I should probably note that I ended up having to remove the gorgeous trim down the front of the overgown for sizing, but rest assured that the beautiful Nami Sparrow added it to her gown for the ball, which you can see briefly at 26:39!
Dear Bernadette, I just wanted to give you a hint that the English default subtitles (at 00:59min) accidentally say "it means that I get to recycle scrap Muslim bits" instead of "muslin bits". This might confuse some people that don't have as much knowledge about different fabric types 😅 Thank you for the beautiful video!
I know you are heading into Regency at the mo, but could you pay a visit into the Tudors, I would love a deep dive into ruffs, from the choice of fabric/lace, the starching, and the intricate ruff pinning patterns, and their meaning, that would be pure joy 😊
In my very younger days (I'm 90) I was a seamstress, my eyes are very poor now and I miss sewing and creating projects. I love watching you and laugh when I see you doing what I used to do
Antiquity done right: when envy of a younger’s accomplishment blossoms into a knowing celebration of their achievement. That’s hard work but so satisfying.
Ok I'm not going to lie. I'm getting so emotional about a regency ballgown embroidered with the Indian names of the craftsmen who made it, being worn proudly. This is what historical recreation should be all about. Absolute hats off to Maayankraj and the whole of the Atelier Shikaarbagh. The gown is gorgeous, Bernadette is gorgeous, and corvids are the best creatures on this earth
I think we all fell in love with Maayankraj a little bit. He both seems like a hoot to work with and extremely professional. The fact that you just mentioned 'victorian goth' and immediately he was SPOT ON with the crows, paying respect to his employees by suggesting they sign their work, the beautiful sketches... I hope we get to see much more of his work in the future.
I certainly fell in love with him. His artistry and that of his team is just amazing and so beautiful. But the man personally and his personality are just amazing. I'd love to watch more from/by him.
"You are my favorite person on this planet!" "Of course I am dear." God I love when our friends are just as fabulous and extra as us and help us push our dreams further! ❤
I’m not ashamed to admit that I became emotional when you showed the names of the artisans and spoke of how the past artisans would have been unnamed. I’m glad we’ve come a bit past that and doing better at acknowledging these lovely people. Thank you for always acknowledging the artists you work with.
I love how over the years you've developed SUCH confidence in altering patterns based on preference and not just historical evidence. Somehow makes it feel even more historical - like a normal 19th century person having been taught the general ways of how to do it and then winging it from there
if you were making your own clothes, altering the patterns is also so natural. you'd have to take your body shape and simple preference into account, as well as the availability of the fabrics or garments to be altered and re-worn. of course you often wouldn't just sew along the pattern as-is.
As a South Asian woman who gets to wear embroidered traditional outfits often, I am so happy to see you falling in love with them as much as I do! Im so glad you were able to honor and present the teams work and I can say my ancestors and theirs thank you for the respect that you showed them, at a regency ball no less, a place where those who disrespected our countries and community would never have shown any recongintion or remorse.
Yes. We need more embroidery in the west. I feel that I suffer from a lack of embroidery in my life. The joy that the mere sight of these clothes provokes is missing.
That overdress is jaw-dropping. The names of the embroiderers are a modern touch that adds importance ... they belong there. And I finally know what that weird tiny crochet hook with a wood handle is, that's in a box of inherites sewing tools ... a tambour hook!
"Don't die, you have to wear this gown.... you can die after that" I love this man and I don't even know him. What a gift he is and what a gift he gave by adding himself to this process. Did anyone else cry at the addition of his teams names? I cried like a baby. How amazing their names won't be lost. Maybe when this ends up in a museum (which one day I hope it does) the history will report more favourably on the skill of such artisans no longer lost and nameless.
Literally fell in love with him from that line. Does anyone know if he's a single man...in want of a wife? I'm immediately going to instagram to follow him
I think this is why ppl gravitate to this channel. You know Bernadette is going to the store in an 18th century garment then using Apple pay. Like a total mashup of time and space in the best way possible.
Or how about all the period hand sewing and then uses zoom to talk to an artisan around the world to collaborate on the embroidery. 😂 Bernadette has the perfect balance of it all.
Just yesterday I watched Karolina's video about regency court dresses and when I saw this one this morning I was like "wow, what a strange coincidence!" It's the same ball. I can literally see her in the background of some of the shots haha
This is the comment I was looking for! Interesting how Bernadette said she didn't have time to do exactly what she had in mind but ended up with a beautifully ornamented gown, and Karolina went for a historically accurate silhouette but overall did something much simpler. I love the contrast in their approaches and the way both dresses turned out.
Same! I just watched Karolina’s video yesterday and then saw the title for this video and was like, “wait a minute, if only Regency court gowns were _actually_ as pretty as Bernadette’s.”
ditto, and I was sort of hoping for Bernadette to be doing the same wonderfully unhinged empire waist and side hoops style, but this dress was amazing!
Everyone needs a Maayankraj in their life. I gasped when you unwrapped the overdress. It's so incredible. The names of those who stitched the embroidery is by far the best part of the gown. I now have a favorite video of yours. I'm going to rewatch this right now.
I really appreciated the diagram of the dress in the bottom corners. I’ve never sewn more than a pillow, and I’m very visual, so it helped me see what you were talking about. I hope that’s something you keep adding!
I have been missing the learning process aspect of her earlier videos. Relating the sketch to the work in process really helps me to translate from idea to reality.
I'm a carpenter. I work with wood and tools that will chop off your arm if you're not careful. And I absolutely love your videos. I'm fascinated by the precision, detail, and techniques of sewing (I peaked at "sewing on a button"). That being said, I actually have--thanks to my education in theatre, and an amazing costuming prof--a reasonable understanding of historical fashion. I dislike Regency (and Empire) fashion. It is--to my modern sensibilities--entirely unflattering (though I understand why it came into fashion at the time). I never thought a Regency gown would look good on you. I was wrong. You wear it perfectly. Have you thought about collaborating with other YT makers to create a steam punk masterpiece? And... Serious kudos and mad respect to Master Singh and his team. That embroidery is *magnificent*. The inclusion of the signatures is the crown jewel of the piece. Thank you.
His experience really shows. I have a small bit of experience making custom items for people. Most people have NO IDEA what they want. Gentle guidance was a must for me. I get it, "what do you want?" is an overwhelming question.
The dress is truly an East meets West gown. The embroidered overgrown decoration is very much like the decoration you'd find on an Indian Sari, a historic western-style dress studded with Indian bling, BEAUTIFUL. My utmost favorite part is that Maayankraj and the whole of the Atelier Shikaarbagh craftsmen and craftswomen embroidered their names on the gown, What could be better than that? A gown to be treasured for many lifetimes! ☺🙏❤ 🌹
Yes, total respect. BTW, at 15:13 the CC missed BB's fun use of "yote" as the past tense of "yeet" (which I had not seen before) and wrote "neat" instead. Maybe you'll enjoy a fun giggle at the "yote" as I just did!
the gown is obviously sublime, i'm just here to say i am absolutely living for karolina in her massive english court dress with everyone else in french style sleek gowns, she cracks me up & everyone looked absolutely beautiful
I absolutely love the names of the artisans on the train of the dress! This is an amazing example of celebrating and recreating history without recreating the awful racism, colonialism, and exploitation that was historically present. Celebrating the past can be done in a way that doesn’t hide the horrible things that happened, but gives an example of what should have been. Showing respect and acknowledgment to those whose presence was written out of history. The gown is gorgeous, and it was lovely to see it.
The reveal of the names at the end literally brought tears to my eyes! Absolutely stunning, beautiful, amazing! Thank you so much for all the artists involved and thank you so much to you Bernadette for so respectfully showing all that is involved in this artform. *also I loved the sketch animations in the corner as you went, I usually watch these videos with my husband who loves to see glimpses into my world of costuming and historical dress even though he does not sew. It was nice for him to get to visually see what you were doing without me having to jump up and grab some scrap fabric or garment to show how it was being manipulated for the final shape.
I've a fun janot Arnold story: I use to have the same pattern book when I was in mid highschool. the pattern the dress used for reference for this project was a favorite of mine. I never made them in full size, but I use to trace the patterns and sew miniature recreations and then dip them in a glue and stuffed with cotton also dipped in the glue to shape them so they looked like floating dresses on invisible mannequins.
I've just attended an exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario entitled "Making her Mark" about women artists and artisans and there was a note about how many of the items were labelled "Anonymous" because women making lace, embroidery, -almost everything -were never acknowledged. So it's wonderful and timely to see that modern artisans are finally putting their names on beautiful garments and I do mean on rather than tucked away inside a label. The gown and overdress are amazing. Thank you for including the helpful "animated" diagrams about the architecture of the dress. It's helpful to those of us who can't sew on a button without having to run to an ER to see how these pieces fit together. Thank you for sharing!
I so hope all the people that worked on the jacket get to see Bernadette jumping with joy at seeing it and then seeing how happy she is to see everyones names. Her reaction is the best and only way to thank someone that's hand made you something
Oh my goodness your dress was beautiful before but with the over dress it is stunning. The craftsmanship is outstanding but the main feature...the names of all who worked on the embroidery, that is beyond special.😊
The overdress on this was jaw-dropping spectacular!!!! Mayaankraj Singh and the Atelier Shikaarbagh are masters !!! I also love how you stood out in a wonderful way with your dark color palette from all the pastels I see at the ball.
I hope in a hundred years this overgown is preserved and a piece in a museum collection with a note about crediting work to the people who made the gowns. It is such a beautiful thing to have the names on there. I may have gotten a bit teary eyed 🥹
I am truly speechlessly awestruck by the work Maayankraj and his team did here. The entire finished project is wonderful but, oh my God, that embroidery!!!!
I’m not sure what the best part of this video is: watching Bernadette work out in a linen shift, watching her create her own gown, or watching her geek out over the amazing stupendous over-gown with the ravens on the train. I love the detail of the artisans’ names embroidered into the design of the dress! And the ball looks like it was so much fun. What a marvelous coincidence to watch this video the morning after watching a Regency-themed episode of Doctor Who! Especially given the design of the aliens’ costumes. 😀
When I saw "regency court gown" in the title, I thought to see Bernadette creating a hoop-skirted abomination such as Lady Rebecca and Karolina introduced me to this week! Instead, she created the Bridgerton version, which is much more palatable. The overgown is glorious and the inclusion of the artisans' names is so affirmative. No longer invisible craftspeople creating signed masterpieces!
May I just say, the little animation, first seen at 9:07, was so charming and helpful! Shoutout to whoever created that for this fascinating video! The editing is so good. And it’s been a joy to watch. 😊
Mr. Singh is a hero! 😊 So cool. Also the moving model image to show the apron front of the dress is so cool and helpful for visualization. You look stunning Bernadette in that beautiful dress! 🤩
This was so beautiful for so many reasons. I'm so glad you're throwing sewing videos back into the mix. I love historical videos because I believe the context is important, but I learn a ton of sewing and construction technique from these videos that I otherwise would not have the opportunity to learn. Especially from an expert. It's a beautiful blend of "here's how to make it" and "here's why we make it this way and with these fabrics." So great.
I never thought I would get emotional seeing some names embroidered on a gown but damn! To be able to read those names and see the mixture of the many religions and cultures of India coming together to create a type of gown that is in some ways alien to them is just beautiful. These are the people who are not looked upon as deserving the respect that other people get, yet their talents, their craftsmanships are unmatched and now seeing there names preserved on the very project they made is, for lack of a better word, amazing!
I teared up at the beauty of the gown. And at how immediately he jumped to corvids and a complete understanding of what you were going for. What a glorious project!
The “using materials until they’re literally dust” spoke to my soul. Literally just stuffed some ornaments with basically felt dust left over from cutting other things out and it’s so delightful and almost cathartic to give them all purpose. 1:04
I’m not crying, it’s just something in my eye that’s all. By the end, things really felt as though they’d come full circle. I hope everyone who took part in creating this gown felt as though their artistry was finally being acknowledged and recognised.
You are a crow-covered gothic delight-- long and lean and black. Good Mr. Singh is a genius and a thoughtful one to tribute his people. Must admit, got a little choked up. It is rare that the hands are given voice. And you are breathtaking in your whole look-- also with newly rippling muscles in the side-lighting. Terrific.
The fact that you are so joyous with proudly wearing their names warms my heart so much on this style of fanciful living dreams. Really grateful to see this. Additionally, you have a cool new outro ~ it's fabulous!
Hoppity skipping Bernadette as she brings home the treasure packet. The Spring green ribbon contrast is a bit of a surprise. The names threaded among the embroidery of the train look positively talisman. I hope his atelier receives lots of orders after this exquisite overgown goes viral.
I love this design in a dark color. I think a burnt umber would be lovely, too. and charcoal grey, and a dark wine/cranberry, and the silk looks about the same weight as linen. and I absolutely love that the sequins do not look campy in any way. the sparkle is elegance in this gown. Applause, applause.
That whole ensemble is gorgeous! And honestly it's so fitting to have their names embroidered on it when back then people like them were still treated like absolute dirt.
This was so cool!!! I clicked bc I saw the crows haha but I got so much more! I appreciate the little drawings as you're describing what you're going to do, so it's easier to visualize, and the footage showing the careful stitches you're taking. That overgown was spectacular! It was so beautiful and went so well with the undergown you made. I love all the gorgeous details and the beautiful signatures. I love how excited you were that this art was signed and thus the craftsmen would never be forgotten when someone looks at this beautiful work of art. It's so cool that by signing their names, it also remembers their ancestors doing the same work on gowns like yours a long time ago :D This was such a joy to watch, to see your beautiful work, their beautiful work, and your excitement about all the details!
I got CHILLS hearing you talk about the names of the artisans and being able to wear them to the ball! What a beautiful thought, shedding some light on forgotten figures in history.
I literally cried tears of joy when I saw the final gown put together. The exquisite physical beauty of the overgown, the symbolism of the embroidered names paying homage to the unknown seamstresses whose work adorned the finest ladies of the time-it overwhelmed me. Your own joy and eagerness to witness it mirroring my own as just a viewer, all of it is just pure good vibes.
Watching you draft and sew is the sewing version of ballet. Truly. No other sewing channel gives me the same feeling. These videos are my favorites! ❤❤❤
Credit is always given to the dressmaker of wealthy Western women, it's how the women show off hiw expensive and posh their dress is. This is no different. A virtue signaling fail.
How FUN!!!! You AND Karolina Zebrowska at the same Ball! Oh, to be a fly on the wall. What an absolutely GORGEOUS gown! I wish I had just 1/4 of your talent. Perfection, my dear... absolute perfection.
Thank you for including the several little diagrams in the bottom left corner at 17:43! This was so helpful to understand how it all fit together! I hope you continue to do these. 😊
That embroidery is absolutely stunning and these people are magicians. The added touch of having the names in there makes it even better. It's just fitting to sign this masterpiece like you would sign a painting. Beautiful.
26:50 Is that a Karolina Zebrowska cameo? 😁 You both look AMAZING in your dresses! I really felt like I shared your joy when you received that package, I agree, it is an exquisite piece! And I also feel that by having the Indian artists names incorporated into the piece, you really are helping to overcome that historical dilemma. And to celebrate their amazing talents! Thank you for another lovely video, Bernadette!
Not only is the gown beautiful, but i full on started to ugly cry when I saw the names of the beading artists. Like, real tears. Its so so so beautiful ❤️
What a beautiful gown. And you did the corvid expression in the end wonderful justice regarding how crows and ravens walk: elegant to watch from the side, derpy from front or behind! Black and shiny! The motif fits perfectly.
Just the fact that you are excited and delighted to be able to point out all of the names of the craftspeople who created that incredible overgown shows why representation is so important!!! Absolutely love the ravens and the dress you made is incredibly beautiful too!!!
I should probably note that I ended up having to remove the gorgeous trim down the front of the overgown for sizing, but rest assured that the beautiful Nami Sparrow added it to her gown for the ball, which you can see briefly at 26:39!
it looks gorgeous with her dress! you have almost a 'night and day' vibe with your black gown and her sky blue one
Thank you for explaining! Reminds me of your sherlock project 😊
I think it looks better without it tbh
Dear Bernadette, I just wanted to give you a hint that the English default subtitles (at 00:59min) accidentally say "it means that I get to recycle scrap Muslim bits" instead of "muslin bits". This might confuse some people that don't have as much knowledge about different fabric types 😅 Thank you for the beautiful video!
I know you are heading into Regency at the mo, but could you pay a visit into the Tudors, I would love a deep dive into ruffs, from the choice of fabric/lace, the starching, and the intricate ruff pinning patterns, and their meaning, that would be pure joy 😊
In my very younger days (I'm 90) I was a seamstress, my eyes are very poor now and I miss sewing and creating projects. I love watching you and laugh when I see you doing what I used to do
I loved reading this comment it made my whole dang year.
That's lovely, though I'm sorry to hear your eyes won't allow you to create as you did. I hope you have a wonderful day!
This is truly the sweetest comment ever. 🥹💕
Antiquity done right: when envy of a younger’s accomplishment blossoms into a knowing celebration of their achievement. That’s hard work but so satisfying.
Hugs❤
Ok I'm not going to lie. I'm getting so emotional about a regency ballgown embroidered with the Indian names of the craftsmen who made it, being worn proudly. This is what historical recreation should be all about. Absolute hats off to Maayankraj and the whole of the Atelier Shikaarbagh. The gown is gorgeous, Bernadette is gorgeous, and corvids are the best creatures on this earth
Me too! I love this so much!!
That part of the video actually put tears in my eyes, so beautiful! And the crows are stunning!
@@jimthechaosbunny same! I’ve already got a cold and I was just wrapped up in bed sobbing like an idiot.
me too hahah
Exactly yes!
“Don’t die. You have to wear this gown. After that you can do that” 😂😂😂 love him
Priorities!
I think we all fell in love with Maayankraj a little bit. He both seems like a hoot to work with and extremely professional. The fact that you just mentioned 'victorian goth' and immediately he was SPOT ON with the crows, paying respect to his employees by suggesting they sign their work, the beautiful sketches... I hope we get to see much more of his work in the future.
He read her mind! The bond of craftsmanship
I certainly fell in love with him. His artistry and that of his team is just amazing and so beautiful. But the man personally and his personality are just amazing. I'd love to watch more from/by him.
@@Mommamacnz I'm here in the comments looking for a link! Seems maybe not on youtube? I want to give him viewwwwwws
@@darsynia link in the description for his IG account.
"You are my favorite person on this planet!"
"Of course I am dear."
God I love when our friends are just as fabulous and extra as us and help us push our dreams further! ❤
So amazing
That line made me squeal with joy! What a guy.
Something about this whole project was so lovely
he is indian edna mode
Extra what?
13:49 “You are my favourite person on this planet.” “Of course I am.” The Edna Mode energy, I am loving it. 💜
forever upset I didn’t make the time to examine the details of the dress in person! 😭 but there was food being served 😔
Karolina, did i see u in regency court dress in the vid? 🤨
I’m still thinking about those roasted grapes tbh 👀
I thought I recognized the dress at 26:50! Both Karolina and Bernadette had lively gowns.
I’m not ashamed to admit that I became emotional when you showed the names of the artisans and spoke of how the past artisans would have been unnamed. I’m glad we’ve come a bit past that and doing better at acknowledging these lovely people. Thank you for always acknowledging the artists you work with.
The names on the train 💫💯
Me too! What a fantastic thing!
Bernadette is living her Crowleycore era and I'm here for it!
🤣
and it's a win!
14:06 I love how Maayankraj's facial expression doesn't even change while you lose your mind over his suggestion of a crow. He knows he's right.
At least he thinks he is. So much so that he added the names without even bothering to ask the person who pays for it.
@@saymyname2417 Well, he _was_ right, and it was beautiful. He knew who they were making it for.
@@aprillen - He knew she would never dare to publicly complain for obvious reasons, whether she was okay with what he did or not.
he knows his client and what would matter to her.
@@ReeniEspino - Oh, you sweet summer child... 🤣
I love how over the years you've developed SUCH confidence in altering patterns based on preference and not just historical evidence. Somehow makes it feel even more historical - like a normal 19th century person having been taught the general ways of how to do it and then winging it from there
Taught rather than teached. You make a good point about preference, the people of those days were real, normal people with individual preferences.
Loved your point.
@@kellysouter4381edited it accordingly! English is not my first language but I promise I am SO eloquent in german😂
if you were making your own clothes, altering the patterns is also so natural. you'd have to take your body shape and simple preference into account, as well as the availability of the fabrics or garments to be altered and re-worn. of course you often wouldn't just sew along the pattern as-is.
As a South Asian woman who gets to wear embroidered traditional outfits often, I am so happy to see you falling in love with them as much as I do! Im so glad you were able to honor and present the teams work and I can say my ancestors and theirs thank you for the respect that you showed them, at a regency ball no less, a place where those who disrespected our countries and community would never have shown any recongintion or remorse.
Yes. We need more embroidery in the west. I feel that I suffer from a lack of embroidery in my life. The joy that the mere sight of these clothes provokes is missing.
@@mellie4174 Embroidery just brings a next level to garments, whether its the hems of sleeves or dresses, to full areas of pieces. It's just amazing.
That overdress is jaw-dropping. The names of the embroiderers are a modern touch that adds importance ... they belong there.
And I finally know what that weird tiny crochet hook with a wood handle is, that's in a box of inherites sewing tools ... a tambour hook!
Sorry for touching the thumb down , because it should not have happened. I liked what you've said. I was trying to click on the word "more."
"Don't die, you have to wear this gown.... you can die after that" I love this man and I don't even know him. What a gift he is and what a gift he gave by adding himself to this process. Did anyone else cry at the addition of his teams names? I cried like a baby. How amazing their names won't be lost. Maybe when this ends up in a museum (which one day I hope it does) the history will report more favourably on the skill of such artisans no longer lost and nameless.
I'm not ashamed to say my eyes were wet watching that part of the video. So beautiful! Honestly I think all makers should sign their work.
I totally cried too. Surprised and reassured to read the comments and find I'm not the only one!
Literally fell in love with him from that line.
Does anyone know if he's a single man...in want of a wife?
I'm immediately going to instagram to follow him
I think this is why ppl gravitate to this channel. You know Bernadette is going to the store in an 18th century garment then using Apple pay. Like a total mashup of time and space in the best way possible.
I have just learnt how to use Apple Pay!!! Very useful.
Or how about all the period hand sewing and then uses zoom to talk to an artisan around the world to collaborate on the embroidery. 😂
Bernadette has the perfect balance of it all.
Bernadette Banner to star in a screenplay of indeterminate temporal setting à la Lalaland when?
her phonecase being a book cover is all that
I'm OBSESSED with the question "Would you like a crow?" like THAT is the sort of person I need in my life!
Just yesterday I watched Karolina's video about regency court dresses and when I saw this one this morning I was like "wow, what a strange coincidence!" It's the same ball. I can literally see her in the background of some of the shots haha
Same, I laughed so loud when I saw her :D The gowns could not be more different :D
This is the comment I was looking for! Interesting how Bernadette said she didn't have time to do exactly what she had in mind but ended up with a beautifully ornamented gown, and Karolina went for a historically accurate silhouette but overall did something much simpler. I love the contrast in their approaches and the way both dresses turned out.
Same! I just watched Karolina’s video yesterday and then saw the title for this video and was like, “wait a minute, if only Regency court gowns were _actually_ as pretty as Bernadette’s.”
It was a Regency Ball in Brighton, organized by Zack Pinsent, who is the person who gave Bernadette the fabric for this project :)
ditto, and I was sort of hoping for Bernadette to be doing the same wonderfully unhinged empire waist and side hoops style, but this dress was amazing!
I have never seen a dress that screams “I am a mage in service to the king” as much as that one 😂. Classy witch vibes.
Everyone needs a Maayankraj in their life. I gasped when you unwrapped the overdress. It's so incredible. The names of those who stitched the embroidery is by far the best part of the gown. I now have a favorite video of yours. I'm going to rewatch this right now.
i love the fact that the names are stitched into the train, it's such a sweet touch
"No historical basis for this, just vibes" - WORDS TO LIVE BY.
I was thinking that should be a new reason for things
I really appreciated the diagram of the dress in the bottom corners. I’ve never sewn more than a pillow, and I’m very visual, so it helped me see what you were talking about. I hope that’s something you keep adding!
Yes! Very welcome addition!
I have been missing the learning process aspect of her earlier videos. Relating the sketch to the work in process really helps me to translate from idea to reality.
I'm a carpenter. I work with wood and tools that will chop off your arm if you're not careful. And I absolutely love your videos. I'm fascinated by the precision, detail, and techniques of sewing (I peaked at "sewing on a button"). That being said, I actually have--thanks to my education in theatre, and an amazing costuming prof--a reasonable understanding of historical fashion. I dislike Regency (and Empire) fashion. It is--to my modern sensibilities--entirely unflattering (though I understand why it came into fashion at the time).
I never thought a Regency gown would look good on you. I was wrong. You wear it perfectly. Have you thought about collaborating with other YT makers to create a steam punk masterpiece?
And... Serious kudos and mad respect to Master Singh and his team. That embroidery is *magnificent*. The inclusion of the signatures is the crown jewel of the piece.
Thank you.
Mr Embroiderer is an absolute vibe! “Do you want a crow” just without a beat, iconic
His experience really shows. I have a small bit of experience making custom items for people. Most people have NO IDEA what they want. Gentle guidance was a must for me. I get it, "what do you want?" is an overwhelming question.
Her talking about featuring the artisans that were historically forgotten has me absolutely in tears! Heavens I love that so much!
The dress is truly an East meets West gown. The embroidered overgrown decoration is very much like the decoration you'd find on an Indian Sari, a historic western-style dress studded with Indian bling, BEAUTIFUL. My utmost favorite part is that Maayankraj and the whole of the Atelier Shikaarbagh craftsmen and craftswomen embroidered their names on the gown, What could be better than that? A gown to be treasured for many lifetimes! ☺🙏❤ 🌹
I'm so happy that Maayankraj had his team embroider their names on the dress. They got to be acknowledged, and that matters.
Absolutely amazing. Am I the only one who cried a little bit over the names in the gown? Such an important gesture
I am also most definitely crying!
I can't explain how much I adore the closed captions. As a hard of hearing person you have my upmost respect.
Yes, total respect. BTW, at 15:13 the CC missed BB's fun use of "yote" as the past tense of "yeet" (which I had not seen before) and wrote "neat" instead. Maybe you'll enjoy a fun giggle at the "yote" as I just did!
the gown is obviously sublime, i'm just here to say i am absolutely living for karolina in her massive english court dress with everyone else in french style sleek gowns, she cracks me up & everyone looked absolutely beautiful
“Don’t die, you need to wear this gown and then you can do that” personally, I am deceased.
I absolutely love the names of the artisans on the train of the dress! This is an amazing example of celebrating and recreating history without recreating the awful racism, colonialism, and exploitation that was historically present. Celebrating the past can be done in a way that doesn’t hide the horrible things that happened, but gives an example of what should have been. Showing respect and acknowledgment to those whose presence was written out of history.
The gown is gorgeous, and it was lovely to see it.
The reveal of the names at the end literally brought tears to my eyes! Absolutely stunning, beautiful, amazing! Thank you so much for all the artists involved and thank you so much to you Bernadette for so respectfully showing all that is involved in this artform. *also I loved the sketch animations in the corner as you went, I usually watch these videos with my husband who loves to see glimpses into my world of costuming and historical dress even though he does not sew. It was nice for him to get to visually see what you were doing without me having to jump up and grab some scrap fabric or garment to show how it was being manipulated for the final shape.
26:48 a moment of appreciation for karolina's atrocious hoopskirts lol
I like the shot at the table where no one can sit too close to Karolina because of her giant hoopskirt!
Honestly at the table, she looked a little like she was suffering with all that weight on her shoulders. Girl looked tired as hell XD
I've a fun janot Arnold story: I use to have the same pattern book when I was in mid highschool. the pattern the dress used for reference for this project was a favorite of mine. I never made them in full size, but I use to trace the patterns and sew miniature recreations and then dip them in a glue and stuffed with cotton also dipped in the glue to shape them so they looked like floating dresses on invisible mannequins.
What a wonderful idea, I love it!
Brilliant!
oh my goodness, that overgown took my breath away. They did an incredible job, its ethereal. Seeing their names on the train brought me to tears
We should take a moment to consider Ms. Banner's unique attire whilst engaging in atleticism...
Indeed😍
Proper athletic attire 😌
I demand they use her clip of that in pormotional content. If nothing else it sure as hell would have people clicking out of curioustiy
I've just attended an exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario entitled "Making her Mark" about women artists and artisans and there was a note about how many of the items were labelled "Anonymous" because women making lace, embroidery, -almost everything -were never acknowledged. So it's wonderful and timely to see that modern artisans are finally putting their names on beautiful garments and I do mean on rather than tucked away inside a label. The gown and overdress are amazing. Thank you for including the helpful "animated" diagrams about the architecture of the dress. It's helpful to those of us who can't sew on a button without having to run to an ER to see how these pieces fit together. Thank you for sharing!
You are right, honoring those with wonderful skills like the embroiderers was so extra. In fact "tis PEAK".
I so hope all the people that worked on the jacket get to see Bernadette jumping with joy at seeing it and then seeing how happy she is to see everyones names. Her reaction is the best and only way to thank someone that's hand made you something
I am a simple person - I see corvids, I like.
Same , my Goth senses are tingling 💀
Saaaaame
I love Corvids ♥
agreed
YES 😀
The “do you want a crow?“ did something to my brain chemistry. OF COURSE A CROW. THIS IS PERFECT!
Oh my goodness your dress was beautiful before but with the over dress it is stunning. The craftsmanship is outstanding but the main feature...the names of all who worked on the embroidery, that is beyond special.😊
The drawing of the dress popping up to show which part you are referring to was SO helpful! Great idea, thank you :)
The overdress on this was jaw-dropping spectacular!!!! Mayaankraj Singh and the Atelier Shikaarbagh are masters !!! I also love how you stood out in a wonderful way with your dark color palette from all the pastels I see at the ball.
I hope in a hundred years this overgown is preserved and a piece in a museum collection with a note about crediting work to the people who made the gowns. It is such a beautiful thing to have the names on there. I may have gotten a bit teary eyed 🥹
I am truly speechlessly awestruck by the work Maayankraj and his team did here. The entire finished project is wonderful but, oh my God, that embroidery!!!!
I’m not sure what the best part of this video is: watching Bernadette work out in a linen shift, watching her create her own gown, or watching her geek out over the amazing stupendous over-gown with the ravens on the train. I love the detail of the artisans’ names embroidered into the design of the dress! And the ball looks like it was so much fun.
What a marvelous coincidence to watch this video the morning after watching a Regency-themed episode of Doctor Who! Especially given the design of the aliens’ costumes. 😀
When I saw "regency court gown" in the title, I thought to see Bernadette creating a hoop-skirted abomination such as Lady Rebecca and Karolina introduced me to this week! Instead, she created the Bridgerton version, which is much more palatable. The overgown is glorious and the inclusion of the artisans' names is so affirmative. No longer invisible craftspeople creating signed masterpieces!
This almost made me cry!!!!! So beautiful!! 12 generations of Maayankraj's family/team artisans?!? Forget it, I'm crying.
omg the little white line drawing is SO helpful for following your thought process. Major upgrade.
It really was very slick, timed perfectly 👌
May I just say, the little animation, first seen at 9:07, was so charming and helpful! Shoutout to whoever created that for this fascinating video! The editing is so good. And it’s been a joy to watch. 😊
Really loving/loved this. The Indian embroidery was the highlight. Looking forward to that mystery future project, and further dress shenanigans.
adding the artists' names embroidered is such a good idea! honestly I'd love to have the names of skilled people on all garments!!
Mr. Singh is a hero! 😊 So cool. Also the moving model image to show the apron front of the dress is so cool and helpful for visualization. You look stunning Bernadette in that beautiful dress! 🤩
This was so beautiful for so many reasons. I'm so glad you're throwing sewing videos back into the mix. I love historical videos because I believe the context is important, but I learn a ton of sewing and construction technique from these videos that I otherwise would not have the opportunity to learn. Especially from an expert. It's a beautiful blend of "here's how to make it" and "here's why we make it this way and with these fabrics." So great.
That is stunning!! So glad the artists signed their incredible work.
Yes! I hope that the atelier makes it a running practice.
I never thought I would get emotional seeing some names embroidered on a gown but damn! To be able to read those names and see the mixture of the many religions and cultures of India coming together to create a type of gown that is in some ways alien to them is just beautiful. These are the people who are not looked upon as deserving the respect that other people get, yet their talents, their craftsmanships are unmatched and now seeing there names preserved on the very project they made is, for lack of a better word, amazing!
Oh my gosh! I love the animation and illustration to help us understand what you are talking about! Thank you so much for this addition!
That embroidery is absolutely breathtaking. What a gift. So lovely.
I am in tears. How _wonderful_ to have a friend like Mr Singh!
(I am glad that Ms Banner is finding love for the Empire Style.)
I teared up at the beauty of the gown. And at how immediately he jumped to corvids and a complete understanding of what you were going for. What a glorious project!
The “using materials until they’re literally dust” spoke to my soul. Literally just stuffed some ornaments with basically felt dust left over from cutting other things out and it’s so delightful and almost cathartic to give them all purpose.
1:04
NGL, I teared up a little bit when you said the names of the embroiderers were sewn into the dress. Beautiful in so many ways!
I’m not crying, it’s just something in my eye that’s all.
By the end, things really felt as though they’d come full circle. I hope everyone who took part in creating this gown felt as though their artistry was finally being acknowledged and recognised.
I wanted to give a standing ovation to this gown you walked out in it. His team did such a phenomenal job on the overgrown!
In the most flattering way possible, you are GIVING Crowley. SERVING underlined, amazing gown!
This gown will be in a museum someday. And no one will wonder whose hands created such a masterpiece.
You are a crow-covered gothic delight-- long and lean and black. Good Mr. Singh is a genius and a thoughtful one to tribute his people. Must admit, got a little choked up. It is rare that the hands are given voice. And you are breathtaking in your whole look-- also with newly rippling muscles in the side-lighting. Terrific.
The fact that you are so joyous with proudly wearing their names warms my heart so much on this style of fanciful living dreams. Really grateful to see this.
Additionally, you have a cool new outro ~ it's fabulous!
Hoppity skipping Bernadette as she brings home the treasure packet.
The Spring green ribbon contrast is a bit of a surprise. The names threaded among the embroidery of the train look positively talisman. I hope his atelier receives lots of orders after this exquisite overgown goes viral.
I love this design in a dark color. I think a burnt umber would be lovely, too. and charcoal grey, and a dark wine/cranberry, and the silk looks about the same weight as linen. and I absolutely love that the sequins do not look campy in any way. the sparkle is elegance in this gown. Applause, applause.
I'm in the car waiting for a job fair to start for my sister... and I get a Bernadette video to wait with!? What joy! ❤
When I saw the names on the over dress I cried. All of you guys are awesome in the truest sense of the word.
My favorite part is the SIGNATURES by the ARTISTS who embroidered and designed the dress. I am so glad their work is being celebrated in this way!!!
That whole ensemble is gorgeous! And honestly it's so fitting to have their names embroidered on it when back then people like them were still treated like absolute dirt.
This was so cool!!! I clicked bc I saw the crows haha but I got so much more!
I appreciate the little drawings as you're describing what you're going to do, so it's easier to visualize, and the footage showing the careful stitches you're taking. That overgown was spectacular! It was so beautiful and went so well with the undergown you made. I love all the gorgeous details and the beautiful signatures. I love how excited you were that this art was signed and thus the craftsmen would never be forgotten when someone looks at this beautiful work of art. It's so cool that by signing their names, it also remembers their ancestors doing the same work on gowns like yours a long time ago :D This was such a joy to watch, to see your beautiful work, their beautiful work, and your excitement about all the details!
That embroidered overdress is a work of art!!!!!!
I got CHILLS hearing you talk about the names of the artisans and being able to wear them to the ball! What a beautiful thought, shedding some light on forgotten figures in history.
I've never thought of having the embroiderers embroider their names on the gown but I LOOOOVE that idea
I literally cried tears of joy when I saw the final gown put together. The exquisite physical beauty of the overgown, the symbolism of the embroidered names paying homage to the unknown seamstresses whose work adorned the finest ladies of the time-it overwhelmed me. Your own joy and eagerness to witness it mirroring my own as just a viewer, all of it is just pure good vibes.
Watching you draft and sew is the sewing version of ballet. Truly. No other sewing channel gives me the same feeling. These videos are my favorites! ❤❤❤
Seing the names on the train is all I need. ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤
So lovely. So great to give credit to the artist of India who made the piece. Thank you for the happy tears, Bernadette.
Credit is always given to the dressmaker of wealthy Western women, it's how the women show off hiw expensive and posh their dress is. This is no different. A virtue signaling fail.
@@charlibrown7745credit is given to the designer and maaaybe the atelier house. But the individual seamstresses are rarely credited
Ok, the "swwsshhh..." As you spun around was absolutely perfect 😂
Without a doubt, a thousand times THE BEST OVER DRESS EVER!
How FUN!!!! You AND Karolina Zebrowska at the same Ball! Oh, to be a fly on the wall. What an absolutely GORGEOUS gown! I wish I had just 1/4 of your talent. Perfection, my dear... absolute perfection.
Thank you for including the several little diagrams in the bottom left corner at 17:43! This was so helpful to understand how it all fit together! I hope you continue to do these. 😊
That embroidery is absolutely stunning and these people are magicians. The added touch of having the names in there makes it even better. It's just fitting to sign this masterpiece like you would sign a painting. Beautiful.
I actually cried when you unboxed that overgown. It was a work of art.
I enjoy the end credits. Tell your sister she did good. ❤ Beautiful dress project as always
"I have no historical basis for this, just vibes" is a whole MOOD.
26:50
Is that a Karolina Zebrowska cameo? 😁
You both look AMAZING in your dresses!
I really felt like I shared your joy when you received that package, I agree, it is an exquisite piece!
And I also feel that by having the Indian artists names incorporated into the piece, you really are helping to overcome that historical dilemma. And to celebrate their amazing talents!
Thank you for another lovely video, Bernadette!
Not only is the gown beautiful, but i full on started to ugly cry when I saw the names of the beading artists. Like, real tears. Its so so so beautiful ❤️
What a beautiful gown. And you did the corvid expression in the end wonderful justice regarding how crows and ravens walk: elegant to watch from the side, derpy from front or behind! Black and shiny! The motif fits perfectly.
Oh, this brought tears to my eyes! Couldn’t help crying when hearing about the significance behind the embroidered names. Loved it!
Embroidered justice? Excellent! ❤️
The beauty of the embroidery and the names brought tears to my eyes! What a cool project!
it's been a minute since we've had a really good felling sequence.
Just the fact that you are excited and delighted to be able to point out all of the names of the craftspeople who created that incredible overgown shows why representation is so important!!! Absolutely love the ravens and the dress you made is incredibly beautiful too!!!