of stone tools? Nah, gimme some classic Mesolithic fashion. I would have gone further to Palaeolithic but we have surviving textile fragments from the Mesolithic period, whereas Palaeolithic so far it appears to have just been utilising animal skins, and a lot of the specific animals they'd have had access to are extinct so it would have to be closest possible. I guess she could do fallow deer skins. Not quite as awesome as the megafauna version (Megaloceros) but I guess she could make do.
One of my favorite videos you have ever done. I LOVE both "Not Your Mammas History" and "Nicole Rudolph" so much. It's amazing you got to work with them!
As someone who is a fan of you, CW, Abby AND Nicole, this feels like a video made for me and I am DELIGHTED. I loved Abby and Nicole's videos, so it was only a matter of time before the trio of videos was complete! Huzzah, indeed!
I know this video makes me so happy!
Yes!!!!
I'm sure people say this all the time, but you have an excellent narration voice. Every time I watch one of your videos, I'm instantly comforted and intrigued. Also really loved to see the subject of this one! I went to CW as a teen and loved it - this was so much fun to watch!
thank you so much for speaking to the historical facts if the times and not glossing over or romanticizing the economic base of slavery. I love you.
To me the smell of a Colonial Williamsburg gift shop is Leather, paper, and some specific type of maybe lye treated wood? So good. Hope you took some good whiffs for us.
I LOVE these sorts of collabs. This is fantastic!
Always love your videos Safiya! Fun to watch and informative at the same time!
18+ Content Momo-Jk.Monster
mejores 😘
siempre en mi corazón
mañas no se la.💟
Son unos de los mejores conciertos.
I'll never forget visiting sovereign hill, the Australian equivalent of colonial Williamsburg for a school camp and getting to dress up like an 1880s child and attend 1880s style schooling for 3 days, it was to this day the best thing I've ever done
Omg did you go to Yarrabee too? It was like a school in the 1800s or early 1900s, and you got to sit in a recreation of an old primary school and tour it for a day, it was so cool!
You are so lucky! I went as a girl to Williamsburg, VA. I was so fascinated by the actors and the clothing. One of the actors was shucking corn. She asked me to join her. She then asked where I lived. I told her New Orleans, and she said, "Oh, the Spanish Colony! Yes, I know it. What a great, far way for you to have traveled." Mind was blown. I thought I was time traveling for real there.
omg i remember doing this it was so fun i went in 2019 right before covid was a thing and we also went panning for gold
as someone who lives ten minutes away sovereign hill, you’re absolutely correct and it’s amazing. i still regularly visit for the lollies.
Yes!!!!! The Raspberry drops at Sovereign Hill are the BEST!!!!!! XD
I'm just so thankful to that CW employee that sent that email. Without them I don't think Saf would have ever broken Tyler down enough to get back there.
Janae is so kind-when I visited last year, she talked with me for almost an hour about the history of their millinery shop and the process of it coming to be as part of CW. I had been looking forward to the millinery shop so much and she absolutely made it the highlight of my entire vacation! From one historical interpreter to another, it was one of those encounters that really drove home what I love about this work: the people and the passion behind it.
"regina george the third" is the best joke tyler has made in this channel lmao
Safiya is basically a time traveler at this point.
Loved your message at the beginning of the video about not Idealizing past life times but more remembering their past fashion trends! As a black woman I really appreciated this note so thanks!
My father was the very excited, proud, immigrant. Yeah, we visited historically significant sights!!!
Thank you for not being afraid to address the history of enslaved people as it relates to this video. Too often people feel like talking about it makes it too controversial but it’s important to talk about!
The first vintage RUclipsr I ever watched was Rachel Maksy. She opened the door to so many other vintage channels, like Bernadette Banner and Karolina Zebrowska. I adore them all so much for highlighting the “vintage style and not vintage values” motto 💕
I think Bernadette and Rachel were 1st and second close together. Now I'm obsessed with all the channels
Yesss Rachel and Bernadette are AWESOME!
As for a person from Europe, it was fascinating to watch this video and get a grasp of USA's history and fashion! Greetings from Poland c:
Same here! Super interesting. From Norway 🇳🇴
@@Miamia_01 I thought you were the same person haha your names are similar and so are your profile image/letter haha
Same! I'm from Portugal and that place looks so cool xD
That Middle school girl American Girl/Dear America/Liberty's Kids is just so iconic (my first fanfic was a SarahXJames liberty's kids fic lol).
I'm a textile designer and a huge history and historical dress enthusiast, so this video was a joy to watch
I'm glad to hear that CW is continously addressing the ugly side of the history it portrays, and in a good way for its staff. I used to volunteer the Dickens Christmas Fair in San Francisco that is now going through a boycott for, among other things, not being a safe environment for its BIPOC performers. The San Francisco Chronicle did an article in its Datebook on 12/4/2021 for anyone who wants more information on the situation, but please don't do to Dickens Fair unless the people who run it get it together and listen to their performers.
CW?
@@misseselise3864 Colonial Williamsburg
Dickens fair in Rochester UK? I go every year seems alright to me
@@Vix2066 ….but the BIPOC that WORK there feel differently, so I’d be inclined to believe them . When people talk about mistreatments, saying “but I enjoyed it/had a good time” is dismissive .
@@Vix2066 also, the op provided a source, which if you looked it up, is from San Francisco . I’m not saying this to be mean, but to say looking things up before you speak on them is important.
omg wait this is incredible!!!
Any safiya video is incredible
Jellyfish is incredible
HEY RUclips 😃
The fact that bots can respond to _the_ verified RUclips account's comment solidifies the idea that they're turning a blind eye to the bot issue. Fix the comments section RUclips 🤦🏻♀️
I... this is very strange. We're not supposed to interact directly with RUclips™️ 😳 you're Big Brother, you're our omniscient overlords. Go, go away!
I love how safiya doesn't care what people say she wears what she want and do what she wants
Oh my goodness! When our children were young, we took them to Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown several times. (I taught them history during those years using the American Girls books and resources as part of our curriculum!) Cutest thing was that my eldest were about nine years old- boy/girl twins. She wore the Felicity costume during our touring day(s) and he enthusiastically joined in on the “Felicity’s Tour”. We were with another brother/sister pair of similar age, and while the other boy was hanging back in embarrassment, our son joined in on the sewing of a pin cushion, learning to dance 18th century dances, and taking tea. When touring, our guide asked us why there were ladders leaning on the houses. History son (who had been listening to the Felicity books) said, “because they needed to be able to stop fires that a chimney’s spark might drop onto the thatched roof!” He surprised us all and made such a fun memory for me. He’s all-guy- ex Minor League Baseball player, but still loves to learn. And sister? She’s now teaching 2nd grade- the age she was when being taught and touring Williamsburg, VA. Thank you for letting me share and for bringing up these wonderful memories!
That is adorable on so many levels. Thank you for sharing a feel good story, no doubt a treasured memory. Have a nice day everyone 😊
As someone who is moving to Mackinac Island in three days to start my first job as a historic interpreter, this came at the perfect time as someone who also took many a childhood trip to historic sites (including one very memorable trip to Colonial Williamsburg, which is kind of a dream job for me). I appreciate the shoutout at 0:58 :) I was also an American Girl obsessed kid, so that tracks. Also, my dad never left his Gettysburg phase. The 3 hour audio tour tape? It took us 6 HOURS. I think it was his version of Disney world.
That's so awesome! I go to law school in MI and I hope to visit Mackinac again this summer! It is really beautiful up there
love mackinac island!!
Awesome! Mackinac Island is my happy place, heading back again this summer. Do you know which part of the island you'll be working at? The Fort, or another spot?
That's so incredible! I'd gladly sling fudge all day if it meant I could be on Mackinac Island. I visited with my partner and he had to drag me off (he knew he would as I am a historical costuming enthusiast, I made my entire bridal party and wedding dress historically correct mid Victorian dresses a couple years before) but I've vowed to return.
The smuggling of the food is what really took me astral projecting back to my days with Historical Reenactment. The amount of time I have drunk soda out of a medieval clay cup? Uncountable.
Lmaoooo we still bout that life😂
You lived the 12 year old me’s life dream to get to have a Colonial Williamsburg makeover! Must have been a tween girl in the mid-2000s thing (all the American Girl and Dear America books must have played a part!)
I think it’s a universal tween girl dream. I am from Denmark, and I definitely had the same urge to dress in 18th century fashion
„It just smells like the gift shop at Colonial Williamsburg!“ - Saf melting every candle from Bath & Body Works together (2018)
This video was so long in the making 😂
4:34 not me crying at how compassionate, considerate, lovely and kind they are to make this a key point in the video- and thinking back on comments they made about editing the footage, I know it was really important for them to have this message. It makes me so happy. Thank you for sharing your life with us, Safiya and Ty. 🥰