Please make a series of videos talking about particular gargements. I really loved how much we can learn just from one piece of clothing. I'm sure there are many more pieces we should know and that deserve a video
The word 間 is a japanese kanji obv, so its root is in chinese. And basically the word in chinese means similar to the space in between, but also it functions as a divide, like a divide in space, or the physical action of dividing something. It's usually used in compound with the word that roughly means center (中), so the word "center" in whole would be 中間.
@1:09 before you tell us......The one and only MR. CHARLES JAMES.I had the pleasure of visiting his studio at the Chelsea Hotel with Tony Viramontes through Antonio.The Met did one of the best exhibits of his work which featured a x-ray machine to view the inner workings of his gowns......AMAZING!
I would also like to interject that Ye likely got inspo from the 80’s film “Akira” Kaneda dons an all ride biker suit with the jacket looking very similar as well and he’s vocalized his appreciation of the film in the past!!
The armpit gusset surprised me. I never thought of gussets as a way of creating a collapsible space as much as a way of creating a pouch from something flat, but it seems like the perfect application of it.
Hey Bliss if you ever did a podcast, I would 100% keep up with it daily, like sometimes I don't really have the time to watch TH-cam videos, but I'm always listening to podcast episodes on the go, like on the bus, while waiting for stuff etc. Just a lil comment for u to consider, obviously these videos take a bunch of time and effort so a podcast would kinda double that, but still yknow, just putting it out there!
The way the sleeves look, especially in the photo at 9:04, remind me a lot of the 16th century Spanish sleeve style where there was a larger, short outer sleeve, and longer, more narrow sleeves came out underneath it. An example of what I mean can be seen in the painting of Anna of Austria by Anthonis Mor van Dashorst.
This idea of the influence of kimonos on the dress shirt etc is sort of blowing my mind. I get it and am also throughly confused. 😳🤯 I need a deeper dive that take. Also let us not forget the kimono and Cristobal Balenciaga
i am not a woman but i wear a petticoat (actually an organza pannier) under my skirt on non-work days because it looks cool and those skirts? those panniers? they use rectangular construction to center the pattern above the cut (like a frikken kimono!) it's kimono all the way down
This video will probably make like $100 from TH-cam We don’t run sponsors. My partner+I put in about⬇️⬇️ 90 hours total on this video. If you like this content, support it on Patreon pls :) Link in description.
I am SO EXCITED that you're talking about Charles James! I'm a vintage/historical fashion tragic and he's one of my absolute icons, he could make fabric do ANYTHING - check out the skirt of his clover dress! Loved the video too
I was so excited to have seen Yves’ version at the YSL Museum in Paris. It was so nice to be able to explain it in detail to my girlfriend! You are amazing, Bliss!
Hello from Japan!! Great video, your pronunciation of Kimono is spot on! Your observation of the Kimono being a garment with a great deal of space between the wearers skin and the fabric is correct/incorrect at the same time. Yes the many different varieties of Kimono garments more or less have lots of space for arms and legs BUT all Kimono's are tightly fastened with an Obi or sash at the waist, slim women have to use folded towels or padding to enhance the body shape so the kimono drapes well. This makes the Kimono very hot, constricting and tiring to wear if you don't wear them regularly. People of Asian decent tend to sweat much less than us and also wrapping a tight Obi sash under the armpits actually suppresses the sweat glands which I recently learned. I am a hot person so even a summer cotton Yukata Kimono I get soaked with sweat. I'm not trying to put you down it's just that I sometimes see the explanation that the Kimono is a louse fitting garment when in fact it isn't.
Thanks for making this video, love the deep dive into the history and inspiration of this jacket! In sewing and patterning making the difference between the body measurements and the garment measurements is called "ease"-you need this so you can move and bend in your clothes, especially when they are made from woven fabrics. Many garments made from knits (i.e. exercise tights or swimsuits) have negative ease and are smaller than your body measurements, they are able to be tight against your body because the stretch in the knit allows you to move easily. Also Schiaparelli made matching monkey fur boots to go with that jacket, they're in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
I just found your channel and I think I’m just going to watch every video. I like the way you talk about fashion, you’re clearly passionate. And funny ! And serious but not taking yourself seriously. Great video. I did know about this jacket ! But not in detail.
The concept of the wall of air is so interesting, I was under the impression kimonos were worn pretty tight (even if in a tubular shape smoothed by padding) because I often saw the obi being compared to the (supposed) tightness and rigidity of a corset, as in, it's deceptively ''comfy'' looking.
A obi is indeed very rigid (well, not so much the obi than allllll the layers of belting that go underneath) but not that tight ! And a kimono is pretty loose fitting overall, tighter around the torso but not particularly restricting. Of course there are styles that are tighter, like those worn by geikos, making them move in a very particular way (very small steps, calculated gestures) but this not true for the everyday kimono wearer. This is a sort of high-fashion way of wearing one.
Holy dart Bliss, you really outdid yourself on this one! I'm getting a bit of Errolson vibes from Charles James obsession with articulation and engineering. Never heard about him before, but seems like I'm gonna jump down a rabbit hole tonight...
Love this video. I'm actually learning to sew because this jacket inspired a design idea for a coat that would both fit nicely and look great on me. I've always been a bit of a fashionista, but now I'm starting to want pieces that fit the way I like and drape in the right places for my body type. I don't want to have to spend a fortune on every garment, so I'm learning to make them myself. This information is going to be very useful. Thank you. I would love to see more videos of this type. It's such great information.
I can’t decide if I love you more or your enthusiastic personality with a drop of humor ❤💕 -but- I have still unanswered questions from both of your channels all the way from the time of Virgil’s passing 😏
I have one more design reference for you, Bliss: the Michelin Man aka Bibendum, from 1894 and one of the oldest trademarks still in existence. Rubber tires were originally white-grey in color and Bibendum looked like the stack of inflated tires made into a man. Let me know what you think.
What is worth 20 dollars a month for me personally, Im a manga artist and my stories world is a hyper fantasy new Americas esk with beast and native and magical weapons- and every character needs a story with there clothes in this new world and a new type of story , so critique and constructive criticism is worth so much more then 20 a month for the hours I spend thinking and researching fashion shows ect …
Can someone give me a quick rundown on what “darts” and “block patterns”? Bliss brought them up and I don’t think I fully understand it off a google search. Thanks
The puffer jacket seen here seems to be an homage to great british designer Charle James. The man was a genius who unfortunately had a hard time making money from his work due to what appears to have been time management, coupled with almost impossible garments to be put into production. P.S. I just realized that the great fashion illustrator Antonio Lopez is wearing the jacket in your very informative look into Charles James.
As a Kimono Enthusiast, no. Just no. I will elaborate; whilst pattern making is a lost art form, the Kimono has a far more complex interaction in global textile cultures than 'block pattern'. Uniformity was a model which started in the US with things like the Ford Model T production line, which kickstarted the idea that less waste was more economically beneficial to the capitalist wallet. I comment this because WHERE ARE YOUR SOURCES??? >: |. Kimono influenced South East Asian styles in the 15th century, along with Japanese sword designs, as the Kosode which spread because before Sakoku (pre 1640), Japanese trade networks were rather well established in the area. Kimono in the 17th century were exported to Europe, becoming the Banyan, later the 'nightgowne', and influenced the creation if the waistcoat at the court of Charles II in a bid to curb his courtiers decadence as to own a Kimono was ludicrously expensive. Kimono went on to inform mens tailoring and suits and were worn by academics and aristocrats. In the 19th century, Kimono were reintroduced by European and American merchants and were worn first by artists and later by the wealthy. By the last quarter of the century, Kimono greatly inspired the dress reform and aesthetic movements, which took the 'Ma' aspect into women's tailoring and created dresses like those designed by Emily Floge or Anna Muthesius which allowed greater movement than the previous was waistline and tea-gowns had provided. These transformed how comfort and space were viewed by designers, not fabric economy. This was more something thought to be done around the 1930s-1950s due to the depression, wartime rations and this was reflected in patterns from the time, which were still heavily done by hand. Uniform patterns, something anyone who has something that fits will understand is a travesty, were created to push more product onto consumers who wanted a particular look, something lady's magazines had pushed since the 1870s in places like Godey Ladys Book or the Englishwomans Domestic as most people could not afford to have their clothes made by tailors, much as we dont all just buy nothing but savile row suits today. Kimono if anything are a T-shape, mostly rectangular, not square and are adapted to the wearer, particularly if something is larger or smaller the sleeves will adjusted to fit. There has also been a move towards changing styles for disabled people to wear them, so there is no one uniform Kimono pattern, I think you perhaps mean the silhouette never changed? PS Love your work, and who hasnt heard of James Charles??? Particularly the dresses
@@BlissFoster See, this name doesn’t automatically come up in a single google search (and it’s a crime). But THANK YOU, omg, I’ve had the dresses saved (and stopped at that lol, the only thing I can look at is the Girolamo Giuseffi dress 😅). I really like this format btw. When you say fashion students recreate the jacket, does it mean drafting from scratch or from scratch scratch?
@@BlissFoster since we’re talking (and I started reminiscing about my final push into sewing - two months of six the musical and the original Barbie movies), can we please, please get a breakdown of Rapunzel’s looks in honor of the upcoming movie? Girlie really said “it’s 14th century” and imho it’s really not. The video would, of course, have to contain the Gimme UGH! remix purely for research purposes 🙇🏻♀️
@@i123456987654 all jokes aside, foil does help get the basics down. Funny story: there was a kid in my class who was awful; he was disruptive, clearly didn’t want to be there. One day, he starts whining that all the rules make fencing less fun. Teacher ignores him. Kid then gets louder and says to the teacher “I bet I could beat you if I didn’t have to bend my knees all weird and hold the sword in that goofy way.” 😯 None of us had seen the teacher actually fence someone before. Teacher says “ok, get a foil. Put on a mask so I don’t send you to the hospital.” They both gear up. Teacher fences correctly, kid starts swinging the sword around like he’s in Star Wars. Teacher blocked every swing for 90 seconds straight. Since you fenced, you know that is a long ass time. When he’d proven his point, he teacher struck the kid one time. Did some bizzare move where he kinda used the foil like a whip: putting so much energy behind it that the foil blade bent and touched the kid (very hard) on his back. Despite the kid wearing a tshirt, a button up and fencing gear, that one touch broke the skin on his back. He left crying 😭
Babe wake up bliss foster posted
Okay babe 😘
Watching bliss with your babe is actually goals tho
facts
Please make a series of videos talking about particular gargements. I really loved how much we can learn just from one piece of clothing. I'm sure there are many more pieces we should know and that deserve a video
Came down here to say this exact same thing
YES ! Absolutely seconding this.
The word 間 is a japanese kanji obv, so its root is in chinese. And basically the word in chinese means similar to the space in between, but also it functions as a divide, like a divide in space, or the physical action of dividing something. It's usually used in compound with the word that roughly means center (中), so the word "center" in whole would be 中間.
@1:09 before you tell us......The one and only MR. CHARLES JAMES.I had the pleasure of visiting his studio at the Chelsea Hotel with Tony Viramontes through Antonio.The Met did one of the best exhibits of his work which featured a x-ray machine to view the inner workings of his gowns......AMAZING!
Thanks!
I would also like to interject that Ye likely got inspo from the 80’s film “Akira” Kaneda dons an all ride biker suit with the jacket looking very similar as well and he’s vocalized his appreciation of the film in the past!!
fun fact, my college has an original Charles James in its archives
we are not allowed to touch it because it is literally disintegrating~
The armpit gusset surprised me. I never thought of gussets as a way of creating a collapsible space as much as a way of creating a pouch from something flat, but it seems like the perfect application of it.
Hey Bliss if you ever did a podcast, I would 100% keep up with it daily, like sometimes I don't really have the time to watch TH-cam videos, but I'm always listening to podcast episodes on the go, like on the bus, while waiting for stuff etc. Just a lil comment for u to consider, obviously these videos take a bunch of time and effort so a podcast would kinda double that, but still yknow, just putting it out there!
The way the sleeves look, especially in the photo at 9:04, remind me a lot of the 16th century Spanish sleeve style where there was a larger, short outer sleeve, and longer, more narrow sleeves came out underneath it. An example of what I mean can be seen in the painting of Anna of Austria by Anthonis Mor van Dashorst.
I had to look up the painting on Google, and you nailed the similarity between the two. Thanks for introducing me to this artwork.
i still believe this is the best fashion channel in the world
im so glad you came to reference Charles James ! he's also responsible for the taxi dress (wrap dress that inspired DVF)
This idea of the influence of kimonos on the dress shirt etc is sort of blowing my mind. I get it and am also throughly confused. 😳🤯 I need a deeper dive that take.
Also let us not forget the kimono and Cristobal Balenciaga
i am not a woman but i wear a petticoat (actually an organza pannier) under my skirt on non-work days because it looks cool
and those skirts? those panniers? they use rectangular construction to center the pattern above the cut (like a frikken kimono!)
it's kimono all the way down
Thanks
1:32 The Metropolitan Museum of Art had a great exhibition of Charles James’ designs including the jacket.
This video will probably make like $100 from TH-cam
We don’t run sponsors.
My partner+I put in about⬇️⬇️ 90 hours total on this video.
If you like this content, support it on Patreon pls :)
Link in description.
I am SO EXCITED that you're talking about Charles James! I'm a vintage/historical fashion tragic and he's one of my absolute icons, he could make fabric do ANYTHING - check out the skirt of his clover dress! Loved the video too
I was so excited to have seen Yves’ version at the YSL Museum in Paris. It was so nice to be able to explain it in detail to my girlfriend! You are amazing, Bliss!
this HIJACKETED fashion
Hello from Japan!! Great video, your pronunciation of Kimono is spot on! Your observation of the Kimono being a garment with a great deal of space between the wearers skin and the fabric is correct/incorrect at the same time. Yes the many different varieties of Kimono garments more or less have lots of space for arms and legs BUT all Kimono's are tightly fastened with an Obi or sash at the waist, slim women have to use folded towels or padding to enhance the body shape so the kimono drapes well. This makes the Kimono very hot, constricting and tiring to wear if you don't wear them regularly. People of Asian decent tend to sweat much less than us and also wrapping a tight Obi sash under the armpits actually suppresses the sweat glands which I recently learned. I am a hot person so even a summer cotton Yukata Kimono I get soaked with sweat. I'm not trying to put you down it's just that I sometimes see the explanation that the Kimono is a louse fitting garment when in fact it isn't.
Man I’m so happy i found your channel
Thanks for making this video, love the deep dive into the history and inspiration of this jacket! In sewing and patterning making the difference between the body measurements and the garment measurements is called "ease"-you need this so you can move and bend in your clothes, especially when they are made from woven fabrics. Many garments made from knits (i.e. exercise tights or swimsuits) have negative ease and are smaller than your body measurements, they are able to be tight against your body because the stretch in the knit allows you to move easily.
Also Schiaparelli made matching monkey fur boots to go with that jacket, they're in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
I just found your channel and I think I’m just going to watch every video. I like the way you talk about fashion, you’re clearly passionate. And funny ! And serious but not taking yourself seriously. Great video. I did know about this jacket ! But not in detail.
The concept of the wall of air is so interesting, I was under the impression kimonos were worn pretty tight (even if in a tubular shape smoothed by padding) because I often saw the obi being compared to the (supposed) tightness and rigidity of a corset, as in, it's deceptively ''comfy'' looking.
A obi is indeed very rigid (well, not so much the obi than allllll the layers of belting that go underneath) but not that tight ! And a kimono is pretty loose fitting overall, tighter around the torso but not particularly restricting. Of course there are styles that are tighter, like those worn by geikos, making them move in a very particular way (very small steps, calculated gestures) but this not true for the everyday kimono wearer. This is a sort of high-fashion way of wearing one.
Holy dart Bliss, you really outdid yourself on this one! I'm getting a bit of Errolson vibes from Charles James obsession with articulation and engineering. Never heard about him before, but seems like I'm gonna jump down a rabbit hole tonight...
Get a book about him! There’s a few really good ones about him that you can find used for cheap 💫💫
Love this video. I'm actually learning to sew because this jacket inspired a design idea for a coat that would both fit nicely and look great on me. I've always been a bit of a fashionista, but now I'm starting to want pieces that fit the way I like and drape in the right places for my body type. I don't want to have to spend a fortune on every garment, so I'm learning to make them myself. This information is going to be very useful. Thank you. I would love to see more videos of this type. It's such great information.
This is incredible… the level of information is super impressive. So much learning about these connections and evolutions of fashion. Thank you
I’m a sculptor (and a fashion nut) and I enjoy so much the bringing together of art and fashion. Thanks Bliss!
Love those pants ("wacky stuff like this") you're wearing! More info on those? (The whole video is great, obv)
Those are by Hamcus! Thanks so much for the kind words!
Thank you! Great stuff
@@BlissFoster
Amazing video Bliss Foster you have given us so much valuable facts!
Your knowledge is impeccable. Thank you for sharing! I love your videos so much
LOVE LOVE LOVE YOUR CONTENT! Your hard work and research is inspiring and appreciated 🎉😊
Love the deep dive into a single piece !❤
so much fun hearing/ watching you
LOVE every bit of this!!! I learned so Much. You are amazing!!!! thank you for sharing .
This video is so good! I'm a fashion designer and this definitely inspire me to make some stuff. Please more videos about iconic specific peaces 🙏
so deep diving....thanks Bliss
Amazing shirt / jacket you’re wearing by the way.
This was a great video. I learned a bunch, from beginning to end. Thanks!
Guess I have to now make it.
I can’t decide if I love you more or your enthusiastic personality with a drop of humor ❤💕 -but- I have still unanswered questions from both of your channels all the way from the time of Virgil’s passing 😏
can you do a compilation of recommended fashion learning resources beside your channel?
I have one more design reference for you, Bliss: the Michelin Man aka Bibendum, from 1894 and one of the oldest trademarks still in existence. Rubber tires were originally white-grey in color and Bibendum looked like the stack of inflated tires made into a man. Let me know what you think.
apparently bliss has finally started seeing us there
What is worth 20 dollars a month for me personally, Im a manga artist and my stories world is a hyper fantasy new Americas esk with beast and native and magical weapons- and every character needs a story with there clothes in this new world and a new type of story , so critique and constructive criticism is worth so much more then 20 a month for the hours I spend thinking and researching fashion shows ect …
Fencer! Me too. In part for the fashion.
Thank you for your videos Bliss 👏 could you imagine being a lecturer at a (fashion/art) University?
Can someone give me a quick rundown on what “darts” and “block patterns”? Bliss brought them up and I don’t think I fully understand it off a google search. Thanks
Hey bliss still trying to get onto the fashion discord not working. Also keep up the content 🤘
Hey hey bliss I get excited about darts, bratz, and larp 😂😂😂
🤯 tha hobby trifecta
@@BlissFoster You know it.
The puffer jacket seen here seems to be an homage to great british designer Charle James. The man was a genius who unfortunately had a hard time making money from his work due to what appears to have been time management, coupled with almost impossible garments to be put into production. P.S. I just realized that the great fashion illustrator Antonio Lopez is wearing the jacket in your very informative look into Charles James.
This is why I watch...
plzzz do an analysis on this year´s met plzz Blisss
Bliss! what jacket are you wearing in this video?
“The gussets are essential” 😂
Bliss, this piece seems to have heavily inspired Larry Legaspi as well, with his use of trapunto in curvaceous ways.
*WOW AND WOW* I knew the jacket - but 1937 OMG
I thought it was about 1988
wondering if the Igo Igo jackets are inspired by this
Yeeeeessss we heavily stan Charles James
Feel free to share a list of French words and I‘d be happy to walk you through how to pronounce them, Bliss! Great video btw
13:31 this was so guttural it struck me with a deep fear
i like the jacket that you are wearing
As a Kimono Enthusiast, no. Just no.
I will elaborate; whilst pattern making is a lost art form, the Kimono has a far more complex interaction in global textile cultures than 'block pattern'. Uniformity was a model which started in the US with things like the Ford Model T production line, which kickstarted the idea that less waste was more economically beneficial to the capitalist wallet.
I comment this because WHERE ARE YOUR SOURCES??? >: |. Kimono influenced South East Asian styles in the 15th century, along with Japanese sword designs, as the Kosode which spread because before Sakoku (pre 1640), Japanese trade networks were rather well established in the area. Kimono in the 17th century were exported to Europe, becoming the Banyan, later the 'nightgowne', and influenced the creation if the waistcoat at the court of Charles II in a bid to curb his courtiers decadence as to own a Kimono was ludicrously expensive. Kimono went on to inform mens tailoring and suits and were worn by academics and aristocrats. In the 19th century, Kimono were reintroduced by European and American merchants and were worn first by artists and later by the wealthy. By the last quarter of the century, Kimono greatly inspired the dress reform and aesthetic movements, which took the 'Ma' aspect into women's tailoring and created dresses like those designed by Emily Floge or Anna Muthesius which allowed greater movement than the previous was waistline and tea-gowns had provided. These transformed how comfort and space were viewed by designers, not fabric economy. This was more something thought to be done around the 1930s-1950s due to the depression, wartime rations and this was reflected in patterns from the time, which were still heavily done by hand. Uniform patterns, something anyone who has something that fits will understand is a travesty, were created to push more product onto consumers who wanted a particular look, something lady's magazines had pushed since the 1870s in places like Godey Ladys Book or the Englishwomans Domestic as most people could not afford to have their clothes made by tailors, much as we dont all just buy nothing but savile row suits today.
Kimono if anything are a T-shape, mostly rectangular, not square and are adapted to the wearer, particularly if something is larger or smaller the sleeves will adjusted to fit. There has also been a move towards changing styles for disabled people to wear them, so there is no one uniform Kimono pattern, I think you perhaps mean the silhouette never changed?
PS Love your work, and who hasnt heard of James Charles??? Particularly the dresses
Jacket’s brand please! It’s farking cool!
Jacket is by Midori Worldwide 💫💫
BLISSSS!!!
Please, anyone who’s googled met gala or anything about fashion, really, knows Charles James. Fashion simply didn’t exist before him 😔💅
There will be no Rose Bertin slander on this channel 😤
@@BlissFoster See, this name doesn’t automatically come up in a single google search (and it’s a crime). But THANK YOU, omg, I’ve had the dresses saved (and stopped at that lol, the only thing I can look at is the Girolamo Giuseffi dress 😅). I really like this format btw. When you say fashion students recreate the jacket, does it mean drafting from scratch or from scratch scratch?
@@lucyl4603 Rose Bertin was Marie Antoinette’s couturier 💫💫 and I couldn’t speak for those projects because I never went to fashion school haha 😆
@@BlissFoster since we’re talking (and I started reminiscing about my final push into sewing - two months of six the musical and the original Barbie movies), can we please, please get a breakdown of Rapunzel’s looks in honor of the upcoming movie? Girlie really said “it’s 14th century” and imho it’s really not. The video would, of course, have to contain the Gimme UGH! remix purely for research purposes 🙇🏻♀️
Don't mind if I do - DuBois would be pronounced dew-bwa. Means "of the forest" in French.
“Weird joke” could it also maybe because it looks like it’s filled with air?
Fencing to Fashion Gang
Guesssetss go nuuuts
This jacket is the amen break of fashion
i feel like puffy things are in these days...for example, prada shoes
It kind of reminds me of the fusion vests in dragon ball z
Charles James was a God.
omg i fenced in high school too
What kind?? I was lame, foil only 😔
@@BlissFoster lol same foil only
@@BlissFoster Fencing is not lame! Never
@@i123456987654 all jokes aside, foil does help get the basics down.
Funny story: there was a kid in my class who was awful; he was disruptive, clearly didn’t want to be there. One day, he starts whining that all the rules make fencing less fun. Teacher ignores him. Kid then gets louder and says to the teacher “I bet I could beat you if I didn’t have to bend my knees all weird and hold the sword in that goofy way.”
😯
None of us had seen the teacher actually fence someone before.
Teacher says “ok, get a foil. Put on a mask so I don’t send you to the hospital.”
They both gear up. Teacher fences correctly, kid starts swinging the sword around like he’s in Star Wars.
Teacher blocked every swing for 90 seconds straight. Since you fenced, you know that is a long ass time. When he’d proven his point, he teacher struck the kid one time. Did some bizzare move where he kinda used the foil like a whip: putting so much energy behind it that the foil blade bent and touched the kid (very hard) on his back. Despite the kid wearing a tshirt, a button up and fencing gear, that one touch broke the skin on his back.
He left crying 😭
Hey Bliss, 😂Regarding this coat I came across this book for character study. SPALDING AVIATOR’S CLOTHING & EQUIPMENT IN THE 1920 - 1930 CHECK IT OUT!
God I love your videos
It reminds me of the inflatable Issey Miyake rubber jacket
Eddie Bauer gigachad
Where’s your jacket from
Midori Worldwide 💫💫
3 full inches is above average, right?
It's basically Charles de Blwa. Don't go too explosive on the B
Amen break of fashion
Charles james, james charles 💀
5th
Confirmed, Zair is 5th 🦾
@@BlissFoster ⭐️
MONKEY THO
bliss fartster
🤯😳
@@BlissFoster i love u
Wouldn’t the inspiration have been taken from Mongolian clothing?
Sounds like you know something we don’t! Tell us about it 💫💫
not first 😔
u a giniuz
go full pouwa
Doodads😂
Hey Ye, stop copying other designers' works, like you accused Adidas of doing to your own design.
First
Confirmed 😌
Hair on the gusset. Literally unwearable.
LmaOOOO that was on my scanner I was hoping no one would notice 😭
@@BlissFoster 😂 Delete this comment ASAP and blame the original photographer
@@imdoingokay i would never 😤
feel like ive seen it in bladerunner
Interesting how innovative and incredible things tend to come out of Massive Economic Downturn... 🤔😉
Thanks!