I Sewed My Great-Great Grandma's Underwear

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  • Опубликовано: 8 янв 2025

Комментарии • 238

  • @VBirchwood
    @VBirchwood  Год назад +34

    This video has been sponsored by Babbel. Start speaking a new language in 3 weeks with Babbel 🎉. Get up to 60% OFF your subscription ➡ Here: bit.ly/vbirchwood60
    Are you looking forward to more Volga Tatar content in the future? 🥰 Thanks for watching!

    • @Karasus_drug_dealer
      @Karasus_drug_dealer Год назад +1

      YES I AM, THE FIRST I EVER HEARD OF IT WAS THROUGH YOUR CONTENT!!!!!!! Please continue educating us on all you learn about your culture.

    • @Nate-ti7ne
      @Nate-ti7ne Год назад

      Wow :0 This is your best video yet!!!!

  • @blueocean43
    @blueocean43 Год назад +120

    Ooh, the wide crotch suddenly made way more sense when you said that they spent a lot of time on horseback. That would indeed be more comfortable for riding than split crotch or modern crotch seams, and possibly sturdier as well as there aren't any seams to wear out between your body and the saddle.

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Год назад +24

      True. I haven't been on horseback for years, but I ride my bike a lot and crotch seams are the bane of my existence. I now know, why special bike underwear is a thing ☠️

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +19

      Yes absolutely! I can confirm too the under trousers create quite a nice bit of padding in the crotch area, so I can imagine it’d be very helpful when riding horses all day.

    • @Uffda.
      @Uffda. Год назад +4

      There’s a cool documentary about the oldest known pair of pants (trousers)- this is a feature, and quite possibly why we even have pants

  • @endlessgarden6801
    @endlessgarden6801 Год назад +179

    it's really banal but hi from Ural❤I have always been surprised at how many ethnic minorities live here and I am so interested in learning something about the Tatar culture from you, thanks to your videos I began not only to be interested in historical fashion, but also to sew) thank you for sharing your culture, I hope that more English-speaking people outside will know more wonderful cultures outside Europe👏

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +31

      Hi!! Not banal at all, as I love it when other people from the Urals comment 🥰 so glad to hear about your interest in historical fashion and sewing and glad you liked the video. Рәхмәт for your comment 😊

    • @Mycopoks
      @Mycopoks Год назад +18

      Привет из Самарской области, брат. Не подумала бы, что иностранные блогеры будут вообще освящать тему малых народов России, но оказалось и такое есть. Уж привыкла, что все думают что все мы русские

  • @beckstheimpatient4135
    @beckstheimpatient4135 Год назад +109

    I love learning more about the Tatar people! As a Romanian, we obviously have some shared history with some of the branches of Tatar culture, and I personally am fairly certain I have "some" genetic heritage due to... well... Tatar raiders... though that could be from any of the many related peoples that raided what is today Romania.
    Because of that, we tend to see Tatar culture through a very narrow lens - which is why your work brings so much joy! A new lens, a new perspective!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +52

      Thank you for your enthusiasm and kind comment!
      I should have mentioned this in the video (as it’s very important) but my project is specifically only related to Volga Tatars. The different Tatar groups are not genetically related, and sometimes didn’t even interact. It’s because “Tatar” was often a name given to us by others. The main theory for the ethnogenesis for Volga Tatars specifically is that we are descended from the Bulgars, who were nomadic around the Volga-Ural region. Historians know that Crimean Tatars, Siberian Tatars, Volga Tatars, and other Tatar groups are all not genetically related, and our clothing is also vastly different too! I’ve focused in my own research on Volga Tatar since it’s my group, but one of my books has examples of garments from other Tatar groups and they vary so much.

    • @antoinepetrov
      @antoinepetrov Год назад +17

      ​​@@VBirchwoodI am Bulgarian and I just learned that Volga Tatars descended from Bulgars, tribes which founded the country Bulgaria.

    • @cloroxbleach6344
      @cloroxbleach6344 5 месяцев назад

      @@VBirchwoodgiven your interest in Viking culture: the best first hand account description of Viking rituals and customs we have is from a man named Ibn Fadlan, who was on a diplomatic trip to explain Islamic law to the recently converted to Islam Volga bulgars!

  • @_______________2192
    @_______________2192 Год назад +20

    One type of Tatar female underwear that is often missed in historical reconstructions is кукрекче, тешелдрек - a sort of rectangular or trapezoid bib with neck and back straps that would be tied or buttoned on the back and worn under the shirt. It mainly served as a modesty panel, covering woman's breast and protecting it from showing in the deep shirt's slit; however, it was also used as breast support. Since кукрекче could be seen, it was decorated with tambour embroidery or applique.
    Ыштан would be usually tucked into stockings and rarely seen. Source - my great-grandma dressed like this her entire life, though her pants were usually striped xD

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +14

      Thank you so much for this info! I hadn’t heard of кукрекче, тешелдрек before! Hopefully I’ll be able to find out more about it somewhere on the internet. Doesn’t surprise me too they’d decorate them with tambour embroidery, as that is such a Volga Tatar thing to do 😂 everything gets a little tambour embroidery if it’s seen hahaha.
      I did know about the ыштан being tucked into stockings though! I’ve been tucking them in recently and it’s very comfortable.

  • @kjtherrick4031
    @kjtherrick4031 Год назад +41

    It's great that you had enough of the red linen blend to make the drawers too. The entire outfit looks wonderful. With that much room in the drawers, the user could continue to wear them through pregnancy and any other weight gain for as long as the material held out. Very practical!

  • @pippaseaspirit4415
    @pippaseaspirit4415 Год назад +18

    A possible explanation for the uncertainty surrounding women’s undershirt (or lack of it!) is that the extra layer was worn for warmth in areas where this would have been necessary.

  • @archeanna1425
    @archeanna1425 Год назад +26

    Bashkir?! Beautiful horses!! What a complex culture.
    The use of basic rectangles makes a lot of sense because it would mean no waste of fabric as it came off of the loom, it would just require what some think of as narrow looms. Sarah Howard has a YT channel - Wear your weaving - with lots of useful information about using various looms. Thanks.

    • @jfm14
      @jfm14 11 месяцев назад

      Bashkir horses are really something special!

  • @pmclaughlin4111
    @pmclaughlin4111 Год назад +15

    These are some of my favorite videos. As an American, I am pretty sure that most of the people I know wouldn't even have heard of the Volga Tartar (or even know what Turkic/Central Asian) would be
    add that to the material culture twist
    Wonderful-thank you for sharing

  • @raraavis7782
    @raraavis7782 Год назад +24

    How convenient it must be, to be an ambidextrous sewist. Especially with all the handsewing. Love your exploits into sewing historical garments from less well known cultures. Very interesting!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +6

      Thank you!! 🥰 so glad you enjoyed the video! It’s definitely very convenient and I feel very grateful to have either hand as an option.

  • @elizabethhatfield2115
    @elizabethhatfield2115 Год назад +10

    The large amount of fabric around the crotch made it easier when sitting atop a horse. I had friends who bred horses and did Mongolian costuming reenactment, so that's where my information comes from. --Lyssa WA, USA

  • @NomadicElfling
    @NomadicElfling Год назад +6

    I grew up in a house without AC, and one of my tricks was putting a bowl of ice in front of a fan helped make summers a lot more bearable

  • @LiljaHusmo
    @LiljaHusmo Год назад +37

    I love your exploration of the Tatar dress! The undertrousers remind me of the construction of the Norse thorsberg trousers or the skioldehamn trousers! Must be a very practical & comfy way to make trousers for lots of different places to have them 😊

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +17

      Thank you Lilja!! ❤️ and so true. They are very similar to them! Just goes to show that this type of cut and construction was practical for so many cultures. What’s cool too is that this style of underwear persists in Volga Tatar culture even back many centuries, so the cut must’ve been exactly what they needed if they didn’t change it for many hundreds of years!

    • @Iflie
      @Iflie Год назад +14

      It would certainly keep you warm with all that extra fabric holding warm air. Ant drafts getting up the skirts wouldn't get to you. And if you were pregnant you could keep wearing the same clothes just pulled less tight, very practical when fabric was at a premium.

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 Год назад +7

      ​@Iflie good point about maternity adaption. I once had a pair of harem pants and matching waistcoat. The pants had a drawstring at the waist and were gathered into embroidered, buttoned cuffs at the ankle. I found a peasant style blouse and these pants were the most comfortable and smart outfit at all stages of my first two pregnancies. They wore out after that. Lol. Anyway, as my belly grew the bow on the drawstring got smaller. Eventually, it naturally fitted over the hips from the back to tie under the belly. Very secure. Modern clothing would become twisted or slip down. Those babies are in their 30s now. Oversized drawstring pants are worth remembering.

  • @katerrinah5442
    @katerrinah5442 Год назад +13

    They look so comfy! And the colour is incredible!
    Seeing people connect with their heritage through clothing makes me so happy. I've recently found out for sure I'm 1/4 Eastern European and Balkan (my maternal Grandfather is a big mystery) and the first thing I did was go look up folk dress from the regions I have ancestry from.
    There's so much beautiful traditional clothing out there and I am so happy to see people like you talking about it 😊❤️

  • @trenae77
    @trenae77 Год назад +23

    When I joined the DAR it was through the one grandparent I never had the chance to meet. Learning about a side of my father’s family that had never really been discussed (no shady mysteries, just the mistaken assumption us kids wouldn’t be interested in someone we never knew) was a blast as I learned the real diversity of my father’s family. So glad you are finding a path toward connecting to your own roots!

    • @samparkerSAM
      @samparkerSAM Год назад

      Very Cool, I'm related to Rev Alexander Haddon, My Grandmother was also D.A.R.

    • @annapruitt5546
      @annapruitt5546 Год назад +2

      Wait what is DAR? Idk if I just missed a part of the video or what, so I googled the acronym. The top result was for the Daughters of the American Revolution, described as a “lineage-based membership service organization for women who are directly descended from a person involved in the USA’ struggle for independence” from the intro paragraph on Wikipedia. Could you tell me more about it?
      How someone would join the group and what a membership entails, are there affiliated costs? what type of stuff do members do in DAR, and what all does DAR offer/provide to members? Like in your original comment, you said joining DAR enabled you to learn more about your father’s family and their history, which is really cool! So I’m curious about the research and discovery process; does DAR have access to all historical records and databases or something like that?

  • @BurhanBayhan
    @BurhanBayhan Год назад +58

    Such a meaningful way to connect with your Volga Tatar ancestors, keep up the great work! 🍃

  • @o2bsam
    @o2bsam Год назад +31

    This is a super interesting and unique way to approach sewing. Sewing this way has definitely connected my curiosity for hand made garments with an added interest in my ancestors and their life and times before me. Untouched hair, is the best hair. See you in Two weeks!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +6

      Best of luck on your journey discovering the garments of your ancestors! It’s a worthwhile one 😊

  • @alyssastevenson9879
    @alyssastevenson9879 Год назад +6

    Unpicking hand stitching has to be one of the most painful things. However finishing a hand stitched seam brings such delight!!
    Thank you for another lovely video😊

  • @fikanera838
    @fikanera838 Год назад +10

    How interesting! I live in Czechia, & would really love to learn some of the traditional textile techniques from my area (Southern Moravia). I agree with you, that it adds so much to your understanding of the culture & daily life once you actually see & feel what people wore at that time. ❤

  • @iainmc9859
    @iainmc9859 Год назад +13

    Have a look at traditional japanese trousers (hakama); they are effectively exactly the same, other than the drawstring. All made out of rectangles with the same baggy crotch. I made a pair for Aikido. Supposedly they were made out of relatively narrow rectangles because Japan did not have wide looms until they opened up to western trade after the Shogun era.

    • @sallythekolcat
      @sallythekolcat Год назад

      I believe the majority of Japanese homeweave was made on backstrap looms prior to the tall loom coming in. So the resulting fabric would be body width or so. Even with a full loom, most cloth woven by a single person would be no wider then the weaver sticking both elbows out, as they needed to be able to work the shuttle on both sides and beat on both sides. That's why broadcloths was such an advancement. it came in 1.5 yard widths, instead of 3/4 yard widths.
      Imaging making sails for ships our of 3/4 yard wide canvas. all the seams.

    • @iainmc9859
      @iainmc9859 Год назад

      Hi Sally, thanks for the extra info regarding backstrap looms. I'd just picked up 'narrow'@@sallythekolcatfrom my reading for the hakama and hadn't taken it any further than that. Coming from a village whose prime trade was weaving in the industrial era I should know the difference. We even had weavers riots as people lost their jobs as machinery 'improved'.
      I strongly suspect that sails may have been made, like the Polynesians did, from grasses (bamboo) for most of Japan's history; although that again is a presumption rather than expert opinion 😁

  • @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874
    @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874 Год назад +7

    My mom is a quilter, and she makes a lot of accidents like V's one in this video.
    Her handy little tool is a little seam-ripper she calls Jack.

  • @innerwoods
    @innerwoods Год назад +3

    It was so cool and unexpected to see this! I'm married to a Tatar from Bashkiria and have a little of those roots myself. My hubs said your face was very recognizable for the area where he's from. I also think it's interesting how many tatar words made their way into the Russian language, like these yshtan became the Russian "shtany", which is just the word for "pants" now.

  • @ushere5791
    @ushere5791 Год назад +10

    i think your new pants are beautiful!! they do look comfortable, and how can anything NOT be beautiful when it's that glorious shade of red? :)

  • @InsoIence
    @InsoIence Год назад +4

    And *this* is what makes all of us so special and interesting - differences. Heritage is precious, as a random person on the internet, thank you for your contribution to its preservation.
    This is beautiful.

  • @bluesoulsearcher5424
    @bluesoulsearcher5424 Год назад +3

    Wow. I feel so many similarities with you. Thank you for making this video & sharing how you’re connecting with your ancestors 🥹 Ethnically I’m an Ashkenazy Jew. So much of our unique original culture, knowledge & history was suppressed by different religious (male) & zionist factions in our communities for hundreds of years never mind the knowledge wiped out with whole communities during the Holocaust 😔
    The pain of disconnection is slow & aching. So, after some research I now have historical references with which to start on my own sewing & recreation journey. Looking forward to seeing more of your projects ❤

  • @AlabasterClay
    @AlabasterClay Год назад +5

    Beautiful! It is wonderful to feel the connection to the past. I like to think of "Grandma's grandmother." It feels more relatable than saying great great grandmother. Not many people have a memory of their great great grandmother. But you can imagine your Grandma as a little girl enjoying the company of her own grandmother.

  • @mariellouise1
    @mariellouise1 Год назад +1

    You’re so fortunate to grow up with your grandmother. She was even luckier to grow up with you.

  • @RR4711
    @RR4711 Год назад +12

    Perhaps if a particular dress had a inner lining they wore it without the undershirt, but if it was unlined they used an undershirt.

  • @caspenbee
    @caspenbee Год назад +26

    I'm learning so much in these videos! The single word for gender is very cool to think about. I think having the same underwear for everyone would demystify the other sex a lot and change the way one thinks about one's body too.
    On a different note, measuring the photo for ratios is pretty genius and I wish I'd thought to do that for garments I've wanted to make!
    The amount of gathers creates a silhouette that obscures the wearer's shape a bit. Going back to gender, I wonder if this silhouette contributed to or reinforced a more unisex idea of gender? Maybe I'm projecting too much onto something I know nothing about -- they sure look comfy though!
    A lot of this style looks similar to historic nordic garments. In nordic clothes, tablet-woven wool wraps are worn around the legs of trousers to keep the heat in (and possibly help circulation like compression socks) during the winter months. Is there anything similar for Volga Tatar?

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +5

      Thanks so much for your comment!
      I have a theory about the gender thing (though this is just my own theory of course). The Volga Tatars converted to Islam in the 900s (the official agreed-upon date when Islam arrived to the banks of the middle Volga is 922AD according to one of my books), but before then they were likely shamanistic (likely Tengrists) and different forms of shamanism have more of an emphasis on gender neutrality.
      By the time of the 18th and 19th centuries, Volga Tatars already had many more "traditional" gender roles, many of which weren't as noticeable pre-900s at least based off of my own research. I suspect this could be because of a number of factors, such as religious differences, how communities were structured, how nomadic or fixed to one location my ancestors were at various times; perhaps as well too Christian and European influences. But I suspect this single word for gender and the unisex undergarments is perhaps a remnant from some of the more fluid gender structures we see in shamanism, which are ultimately the roots of the Volga Tatar people.
      Much like the Viking leg wraps, there is a similar garment for Volga Tatar men (leg wraps of sorts) that is mentioned in my book, but they're referenced as being worn in the 19th century (maybe earlier as well but I can't say for sure as the example I can see if specifically 19th century). They are heavily embroidered with the traditional style of Tatar tambour embroidery, and they were often given as a gift from the fiancée to her fiancé. I'm not sure if they were only worn for winter, but there are examples of them made from a lighter cotton or linen material, so I suspect it was more of a year-round thing.

  • @annerigby4400
    @annerigby4400 Год назад +4

    I am at 10:21 and it occurs to me that I would have used one large rectangle for the middle section and wrapped it under to the other side (so folded it up) and I would have used two large rectangles for the sides and folded them back, so that would have been three pieces and then gusset/gore bits which are probably narrower at the bottom and wider at the top and then folded back like the side pieces and then they would be sewn to the side pieces and to the outer edges of the middle section. Since you're using scraps, this approach was likely not possible, but that is how I would have wanted to tackle it.

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад

      This is a genius idea!! Thank you! I’m definitely going to do this for my next pair if I’m not using scraps. It’ll probably speed up the time it takes to make these by double ☺️

  • @theverbind
    @theverbind Год назад +9

    Love this accurate but funny title, so excited to watch all of this after work!! Also please consider writing down what your hard won research has found!!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +6

      I can’t take credit for the title as my best friend came up with it 🥰 hope you enjoy the video!! I’m planning to put together a longer video in the future on my research (but it’ll probably be much further down the line as there’s a lot to unpack)

  • @nanettebromley8843
    @nanettebromley8843 Год назад +9

    Interesting video. I saw the trousers and thought of the thorsberg trousers of the viking period. Same with the pictures of the under dress/tunic. Which makes sense as it was simple construction from squares and rectangles with very little fabric waste as fabric was very expensive/time consuming to make.
    Its amazing how much yarn/thread goes into something as simple as a scarf.

  • @saritasarit
    @saritasarit Год назад +20

    This are beautiful. I see a woman being able to wear this throughout all the stages of her live, as she gets pregnant or gains and loses weight. I wonder about periods in this type of garment. I know that some turkic traditional “panties” are like a triangular scarf and it was used for periods with extra absorbency under the tunics. I would legit wear this type of clothing.

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +8

      Thank you!! I regularly think about how I will never need to adjust the sizes of any of my Tatar clothing, and also long as the fabric will last (of course with some future mending) I’ll be able to wear the garments, because that’s exactly it - they’re designed for the natural changes of the body 😊
      I also think these yshtan would be very suitable for periods, as the way they gather at the crotch isn’t too dissimilar from 18th century Georgian (British) menstrual aprons (I’ve recreated one before).

  • @samparkerSAM
    @samparkerSAM Год назад +2

    Hello from New Orleans Louisiana, Very Interesting, I have similar story, we have Lace from the 1800's , Including piece work, My Grand Aunt also saved a Lace Top from her Mother with pearl buttons. As a Child my Grandmother gave me a Matador Costume from the 1900's , We are Minorcan, ... I also saved Several Suits from my Grandfather that I treasure.

  • @joannebishop3295
    @joannebishop3295 Год назад +4

    These look so beautiful and practical for a woman to wear through her monthlies, pregnancy and the thicks and thins of life. The women's rational dress movement could have taken lessons from these Tatar women. Very beautiful and practical clothing.

  • @JosieAreSee
    @JosieAreSee Год назад +2

    Oh my goodness. You’re great great grandmas spitting image! 😮❤

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +5

      That’s my grandma in the 1970s 😊 but thank you!

  • @jocelynleung7480
    @jocelynleung7480 Год назад +2

    I've made Chinese historical underwear trousers with a crotch gusset which looks "unflattering" (just like you said, whatever that means) but it's SOOOO comfy!

  • @Nebulouslystarlight
    @Nebulouslystarlight Год назад +4

    I absolutely love the tone shift of the past few vids to your previous normal. It's like you're finally having fun in your authenticity, and it really shows how passionate about this you are ❤

  • @KhalideKashmiri
    @KhalideKashmiri Год назад +2

    Сәлам! It's a pleasure to see a tatar woman involved in historical reconstruction, as our culture is underrepresented and virtually forgotten by almost everyone. Do you consider sewing something else? Калфак probably or an альяпкыч to finish your outfit?
    On the final note, i express deepest gratitude for your work, great job 🟩⬜🟥!

  • @bethliebman8169
    @bethliebman8169 Год назад +6

    Nice research and creative problem solving! I love how this underwear turned out.

  • @annematusiewicz3712
    @annematusiewicz3712 8 месяцев назад

    About 11:40 in when you realize you've sewn the piece on backwards- so relatable. And what beautiful hand sewing! The time you've spent sewing has paid off.

  • @pyenygren2299
    @pyenygren2299 Год назад +4

    It is exciting to see you figure out patterns, and then sew the clothes.

  • @incryowl
    @incryowl Год назад +3

    Such a good video! I was listening intently to everything you said, hehe. It's especially interesting since my mother is Tatar too. Although, she's Kazan' Tatar, but, well, all of us are connected anyway 😂

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +2

      Thank you!! Kazan Tatars are Volga Tatars 😊 Volga Tatars are Kazan Tatars and Mishar Tatars (and we are genetically related) and then the other Tatars like Siberian Tatars, Crimean Tatars, Lipka Tatars aren’t genetically related to us Volga Tatars most likely (according to research)

  • @anja8595
    @anja8595 Год назад +9

    This feels like a strange compliment, but I really appreciate how much your videos respect my attention? Things like not having jump cuts. I can sit and enjoy with a tea.

  • @saulemaroussault6343
    @saulemaroussault6343 Год назад +1

    Oh you have such a beautiful name ! 💚
    As much as I can tell my ancestry is 100% French up to the 17th century ? Then German on my father’s side ? Mayyybe ? Maybe a bit of Spanish because my mother’s father might have had spanish ancestry ? Then again it comes to borders, where they were at the time etc.
    I’m always keen on learning about other cultures and their history, especially about Eastern Europe/Central Asia/Middle East as my partner is Armenian :)
    I’m sloooowly building up the confidence to make her an Armenian traditional shirt/tunic (I make things for me, and it’s okay if it’s messy, but if it’s for her it has to be Right)
    I’m always very sad to realise that there isn’t a lot of material available to learn about the details of some cultures. Sure you find mentions, pictures… but if you want recipes, patterns.., there’s nothing, or nothing left. It’s tragic really.
    Recently a friends relative published a book on 18th-19th century wool processing in the South Alps, and he only was able to do so because there were people to talk to about this, who had memories about their grandmothers working, and inherited cloth made by them. Some of this fabric was stashed in an attic with tools, including tools used to process the wool. It wasn’t trash, more like forgotten treasure, but someone buying the house might have thrown everything away. (Overall he managed to photograph and study a dozen of pieces, mostly blankets, which were staples for a long time. Every household had at least one, but we have no idea if there are more remaining)
    10 years from now it might have been lost forever, and it’s France, aka a rather well studied country, with rather well preserved traditions (at least in archives), and a culture of writing at least some things down. I don’t imagine how much is being lost, or was lost, in more unstable or less known about regions.

  • @ericalarochelle3779
    @ericalarochelle3779 Год назад +1

    Great to see this insight into Volga Tatar material culture! From a horseback riding perspective, I am curious how the pants would work. The clothing I have worn, and seen others wear, tends to be close fitted to limit chafing. If you ever come across resources about experimental archeology/living history/current use, I'd be quite interested in checking it out, even if Google Translate is required!

  • @nurmihusa7780
    @nurmihusa7780 Год назад +8

    Amazing work as always. Thank you for taking us along your journey!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +2

      Thank you for watching! 🥰

  • @hnelson5609
    @hnelson5609 Год назад +1

    Beautiful color!! If it makes you feel any better ive been sewing since 1985 and make simple mistakes even now. Its just the nature of the beast. Can't daydream or work for long hours. Check everything twice, at least. You sew a beautiful hand seam btw!

  • @alex9190
    @alex9190 Год назад +4

    im a lefty too and can also do some things with only my right hand. like making baskets and using scissors and playing guitar. it feels weird doing it with my left hand

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад

      Scissors have an inherent handedness in how the blades cross, so it’s really hard to cut properly with the scissors in the hand they weren’t made for because the thumb is pushing the blades apart instead of together.

  • @Dominika-ry5re
    @Dominika-ry5re Год назад +2

    These look so comfy! Thank you for another video on Tatar clothing, your research on it is impressive. When you were drafting the patter, I was thinking - sure your greatgreat granthmother was also learning to do it at some point, maybe she also wasn't sure how to start (although she knew how the back was supposed to look like) 😉

  • @bonniehyden962
    @bonniehyden962 Год назад +1

    V.! ...what happened? I love your personality coming out in this video! ...and seeing ...just you. ...letting your hair down, figuratively and literally. And those undies are great! I very much look forward to following you on this journey. Blessings to you!

  • @BCKammen
    @BCKammen Год назад +1

    Every time I hear the use of Celsius instead of Fahrenheit I have to look it up. Thank you for that little bit of "love/hate" today. The bunching could be for difference in the way a person would sit on a horse or bending and flexing, just my opinion.
    Keep up the great work. Enjoying the history that you are giving and expanding my knowledge.

  • @ChayatsujiKimono
    @ChayatsujiKimono Год назад +2

    Rooting for you from the Netherlands! I'm so excited to see you going on this journey and thank you for taking us along

  • @LadyValkyri
    @LadyValkyri Год назад +2

    I love them! The look super cute AND comfy. You did an amazing job! Hugs

  • @allychristiansen
    @allychristiansen Год назад +2

    This is so cool! I've been wanting to research my ancestors' clothes and try making them, it's cool to see you doing it and getting so much happiness from it!

  • @anthonypc1
    @anthonypc1 Год назад +8

    I'm dyslexic and clicked because I had to know why you sued your own great-great grandma...
    or her underwear ??
    This is a more wholesome video than expected. :)

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Год назад +4

      Weirder things have happened, I'm sure 😅

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +2

      None of that type of tea to spill, thankfully 😅

  • @emeraldoracle8706
    @emeraldoracle8706 Год назад +2

    I always love your process and seeing you explore your clothing heritage. Also I am glad to hear that it has cooled down for you 🥵

  • @michaelsnider2484
    @michaelsnider2484 Год назад

    Wow, you look just like your grandmother! Lovely!

  • @vincentbriggs1780
    @vincentbriggs1780 Год назад +4

    They look so comfy, and the red fabric is gorgeous!
    Oh nooo, it's so frustrating when you accidentally sew something backwards :( I did the same thing recently on my red voile shirt. Sewed in the gusset and closed the side and sleeve seam and then noticed it was inside out, and the fabric was so delicate I had to be very slow and careful with the unpicking, and cut a new gusset.

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +1

      Thank you!! I’m sorry you had to go through the unpicking a beautiful seam process too 🥲

  • @destinytaylor5862
    @destinytaylor5862 Год назад +1

    I don't know if the people depicted in this manga are Volga Tatar, but years ago I found Otoyomegatari (A Bride's Story) by Kaoru Mori. The art is amazing and the characters dress similarly to the women on your books. It is lighthearted but warning for some nudity, violence, etc.

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +1

      The manga looks super interesting! Reading the synopsis etc. it looks like the plot and characters could be potentially Volga Tatar, or they seem like some type of Turkic community at the time. They don’t name any specific one by name, so it’d be hard to say for sure since so many different Turkic peoples have existed in Central Asia, but what a cool concept for a manga. Thanks for sharing.

  • @Athlynne
    @Athlynne 3 месяца назад

    Vasilisa, I think I remember that from a faerie tale. What a beautiful name!

  • @my-mysknitsaloon
    @my-mysknitsaloon Год назад

    Yes, I just love the historical Volga Tatar clothing you're making.

  • @desertkhaat
    @desertkhaat Год назад

    I'm really enjoying learning about the Volga Tatar dress & it's absolutely lovely to see you getting closer to your ancestors as you embrace your roots: I look forward to your ongoing journey!

  • @АллаПанина-ъ5м
    @АллаПанина-ъ5м Год назад

    This video is a treasure! Learning about Tatar clothes is not easy, I couldn't find much resourses. Thank you for the reasearch and clear explanations!

  • @shutterchick79
    @shutterchick79 Год назад

    Cool video... Historical fashion and language learning in one video - 2 of my faves 😊

  • @alex9190
    @alex9190 Год назад +1

    wow, that kit you took the awl from is BEAUTIFUL!!!!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +1

      Thank you!! It’s antique 😊

  • @suzettehenderson9278
    @suzettehenderson9278 Год назад

    Those look so much like the trousers found in the Tarim basin!

  • @haleyhoudini
    @haleyhoudini Год назад

    Wow you look so much like her!
    Thank you so much for the educational and beautiful video 😊

  • @lilykatmoon4508
    @lilykatmoon4508 Год назад

    I really enjoyed this video. I love learning about different cultures, and I enjoy how you light up when sharing your new knowledge and your heritage. It’s interesting how you describe your handedness because I’m actually the exact same way. I eat and write with my left, cut, hit (with a bat), and throw with my right but see with both. I have rheumatoid arthritis and can have days where only one hand is really bothering me so it’s convenient that I can just sew with the other. When both are bad, all bets are off, lol. I also appreciate you sharing your thought process on how you made your pattern. Thanks for taking us on this journey with you ❤

  • @susanjohnson5824
    @susanjohnson5824 Год назад +1

    Fascinating love the deep dive into garment history

  • @Jane-cr9bp
    @Jane-cr9bp Год назад

    Those undies look very comfy! Thanks for sharing your culture, Vasi. It's so interesting!

  • @kimlorton3002
    @kimlorton3002 10 месяцев назад

    I love these! They look lovely and very comfortable! Great job!

  • @cherylrosbak4092
    @cherylrosbak4092 Год назад

    I love watching as you discover your culture.

  • @janeevans4758
    @janeevans4758 Год назад

    You are so very talented, you really do create mind blowing items.
    Thank you for sharing your wonderful talented makes with us.

  • @suzz1776
    @suzz1776 Год назад

    That kit u have with the awl is beautiful

  • @alisonbufarale3406
    @alisonbufarale3406 Год назад

    They are soooo cute! Love the whole outfit, the underwear really completes it. ♥️♥️♥️

  • @christine132
    @christine132 Год назад

    Iove this more vlog-like style! I love seeing your personality and true voice come out.

  • @ladystitch-a-lot
    @ladystitch-a-lot Год назад

    They look so comfortable and cute 😍

  • @nekkidnora
    @nekkidnora Год назад +1

    Votre prénom est VASILISA??? Comme "Vasilisa la belle"??? C'est trop beau, trop cool!

  • @mystik.mermayde.aotearoa
    @mystik.mermayde.aotearoa 3 месяца назад

    I think they look really pretty!! From my modern lens ❤️

  • @emmaaustin123
    @emmaaustin123 Год назад

    There exists a youtube video of the first pair of trousers ever made. Very very similar pattern. I love your videos. Take care

  • @catherinelevison3310
    @catherinelevison3310 Год назад

    The photo at 6:05 (of the 4 people sitting outside) shows beautiful headcoverings. Will you look into how they tied those to their heads please? I love to learn more about those large head scarves. Thank You!!!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +1

      It's a large square scarf that then gets folded into a triangle. Then you drape the edge of the triangle over the front of the head, and tie two edges of the triangle at the back of the head 😊

    • @catherinelevison3310
      @catherinelevison3310 Год назад

      @@VBirchwood thank you!!

  • @CassianGray
    @CassianGray 10 месяцев назад

    The finished product looks so relaxed and comfy! While what others have said about the extra fabric in the crotch being for riding horseback is mostly likely the main reason, I also wonder how the extra fabric would've helped with dealing with periods. I recall an Abby Cox video on historical "periods" (haha punny) and her diaper linen diaper had lots of bunched fabric like this. Maybe menstruating people wore a second pair of yshtan? or something similar?

  • @melinnamba
    @melinnamba Год назад

    These look a lot like the oldest known trousers. There is a documentary here on RUclips called "the invention of the trousers" that shows a group of archeologists recreating the oldest trousers that have been discovered. They also wondered about the amount of fabric in the crotch area and figured out, that it was likely a design choice to make riding on horseback more comfortable.

  • @tatianaacademy7007
    @tatianaacademy7007 6 месяцев назад

    You are so beautiful! Thank you for sharing!

  • @robintheparttimesewer6798
    @robintheparttimesewer6798 Год назад +1

    Everything you make is so lovely. These do look comfy which your right should be the only criteria for underwear!
    Also congratulations on keeping your ambidextrous ability! My isn't as good unfortunately when I started school teachers were still allowed to hit kids. Every time I was seen using my left hand I was hit! Though I still do something's that are usually only seen in left handed people, like my watch is on my right. It confuses people!

  • @SeaSelka
    @SeaSelka Год назад +1

    Hello! Interesting video, I like watching you work on your next project. I was born on the Volga (my ancestors are from the Saratov, Penza and Tambov regions), ethnically we seem to be Slavs, but my grandmother had a very atypical face for central Russia, rather Asian. We know little about their history; her parents were expelled from their native lands during the repressions after the Revolution. My appearance is similar to yours - rounded face, dark eyes, shape of the nose and lips. But my hair is lighter and my skin is a different shade, completely covered with freckles.

  • @unknown5150variable
    @unknown5150variable Год назад

    WOW! You're talented, and it also seems like you really enjoy what you do. I couldn't leave without adding a comment to help boost the algo in your favor. Good luck with your channel 👍🙂

  • @mr.purple1779
    @mr.purple1779 11 месяцев назад +4

    Tatars have no Mongol origin. Volga Tatars include three ethnic components. The Onogurs-Bulgars arrived in the Volga basin in the 7th century and assimilated into the Sarmatians. Then in the 13th century, the Kipchak Tatars of the golden horde brought the final background, name and language. Harvard recently published an article on Turkic ethnogenesis. The Pazyryk culture of Altai was transformed into the culture Bulan Koby of the Hunno-Sarmatian period. In fact, the Tatars have two large components, the larger ancient nomads Asian Scythians (European Iron Age) + Bulan Koby of the beginning of the new era (from Altai). Volga Tatars average 80% Europeans. So I'll probably disappoint you.

  • @berthaowens1588
    @berthaowens1588 Год назад

    Love it, well done. This made me happy to see it coming together.

  • @xHideousFoxx
    @xHideousFoxx 5 месяцев назад

    super cool!

  • @ПолинаВасильева-в8и

    ужасно интересно, спасибо! и кстати, очень даже flattering)

  • @cosplaygoose3246
    @cosplaygoose3246 Год назад

    Those look heckin' comfy ngl

  • @fjolliff6308
    @fjolliff6308 Год назад

    You are amazing!

  • @fancyfree8228
    @fancyfree8228 Год назад

    Love this!

  • @akashanumberfive199
    @akashanumberfive199 Год назад

    Yes comfort but I bet also you could have a pretty comfortable menses in those pants. Much like the proverbial " apron" used in like the 1700s. Good but if absorbent fabric. Easy clean so several of those should be you through a week.

  • @angelbear_og
    @angelbear_og Год назад

    I live in the southern US -- hot & humid! Even when you're not sweating you're wet! Been thinking of making something along these lines to prevent sweaty leg skin from rubbing. These look like they would be so comfortable! How do you like them in the heat?

  • @clairbear1234
    @clairbear1234 Год назад +1

    You are just so cool and beautiful and inspiring.
    Question- how would advise someone to start looking into their own ethnic clothing history? Good first steps?

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +1

      Thank you!!
      My greatest recommendation, and this will sound so obvious, is conduct a search engine search of your ethnic group's name and "folk clothing" or "historical clothing" and see what comes up. There's likely someone that has written about the topic, then check to see what sources they include on their own article. Then do a Google search for those books or sources. It also helps to learn what the word "clothing" or "historical clothing" is in your ethnic group's language, as you may get more search results in their original language that could guide you to other sources (hopefully some English ones!)

  • @YouHaveAGoodPoint
    @YouHaveAGoodPoint Год назад

    Will you show us more construction and drafting on the red tatar ensemble too?

  • @petapendlebury9024
    @petapendlebury9024 Год назад

    That's such a fantastic shade of red! If you make them again do you think you'd increase the back depth a little to give more derriere room?! Or was that not done in the extants? Glad its cooling down a little bit for you.