Alice Loxton is just so completely adorable. I feel like anything she feels will be immediately translated into whole body expression, and when she's happy or excited, this is an utter joy to watch. :)
Just visited the fashion museum in Bath earlier this month. While the play costumes are the focus of this video, the actual historic dresses on display are breathtaking. Definitely worth a visit if you’re into historical fashion.
Hi Ellen I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
im not in to fashion much but i do love reading historical romances. so seeing the cloths the heros and heroine would wear is defiantly something i would love to see.
Not wearing a corset back then probably would have felt like NOT wearing a bra and then going out! Lol. Feeling awkward and like people can tell etc. Love this video, I'm a huge fan of history (women's history included)
A great insight to fashion through the ages Alice. One has to wonder what the future holds for fashion and how that will be looked back on in the decades that follow that. It's great that the museum in Bath not only shows the fashion through the ages but intends to keep updating the collection as time moves on. Thanks for sharing.
LOVE this channel and LOVE Alice Loxton! I am a huge history buff, and I usually have a hard time watching history documentaries because they tend to over-dramatize things to make it interesting but in doing so they stretch the facts. But when you have Alice Loxton on board, no need for over-dramatization, history itself is entertaining!!
You know most people didn’t dress in stuff like this? Most of clothing throughout history has been very utilitarian and dull in comparison, and only the rich dressed like this. There’s some absolutely amazing clothing available now with exquisite detail.
A suggestion would have been on the historical dresses what occasion/use were the specimens suitable and how high up and/or down the social strata did the items reach.
Red carpet dresses started 20 years ago? Cher and Bob Mackie have entered the chat! Great video though, I love how she puts on a dress and immediate gives it the all-important twirl test, I mean, aside from whether it has pockets it's definitely about the twirl!
Sarah Bernhardt, Evelyn Nesbit, Virginia Wolfe, Molly Bloom, Lilly Langtry, Lady Randolf Churchill Jennie Jerome, Queen Consort Alexandra, Alice Keppel have entered the chat in photographs and newspapers walking on Red Carpets . And Vicereine Viceregal Lady Mary Victoria Curzon has Just Stepped Onto “The Red Carpet” wearing The Gold and Silver Peacock 🦚 Green Beetle 🪲 Zar &Dozi Dress , Delhi Embroidered Fashion House Kishan Chand for The House of Jean- Philippe Worth Of Paris for The Consummating Night Celebrations of King 👑 Edward VII Coronation Celebrations Showcasing and Highlighting India’s Contribution To The World Of Fashion. The Dress 👂 Heard and Seen About Around The World 🌏🌍🌎Because it Celebrated The British’s Vast Empire and India’s 🪡🧵Unmatched Embroidery Industry and Mary Victoria was a Girl from Chicago USA 🇺🇸. So It Made Simultaneous News 📰🗞📯📜📃📄📮📬🎨✍️🐎🚂Around The World 🗺🌏🌍🌎 over a Century Ago.
The curator Rosemary was a gem. Loved Alice too. Very jealous of both their jobs. What an inspired idea to have facsimile costumes to try on. Really brings clothing to life and helps people understand the practicalities of dress and dressing. I’ve never been to the Museum in Bath, now on my bucket list.👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🌟🌟🌟☺️☺️☺️
It’s called a slip dress for a reason! 😂 The ladies of the past would’ve been shocked. Though the Victorian ladies were even shocked by the *Regency* ladies’ comparatively exposed style, of the (relatively) immodest, sensual way their own mothers and grandmothers dressed, which is of course so Victorian of them. While Alice’s little sundress certainly helped make trying on the garments much simpler from a production standpoint, I thought the whole thing suffered as a historical fashion showcase. The effect of gowns’ designs was spoiled by how they were huge and just hung on her, and time off-camera could’ve been taken to pin them into a better fit. As it is shown, none of the beautiful details could really stand out. The differences in silhouette are hard to see when they’re all hanging like sacks. I think they should’ve presented the originals more closely; these mock-ups at the museum aren’t for history tv, they’re for visitors to get to have some dress-up fun and cool photo opportunities. This video wasn’t very good, imo, more I think about it. Time to go love on my snoring dachshunds!
“Incomplete underclothes” is exactly what I thought of her (bra-less) slip of a dress. Though it now occurs to me that the choice to wear what is essentially a SLIP, (an undergarment that, regrettably, seems to exist no more), was made to facilitate the trying on of bulky dresses-and thus makes perfect sense.
There are so many things to say about corsetry, but one I wish was brought up more often is: they're still worn. They're often built right in to those red carpet dresses. That's how those strapless looks stay up, and how those giant skirts don't drag down the actors wearing them. Funny no-one fusses over a contemporary woman striding down a red carpet bending a rib. And no-one faints either.
Just wonderful that Alice showing historical women's fashion and she definitely brings it out very well. Stunning!!! Which is one of the reasons why I love the Victorian era not just men's fashion but women's fashion too. 🎩🎩
I could not see if anyone has contributed this but as a historical fashion (and therefore corset) wearer,, I love wearing corsets!! These were made to measure garments and would fit perfectly. They give really good back and chest support, if women really hated wearing corsets they would have gone out of fashion :)
Such a smart young lady, very impressed with your love of history and amazing personality. She reminds me of Lucy Worsley but with her own take on things.
Yeah, I mean, if the example is not really like the dress at all, what is the point? I assume this is part of the museum experience (? Which is cool) but there are so many in depth historically accurate dress maker/wearers on TH-cam, this is…underwhelming.
I think the first dress, the yellow and pink one, looks even better without the undergarments. While perhaps losing in formality and grandiosity the look of the dress losing its stiffness and avoiding a conciencious overtight look, now is left to fall richly around the body displaying a soft but very pretty luxuriousness.
Now that’s looks very good, my favorite type of dress was the first one because I like 18th century dresses and even better the powdered grey hairstyles!
The red carpet dress looks nice. I understand why they sold well. High performance fabrics and reuse does matter. It was fun to look how those models look like on a young woman.
Alot of interesting information about how fashions changed with the introduction of new materials and mechanical inventions that made clothes available for all. Great program!
Yeah, for obvious reasons most of the working/middle class garments didn't survive, as opposed to the more formal stuff that might have been worn a few times then put away into storage
I prefer the blue dress worn underneath the others. ;) It is fun to notice that men wore skirts in ancient days, tights and frilly frocks, but now these are for women. Cant wait for the evolution of women's briefs.
i work in 18th century fashion history and was like no nonononononno when the gown didn't close in the front and the petticoat was sewn in and she didn't have a shift or stays until the lady explained its so regular visitors can pop it on and off lol too quick to judge! of course they know what they're doing :)
I was expecting more of an idea of how I could build an 18th century wardrobe, like how many shifts would I need, how many day dresses, evening dresses, cloaks etc. make that video, please! Hehe
That's what's interesting about now vs. the past. Because everyday people would wear the same thing. The same things meaning underlayers and clothing. For feminine dress: Shifts, stays/corset, padding! (not talked about enough), petticoats, and dress. Just in fabrics that worked for their class and were affordable to them. The SILHOUETTE was what was fashionable. You wore the underthings and cut of clothing that allowed you to have the fashionable silhouette that matched all across the socioeconomic spectrum and boom you were in fashion. Also you didn't have to change your actual self to be in fashion. You wore the support garments and padding that got you to the fashionable silhouette. (Tight lacing your corset or wearing an ill fitting corset was what generally lead to discomfort. Otherwise it was a support garment that well supported the back and bosom. I said bosom, don't remove my comment YT!) So you'd have a structure garment shaping you and would pad out anywhere that needed it, if fashion called for it, and that was that. Fashion through all of this meaning what society expected you to wear for any occasion/activity as well as actually being in fashion. Which we are both still beholden to today.
@@Emthe30something Working class people would have worn clothes that weren't made of the expensive fabrics, and were much more simple than what the wealthy wore, eg: not having all of the flounces or the extra decorations like the scallops on the white Regency style gown.
Alice not only looks and dresses like a teenager, she acts like one. The purpose of a corset wasn’t to “suck one in”, it was to support the bust, and give the foundation and shape for the dress. Also, early on, many dress parts were pinned to the stays/corsets.
Hi Kimberly I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement as A new friend. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
I liked all the dresses except that pink "fluffy" one from the 20th/21st century. It was too revealing and needed an underskirt or petticoat. I love how Alice did the runway model bit while wearing the Georgian and Victorian attire! 😁 I think women's clothing were more intricately and carefully made before the 1960's. I find most of the women's clothing styles of the 19th century beautiful.
As a high schooler, 1969-1973, I was very much into retro-now vintage-fashion. I adored the design, fabric and superior construction of women’s suits, which I wore to school, and fancy dresses, which I wore to concerts and gigs.
you really missed the point here. the last dress, which you don't like because it's too revealing, is perfect example of the shift over the 20th century to underwear-as-outerwear the hosts briefly mentioned. it's not different than any other dress they displayed; it's a continuation of the evolution of fashions.
I want to dress in plain Victorian style clothing. I am retired and sick and had to move up north where it is very cold. I think it will work best with the weather here
Sorry to say I was really disappointed by this video, given it’s titled “How to dress for all occasions in the 18th century” when in fact only one dress (the first) was an 18th century replica. As much as 19th century fashion is fascinating in itself, detailed information about, and examples of, the way people dressed in preceding centuries is more difficult to come by online. As someone primarily interested in 17th and 18th century fashion I’m afraid this was a let-down. Please choose more accurate video titles in future! ☹️
A little disappointing for fashion history fans. Too general and whimsical of an approach to a complicated subject. The dressing up probably seemed like a good idea at the time, and gave Alice the presenter an opportunity to flounce around in a few mock-up examples. Alice, (bless her)is stick-thin, and the outfits she tried on were obviously way too big for her, so it was hard to picture the “shape” each outfit would have displayed. However, I longed to peer into the display cabinets and drool over the real thing. Maybe skip the dressing up next time and concentrate on the authentic dresses.
First off: well done for not dissing the corset and stays; as asking "did women in the time like corsets" would be like saying "do women in the 21st centuary like wearing bras and occasionly some of them wearing spanks to get in to high fasion clothing for a photo shoot or events..." Secondly: I understand that the clothes that she put on were a one size (doesn't) fit all for trying out in the museum and that it would be outrageous if she were to try on actual period garments however if you are going to entitle your documentary 'evolution of women's fashion through the ages" 1: there should be way more ages represented and 2: there are plenty of good precision replicas (in all shapes and sizes) made by skilled crafts people (cos tube is full of them) who would have (I'm sure) been happy to help out and provide dresses and the appropriate under-garments to make the dresse work properly if they had been asked! What a shame to miss this opportuity to not only show properly reconstrusted, historically accurate outfits but also to show case the amazing talent of these people who are keeping old skills alive...
I think the point of the video was not to teach people about history of dress, but to show case the Fashion Museum and what it has to offer for visitors.
it's Kendall Jenner dress and its high fashion designed by italian designer Giambatista Valli it has been world renowned by vogue etc. you clearly have no taste whatsoever and whatever you wear is ghastly.
That what is known as verdugado. Those circles that let the skirts move. Very famous in Spanish courts, with plane front or carton de pecho and chapines. ( shoes)
The white dress from the early 19th Century, with madras lace, and made of Muslim, which I had no idea about, is very nice. More wearable. The bonnet goes perfect with it.
I think the Victorian one's best. Were Alice to wear this every day, a flock of gentlemen riding penny farthings and wearing top hats and adorned with whiskers in the hipster style would be quickly convened, who'd spare no opportunity to raise thier hats in salute.. 🌟👍
Did the petticoat drawing they showed at 2:40 look like it was from the 1890's/1900's or am I tripping? Edit: oh I just realized it was supposed to be a general example of a petticoat not one actually from the 1760s
What is she talking about “red carpet dresses” being a “21st century thing”. They did not “start” 20 years ago! I truly don’t know what she would specifically mean to make that accurate. Gowns worn purely to be photographed on the red carpet? Been going on much longer. The rise of the Internet only changed the places we viewed images and how many more get seen. And there are different types of celebrities who are being admired and imitated - a much wider definition of “celebrity” than just “movie star”. But red carpet walks have been going on MUCH longer than 20 years. I really keep trying to figure out what she meant. This footage is obviously very much edited down, and I’m sure she said a lot more, but I can’t think what else she could’ve been saying that could make that comment accurate.
The displays look good, the presenter does her jobs, but the pseudo replica dresses are a good example how some modern museums dumb down history to make it presentable to a supposedly dumb public. I was very disappointed at this presentation. Either work with the displays, or look for historic costume makers or living history groups representing the period. There are such gorgeous works that could have made it into this video but weren't...
I sort of agree, but as the museum lady said at the begining, this is for visitors to try on, it would make it much less accesible and expensive for the museum to make it with the right period undergarments and aproppiate size for every person, though I agree that there should be a way to cinch the important parts down a little so that it conforms more to the period shape
Alice Loxton is just so completely adorable. I feel like anything she feels will be immediately translated into whole body expression, and when she's happy or excited, this is an utter joy to watch. :)
This is my sweet spot. The intersection of history and fashion, and how they inform each other. Give us more please!!!
th-cam.com/video/kXa6zzh2dhs/w-d-xo.html
Me too!
Alice's giddiness at being invited to try the clothes on is a whole-ass mood lmao
A 'whole-ass mood lmao'? Really? This isn't a BTC video or whatever that Chinese girl band social media folk speak in ebonics about.
Okay not only is this a superb video due to Alice and Rosemary's expertise, but I adore the editing choices lol. So fun and engaging!
Just visited the fashion museum in Bath earlier this month. While the play costumes are the focus of this video, the actual historic dresses on display are breathtaking. Definitely worth a visit if you’re into historical fashion.
Hi Ellen I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
im not in to fashion much but i do love reading historical romances. so seeing the cloths the heros and heroine would wear is defiantly something i would love to see.
Not wearing a corset back then probably would have felt like NOT wearing a bra and then going out! Lol.
Feeling awkward and like people can tell etc.
Love this video, I'm a huge fan of history (women's history included)
Love Alice Loxton! She's a great presenter who knows her history and can add some humor in her videos!
A great insight to fashion through the ages Alice. One has to wonder what the future holds for fashion and how that will be looked back on in the decades that follow that. It's great that the museum in Bath not only shows the fashion through the ages but intends to keep updating the collection as time moves on. Thanks for sharing.
If you look at the last 20 years of fashion, it hasn't changed that much. The biggest difference would be the colours, I would guess.
Thank you, thank you, thank you History Hit! PLEASE do more episodes about clothing through history.
Guess the poor, servants and land workers weren’t wearing these.
LOVE this channel and LOVE Alice Loxton! I am a huge history buff, and I usually have a hard time watching history documentaries because they tend to over-dramatize things to make it interesting but in doing so they stretch the facts. But when you have Alice Loxton on board, no need for over-dramatization, history itself is entertaining!!
Love the historic fashions; I think its the attention to details that is not as apparent in modern fashions since the 1960's.
You know most people didn’t dress in stuff like this? Most of clothing throughout history has been very utilitarian and dull in comparison, and only the rich dressed like this. There’s some absolutely amazing clothing available now with exquisite detail.
1960s, not 1960's. 60s, not 60's. Sixties, not sixtie's.
A suggestion would have been on the historical dresses what occasion/use were the specimens suitable and how high up and/or down the social strata did the items reach.
Red carpet dresses started 20 years ago? Cher and Bob Mackie have entered the chat!
Great video though, I love how she puts on a dress and immediate gives it the all-important twirl test, I mean, aside from whether it has pockets it's definitely about the twirl!
Sarah Bernhardt, Evelyn Nesbit, Virginia Wolfe, Molly Bloom, Lilly Langtry, Lady Randolf Churchill Jennie Jerome, Queen Consort Alexandra, Alice Keppel have entered the chat in photographs and newspapers walking on Red Carpets . And Vicereine Viceregal Lady Mary Victoria Curzon has Just Stepped Onto “The Red Carpet” wearing The Gold and Silver Peacock 🦚 Green Beetle 🪲 Zar &Dozi Dress , Delhi Embroidered Fashion House Kishan Chand for The House of Jean- Philippe Worth Of Paris for The Consummating Night Celebrations of King 👑 Edward VII Coronation Celebrations Showcasing and Highlighting India’s Contribution To The World Of Fashion. The Dress 👂 Heard and Seen About Around The World 🌏🌍🌎Because it Celebrated The British’s Vast Empire and India’s 🪡🧵Unmatched Embroidery Industry and Mary Victoria was a Girl from Chicago USA 🇺🇸. So It Made Simultaneous News 📰🗞📯📜📃📄📮📬🎨✍️🐎🚂Around The World 🗺🌏🌍🌎 over a Century Ago.
funniest thing about fashion for women: THEY USED TO ALWAYS HAVE POCKETS! NOWADAYS THEIR POCKETS ARE EITHER SUPER SMALL OR NONEXISTENT
Rosemary is a wonderful presenter in her own right ❤
What fun content! Alice clearly was happy to take part in this historic fashion show. Well done!
The curator Rosemary was a gem. Loved Alice too. Very jealous of both their jobs. What an inspired idea to have facsimile costumes to try on. Really brings clothing to life and helps people understand the practicalities of dress and dressing. I’ve never been to the Museum in Bath, now on my bucket list.👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🌟🌟🌟☺️☺️☺️
Alice arrives at the fashion museum wearing what the ladies of the past would have considered almost a shift. Incomplete under clothes.
It’s called a slip dress for a reason! 😂 The ladies of the past would’ve been shocked. Though the Victorian ladies were even shocked by the *Regency* ladies’ comparatively exposed style, of the (relatively) immodest, sensual way their own mothers and grandmothers dressed, which is of course so Victorian of them.
While Alice’s little sundress certainly helped make trying on the garments much simpler from a production standpoint, I thought the whole thing suffered as a historical fashion showcase. The effect of gowns’ designs was spoiled by how they were huge and just hung on her, and time off-camera could’ve been taken to pin them into a better fit. As it is shown, none of the beautiful details could really stand out. The differences in silhouette are hard to see when they’re all hanging like sacks. I think they should’ve presented the originals more closely; these mock-ups at the museum aren’t for history tv, they’re for visitors to get to have some dress-up fun and cool photo opportunities.
This video wasn’t very good, imo, more I think about it. Time to go love on my snoring dachshunds!
“Incomplete underclothes” is exactly what I thought of her (bra-less) slip of a dress. Though it now occurs to me that the choice to wear what is essentially a SLIP, (an undergarment that, regrettably, seems to exist no more), was made to facilitate the trying on of bulky dresses-and thus makes perfect sense.
Exactly. And short so her clothes wouldn't show under the last dress.@@nanwilder2853
Love watching documentaries about history of fashion. 💯💯👏👏. There's only few of them
Girllll...I would be overwhelmed to be able to try on those dresses ❤️❤️❤️❤️
There are so many things to say about corsetry, but one I wish was brought up more often is: they're still worn. They're often built right in to those red carpet dresses. That's how those strapless looks stay up, and how those giant skirts don't drag down the actors wearing them.
Funny no-one fusses over a contemporary woman striding down a red carpet bending a rib. And no-one faints either.
Spanx
@@AroundTheWorldWithEase Not even. The built-in evening gown corsets have boning. But yes, also Spanx.
Alice did exactly as I would’ve, swish swish swish the skirt’s. lol love the Victorian best
Everything Alica presents is a treat.
Great fun. I liked the Victorian one the best.
Definitely the most adorable historian I ever saw…
Lovely summer dress, looks cooling.
Just wonderful that Alice showing historical women's fashion and she definitely brings it out very well. Stunning!!! Which is one of the reasons why I love the Victorian era not just men's fashion but women's fashion too. 🎩🎩
Alice looks so regal and elegant in those dresses- they really suit her
This is such a awesome place to make things accessible to the public and easy to try on.
The great content never stops from History Hit!
The happiness meter was too cute!
What's with the 1880 petticoat illustration when we're talking about 1770 fashion at 2:50?
I enjoyed listening to Rosemary. She is very knowledgeable about fashion and history. I'd like to talk with her for a few hours with a cup of tea. 🌷🌹🌷
I could not see if anyone has contributed this but as a historical fashion (and therefore corset) wearer,, I love wearing corsets!!
These were made to measure garments and would fit perfectly. They give really good back and chest support, if women really hated wearing corsets they would have gone out of fashion :)
This is an amazing museum. I spent hours in there
How?? It's tiny
@@monkeytennis8861 I spent time looking at each garment carefully
Definitely the white empire line dress. Loved the Jane Austen style dresses in films.
History & Alice…..Bliss 🥰
Such a smart young lady, very impressed with your love of history and amazing personality. She reminds me of Lucy Worsley but with her own take on things.
Undergarments really are key!
Yeah, I mean, if the example is not really like the dress at all, what is the point? I assume this is part of the museum experience (? Which is cool) but there are so many in depth historically accurate dress maker/wearers on TH-cam, this is…underwhelming.
The correct term is under-lovelies.
Alice the constant professional
Very knowledgeable on the subjects that she discusses.
From your American friend 🇺🇲👍👍
I think the first dress, the yellow and pink one, looks even better without the undergarments. While perhaps losing in formality and grandiosity the look of the dress losing its stiffness and avoiding a conciencious overtight look, now is left to fall richly around the body displaying a soft but very pretty luxuriousness.
I went to the fashion museum in bath too...well worth a visit!
Now that’s looks very good, my favorite type of dress was the first one because I like 18th century dresses and even better the powdered grey hairstyles!
I will want to go to Bath and even more now!
Wow this channel is LEGIT awesome💯
The red carpet dress looks nice. I understand why they sold well. High performance fabrics and reuse does matter. It was fun to look how those models look like on a young woman.
Alot of interesting information about how fashions changed with the introduction of new materials and mechanical inventions that made clothes available for all. Great program!
An interesting selection of clothes, but what is missing who would have worn them? Everyday folks, or the upper ecolons? That is a bit missing
mostly upper class as the material were expensive to get then i think
Yeah, for obvious reasons most of the working/middle class garments didn't survive, as opposed to the more formal stuff that might have been worn a few times then put away into storage
I prefer the blue dress worn underneath the others. ;) It is fun to notice that men wore skirts in ancient days, tights and frilly frocks, but now these are for women.
Cant wait for the evolution of women's briefs.
This is such an amazing video thank you for this!
Beautiful Alice.
I really enjoy the evolution of fashion. I liked how history was already reusing and repurposing their clothes. Thanks!
I heard your interview on Sunday morning talking about your book "Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs?" It was a great interview!
They don't have anything to do with that book, what a weird comment.
i work in 18th century fashion history and was like no nonononononno when the gown didn't close in the front and the petticoat was sewn in and she didn't have a shift or stays until the lady explained its so regular visitors can pop it on and off lol
too quick to judge! of course they know what they're doing :)
Oh she gonna walk the catwalk for us lol I love it
Alice rocks!
The fashion expert was great
I was expecting more of an idea of how I could build an 18th century wardrobe, like how many shifts would I need, how many day dresses, evening dresses, cloaks etc. make that video, please! Hehe
You looked fab in the bonnet alice,was great to see the style of the times.
What I would like to know is what ordinary working people wore at the time!
That's what's interesting about now vs. the past. Because everyday people would wear the same thing. The same things meaning underlayers and clothing. For feminine dress: Shifts, stays/corset, padding! (not talked about enough), petticoats, and dress. Just in fabrics that worked for their class and were affordable to them. The SILHOUETTE was what was fashionable. You wore the underthings and cut of clothing that allowed you to have the fashionable silhouette that matched all across the socioeconomic spectrum and boom you were in fashion. Also you didn't have to change your actual self to be in fashion. You wore the support garments and padding that got you to the fashionable silhouette. (Tight lacing your corset or wearing an ill fitting corset was what generally lead to discomfort. Otherwise it was a support garment that well supported the back and bosom. I said bosom, don't remove my comment YT!) So you'd have a structure garment shaping you and would pad out anywhere that needed it, if fashion called for it, and that was that. Fashion through all of this meaning what society expected you to wear for any occasion/activity as well as actually being in fashion. Which we are both still beholden to today.
@@Emthe30something Working class people would have worn clothes that weren't made of the expensive fabrics, and were much more simple than what the wealthy wore, eg: not having all of the flounces or the extra decorations like the scallops on the white Regency style gown.
Alice not only looks and dresses like a teenager, she acts like one. The purpose of a corset wasn’t to “suck one in”, it was to support the bust, and give the foundation and shape for the dress. Also, early on, many dress parts were pinned to the stays/corsets.
Hi Kimberly I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement as A new friend. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Why so rude to our sweet Alice? 😋
@@missbraindamage: There is nothing “rude” about stating the truth about Alice’s comportment and behavior ; if anything, she went easy on her!
I liked all the dresses except that pink "fluffy" one from the 20th/21st century. It was too revealing and needed an underskirt or petticoat.
I love how Alice did the runway model bit while wearing the Georgian and Victorian attire! 😁
I think women's clothing were more intricately and carefully made before the 1960's. I find most of the women's clothing styles of the 19th century beautiful.
As a high schooler, 1969-1973, I was very much into retro-now vintage-fashion. I adored the design, fabric and superior construction of women’s suits, which I wore to school, and fancy dresses, which I wore to concerts and gigs.
you really missed the point here. the last dress, which you don't like because it's too revealing, is perfect example of the shift over the 20th century to underwear-as-outerwear the hosts briefly mentioned. it's not different than any other dress they displayed; it's a continuation of the evolution of fashions.
I know in windy areas they weighted the hems with lead. That would make dresses heavier.
Not by much, weights in the size range of coins or fishing weights. No heavier that going around with a handful of pocket change in pants pockets
I watch for Alice Loxton. She is enchanting.
The dress and the sneakers look surprisingly good together.
Happiness meter 😀 wonderful
I want to dress in plain Victorian style clothing. I am retired and sick and had to move up north where it is very cold. I think it will work best with the weather here
Sorry to say I was really disappointed by this video, given it’s titled “How to dress for all occasions in the 18th century” when in fact only one dress (the first) was an 18th century replica. As much as 19th century fashion is fascinating in itself, detailed information about, and examples of, the way people dressed in preceding centuries is more difficult to come by online. As someone primarily interested in 17th and 18th century fashion I’m afraid this was a let-down.
Please choose more accurate video titles in future! ☹️
@15:58 That's Kendall, not Kylie. But I guess the Kardashians are kind of interchangeable.
What fun trying on historical fashion, I envy you. I d be having my own little photo shoot
Why is this one not available in the app?
Good vid but you should consider changing the title to indicate "from the 18th to 20th Century".. Most of the video is about the 19th century.
❤️ Alice
this girl is amazing
I liked your green dress best! 😂
A little disappointing for fashion history fans. Too general and whimsical of an approach to a complicated subject. The dressing up probably seemed like a good idea at the time, and gave Alice the presenter an opportunity to flounce around in a few mock-up examples. Alice, (bless her)is stick-thin, and the outfits she tried on were obviously way too big for her, so it was hard to picture the “shape” each outfit would have displayed. However, I longed to peer into the display cabinets and drool over the real thing. Maybe skip the dressing up next time and concentrate on the authentic dresses.
Great one Alice, I loved the Victorian gown 😍
I think I liked the blue dress the best.
can Alice stay? i keep getting attached to presenters and then they leave :(
I love Alice the girl of my dreams, wonderful.
First off: well done for not dissing the corset and stays; as asking "did women in the time like corsets" would be like saying "do women in the 21st centuary like wearing bras and occasionly some of them wearing spanks to get in to high fasion clothing for a photo shoot or events..."
Secondly: I understand that the clothes that she put on were a one size (doesn't) fit all for trying out in the museum and that it would be outrageous if she were to try on actual period garments however if you are going to entitle your documentary 'evolution of women's fashion through the ages" 1: there should be way more ages represented and 2: there are plenty of good precision replicas (in all shapes and sizes) made by skilled crafts people (cos tube is full of them) who would have (I'm sure) been happy to help out and provide dresses and the appropriate under-garments to make the dresse work properly if they had been asked! What a shame to miss this opportuity to not only show properly reconstrusted, historically accurate outfits but also to show case the amazing talent of these people who are keeping old skills alive...
Its a free youtube channel - how would they pay for all that?
I think the point of the video was not to teach people about history of dress, but to show case the Fashion Museum and what it has to offer for visitors.
Can you demonstrate the fashion from the neolithic to the Regency period? To fill the gaps.
Alice Loxton in a corset...what's not to like about that?!! 👍🏻
I just put this on for Alice Loxton lol
That Kylie Jenner dress is ghastly.
it's Kendall Jenner dress and its high fashion designed by italian designer Giambatista Valli it has been world renowned by vogue etc. you clearly have no taste whatsoever and whatever you wear is ghastly.
Good show Alice!
That what is known as verdugado. Those circles that let the skirts move. Very famous in Spanish courts, with plane front or carton de pecho and chapines. ( shoes)
History woman I love you.
Why are these HH gems on YT for free but not available on HH streaming for which I pay $80 a year??? I won't be paying for a second year.
Great video! My favorite dress: the yellow, 18th century one
Angelic!
Alice is a goddess
I love that summer dress on her, hnnnng...
The white dress from the early 19th Century, with madras lace, and made of Muslim, which I had no idea about, is very nice. More wearable. The bonnet goes perfect with it.
The fabric is called muslin, which is a light cotton weave. Muslim is someone who practices the Islamic faith.
I think the Victorian one's best. Were Alice to wear this every day, a flock of gentlemen riding penny farthings and wearing top hats and adorned with whiskers in the hipster style would be quickly convened, who'd spare no opportunity to raise thier hats in salute.. 🌟👍
Did the petticoat drawing they showed at 2:40 look like it was from the 1890's/1900's or am I tripping?
Edit: oh I just realized it was supposed to be a general example of a petticoat not one actually from the 1760s
Absolutely LOVE LOVE this...would like to see MORE
What is she talking about “red carpet dresses” being a “21st century thing”. They did not “start” 20 years ago! I truly don’t know what she would specifically mean to make that accurate. Gowns worn purely to be photographed on the red carpet? Been going on much longer. The rise of the Internet only changed the places we viewed images and how many more get seen. And there are different types of celebrities who are being admired and imitated - a much wider definition of “celebrity” than just “movie star”. But red carpet walks have been going on MUCH longer than 20 years. I really keep trying to figure out what she meant. This footage is obviously very much edited down, and I’m sure she said a lot more, but I can’t think what else she could’ve been saying that could make that comment accurate.
The displays look good, the presenter does her jobs, but the pseudo replica dresses are a good example how some modern museums dumb down history to make it presentable to a supposedly dumb public. I was very disappointed at this presentation. Either work with the displays, or look for historic costume makers or living history groups representing the period. There are such gorgeous works that could have made it into this video but weren't...
Yeah, they're all so big on here, plus none of the proper undergarments, really doesn't give a good idea of the proper silhouettes
I sort of agree, but as the museum lady said at the begining, this is for visitors to try on, it would make it much less accesible and expensive for the museum to make it with the right period undergarments and aproppiate size for every person, though I agree that there should be a way to cinch the important parts down a little so that it conforms more to the period shape
I'm curious where they found some of these dresses? Who did they belong to?
Alice is real looker ! Tall and beautiful 😍. She could very
easily have been a pro -model !
Real eye 👀 candy 🍬 !