Medieval hoods: A funny thing about medieval hoods and an amazing discovery!

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2024

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  • @PJSproductions97
    @PJSproductions97 2 года назад +2443

    The more I watch this channel the more I realize that all the medieval folks just did all the same stuff we'd be doing if we only had what they had to work with. Humans have always been the same.

    • @kellykoistinen1934
      @kellykoistinen1934 2 года назад +42

      LITERALLY!

    • @SyndicateOperative
      @SyndicateOperative 2 года назад +81

      Arguably, they do it more efficiently in some cases, especially regarding clothing.

    • @MrHocotateFreight
      @MrHocotateFreight 2 года назад +75

      @@SyndicateOperative definitely, it's because having less, they need to be more creative but also efficient with resources

    • @Chronospherics
      @Chronospherics 2 года назад +45

      Medival times weren't so long ago, fundamentally we are the same species as they were, a few hundred years of evolution is literally nothing... but no, humans have not always been the same if you go further.

    • @TheWorldsprayer
      @TheWorldsprayer 2 года назад

      Humans at their core are problem solvers, and it makes sense that even closer to a millenia apart, we found find similar solutions to similar problems and situations.

  • @borignev9087
    @borignev9087 5 лет назад +9830

    Some drunk idiot: *wears his hood the wrong way round*
    Nobles: Yeah, this is high fashion now

    • @lynofkates
      @lynofkates 5 лет назад +929

      Rusczi Kaszëba that’s probably accurate. That’s pretty much exactly how Paniers (the big wide French skirts) came into fashion. Women delivering bread wore baskets on their hips to carry the loafs in, and then would often place their top skirt over the baskets to protect the merchandise from the incredibly dirty streets. Nobility saw the look and said “hey, her waist looks REALLY tiny when she’s wearing that basket contraption, I want one!” Thus the big metal cages under their skirts were born. Fashion often is the result of mimicking something actually useful and then essentially copying it so many time that it becomes useless and purely decorative.
      Like pockets on most women’s jeans 🙄

    • @cyanidejack1013
      @cyanidejack1013 5 лет назад +105

      I think you could reasonably say that about all fashion.

    • @Little2Raph
      @Little2Raph 5 лет назад +219

      The drunk idiot was probably the king. . .

    • @thievingpeppers1914
      @thievingpeppers1914 5 лет назад +63

      Forget about wearing sweatshirts normally- wear them around your waist

    • @calistman222
      @calistman222 5 лет назад +114

      Sadly, wearing our pants backwards never cought on. RIP 1990s.

  • @LeakyBellows
    @LeakyBellows 5 лет назад +20087

    I'll never stop being salty about the fact that hoods and cloaks are no longer socially acceptable attire.

    • @sagerx
      @sagerx 5 лет назад +467

      True

    • @viridisxiv766
      @viridisxiv766 5 лет назад +2843

      fashion is stupid, wear the hood and cloak proudly!

    • @H36662
      @H36662 5 лет назад +1101

      Go bring them back into style! :D

    • @zyral.f.6938
      @zyral.f.6938 5 лет назад +834

      Huh? Agree on cloaks (no pockets) but once the snow or wind starts, hoods go up here in the Midwest.

    • @faithcastillo9597
      @faithcastillo9597 5 лет назад +320

      I love my cloaks! Especially the hooded ones.

  • @granthurlburt4062
    @granthurlburt4062 2 года назад +783

    I spent 3 weeks as part of an archaeological project in Egypt's western desert. We westerners wore hats, short-sleeved shirts (when it wasnt windy) and often shorts in the heat, then our jackets and long pants and even sweaters at night. The Egyptians often wore the same robes with loose turbans day and night. The loose robes kept cool air around their bodies in the day time and warmth at night. The turbans were protection against sun and heat in daytime and provided warmth at night.

    • @joebonomono
      @joebonomono 2 года назад +134

      Always dress local.

    • @DanielJoyce
      @DanielJoyce 2 года назад +66

      The keffiyeh is a large but very thin scarf. Worn loosely it doesn't trap much heat but bunched up it's quite warm. I love them

    • @senchaholic
      @senchaholic Год назад +9

      Did you adopt their clothing then?

    • @georgedunkelberg5004
      @georgedunkelberg5004 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@senchaholicTIGHTY-WHITIES?

    • @arctain1
      @arctain1 9 месяцев назад +47

      I question the “loose robes kept cool air around the body”. Uncirculated air heats up by body heat. This is the general idea of ‘layering’ - to provide an insulated space where uncirculated air can heat up, without great loss.
      The air isn’t ‘cool’ during the day in Egypt - it’s hot. One cannot keep cool air around the body in a hot environment. But, the air is also dry.
      A better explanation is that loose robes provide the ability for air to circulate with body movement, allowing the sweat to evaporate without encumbering that circulation with clothes. The more natural use of the body’s heat regulation system is for the skin to be protected from direct heat of the sun, while allowing for sweat to evaporate, cooling the body. This is the basic thermoregulation that one gets by moving into shade rather than standing in the sun - it ‘feels’ cooler because your body can more effectively disperse heat without also heating the skin up at the same time.
      This would also explain why the same loose robes are worn at night - without movement, the air isn’t circulated, thus providing the shutoff of circulation that was depended upon during the heat of the day.

  • @brockswisstee7767
    @brockswisstee7767 5 лет назад +1718

    I love how much joy he's expressing while talking about something as simple as a hat. You can tell this guy truly loves what he does.

    • @howey935
      @howey935 4 года назад +40

      Yep he's cracked life. Making a living from something you love doing.

    • @Andreas0705
      @Andreas0705 4 года назад +5

      I wonder everytime when I she the videos what he is doing for a living - because I want that to!

    • @vincentlok8894
      @vincentlok8894 4 года назад +32

      Andreas Tanghøj Toft he’s the CEO and cofounder of a pretty well known video game company called “Rebellion”. This channel is just for fun, he’s already earned his millions.

    • @jbelme1
      @jbelme1 4 года назад +4

      He had an epiphany.

    • @sunny-sq6ci
      @sunny-sq6ci 4 года назад +3

      it's part of human history that has very little in terms of context or recording. luckily information like these are still within a timeframe that what evidence there is, can still b translated.

  • @EpicGamerSetzuna
    @EpicGamerSetzuna 5 лет назад +2725

    Instead of being angry that medieval is out of style, we all must band together and make it the "In" style again. We as consumers have this power! BRING BACK CLOAKS!

    • @favoritemustard3542
      @favoritemustard3542 5 лет назад +41

      "A Band of Bards Too Far"

    • @jinxingxuelang
      @jinxingxuelang 5 лет назад +76

      Yas! Yas! Yas! *banging pots and pans* BRING BACK CLOAKS!!! BRING BACK CLOAKS!!!

    • @Sunshine_Daydream222
      @Sunshine_Daydream222 5 лет назад +45

      Just do it. I wear ponchos so ppl don't stare at muh cloak. They always think I'm a scary witch or something but with my ponchos I guess I blend in better 😂

    • @favoritemustard3542
      @favoritemustard3542 5 лет назад +9

      @@Sunshine_Daydream222 u silly.
      ...SILLY SMART!! YASSSS

    • @arx3516
      @arx3516 5 лет назад +37

      It can be done, a large community organized through an internet forum that starts wearing cloaks and hoods, when enough people are doing it it will start to become a trend that fashion designer would want to follow.

  • @OmniCausticInfidel
    @OmniCausticInfidel 5 лет назад +2431

    living history is what histroy channel should do a bit of instead of all the trucking and pawning. Im so glad to find you doing this here on youtube

    • @JaneDoe-ci3gj
      @JaneDoe-ci3gj 5 лет назад +15

      What does trucking and pawing mean please? English is not my first language.

    • @OmniCausticInfidel
      @OmniCausticInfidel 5 лет назад +122

      @@JaneDoe-ci3gj history channel here in US/canada was a channel that in the past had history documentary's like this show kinda, but in the present they often have shows that concentrate on moving goods by truck on ice roads, hunting alligators in the swamp, or seeing how much old stuff would sell for at a pawn shop

    • @akudaemon1478
      @akudaemon1478 5 лет назад +95

      @Jane Doe
      The TV channel they mentioned used to be about actual history and documentaries. Medieval history, Egyptology, both World Wars, etc. Now it is more about reality shows like Ice Road Truckers and Pawn Show that are more sensationalist stuff and not actual history.

    • @carlosmarte3154
      @carlosmarte3154 5 лет назад +38

      Jane Doe
      Trucking- The process of moving cargo via 18-wheel trucks
      Pawning- (the literal and accepted use of the word differ) Literal: to offer an item of value as a secure for a loan; ie collateral
      Accepted use: to sell an item of value for money.

    • @deektedrgg
      @deektedrgg 5 лет назад +37

      The CEO of History Channel actually talked about it, saying he wanted to see a return to historical docus on HC... but he's the CEO. He's there to make money. And all that reality TV shit sells a lot better than docus on ancient Colombian civilizations or prehistoric China, unfortunately.

  • @Wolfrover
    @Wolfrover 2 года назад +200

    Fun fact: The medieval hood and capelet had a lasting impact. Not only did the capelet hang on for centuries (it appears in the Inverness coat, for example), but the hood itself was sometimes used as a precursor to both pockets and backpacks. After all, you've basically got a bag attached to your collar. So, when they didn't need to cover their faces (or did need to carry something extra), the hood could be used as a pocket or backpack. This was especially common in medieval universities, since it made it easier to carry the bulky books and scrolls of the period. Just put it over your shoulder into your hood, and now your hands are free. (Of course, there were also several cases of thieves "pickpocketing" what was carried this way, so you tried to be careful.)

    • @SunRabbit
      @SunRabbit Год назад +15

      In the old paintings the hoods sometimes had deep-cut zigzags going around the periphery around the shoulders, and that was so that you coud ties these together to make an impromptu sack.

    • @anonanon7497
      @anonanon7497 Год назад +4

      I doubt you'd be carrying bulky items on something that would pull on the front of your neck. Possibly it would have been used for storage but without being worn in the same way.

    • @basil_jackson
      @basil_jackson Год назад +9

      @@anonanon7497 they would flip the hood around, thus the 'bag' is in front and the weight is on the back of your neck.

    • @Dude-hs7zm
      @Dude-hs7zm 8 месяцев назад +3

      That’s so funny because I often do that now lol. When I have a small item I just need to place somewhere I often just toss it into my hood.

    • @eoinmacantsaoir811
      @eoinmacantsaoir811 5 месяцев назад +1

      Barrister's robes still have a hood at the back .
      Apparently in the olden days it was unseemly for them to handle money directly, so their fee would be discreetly placed in the hood/pocket

  • @gavinreid5387
    @gavinreid5387 3 года назад +2431

    Hoody , after over 1000 years back in fashion. Skinny jeans are equivalent to medieval tights. Very retro.

    • @CURRYBOH
      @CURRYBOH 3 года назад +65

      Backwards hat is from the hood bro.😎
      ...🤯

    • @katem6861
      @katem6861 3 года назад +13

      @@CURRYBOH yep, mind blown 🤯🤩👍

    • @dehydratedwater4803
      @dehydratedwater4803 3 года назад +71

      @@CURRYBOH actually people have flipped their caps backwards when working on something that they have to get close to since your grandfather's time. And droopy pants started as easy access to the booty in prison.

    • @personl7949
      @personl7949 3 года назад +2

      Galvin Reid good one... 👏💯

    • @Hithere-ek4qt
      @Hithere-ek4qt 3 года назад +8

      @@CURRYBOH that style is so yesterday. Only worn by wannabees.

  • @calipigenia
    @calipigenia 5 лет назад +2278

    I actually gasped when he put on the modified hat and I recognized it, totally shooketh

  • @helmort
    @helmort 4 года назад +380

    100000000 medieval paintings studied in my life and ow for the first time i can understand the origins of their hats! Amazing!

    • @Roger-rh5lu
      @Roger-rh5lu 4 года назад +18

      A picture is worth a thousand words, but a video can have more than a thousand words and it STILL has an image, videos are perfect, I wonder why in the Middle Ages they only insisted on making paintings, and did not see videos

    • @cheryliodice492
      @cheryliodice492 3 года назад

      U

  • @user-oo8xp2rf1k
    @user-oo8xp2rf1k 2 года назад +628

    I was cycling in camping in the Scottish highlands for three weeks and constantly losing my lighter in the heather. I ended up wearing a belt pack whenever I camped, turned round to the front were I could put things in it easily.
    I realised I had re-invented the sporran. Or rather ( in a sense) the heather moorland environment itself invented the sporran.

    • @maydavies888
      @maydavies888 2 года назад +6

      Are you in Real Men Wear Kilts on FB?

    • @fireandiron4181
      @fireandiron4181 2 года назад +52

      It's quite amazing how practical their clothing was! I cannot believe that there are still people who think that medieval peoples were unintelligent. If you actually look at what they had on them and what they wore, everything had an use. Many things even had several uses.

    • @ernest3286
      @ernest3286 2 года назад +22

      I think the fanny pack beat you to it

    • @ArtThingies
      @ArtThingies 2 года назад +23

      @@ernest3286 "fanny" is considered an inappropriate word in some places, particularly in parts of Britain, as an immature term for "vagina". But you're not wrong. In many places, especially places where "fanny" has that meaning, they are referred to as belt packs among a few other similar terms.

    • @jonhohensee3258
      @jonhohensee3258 2 года назад +1

      B - cycling IN camping???

  • @helenahandbasket1489
    @helenahandbasket1489 3 года назад +1527

    I think all the weird wearable blankets are cloaks slowly making a comeback.

    • @kathryncarter6143
      @kathryncarter6143 3 года назад +54

      I hope

    • @lydiahubbell6278
      @lydiahubbell6278 3 года назад +28

      I bought a couple of cloak pins...

    • @drewthompson7457
      @drewthompson7457 3 года назад +32

      Carbon tax is speeding up staying warm in low tech ways, at least at my house.

    • @WWZenaDo
      @WWZenaDo 3 года назад +25

      Not with man-made global warming rapidly changing the climate. Personally I'm looking at the Berbers (Tamazight) of North Africa as a guide to the proper garb for the changing climate in my area.

    • @beltlevel
      @beltlevel 3 года назад +31

      With the more volatile and variable weather patterns we'll get as our climate warms and destabilizes, we need all the wearable blankets! Blanket scarves, shawls, wraps, ponchos, cloaks, etc.

  • @HailEternalRedOcean
    @HailEternalRedOcean 5 лет назад +1204

    Kid: *puts on hood the wrong way*
    Noble: "You put it on wrong"
    Kid: "Oh, you haven't heard?"

    • @goolash1000
      @goolash1000 4 года назад +47

      More like, kids hanging out joking with their hoods on backwards, adult walks by, knocks it off his head.
      Kids: "boomers..."

    • @rensmetselaar9
      @rensmetselaar9 4 года назад +1

      😂😂

    • @trentward5587
      @trentward5587 4 года назад +17

      Kid: "Must not get to the cloud district very often."

    • @carlchapman4053
      @carlchapman4053 3 года назад +3

      @@goolash1000 - Boomers back then being the gunpowder generation. "Bang! and your enemies gone!"

  • @Izzy_iz_tired
    @Izzy_iz_tired 5 лет назад +4010

    Let us thank the youtube algorithm for recomending us something interesting for once.

    • @Dargonhuman
      @Dargonhuman 5 лет назад +10

      Right? I've got Amazon open in a separate tab looking for that style of hood for when I'm walking home at night and it's cold.

    • @daetslovactmandcarry6999
      @daetslovactmandcarry6999 5 лет назад +35

      _"Let us thank the youtube algorithm for recomending us something interesting for once."_
      *Even a broken clock is right twice a day.*

    • @c0mpu73rguy
      @c0mpu73rguy 5 лет назад +8

      Actually, my youtube often recommends interesting but random and weird things to me. Just tell it you aren't interested in this or that kind of videos and it'll eventually catch up to what might and might not interest you (usually, clickbaity videos with 😱 HUGE TITLES OMG YOU WON'T BELIEVE THAT!!! 😱 are an automatic toss for me, same with some topics like celebrities and others). It's great to discover new unexpected stuff like how to fix an old rusty deadlocked vise, or how to make a pillow cube out of magnets.

    • @michaelmcnally4557
      @michaelmcnally4557 5 лет назад +1

      @@nucleargoat6007 you got a link

    • @michaelmcnally4557
      @michaelmcnally4557 5 лет назад

      @@nucleargoat6007 come on man I got to watch that to

  • @dbergerac9632
    @dbergerac9632 2 года назад +98

    Back in the 80's I wore this type of hood many winters in all of the ways that you demonstrated. It was very comfortable and when the hood was down, it was a handy pocket for food.

  • @SentinelConvergence
    @SentinelConvergence 4 года назад +2548

    I met a guy who regularly wore cloaks, especially in winter; he'd get on public transport with an oblivious IDGAF attitude when he got stared at. Whenever people asked why he was wearing one he just gave them a mildly incredulous smile and replied: 'Because I want to.'

    • @milanstevic8424
      @milanstevic8424 3 года назад +159

      where do you live so that people regularly ask other people why they're wearing what they're wearing?
      I can't miss to notice that is has to be an interesting place with nothing better to do with own life.

    • @g.bergervoet4505
      @g.bergervoet4505 3 года назад +157

      How dare you wear anything the masses don't wear.

    • @DarkMatterX1
      @DarkMatterX1 3 года назад +77

      All the reason you need, really.

    • @DarkMatterX1
      @DarkMatterX1 3 года назад +65

      @@milanstevic8424
      Westerners don't have any real problems. So they invent them by being nosey, judgemental busybodies.

    • @PanduPoluan
      @PanduPoluan 3 года назад +135

      I really need to top up my IDGAF reservoir...

  • @felixucoff
    @felixucoff 5 лет назад +1501

    "Chaperon" actually means "hood" in French ("Le petit chaperon rouge" = "Little red riding hood"), so, there you go!

    • @josepartida1711
      @josepartida1711 5 лет назад +16

      Merci beaucoup

    • @norbertfleck812
      @norbertfleck812 5 лет назад +82

      When fashion goes crazy, it's always the French 🙃😄

    • @jerotoro2021
      @jerotoro2021 5 лет назад +17

      This must connect to the English word "chaperone"... any insight on the etymology there?

    • @cactusc9519
      @cactusc9519 5 лет назад +53

      @@jerotoro2021 a hood or hat keeps your head presentable and protected, a "chaperone" is a person who (supposedly) helps keep another person presentable and protected.

    • @darthkek1953
      @darthkek1953 5 лет назад +27

      @@jerotoro2021 chapeau, cap, cape, chaperon (not chaperone) are all related, from Latin/PIE caput/kaput. (NOT related to the Yiddish kaput meaning dead).

  • @lebarosky
    @lebarosky 3 года назад +376

    I love this sort of thing. When the re-enactors started making eleventh century hauberks, they found out that wearing the sword belt exactly as depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry is the most comfortable and helps distribute its weight on the hips. Surprise!

  • @TeaCupCracked
    @TeaCupCracked 2 года назад +101

    I think this is why the Hoodie (either with or without the zip front) is so popular today; It's a 19th/20th century soft-jacket combined with a medieval hood. You get the "benefit" (style is supjective) of the clean cut of a jacket, the soft blank-comfort of a cloak and the protective properties of a hood.
    I tend to focus on more 18th-19th-20th century fashion for research, but the common thing you see throughout history is that super-functional garments will stick around for ages up until a much better replacement is discovered. You can see this with men's shirts; up until elastic became widely available, the tails of men's shirts were kept long (from the incorporation of "true" pants/trousers and through to the 1900s/ending somewhere around WW1) so they could be tucked between the legs as the underwear layer. But once boxers and briefs became easily available (with their handy elastic waistbands) you see a drop-off in the tuck method and shirts stay the same, except the tails shorten to just tuck in to the belt/pant waistband. And then with women you can see how aprons are tied to periods of history and social class where you don't have many dresses but you need to do rough work. The more washable and replaceable garments became, the less need you had for protecting the front of your dress on a moment by moment basis; eventually only needing an apron for food prep in one room of the house. If you time traveled back a ways and told a woman that no one would wear aprons daily in the 21st century, she would be confused not for cultural reasons but for logistical reasons ("So wait that means people have more then a few dresses? And they can just... wash it or buy another one all in the same day???).

    • @zerstorer88
      @zerstorer88 10 месяцев назад +3

      I don't know man, I rarely ever see hoodies here in Europe in last 10-15 years. They were big among the youth is 90s but after that they gradually almost disappeared.

    • @57badarse
      @57badarse 9 месяцев назад +4

      ​@zerstorer88 if you live around an American military base you see em all the time. A group of young men in hoodies blissfully unaware of how much they stand out.

    • @FigaroHey
      @FigaroHey 9 месяцев назад +8

      I see kids in hooded jackets or pullovers daily in Poland, both boys and girls, especially in winter.

    • @lauraschilling5088
      @lauraschilling5088 9 месяцев назад +7

      @zerstorer88 I'm in the States. My kids practically live in them. My older daughter wears a thin one 6 month of the year at school because the class rooms at her high school range in temp from sub arctic to sub tropical based on distance from boiler and proximity to the center of the building (many rooms have no windows if they are in the middle after many additions to the building). The younger one has four or five pullover hooded sweatshirts emblazoned with either the summer camp logo, the school's cross country team logo, track team, or the wind band logo.

    • @LordSenile
      @LordSenile 8 месяцев назад +7

      Hoodies are sweaters, not jackets, with hoods.
      Most modern winter coats and jackets have hoods though.

  • @pressrepeat2000
    @pressrepeat2000 5 лет назад +570

    😂 The hood worn backwards though! Will never watch a medieval movie the same way again... “Oh that dude is wearing his hood backwards, he think he’s cool”...

    • @Dargonhuman
      @Dargonhuman 5 лет назад +15

      Medieval douchebros...

    • @paul20g20
      @paul20g20 5 лет назад +4

      Lmao

    • @billytoll6675
      @billytoll6675 5 лет назад +1

      He is a Midevil renactor you judgmentalasswipes

    • @Dargonhuman
      @Dargonhuman 5 лет назад +12

      @@billytoll6675 We're not talking about the guy in the video, we're talking about whatever historical guy invented the backwards hood look.

    • @cactusc9519
      @cactusc9519 5 лет назад +3

      absolute madlad

  • @xxlCortez
    @xxlCortez 5 лет назад +2021

    And old people were like: Back in 1300, we knew how to wear our hoods properly. Damn kids.

    • @PoliticallyDonutTasty
      @PoliticallyDonutTasty 5 лет назад +133

      Here a quote from the 14th century:
      "Modern fashions seem to keep on growing more and more debased … The ordinary spoken language has also steadily coarsened. People used to say ‘raise the carriage shafts’ or ‘trim the lamp wick,’ but people today say ‘raise it’ or ‘trim it.’ When they should say, ‘Let the men of the palace staff stand forth!’ they say, ‘Torches! Let’s have some light!"
      And there is also some old painting floating around, showing something along the lines of:
      Tis of old: riding horses, being chivalrous and playing an instrument
      Tis of now: drinking beer, smoking pipe and playing cards
      Sadly I can't find it.

    • @BrandanLee
      @BrandanLee 5 лет назад +67

      There is a "kids these days" list in written word dating back to time immemorial. I can't seem to find the full list but it goes back to fucking ancient Sumeria 4000 years ago.
      Here is one from 2020 years ago: In Book III of Odes, circa 20 BC, Horace wrote:
      Our sires' age was worse than our grandsires'. We, their sons, are more
      worthless than they; so in our turn we shall give the world a progeny yet more
      corrupt.

    • @lynnica5219
      @lynnica5219 5 лет назад +3

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @nath96music
      @nath96music 5 лет назад +5

      @@BrandanLee I would love to read the whole list

    • @vickiechandler3112
      @vickiechandler3112 5 лет назад +8

      lol.....and they walked both ways to the castle up hill , barefoot, in the snow...LOL

  • @gaborfabian1239
    @gaborfabian1239 5 лет назад +979

    Holy bonkers... With that roll-up technique you went from medieval to renaissance fashion in less than a minute!

    • @Loreman72
      @Loreman72 5 лет назад +92

      And those hoods were later chopped back into berets, still worn in the military today.

    • @shannonhayes2447
      @shannonhayes2447 5 лет назад +92

      Life-hack: how to be fashion when all you've got is your grandma's passé hood

    • @stringsattatched
      @stringsattatched 5 лет назад +28

      @@shannonhayes2447 look at the stuff they sell these days in the shops. A lot of it is just retro from the 50s to the 90s. Be if weir peticoats to grundge look, you can currently recycle everything found in your own, your parents' or you grandparents' attick, cellar or garage. Even the old and ugly shapes for glasses are all the rage again

    • @aj863
      @aj863 5 лет назад +5

      I absoluteley hate big 90's style hipster glasses.@@stringsattatched

    • @nnggghhaa3709
      @nnggghhaa3709 5 лет назад

      Holy Beautiful

  • @cobblerama
    @cobblerama 2 года назад +189

    The first part when you mentioned rolling the edge of your hood back for visibility, the same is true for fur trimmed winter jackets like the N2B. I wore them in the USAF in VERY cold conditions (-30°f and below). Rolled all the way out, the fur is on the inside of the hood. Really helps with freezing winds but your visibility is very limited. Roll back the fur to the outside edge and you have a much wider field of view. Nowadays I live in Northern Michigan and still wear one daily during the winters when the temp falls below 10°f.
    Love your videos, new subscriber.

    • @ModernKnight
      @ModernKnight  2 года назад +27

      Thanks for the observation and welcome aboard!

    • @con.troller4183
      @con.troller4183 2 года назад +22

      Even when rolled back, the fur trim reduces the wind on your face by creating a chaotic verge, disrupting airflow.

    • @fireandiron4181
      @fireandiron4181 2 года назад +7

      @Gillie Monger Half the reason I live in the cold is because I love wearing heavy coats with lots of pockets!

    • @adamcichon6957
      @adamcichon6957 Год назад +9

      If i remember correctly, N2Bs ware modeled after traditional Inuit parkas. Pretty much only God knows, how many centuries old those traditional parkas design is. US Army just adopted tried and trued design, perfected by generations of people, who lived their whole lives at far north.

    • @darbonhunter
      @darbonhunter 8 месяцев назад +1

      I really like my knee length parka. Its cozy and warm, especially with the fake fur around the hood rolled out. The down stuffing is also really great for heat retention. I highly recommended this sort of coat design for cold/snowy weather.

  • @jacopoarmini7889
    @jacopoarmini7889 5 лет назад +559

    what I find most appealing of your videos is how soothing and calming they are, the rustic environment, the homely and wholesome topics... This series is a blessing for my nerves.

    • @elliottselman6746
      @elliottselman6746 5 лет назад +14

      Agreed!
      Totally unrelated topic-wise, but the show Detectorists is like that. Great English humor, but not real silly. Very relaxing, yet entertaining show.

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 5 лет назад +5

      Instead of wars and bloodletting and shit, he focuses on stuff that actually comprised about 90% of people's lives, even knights. It's the low-key stuff that we all wonder about but doesn't often get addressed.

  • @CruentusCruor
    @CruentusCruor 4 года назад +351

    Can we have these vids for histroy class in all schools? This gentleman has connected history to our time like no other ever or since!! Keep at it, Sir!! You rock !!!

    • @travisbdub4952
      @travisbdub4952 2 года назад

      WHAT! NO! Are you insane? No no, school teachers can't be bothered to teach real history. They're too busy pushing "wokeness", CRT and other political biases on our kids. (blows raspberry)

  • @colinp2238
    @colinp2238 5 лет назад +2260

    Maybe some of the old illustrations would have been a good accompaniment to this video?

    • @2nd3rd1st
      @2nd3rd1st 5 лет назад +70

      Absolutely right

    • @SarahExpereinceRequiem
      @SarahExpereinceRequiem 5 лет назад +94

      wiktenauer.com/images/6/66/MS_Ludwig_XV_13_32r.jpg
      Here's one from a fencing manual from ca. 1404. I like this one because the subject appears to be wearing another, separate yoke.

    • @MurderHoboRPG
      @MurderHoboRPG 5 лет назад +63

      Nah man. UK has insane copyright laws.

    • @MrMonkeybat
      @MrMonkeybat 5 лет назад +43

      @@MurderHoboRPG Copyright does not go back to medieval times.

    • @MurderHoboRPG
      @MurderHoboRPG 5 лет назад +28

      @@MrMonkeybat it was a joke.

  • @jessl1934
    @jessl1934 3 года назад +84

    Fascinating to learn that fashion in the medieval period drew from practical usage of clothing and then it was adopted and modified to become a statement of fashion and status.
    It makes me think about how heels were originally a practical design used for stirrups but then turned into a high-fashion item where they have remained ever since (most notably in high heeled women's shoes but most men's dress shoes also feature a heel, it's just less pronounced than a stiletto)

    • @khajiithadwares2263
      @khajiithadwares2263 2 года назад +4

      You're probably stumbling upon the reason why hoods went out of style. Originally made when needed, adopted in form by richer population, without the function. Richer population moves on to the next best trend. Somewhere in the middle, the poor 'forgot' they did their own hoods, since they gave it to the market version of their own produce.
      The looming machines went in disrepair as they were unkept or moved out of the way and forgotten, while more and more refined clothing was coming in from the big cites.
      (not 100% if the way things were in industrial era with mass production applies to the same extent in the middle ages (550-1453) - but it is as far as loss of function is concerned)
      Its possible that slavic headscarfs used by women even to this day, but also arabic desert scarfs used by men and women hijabs are examples of medieval attire keeping true to function.
      As MrJones comments below: "One of the things we moderns get wrong about hoods is their size. We make them huge and drapey and romantic. It’s beautiful-if you can keep it just so on your head, and if there’s no wind."

    • @jessl1934
      @jessl1934 2 года назад +4

      @@khajiithadwares2263 Tell me a kufiyah isn't one of the most functional pieces of clothing ever, especially for desert and temperate climates.

    • @DJPhasik
      @DJPhasik 2 года назад +1

      Quite fascinating indeed! The same type of clothing modification has happened in modern times with the aforementioned backwards baseball cap, the hoodie worn on the waist, and even rolled up pants (a.k.a. “highwaters”) being first a practical alternative way of wearing, and then a fashionable style in their own right.
      As fashion seems cyclical, we can only wonder when the hilariously long-toed shoes such as poulaines, or the “Botas picudas mexicanas” (a.k.a. Mexican pointy boots) will come back in style in a new and hilarious way.

    • @FigaroHey
      @FigaroHey 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@DJPhasikIt wasn't that many years ago that men's shoes had absurdly long, pointed "toes" beyond where their toes actually ended inside the shoes. Late 1990s was it? Early 2000s?

    • @DJPhasik
      @DJPhasik 9 месяцев назад

      @@FigaroHey Haha, yes! It's true some dress shoes (especially unique fashion statement types) did begin to approach the absurdly long threshold. Yet it seems that the poulaines and Mexican pointy boots still claim the title as the most absurdly long-toed shoes.

  • @ElDuardo01
    @ElDuardo01 5 лет назад +4520

    Okay algorythm... Surprise me

    • @jeaniebird999
      @jeaniebird999 5 лет назад +144

      This makes TWICE in two days that RUclips has put something worthwhile in my recommended! I'm shocked!

    • @CloudedPeach
      @CloudedPeach 5 лет назад +13

      Damn, tru

    • @digitalgreenie
      @digitalgreenie 5 лет назад +47

      I have only watched only one video about medieval spear fighting and a thought about medieval hoods crossed my mind. Suddenly RUclips suggests me the video exactly on the same topic. I think this is some kind of dark sorcery

    • @CloudedPeach
      @CloudedPeach 5 лет назад +12

      @@digitalgreenie was it a half hour video about the advantages of untrained spear vs. trained swordsmen? Because I saw that randomly and it was really good too.

    • @warsstar
      @warsstar 5 лет назад +9

      A surprise, to be sure, but a welcome one.

  • @bradhorner
    @bradhorner 5 лет назад +651

    The infamous medieval bard, Flavor Flavio, he wore his hood a quarter turn. He also wore a large sundial chain.

    • @bradhorner
      @bradhorner 5 лет назад +22

      He did the song Fight The Power!
      (Of Aristocracy) and wore jheri curls.

    • @kimquinn7728
      @kimquinn7728 5 лет назад

      @@bradhorner 😄

    • @justanotherhuman6532
      @justanotherhuman6532 5 лет назад +12

      I smoked a lot of weed and Im enjoying "Flavor Flavio" as a name more than I probably should.

    • @BrandanLee
      @BrandanLee 5 лет назад +2

      HWAT

    • @chrishenning8829
      @chrishenning8829 5 лет назад +2

      YEEEAAAHHHH BOOOOIIIII!!!

  • @redram5150
    @redram5150 5 лет назад +993

    Why do I have a feeling the guy who invented a cape-hat was the ancestor of the guy who turned a bathrobe into a Snuggie

    • @Call-me-Al
      @Call-me-Al 5 лет назад +37

      Snuggies make perfect sense: they are great for wheelchair users

    • @midshipman8654
      @midshipman8654 5 лет назад +40

      you know, given the statistics of human propagation, that’s way more likely than you may think.

    • @redram5150
      @redram5150 5 лет назад +9

      Il Al a Snuggie is a bathrobe in reverse. Use a bathrobe

    • @Call-me-Al
      @Call-me-Al 5 лет назад +13

      @@redram5150 aren't snuggies notably longer than a bathrobe? Plus aren't snuggies usually like made out of fleece while bathrobes are usually made out of terrycloth cotton. This on top of that snuggies often are sewn notably different from the shape of a bathrobe. I have never owned a snuggie (though have a friend who does), nor have I owned a bathrobe since my early teen years because I don't have any use of a bathrobe. It's really pointless to someone who gets undressed in the bathroom and gets dressed there too after immediately towelling off. I'm an adult who lives with my partner so I have no reason to lock the bathroom door while I shower. Not everyone owns a bathrobe nor a morning robe, but even if they did that doesn't mean their robe will fit their needs if they want a snuggie.
      That's like telling me to just use two knitting needles if I want a pair of chopsticks because not everyone owns knitting needles, nor does the shape of the average knitting needle work as well as chopsticks, and additionally even the material the knitting needles are made out of can be unpleasant to eat with.
      Edit: I don't want a snuggie either, I was pointing out that they have good use cases because "snuggies" (any robes sewn to be worn backwards while seated or lying down, not any specific brand) are usually a lot more comfortable for wheelchair users than wearing robes backwards so if they want one then don't be an ass about it to them.

    • @Sam-ml5wt
      @Sam-ml5wt 5 лет назад +2

      Reincarnation 😂

  • @zukaro
    @zukaro 2 года назад +59

    Honestly I kinda love ancient clothes in some ways just because of how versatile everything is. Makes me wanna get some blanket pins and wear my wool blanket in the winter (and in fact I've found that a belt is a great way to wear a blanket without putting holes in the blanket).
    But there's just something nice about being able to use one thing in many different applications, rather than having things that are made for a single application and don't really apply to any other applications.

  • @kozmikhero6749
    @kozmikhero6749 5 лет назад +516

    I remember wearing a hood and cloak for hallowween one year and thinking "Wow this is like super warm and cool looking why don't we use these anymore?"

    • @novaiscool1
      @novaiscool1 5 лет назад +58

      The same reason why woman's clothes makers forget to add pockets, so they can sell us more products to achieve the same level of functionality.

    • @shallandavarpainterofsouls9509
      @shallandavarpainterofsouls9509 5 лет назад +15

      I know, it's sad. :( I love cloaks.

    • @kingdavidapple
      @kingdavidapple 5 лет назад +17

      @@shallandavarpainterofsouls9509 So wear them! I've made enough round caps for fellows singing in a madrigal group, I decided to make one of canvas for myself & wear it year-round. Compliments all the time. Fine cap: keeps rain or snow off, casts enough shadow to keep sun off most my head and neck (2 inch brim.)

    • @Wustenfuchs109
      @Wustenfuchs109 5 лет назад +16

      Because some modern fabrics are much better in the things you want done. We still have hoods, they are just an integral part of other clothing items. Some are well made, some are worse, some are there just for the show - but we still have them and use them. As for the cloak, that too you still have - usually as an added protection from rain or wind above a much warmer clothing. A modern raincoat/coat offers a much better protection from wind and rain, unlike the medieval ones that would either get soaked fast (wool) or be very cumbersome to wear (leather).
      Long story short - humanity is not retarded when it comes to the use of certain items. If something IS useful, we use it - unless we find something better. When we do, we change, adapt.
      So, while you could argue that the cloak is "cool looking" (to you it might be, to a person of the time it would an odd thing to say in the same way it is odd to you that jeans are cool looking - there might be cool looking ones, but they are ordinary and everyone uses them), it simply changed over time to a more useful clothing item(s). Now we make things that fulfill the same function but either better or cheaper. Oddly enough, "cool factor" is not what keeps things around, it is their usefulness and functionality.

    • @brucedockery5677
      @brucedockery5677 5 лет назад +22

      Work outdoors in the winter, and you learn really quickly why Carhardt jackets with the heavy hoods are so popular with rural people and construction workers!!

  • @BarefootBeekeeper
    @BarefootBeekeeper 3 года назад +538

    It's remarkable how few people wear hats today compared with 100 years ago. An underrated garment, I think.

    • @kathryncarter6143
      @kathryncarter6143 3 года назад +6

      And this makes more sense than the female aristocrats & the silly useless things they put on their heads.
      The guys should be so lucky. If they wore hats, they could at least cover their bald spot.

    • @katemarin8363
      @katemarin8363 3 года назад +85

      Theory I read attributed this to the increasing use of cars, which had less & less head room over the decades. It does seem the only hats being worn over the last 30 years or so are very low profile.

    • @kathryncarter6143
      @kathryncarter6143 3 года назад +8

      @@katemarin8363 except for female aristocrats.

    • @tomellis4750
      @tomellis4750 3 года назад +5

      No it's overheaded.

    • @R_Forde
      @R_Forde 3 года назад +15

      I come from a long line of hat wearers.

  • @linked_soul
    @linked_soul 5 лет назад +1761

    Me: Ok, I should go to sleep now.
    YT: Heres a Video about medival hoods.
    Me: Ok just this one Video, cant be this good
    Also Me: Proceeds to watch the whole channel after seeing a hood being turned isnide out

  • @greenmantis9857
    @greenmantis9857 2 года назад +29

    You’re right we don’t change that much we mainly just repeat ourselves, a lot people have similar ideas to people long ago. Great video thank you.

  • @MrTudenom
    @MrTudenom 5 лет назад +149

    Can you imagine what future historians will say about things like wearing your pants low enough for your but crack to show? "Men of the 21st century were highly concerned with crack sweat, the lowering of the pants aided in air circulation and kept the wearer cool in hot weather".

    • @gabriel300010
      @gabriel300010 5 лет назад +7

      They shall remember it as an ingenious solution to the discomforts of global warming

    • @roberts7107
      @roberts7107 5 лет назад +17

      The lower the pants, the lower the IQ.

    • @cactusc9519
      @cactusc9519 5 лет назад +6

      lol. it's actually interesting that in a way the sagged pants thing brings back the same idea behind slashed sleeves. "check this out, even my under layers are cool and aesthetic looking."

    • @sixchiensblancs
      @sixchiensblancs 5 лет назад +7

      @@roberts7107
      Same thing with ties, the longer and redder the tie, the more corrupt and stupid the wearer.

    • @cyohe8643
      @cyohe8643 3 года назад

      🤣

  • @Whereawarewolf
    @Whereawarewolf 5 лет назад +975

    You know this came from some guy who was sick of carrying his kids stuff around.
    “I told you it was too warm for a hood but you wanted to bring it so you’re going to carry it!”
    “But I don’t want too!”
    “Here just turn it like this. Now it’s a hat.”
    “It looks stupid!!!”
    *passing nobleman: “hey, cool hat kid.”

  • @victorias.6751
    @victorias.6751 5 лет назад +247

    Hello from the USA! Our oldest child is almost 6 and he loves your videos. We all especially enjoy the ones featuring your horses. Thank you for providing family friendly and educational videos!

    • @Borthax
      @Borthax 5 лет назад +4

      Wait till he gets to how you use bladed weapons to slaughter your foes.

    • @Borthax
      @Borthax 5 лет назад

      And also Half swording

    • @Borthax
      @Borthax 5 лет назад

      @Masterffc Not entirely, America has rich pre history... that's about it.

  • @NephiylusBaphson
    @NephiylusBaphson 2 года назад +49

    This little sneak peak into medieval fashion trends warms my heart in a very strange and unexpected way. A sort of nostalgia birthed from historical fascination rather than personal experience. I think that I would get a similar feeling if a medieval peasant told me their favorite joke or their closest equivalent of a meme.

  • @gavinreid8351
    @gavinreid8351 5 лет назад +242

    I have noticed in medieval art head wear is ubiquitous, but in films set during this era hardly anyone had headwear.

    • @sixchiensblancs
      @sixchiensblancs 5 лет назад +62

      In films you need to see actors faces and hear them properly.

    • @deaddoll1361
      @deaddoll1361 5 лет назад +64

      Unfortunately films set in this era don't strive to be historically correct, whether it's attire, weapons or the story. They like to take an ancient, well known story to help sell the film and then write a fantasy. Mary, Queen of Scots will draw more viewers than Renesmee, Imperatrix of the Elves, yet the former is almost as much a fantasy. Many viewers will think it's historically accurate though, based on the title.

    • @mfree80286
      @mfree80286 5 лет назад +5

      @@sixchiensblancs Else, all will be as Kenny from South Park....

    • @sixchiensblancs
      @sixchiensblancs 5 лет назад +2

      @@mfree80286
      Lol... Yeah his facial expressions were hard to grasp... 😊

    • @midshipman8654
      @midshipman8654 5 лет назад +32

      gavin Reid same reason Helmets aren’t worn on the big screen and everyone dresses in boring drab colored biker gear.
      Wish we could get out of the boring everything is grey look that Hollywood likes to put over medieval/early modern aesthetic since the 90’s. Ironically, they trying to make things seem grounded and realistic, but reality is often colorful and odd.

  • @gubgub4321
    @gubgub4321 5 лет назад +225

    Reminds me of when I first noticed that a modern blazer is basically the same as a 19th century military coat but with all but 2-3 of the buttons removed. Explains the vestigial button hole on the lapel.

    • @autosadist
      @autosadist 5 лет назад +21

      the modern peacoat is similar in this respect too!

    • @gubgub4321
      @gubgub4321 5 лет назад +66

      @@autosadist yeah totally. It's a trip when you button up a double breasted pea coat all the way and realize "oh i look like a soviet military official"

    • @ellefleming5113
      @ellefleming5113 5 лет назад

      Good point

    • @garymitchell5899
      @garymitchell5899 5 лет назад +4

      Actually it doesn't because everything else has been removed and if the buttonhole wasn't needed then it would have gone too. We're not talking about appendix or third eyelids.

    • @favoritemustard3542
      @favoritemustard3542 5 лет назад +4

      My third eye is blind...

  • @Aconitum_napellus
    @Aconitum_napellus 5 лет назад +2485

    Harken lads! If thou reversest thy hood, dost thou not reckon it looketh snazzy?!

    • @faithcastillo9597
      @faithcastillo9597 5 лет назад +65

      "Lord what fools these mortals be!"

    • @anvilbrunner.2013
      @anvilbrunner.2013 5 лет назад +75

      Tis quod sinful appeal to ye sodomyte, thou fell lollygagger.

    • @sail4life
      @sail4life 5 лет назад +105

      Methinks it doth resemble naught so much as the arse end of an ox. But away, do thou as thee will. 'T is not for me to judge thy tastes or lack thereof.

    • @mose717
      @mose717 5 лет назад +50

      Verily

    • @raintamer8121
      @raintamer8121 5 лет назад +9

      Something Dreadful, I see what did there! You dog 😂.

  • @LynneFarr
    @LynneFarr 10 месяцев назад +133

    Glad to see some of these great earlier videos getting the views they deserve!

  • @Thelazyparent
    @Thelazyparent 4 года назад +199

    This man is like everyone’s favourite history teacher

  • @cashkromsupernerd1193
    @cashkromsupernerd1193 4 года назад +235

    And here I was impressed when my brother wore his hoodie backwards to hold.snacks right by his face

    • @mikha007
      @mikha007 3 года назад +16

      Like a horses nosebag

    • @kevingray4980
      @kevingray4980 3 года назад +6

      @@mikha007 my thoughts exactly!

    • @wordzmyth
      @wordzmyth 2 года назад +5

      Sounds like your brother is an innovator

  • @omarma7815
    @omarma7815 4 года назад +125

    when the hood turned into a chapreon I lost my mind ... it all makes sense now

  • @drivestowork
    @drivestowork 2 года назад +18

    I work at a frozen food factory... the modern hood, the hoodie, is very important piece of clothing for those driving forklifts in the frozen warehouse!!!
    A balaclava and the hood(ie) are absolutely essential!!

  • @reginaromsey
    @reginaromsey 5 лет назад +31

    I’ve worn the same outfit as a woman in January in Sweden. It works a treat! Wearing it in the rain in Germany it kept me warm and the hood, worn as far forward acted as a porch to keep the water out of your eyes.

    • @oktopussy9628
      @oktopussy9628 5 лет назад +1

      But doesn't it soak full of water?

    • @reginaromsey
      @reginaromsey 5 лет назад +2

      Wool is warm even when wet. When I got caught in a soaking rainstorm for over an hour I found that most of the water ran off and since it retained my body temperature the rain didn’t make it cold.

  • @PR0MARK1
    @PR0MARK1 3 года назад +91

    This guy is strangely entertainining, even about something normally boring. I have aquired more knowledge thank you sir.

  • @NoName-fc3xe
    @NoName-fc3xe 5 лет назад +614

    That little analogy to people turning ball caps backwards is spot on. Liked and subbed for more! Great work!

    • @grassroot011
      @grassroot011 5 лет назад +5

      The reversed ball cap is still.. stupid. Looks like a duck who's had his face slapped hard, Daffy Duck you say?

    • @NoName-fc3xe
      @NoName-fc3xe 5 лет назад +2

      @@grassroot011 In general, I agree with you. The very few exceptions are cute girls, Sylvester Stallone from Over the Top and the lead singer of Manchester Orchestra in the Shake it Out video. Lol

    • @EliWintercross
      @EliWintercross 5 лет назад +5

      The only purpose I could see for wearing a cap backwards, is if you needed to look down a scope and didn't want your hat to fall off or bang against your rifle scope...
      That's about it.

    • @coconinoco
      @coconinoco 5 лет назад +21

      This originates with fielders switching the brim around to keep the sun of their neck or ears. It's very practical. I do it if I'm working outdoors in the sun.

    • @ichhabe330
      @ichhabe330 5 лет назад +2

      I came to the same conclusion after seing this video. Liked and subbed...for more.

  • @annt7384
    @annt7384 2 года назад +9

    I love hoods. They’re great in New England, especially when it unexpectedly starts to rain or snow; your hood is always there. Mine is attached to a modern coat, but dressing in layers is timeless.

  • @fleetskipper1810
    @fleetskipper1810 5 лет назад +108

    I’m also fascinated with history for the same reason you stated: human beings don’t change.

    • @2nd3rd1st
      @2nd3rd1st 5 лет назад +8

      I disagree strongly, my newborn son used to look like a dried prune and was pretty useless around the farm. Now 16 years later he looks like a younger version of myself and is handy with a John Deer.

    • @ayebraine
      @ayebraine 5 лет назад +4

      It's paradox, because both this is to some extent true, but also the quote "the past is a different country; they do things differently over there" is also true. Keeping both in mind helps very much. Not one single thing that you perceive as self-obvious is guaranteed to be the same in a different era... and often exactly because people don't change, but they solve the problem in a different way in different circumstances.

    • @fleetskipper1810
      @fleetskipper1810 5 лет назад +1

      ayebraine well put!

    • @Yal_Rathol
      @Yal_Rathol 5 лет назад +4

      @@ayebraine history repeats, the details change.
      sure, the rules were different, the politics were different and the weapons and wars were different. but people throwing hysterical fits because a bowl of rice was a coin higher than they were willing to pay? that's timeless.

    • @chickenbob562
      @chickenbob562 5 лет назад +2

      for all your discussions
      let me try to conclude it
      human behavior never changes
      just the way they apply their behavior is changing

  • @firstwavepuresoul
    @firstwavepuresoul 5 лет назад +132

    The first hood in bergundy colour is just the job to stave off the cold from around the ears. Most modern headwear fails to account for the ears. The linen lining is the secret to it I think. The grey one, also very swish, is ideal for stepping out...both are tremendous. A great learning video for apparel of the times. Liked the intro showing the walk along the path!

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 5 лет назад +8

      I think the "forgetting the ear protection" is mainly because we have heaters everywhere now (especially cars), people even 50 years ago would wear hats with ear protection much more often then today. A good example is the Ushanka, the deer stalker, and the various kinds of beanie. I think with the more modern ideal of form fitting clothing, and without ear protection being as much of an issue, clothing manufacturers can make smaller hats.

    • @brokenwave6125
      @brokenwave6125 5 лет назад +3

      What cold weathet hats have you been looking at??
      They always account for the ears...
      If you're using baseball caps or fedoras as the metric then that's totally unfair.

    • @rogerc.roberts4705
      @rogerc.roberts4705 5 лет назад +8

      The video contained no surprises for me as I learned from my experience as
      a "Token Celt" in a local Viking historical re-enactment group. We took part in a Thanksgiving/Christmas parade, about 29 degrees. My hood & cloak had (modern) linen liners and well before the end of the parade I had sweat running down my back.
      In contrast, marching with us were several young women, employees of a bank, one of the sponsors. All but one was dressed in modern clothing that would be worn to a mall during cold weather. They "froze". But , I had loaned one female the extra hood I had brought with me & she, like me, did not realize that the signs showing the temp were in fact CORRECT, as it was just below freezing. She was not cold.
      My other re enactment experience was circa 1875 lifestyle. From that I discovered the reason people wore NIGHTCAPS to bed during that time period (heating came from burning coal). When a storm knocked out my electric service during December (I am in Central Ohio) I had no problem using the night cap, 2 wool blankets, an a kerosene heater sitting in the hallway, not in my bedroom, to stay warm during the night. The city discovered that my house lacked electric and forced me out of my house, which they boarded up citing a "health factor". Yet I did not have any colds that winter. This year I am still in court w/ the city and am being forced to live with other people, my re enactment clothing is at my house. And here it is mid March and I have been bed ridden for two weeks this winter.
      Not hard to develop the idea that modern society has come to depend on modern gas/electric powered heating systems way to much! Don't get me wrong, these systems do have a place in the "Modern World", but so does following the older, proven ways of our ancestors.

    • @davidlink3787
      @davidlink3787 5 лет назад +2

      If you think modern hats fail to cover the ears, you've never spent a winter in the American Midwest. A knit stocking cap that can be pulled down to cover the ears is pretty much mandatory.

    • @Earthether
      @Earthether 5 лет назад +1

      firstwavepuresoul my hunting baklava works
      This way

  • @gearhead1234
    @gearhead1234 11 месяцев назад +4

    A few years ago, I bought a quality burgschneider wool hood for the ren faires, but started using it, working outside during the cold snowy months. I get odd looks once in a while, but I don’t care.. it really works well and I’ll continue using it. The medieval people really knew how to stay warm! Cheers!

  • @Kitiwake
    @Kitiwake 5 лет назад +107

    My friend, a brother in the Franciscan Order (OFM) always wore his monks habit and a cape in winter
    He was very social when I knew him. At one time, he was around the contestants of a fancy dress competition and the judges wanted to award him first prize!
    True story.

    • @RianeBane
      @RianeBane 4 года назад +10

      I go to a college that was founded by a group of Benedictines, and it's always fun to see the monks walking around campus with their hoods up in the winter!

    • @buddhastaxi666
      @buddhastaxi666 4 года назад +5

      After gracefully decling the acclaim your brother should have walked home across a river or lake.

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 3 года назад +3

      I know of one Order who not only use their habits and hoods as an extra layer when its really cold, they swap shirts and trousers for their cotton habits to keep cool in hot weather. Its the only time that I wear a skirt too. Air circulation is wonderful.

    • @CrankyGrandma
      @CrankyGrandma 3 года назад +8

      Two of my kids went to a Franciscan university. Nothing like seeing a Franciscan Friar in the same clothing the order has worn since the 1200s, talking on a cell phone.

    • @flybymight
      @flybymight 3 года назад +1

      And most of the Franciscans I have known would wear their sandals, often without socks, all winter- I am in Canada!

  • @bhambabean1192
    @bhambabean1192 5 лет назад +74

    It's essentially the medieval form of tying a sweater around your waste when it gets warm out.

    • @yogadr6
      @yogadr6 3 года назад +7

      Tying any sweater around your waste would be a very malodorous and extremely foolish thing to do!

    • @daviddroescher
      @daviddroescher 3 года назад

      @@yogadr6 in what context?
      It is much more secure than looping the arms around your neck like a medieval hood for a headless men
      Or are you confusing the mid point between your hips and ribs as fecal matter/trash.

    • @rochellee.pigman6495
      @rochellee.pigman6495 3 года назад +1

      @@yogadr6 I see your inner editor showing😉

    • @anastasia10017
      @anastasia10017 3 года назад +1

      why would anyone want to tie a sweater around their waste when they could put it in the sewer ????? forget about it being warm out .

  • @ringokidd387
    @ringokidd387 3 года назад +28

    I've enjoyed my leather suede archers hood for a few years now not only at the ren fairs but it's quite formidable clothing for inclement weather when hunting or fishing or just being out in the outdoors! Naturally waterproof protects you from the rain the wind and keeps you warm

  • @michaelsommer5255
    @michaelsommer5255 2 года назад +7

    Ok, I learned something new about my favourite medieval clothing item (and the commonly underestimated one). The rolling back stuff was new to me and that it was converted into a fancy head, I had heart short time ago, but now I can see how it was done and even why. (If it is too warm for the hood, but you want a hat...and people get suddently creative)
    I found my hood from my medieval gear highly usefull, because even while sleeping in a tent, it keeps your head and shoulders warm and does similar things like the head of the mummy-sleeping bag, but is much more confortable. (And we had some nasty frosty nights in our camps.)
    And it is fascinating, how warm a proper hood can keep you, even if you don't have a cloak with you. Ideal for mild days with some cooling down in the evening. Too warm for a cloak, but not entirely warm, so you need another layer. The equivalent to the "mid-season coat"...but much more versatile and modular.
    I once used to have a nice warm woolen winter coat (until nasty clothing moths killed it), but it lacked any hood and so I weared my medieval hood other it (it was nearly the same colour)...perfect for cold ice rain. I was on my way home from a visit of a friend and it was a cold november night, when ice cold rain set in...rather unpleasant, but hood and coat did their job...only the water pouring down the wool dripped over my lower legs and the coat turned in the end out to get realy heavy. But it was ok...I felt much better, than the stranded group of young guys, who wanted home after pub or a party and were relativly druck...they were not proper equiped and waited for a Taxi that never came. The mood was not the best....but the comment someone made, as they saw me was great: " It is raining, it is cold, there are always taxis in this area, but there is no...and now even Dead is coming."
    I walked away in the most elegant way possible. If you wear a usefull but a bit outfashioned gear, you could get promoted...even without a scythe.

  • @damonturnbull5903
    @damonturnbull5903 5 лет назад +20

    Finally an intelligent History Channel on RUclips. Great presenter that doesn't blow his own horn. Just gives you the facts by living History. Thank you!!! SUBSCRIBED

  • @ArtyFartyBart
    @ArtyFartyBart 5 лет назад +660

    Yeah, but would you relinquish the throne if the rightful king of Gondor returned?

    • @corvuscrow5485
      @corvuscrow5485 5 лет назад +42

      Took me a minute but HE DOES resemble the guy...(!)

    • @ramixnudles7958
      @ramixnudles7958 5 лет назад +18

      @uncletigger Aye, I used to be an adventurer like you. Then I took an arrow to the knee, and now I don't kneel.

    • @theusher2893
      @theusher2893 5 лет назад +8

      Bart Geerts You win. I can’t top this comment.

    • @espositogregory
      @espositogregory 5 лет назад +3

      Lo Bart Geerts, he is but only mortal.

    • @ageant01
      @ageant01 5 лет назад +15

      Gondor needs no King!

  • @swivelshivel6576
    @swivelshivel6576 5 лет назад +275

    God, this reminds me of when in grade school we would wear our hooded sweaters by just hanging them by our heads with just the hood

    • @favoritemustard3542
      @favoritemustard3542 5 лет назад +2

      I have a backpack that i can do that with.

    • @steamboatwillie8517
      @steamboatwillie8517 4 года назад +5

      Oh yes! Like putting your duffelcoat on just by the hood, so you automatically had a cape to swoosh out behind you when you ran around. Those were the days. No X box etc, but a dead bee in a matchbox would do you most of the summer holidays! :0)

    • @rammbostein
      @rammbostein 4 года назад +2

      oh man totally,
      I had a friend during grade school would always wear his older brother's hoodie, and since was so much larger, he'd wear it over his back pack. We'd all get a kick out of it, it was like a camel hump LOL

    • @tgbluewolf
      @tgbluewolf 4 года назад +3

      Or if we needed to carry something we'd put our hoodie on backwards

    • @MagnificoGiganticus
      @MagnificoGiganticus 4 года назад

      I thought that was what he was going to do. I was wondering what it evolved into.

  • @johneverett3947
    @johneverett3947 2 года назад +6

    I have watched his videos for a long while and have subscribed, I miss them when I can’t find them. He’s very informative, down to earth and entertaining with out focusing on violence and shock factor. He cares deeply about the medieval period and his animals. I wish more sites followed his example.

  • @danieltruman2312
    @danieltruman2312 5 лет назад +18

    The intro is a thing of beauty. You rock the shit out of a lance, a sword and a horse!
    Hats off to you sir.

  • @ChiiRayne
    @ChiiRayne 5 лет назад +5

    The second you turned the outside of the hood inwards, I could not stop giggling. The ingenuity of the old worlds still baffles me to this day. Bravo for the connection between time periods. Absolutely love it!

  • @onyxlily2230
    @onyxlily2230 5 лет назад +209

    I'm portuguese. When I saw pictures of Prince Henry Navigator, I could never understand what the f*** he was wearing on his head. Now I know.

  • @AnikaBren
    @AnikaBren 2 года назад +6

    I think it is interesting how the cloak and the hood took good advantage of heat rising. The cloak would hold and funnel body warmth from the legs and torso and funnel it up and hold it around the chest and shoulders, add the hood and the heat coming up and out of the cloak from the neck would funnel up around the dead and face.

  • @benodaboy
    @benodaboy 5 лет назад +212

    “Walls make a big difference to being warm.”

    • @hammermantbg
      @hammermantbg 4 года назад +33

      You never really apreciate walls untill you have none

    • @Smo1k
      @Smo1k 3 года назад +21

      @@hammermantbg Just like roofs: You don't appreciate their being over your head until they're on it.

    • @buckbundy8642
      @buckbundy8642 3 года назад +4

      You learn something new every day.

  • @markrude9489
    @markrude9489 5 лет назад +12

    I'm glad you did this demonstration. The hood-to-hat conversion is one of my favorite bits of medieval fashion.

  • @mohamedaljamil6334
    @mohamedaljamil6334 5 лет назад +53

    Man, I love how you look into the history of clothing, weapons and Armor. Which makes me sad that us middle Easterns don't have people doing that. Which brings me to a request. I hope that someday in the future you could look into the history of Arabian armour, clothing, weapons. and how the Arabs and the Europeans exchanged technics between them when the crusades happened in the middle east

    • @ModernKnight
      @ModernKnight  5 лет назад +34

      good idea, I'll try to do some research.

    • @maddux1188
      @maddux1188 4 года назад +6

      That would be so freakin cool

    • @MrNicopa
      @MrNicopa 4 года назад +4

      If you look carefully at European armorial bearings (which is a picture of a knight’s correct colours for battle wear) you will see that every Knight has a coloured keffieh over his helmet and an arghal to keep it fixed in place. Obviously this is Arab.
      The colours match his shield.
      This is to keep the middle eastern summer sun from overheating his helmet.

    • @MrNicopa
      @MrNicopa 4 года назад +4

      The knight’s keffieh is called a mantling.

    • @MrNicopa
      @MrNicopa 4 года назад +4

      The arghal is called a torse.

  • @shivmongoose3343
    @shivmongoose3343 9 месяцев назад +5

    As someone who has spent many months sleeping rough I've found that when I'm shopping at the thrift store I favor the larger, deepest hoods when I'm looking for a hoodie. I've often wished that cloaks were still in vogue. Many times I've cut a hole in the center of a blanket that was the right size and fabric. I'm glad we have more choices than just wool but often I'd prefer wool to mist of the synthetics that abound.

  • @Alpha_Synergy
    @Alpha_Synergy 3 года назад +78

    Everyone keeps talking about how cloaks and hoods are no longer socially acceptable. Here's the thing: you can wear it if you really want to. I wear leather vambraces all the time, and I only ever get positive comments on them. If you want to wear a cloak, just do it. No one's going to tell you that you can't. And if they do, unless they give a legitimate reason why in that situation you shouldn't, do it anyway.

    • @philt4346
      @philt4346 3 года назад +4

      And carry a sword. Trust me.

    • @LincolnDWard
      @LincolnDWard 3 года назад +3

      @@philt4346 Might run into issues carrying a weapon into certain public spaces, but... : )

    • @milanstevic8424
      @milanstevic8424 3 года назад +6

      @@LincolnDWard with an added opportunity to also fight for the privilege of carrying a sword

    • @austenhead5303
      @austenhead5303 3 года назад +6

      Nobody's saying that you'll get beat up or arrested for wearing something "weird", but you WILL get judged and treated differently. The question then becomes: is that something you're willing to deal with for the sake of wearing a "weird" garment you like? For most people, the answer is probably no.

    • @fenrirgg
      @fenrirgg 3 года назад +20

      It's 2021, dressing as a plague doctor is socially acceptable now.

  • @mbjac
    @mbjac 5 лет назад +41

    This channel oddly enough keeps appearing as an ad at the top of my home feed, ignored it for ages, I'm so glad I clicked because this channel is amazing, well done the camera work and production value is through the roof amazing

  • @TheEJackUK
    @TheEJackUK 5 лет назад +131

    I lament the fact that cloaks are no longer everyday wear

    • @connaghananthony
      @connaghananthony 5 лет назад +9

      Start a new trend yourself.

    • @warriormaiden9829
      @warriormaiden9829 5 лет назад +4

      Lol, I have one and wear it on a regular basis anyway. XD

    • @warriormaiden9829
      @warriormaiden9829 5 лет назад +4

      @MeadhbhNi Lol, I guess it depends on the style of boots you wear with it. :)

    • @TheEJackUK
      @TheEJackUK 5 лет назад +3

      @MeadhbhNi a man who wears cloaks and boots together...... Isn't afraid of anything

    • @TheEJackUK
      @TheEJackUK 5 лет назад +5

      @MeadhbhNi but I'll be warm and dry and able to swish dramatically down corridors 😎

  • @keithrobicheux4749
    @keithrobicheux4749 2 года назад +6

    I love the cloth face mask!!! It’s my favorite new cold weather item. It’s way more portable than a scarf, and it keep you really warm paired with a beanie/watch cap/tuque or a hooded sweatshirt

    • @notaboutit3565
      @notaboutit3565 2 года назад

      Could just wear one of them nylon balaclavas. Got the beanie and the mask in one garment, fits really well in the left hand ass-pocket, plus it’s thin enough to still wear a ball cap.

  • @dantebond8124
    @dantebond8124 4 года назад +12

    The red hood worn inside-out reminded me of a jester and I was wondering if you could make a video on medieval jesters, perhaps clarify any modern day misconceptions.

  • @fourseasonsnorth
    @fourseasonsnorth 5 лет назад +378

    That is so cool! These hoods should come back into style :)

    • @clintcarpentier2424
      @clintcarpentier2424 5 лет назад +14

      Well get on it.

    • @Aconitum_napellus
      @Aconitum_napellus 5 лет назад +3

      @Dick Fageroni We'll probably have to make them out of something else because the sheep will have mutated into radioactive monstrosities.

    • @recowabunga7200
      @recowabunga7200 5 лет назад +1

      Aren't they already?

    • @brokenwave6125
      @brokenwave6125 5 лет назад +6

      I just use a shemagh when its cold. Pretty much the same concept but arguably more versatile and useful.
      Shemaghs are great for first aid as they can not only be a hat, hood, or scarf...but a sling, bandage, or tourniquet.

    • @dragonsword7370
      @dragonsword7370 5 лет назад +3

      @Modern Woodsman wool is great until the weather turns warmer. A shemagh was made to be used to stay warm at a cold desert night, then cooling and sunproofing during the hot bright day. Waterproofing and heat retention are the best reasons for wool bruv.

  • @peteraugust5295
    @peteraugust5295 4 года назад +196

    Imagine the first dude to show up in the streets of nuremberg wearing his hood upsidedown.. What a hipster...

  • @emeralddraegon
    @emeralddraegon 2 года назад +17

    Haha! I was thinking about backwards ball caps just before it's mentioned! This video was humorous and insightful! They may have lived very differently back then, but at the end of day, they still acted as people do! 😂 Loved learning this!!!

  • @iainjones695
    @iainjones695 5 лет назад +82

    Would you ever list your suppliers for your reproduction garments Jason. They look fantastic quality.

    • @Shinzon23
      @Shinzon23 5 лет назад +11

      Mewants too

    • @Mars-dw2zc
      @Mars-dw2zc 5 лет назад +18

      i think i found where he’s getting it, medieval-market.com
      looking at the cloaks and hoods on there, they look just like his ones

    • @iainjones695
      @iainjones695 5 лет назад +8

      Cheers @@Mars-dw2zc

    • @HappyJackBass
      @HappyJackBass 5 лет назад +2

      What an excellent website! Polish, I assume?

    • @TheNeeenha
      @TheNeeenha 5 лет назад +2

      @ Iain Jones Check this site out www.museumreplicas.com/

  • @mackbrown1570
    @mackbrown1570 5 лет назад +13

    I do like your videos, though I haven't the time to watch many of them. You come across as intelligent and well-thought-out but not preachy, and your insights are interesting and more addictive than I would have expected.
    I do appreciate all the work and research you do to gain these insights.
    Please do keep on!

  • @The3Rich3
    @The3Rich3 5 лет назад +296

    Get this man a BBC documentary

    • @WelshRabbit
      @WelshRabbit 5 лет назад +21

      I'd love to see him on TV in the US on the History Channel (if the History Channel would ever present history once again).

    • @Teeniebfable
      @Teeniebfable 5 лет назад +3

      He’s now on Amazon

    • @WelshRabbit
      @WelshRabbit 5 лет назад +3

      @Benjamin Farrington, yes, exactly!!! That's such a brilliant pun.

    • @QWERTY-ri5yw
      @QWERTY-ri5yw 5 лет назад +7

      eewwww not the bbc

    • @ancientmariner7473
      @ancientmariner7473 5 лет назад +5

      Richard Mansfield,
      BBC?, ??
      Why would a respectable gentleman want to work for paedophiles?

  • @falcolf
    @falcolf 2 года назад +13

    This was so great, that clothing looks so cozy, and relatively weather resistant too! Go wool!

  • @Leuk2598
    @Leuk2598 5 лет назад +21

    This was actually very intriguing to me. When I played Kingdom Come:Deliverance, I used to see those three articles of clothing all the time. And whenever I saw a shapron, I would go "nice hat but, how and who the fuck came up with that weird shape with random strip dangling from it and all?" In my head.

  • @kingdavidapple
    @kingdavidapple 11 месяцев назад +4

    My medieval hood has no linen lining. It is a single layer of wool, yet when I hike 5 miles or more in a snow storm or rain, it has proven comfortable & weather resistant. I have learned to turn the sides and lower edge, if needed, while leaving the upper edge out to offer shade or a bill, if you will, to fend off precipitation. I have turned the edge twice to change how closely it conforms to my head while affording better peripheral vision. The liripipe on mine was not quite long enough to tuck into the back when wrapped around my throat, so I added a tassel, which made the difference. I have hiked for hours in temps such as you began this video with & found the medieval hood answers the need surprisingly well.

    • @peetabrown5813
      @peetabrown5813 9 месяцев назад

      What (and where) is the liripipe on his hood? Does it have a function ?

    • @kingdavidapple
      @kingdavidapple 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@peetabrown5813 In both hoods, liripipe hangs to his left. It is the long tail - longer in the gray one - & he flipped the gray one around his throat loosely. If he wore the hood as in the first instance & wished to make the hood warmer in real wind (none in the first instance that is obvious) he could wrap it around his throat closely & trap warm air rising from his body. That is what I did by adding a tassel to mine. Had my hood as long a liripipe as his second example, it would have worked fine to wrap & tuck in place. To wrap & tuck is its first function, in my view. Someone has suggested it could also be used a a kind of pocket (which few people had in those days) & I suppose it could perform that function, although distributing weight might be a challenge. I'll try that.

    • @peetabrown5813
      @peetabrown5813 8 месяцев назад

      @@kingdavidapple thanks , it is very interesting. Although this video is old he has a fascinating channel

  • @yogawarriorgirl
    @yogawarriorgirl 5 лет назад +81

    Vernon Roche has mellowed since his time fighting for Temerian freedom. He looks quite happy teaching his culture to this strange Internet audience.

    • @johndalquen7668
      @johndalquen7668 3 года назад +6

      When he wore the hood as a hat I thought of Roche.

  • @StellaShadowmoon
    @StellaShadowmoon 6 месяцев назад +2

    When you put on the chaperon hat at the end I really started to laugh 😂 it’s EXACTLY like the upside down rolled hood! That’s great haha

  • @ladychatelaine697
    @ladychatelaine697 5 лет назад +28

    I love the medieval era! You make such interesting videos. Thanks for all the really informative points you give us...🙂🇬🇧

  • @530skeptic
    @530skeptic 5 лет назад +10

    "Human beings don't change, do they?" Super fascinating, dude. Subbed.

  • @ramixnudles7958
    @ramixnudles7958 5 лет назад +136

    We just turn things backwards to be different.
    "Look at me, I have taken my long woolen under drawers and put them over my head. My head sticks out of the trap-door. I shall call it ... Whoa this is pretty warm. I shall call it... whew, I'm sweating.
    I'll call it... Dash it, it's a sweat shirt.

  • @elfieblue3175
    @elfieblue3175 2 года назад

    You are getting lots of mileage out of this video. This is just what I needed to see!
    I have a short hooded cape I wear the same way when I need visibility out walking (I'm in Canada): roll the hood back, and have it set more snugly on my head at the same time. It just needs a knitted jumper and a knitted hat for insulation, and the woven cape keeps the wind off. I got it when I was 18 or 19; I'm in my 50s now, and I've worn it every autumn and winter that I've had it.
    It's a solid garment choice, unless you have to buckle into a car and drive.

  • @darthvaper7157
    @darthvaper7157 3 года назад +22

    My little brother used roll his t-shirts, sweaters or hoodies like that when we were out camping or hiking...40yrs ago. I thought he was pretty smart most people thought he was wierd.

  • @fdsfsdfsdf3866
    @fdsfsdfsdf3866 5 лет назад +13

    So interesting and informative. I love how high spirited and good humored this man is! Loving this channel!

  • @jowalker5152
    @jowalker5152 5 лет назад +13

    Fascinating, I've always loved hoods and seeing how they evolved into what could be described as a high fashion item is very interesting.

  • @rodneygilbertson2231
    @rodneygilbertson2231 3 года назад +2

    I saw a comment made in another video saying this is what I thought the history channel would be! He was right! Your channel is way better! Highest praise!!

  • @Doughy_in_the_Middle
    @Doughy_in_the_Middle 3 года назад +26

    I watched this when you first posted it, and being a lover of language, I can't believe I missed this.
    The hat, "chaperon" of course sounds like "chaperonE", or, to supervise a couple on a date. Had to check the etymology, and it's 100% just that: chaperone has it's roots in the name for the hat!. You can totally imagine the idea of years and years of seeing little old ladies walking beside a couple to make sure there's no funny business, and those ladies eventually just being referred to by their head garment...the chaperon (with the "e" added in English).

  • @sylviahoffman9440
    @sylviahoffman9440 2 года назад +4

    I saw where you were going as you were rolling the neck - it totally makes sense how that hat design evolved. Excellent explanation. Thanks!

  • @Everett-xe3eg
    @Everett-xe3eg 5 лет назад +5

    This is some high production quality content my man. The music and the themes are wonderful. Everything about the time you put into this is wonderful. I am glad I found you in my feed and you have not disappointed yet.

  • @walkingpureheart4330
    @walkingpureheart4330 2 года назад +1

    This showed up today in my feed and it was lovely reviewing it once again..I couldn't believe it had been three years since I stumbled upon your channel. I am Arthurian to the core and watching and learning the inner working of medieval life has been interesting. I love Renaissance and how it brings to mind fantastical thoughts- damsels and the knights who would fighting to protect them, only to love them from afar lol
    And, gives want to have lived back then, yet reality of life then, makes one thankful of modern times..but it is so welcoming and you are the perfect knight for teaching us.
    Being a tomboy, loving my horses and riding, being in the midst of the boys and their mechanical toys has been great..but watching and seeing all that goes into actually being, living the life of a knight and what goes into you carrying on knighthood with others is beyond the best..thank you for the vicarious moments you have given me lol plus seeing your deep caring connection with your horse's and showing proper horsemanship..
    Sorry, for the long rambling.. think I'm jealous, not just of you boys who get to get wicked with swords, javelin's and horses! But that I wasn't aware so to playing with you guy's , instead of other things lol

    • @ModernKnight
      @ModernKnight  2 года назад

      Thanks for being a longterm supporter, it's appreciated.

  • @haggis0breath
    @haggis0breath 3 года назад +14

    in the 90's I wore a dog sweater as a hat when I went skiiing. It was for for my 40lb spaniel to give you an idea. It was nice, covered my neck and ears, people thought it was funny which was fine as I was a teenager... All was well until some teen girls yelled "is your dog cold hahaha". they should have asked me about fleas as old Danny definitely had 'em