Visit birchliving.com/nicolerudolph to get $400 off your Birch mattress, plus two free pillows. Because the best day starts with the best sleep, and Bailey is awfully grumpy otherwise!
An old friend once told me that her grandmother made buttons with her rings to ensure their safety as she traveled from her home in Poland to America. Her coat buttons and those of her husband and adult sons were cloth covered coins. Distributing the family's money onto their 'common clothes' ensured that even if they were separated by chance or misfortune, each of them would have some material resources to smooth the way until they could be reunited.
My grandfather’s grandparents did the same thing! They came over to the US in the very early 1900s, I can’t recall the year but it was just before WWI which was good because they lived in Russia (an area that is now Belarus). At the time, the town (including my family) was primarily Jewish, so they were hit with pogroms regularly. So the two of them packed up what little they had, stitched their valuables into clothing, traveled from Russia all the way to Western France, and hopped a ship to the US.
Perfect for walking through your new husband’s drafty Manor House holding a candlestick, searching for the source of the bloodcurdling moans you are sure you hear coming from the attic!
A little fun fact: Liberty & Co. was so popular and iconic in Italy that the entire "art nouveau era" in all its forms, from architercture and dresses to painting and house decor, in Italian is called "stile Liberty" (the Liberty Style).
“I got it on major sale. Had NO idea what I was ever going to do with it…” lol story of my life! My stash is ridiculous and sometimes I just run my hands lovingly over the fabrics.
Same! I’m actually ashamed of the obscene size of my stash, but I love the fabric so much that it is literally difficult to cut into a piece to make a garment! 🤦🏼♀️
I'm stunned at how elastic the smocking is, despite not containing any elastic material nor any knitting, and even more stunned at the fact that you went & made a WHOLE DRESS with that technique and the result is absolutely ✨MAGICAL✨
I began smocking in 1985 when I was pregnant with my first child. I bought a new Bernina, a 24 row pleater, and took several classes. Hand sewing has always been my strong suit. Over the years, I did a lot of general sewing and have sort of struggled with machine sewing concepts in general. I now am quilting (piecing and long arm), as well as hand quilting and other techniques. I am retired now, and in the process of moving into a new studio space that will accommodate all of my things and toys. Thank you for inspiring ‘adult smocking madness’ into my already overstimulated brain, I do thrive on the madness of it all… love your content ❤❤❤❤
"I'll sell my rod, I'll sell my reel, I'll sell my only spinning wheel, to buy my love a sword of steel." Your final tableaux were fantastic. You are so impressive!! All of that precise hand work. My maternal grandmother grew up in NYC, in an upper middle class family. During her teens (1913-1920) she learned to sew, embroider, knit, crochet, make lace, and draw/paint with pen and ink and watercolors. I still have some of her lace (that would fit the neckline of your dark fairy tale dress) and embroidered pillowcases, as well as her Singer sewing books. You were indeed brave to take on such a large project for your first smocking adventure. Kudos to you!
7:38 "I was going to be doing yards and yards, if not miles and miles..." and in my head this immediately started playing: "and I will smock 500 miles and I will smock 500 more_".
Oh wow. I did a little bit of English smocking 30-ish years ago when my children were small. I always bought pre-gathered fabric. Doing your own gathering is HARD. I enjoyed it, but quit because I had carpal tunnel problems and early arthritis. Your dress is BEAUTIFUL!
This is a gorgeous gown. I love those puff sleeves! I am so excited and grateful for this video because I have photo of my great grandmother. She is wearing a smocked gown. It appears to be early Edwardian and this is so helpful in allowing me to understand the process when I try making my own one day.
Haven't even finished the video but liking for your OVER FIFTY HOURS OF STITCHING. 👏👏👏👏🎉🎉🎉(edit:ps. As a hand smocker, your work is absolutely BEAUTIFUL and blows my mind that you haven't smocked before!)
That dress looks like it truly walked out of a fairy tale! It is stunning! As a kid I never understood why clothing was so expensive before the modern era and I fully understand why now. The hours you put into this garment are mind boggling. I crochet, and it has really given me an even greater appreciation for handmade clothing. The 20-40 hours it takes me to make a sweater put everything into perspective. Excellent work, as always!
Very beautiful! Looks comfortable, too. I imagine smocked dresses and blouses like this would have been a status symbol back in the day, with the large amounts of fabric used and the time the embroidery took.
It amazes me how patient historical garment makers on youtube are. I would have given up after like one row of gathering haha This came out absolutely stunning! Speaking of stunning, that red wig looks incredible on you!
Nicole! You need to know about smocking dots. They are a heat transfer grid of dots that smockers use. They come in different colours and spacings. Loving this, no shame in using the resources that are out there
They wouldn’t have worked for the curved neckline or for the minor adjustments I made between 1/4” and 3/8” spacing on each of the sleeve rings. Great for basic work, but wouldn’t have helped here!
Gorgeous There was a fad for cross stitching and smocking on small gingham checks in the 1950s. It gave the sewist a built-in grid. I have several aprons and tablecloths my great-aunt did. My secretary, 30-some years ago, had a Pullen pleater--a pretty nifty gadget for drawing up even pleats in preparation for smocking.
This is so fascinating! I absolutely love this style of clothing so I really appreciate your making these videos to share your knowledge with the world!
I have long been fascinated with smocking, to the point that decades ago I purchased one of Martha Pullen's smocking gathering tools but have never used it. I also have tried doing a machine smocking using a ruffling foot and some decorative stitching with 12 wt threads, but obviously your hand smocked and embroidered work is totally more exquisite. One of your best costumes in my humble opinion! I hope you manage to wear it multiple occasions! Now, since I only rarely make clothing anymore, although I used to make special occasion clothes decades ago, I have moved to quilted wall art as I have become older, I need to figure out how I could incorporate some smocking on an art quilt. 🤣Great tip on the silk yarn. I managed to find it...I could use it for couching on by machine. Thanks for sharing this wonderful work. It would make a great bridal dress by the way. Cheers, BJ.
I have some of those magazines and just can't throw them out. Children's clothing has been the only thing smocked for so long we don't think of it for adult clothes. In the 70s we wore elastic in the bobbin tops or dresses. Very easy to wear.
This is so gorgeous! I'm in love with the dress you made and also with some of the pieces you took for inspiration (the dark purple blouse from Amsterdam, I can't even!!!)! Smocking is already known from the Viking Age and I have to try it at some point. Although maybe not starting with an as elaborate piece as this. Absolutely stunning work and presentation!
You used to be able to buy transfer papers of dots for marking out the gathers. So much easier, especially for a round neck! Alas, they are a thing of the past. You can also use gingham fabric and use the interstices as marks.
Oh I’ve always loved smocking! I remember my aunt making us little smocked dresses. I’m so drawn to it that I must make myself something! Thanks for doing all the research and hard parts!
You provided all the elements of a good video. You talked about the historical aspects of the smocked dress, discussed the fabric and development of the design, demonstrated the making of your dress, and finally, the creation of the story where you wore your dress. It was charming. I liked it a lot.
Brilliant, as always. The utter softness of every element, from fabric to smocking, was so dreamlike, and the finish on the neckline was the perfect complement. Also, in all of your videos, watching your hands is a real treat -- they're so graceful, it's like watching a "hand ballet". I enjoy these so much, and though I may never make any of them, they do stimulate my creativity, and I think that carries over into other things I do, such as my knitting and crocheting. Just lovely, and so appreciated.
This and the previous dresses were so beautiful! I loved them and fell into the deepest rabbit hole looking up pre-Raphaelite paintings and Artistic dress fashion plates.
I really wanted to try smocking at one point because we'll it's beautiful. Once I realized exactly how difficult and tedious it is I was like nah. I'm fine not doing that. Kudos to you though. It looks amazing and definitely a labor of love.
I have long been fascinated by smocking. Not only does it look beautiful, it's a way to add stretch to non-stretchy fabrics without suffering material waste by cutting into them. A very practical thing during a time where clothing was often un-stitched and the fabric reused for new garments. Plus the stretch in the garments meant a more versatile fit. Not sure I'll ever have the patience to make a smocked garment for myself, but I do admire the technique very much.
Yes. Despite the initial expense, I am curious about whether smocking would be a long term investment if the bottom part of a smocked garment could be unstitched as maternity wear.
I think it's nice how smocking was actually quite egalitarian a technique- yes, the affluent liked it- but so did a lot of common people, & it was also something for males & females; I had an old book on different sewing & needlework techniques- & one of the illustrations in the smocking section was a photo of this old farmer, in a top hat & a long smocked shirt, dressed up for market day- dude looked immaculate! Next to it was, quote 'a shepherd's smock' - Unisex fashion before it was 'trendy'!
Not sure if they can still be found on the internet but Grace Knott smoking plates (patterns) are wonderful for this type of geometric smocking. There are also published books. Can find books from Martha Pullen as well. Also iron on dots are available to bypass the drawing of a grid. And finally smoking pleaters. It used to be that heirloom sewing stores would sell pre gathered inserts of offered pleasing services so you could just do the fancy stuffer
Lucky for all of us, smocking is slowly regaining popularity, my guess is due to the beautiful dresses that princess Charlotte wore when she was little. Heirloom sewing stores and content creators are still making patterns and tutorials. Add in the costuming community with gorgeous projects like this and the patterns from Clockwork Faerie, and recreating your own liberty dress is attainable. If you can sew a backstitch, you can do English smocking. ❤
Oh this looks so beautiful! I had already heard of the reform dress movement, but now I really consider making a dress like this myself. Probably even doing some further research into the german movement as I live there 😊 And the smocking looks absolutely beautiful, I'll totally try that out!
Back in the 70th it was trendy - I made a silk dress with strocking, though in a way much simpler than here. I made parallel stitches with longest stitch on sewing machine where you can pull one thread to geather the buffs, certainly no decorative stitches over it. You've done a HUUUGE amount of work. Extremely beautiful!
The thumbnail looks exactly like a pre-Raphaelite illustration! I love those Liberty gowns, too. My grandmother used to smock pillows and I always thought smocking was very nearly magical!
You can run a line of smocking on the inside as well any place you need more strength or durability, or a little less stretch. It’s a good thing to do first, roughly every 2 inches. This style of yoke is called the “bishop”, you can get guides that help you gather to the right size without having to out it on a body. Amazing job for your first try!
Smocking!!!♥️ I think of my grandma everytime. She made multiple smocked garments for every grandchild, as well as fabergé eggs. She did the English type of smocking. I didn't even realize there were other types. She taught me how to smock in my teens like 20 years ago. She passed away this last fall. I want to get a pleater one day
Helleva work! You cleared up a smocking misconception for me. I have a memory from my childhood when my mom made a smocked yoke dress for me. I think she used a smocking attachment for her sewing machine along with elastic, I was intrigued that the smocking was so stretchy, especially at the cuffs, with no elastic. Very cool.
Singer made an attachment called a smocking or cartridge pleater. They are hard to find. They could be used with elastic bobbin thread or basting thread and then steam set and hand stitching.
This gave me a whole new insight into my great aunts and their friends. I took it for granted that I would get a beautiful smocked dress for Christmas or Easter. I always felt the love that was put in them, but I never understood how much skill it took.
You know I like the juxtaposition of these two fairytale looks. The villainess dress has a hand sewn for royalty feel to it, while the heroine dress has a homemade with love feel.
I remember when I was about six my first cousin once removed got married and I was one of the flower girls, so my mother made me a beautiful smocked dress and to this day whenever I think of smocking I think of this bright green smocked dress (actually was kinda like an artistic dress, as much as mid-2000s patterns could be) with these embroidered flowers on it
Absolutely gorgeous work! Seeing the time it takes makes sense as to why my brain associates smocking with kids' clothes: just so much less fabric to have to smock
Ah, smocking! I haven’t seen any in person in decades. My mom used to work in a small sewing factory with some really old machinery years ago when we lived in South Carolina, they still did smocking, and focused most of their work on children’s dresses.
This is so gorgeous and I am super intimidated by the process but fully enjoyed watching it come together. Your hard work really paid off ! I love love LOVE it!!
I adore smocking, though I usually think of it as for children's clothing. My daughters wore Polly Flinders dresses (gifted by their grandmother) when they were small. Sadly, I see these dresses no more. I would love to own a beautiful nightgown made with smocking. lovely!!
You did a great job. I did smocking back in the 80s. The sewing stores carried iron on smocking dots that saved that whole measuring and calculating pain. I found it a quick and easy way to create a dramatic look plus a comfortable stretchy garment.
My first sewing project ever on my landscape will probably have smocked sleeves. Thank you for sharing your wisdom. With every dreamy pose of this listless woman reading in her gown, I gasped at the beauty! 😅
My great grandmother made smocked dresses for my mother when she was little, and they are still some of her most prized possessions! Smocked dresses for little girls are still very popular in the south. Your finished garment is so beautiful!!
Whew, I flashed back 26 years to my 1 and only time to smock. My daughters were 3 and 1 yrs old and I had the brilliant idea to make and smock their Easter dresses. In the south ALL little girls needed smocked dresses🤦🏻♀️ It was the longest month and sewing project of my life. I enjoyed cross-stitching so I thought “How hard or different could it be?”🙄 Oh how I was humbled! I finished them and they were pretty, but I swore “never again”. Now that I’m older and have much more experience I would actually like to try it again. I still have them and maybe one day I’ll have a granddaughter that can wear them while I tell the them the epic tale of how Grandma Slayed Sir Smockington in the Year of our Lord 19 and 96. 🤣 Your dress is absolutely stunning BTW❤️
That is a tour de force of sewing; I knew a bit about smocking on a machine but seeing it done on a grand scale is blowing my mind! That dress is an amazing piece of art.
When I was a kid (1980s), my grandmother made beautiful smocked dresses for all of her granddaughters. We saved them carefully, and they have been and are being worn by the next generation now. Just over this past Christmas, I was talking with one of my sisters and an aunt about her smocking - unfortunately she didn’t pass the skill on to any of her descendants.
I can’t tell you how excited I am that you did these videos. I dearly hope you will discuss artistic dress and Liberty garments more, I am so fascinated with this period!
Those sleeves. I would be terribly tempted to bastardize centuries and make them so they were removable as to better enjoy them on all sorts of different ensembles. Gorgeous work as ALWAYS.
The staging for the reveal was wonderful! Thank you for all that work, it gives such a clear picture of the technique but an appreciation for the amount of time and skill involved. Love this series!
I have to laugh at myself when I read all the other comments by people who are now inspired to try smocking. Thank you,Nicole, for saving me from another guilt-laden UFO! Should I try a garment with this kind of shaping, and as a lover of fairy tale style, that's sure to happen, I shall do maybe a smocked neck or the center front of the waist and then resort to ribbon channels or (gasp!) a bit of hidden elastic, for all the other areas. Your patience is the stuff of legends. :)
Visit birchliving.com/nicolerudolph to get $400 off your Birch mattress, plus two free pillows. Because the best day starts with the best sleep, and Bailey is awfully grumpy otherwise!
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An old friend once told me that her grandmother made buttons with her rings to ensure their safety as she traveled from her home in Poland to America. Her coat buttons and those of her husband and adult sons were cloth covered coins. Distributing the family's money onto their 'common clothes' ensured that even if they were separated by chance or misfortune, each of them would have some material resources to smooth the way until they could be reunited.
This story is amazing. I wonder if it was common but relatively undocumented practice, given the stakes?
Smart & savvy people! ✨🎇
o that's lovely ♥
@@kagitsune this seems to be pretty common among various people that immigrated. I've heard similar stories from Irish, Italian and Romani sources too
My grandfather’s grandparents did the same thing! They came over to the US in the very early 1900s, I can’t recall the year but it was just before WWI which was good because they lived in Russia (an area that is now Belarus). At the time, the town (including my family) was primarily Jewish, so they were hit with pogroms regularly. So the two of them packed up what little they had, stitched their valuables into clothing, traveled from Russia all the way to Western France, and hopped a ship to the US.
Perfect for walking through your new husband’s drafty Manor House holding a candlestick, searching for the source of the bloodcurdling moans you are sure you hear coming from the attic!
Perfect!
best not to open that single door he said not to 👀
A little fun fact: Liberty & Co. was so popular and iconic in Italy that the entire "art nouveau era" in all its forms, from architercture and dresses to painting and house decor, in Italian is called "stile Liberty" (the Liberty Style).
This is so cool. Thanks for sharing!
I just found out the word for smocking in my language - Czech - "žabičkování" which literally translated means "little frogging" 🐸😂🤣
As in jump, jump, jump each stitch?
That's cute!
Fellow czech here too!
Oh wow, that's adorable 😂
Cool. Thanks. :-D I was wondering, what the translation is. (Fellow Czech here.)
“I got it on major sale. Had NO idea what I was ever going to do with it…” lol story of my life! My stash is ridiculous and sometimes I just run my hands lovingly over the fabrics.
Same! I’m actually ashamed of the obscene size of my stash, but I love the fabric so much that it is literally difficult to cut into a piece to make a garment! 🤦🏼♀️
I'm stunned at how elastic the smocking is, despite not containing any elastic material nor any knitting, and even more stunned at the fact that you went & made a WHOLE DRESS with that technique and the result is absolutely ✨MAGICAL✨
I began smocking in 1985 when I was pregnant with my first child. I bought a new Bernina, a 24 row pleater, and took several classes. Hand sewing has always been my strong suit. Over the years, I did a lot of general sewing and have sort of struggled with machine sewing concepts in general. I now am quilting (piecing and long arm), as well as hand quilting and other techniques. I am retired now, and in the process of moving into a new studio space that will accommodate all of my things and toys. Thank you for inspiring ‘adult smocking madness’ into my already overstimulated brain, I do thrive on the madness of it all… love your content ❤❤❤❤
"I'll sell my rod, I'll sell my reel, I'll sell my only spinning wheel, to buy my love a sword of steel." Your final tableaux were fantastic. You are so impressive!! All of that precise hand work. My maternal grandmother grew up in NYC, in an upper middle class family. During her teens (1913-1920) she learned to sew, embroider, knit, crochet, make lace, and draw/paint with pen and ink and watercolors. I still have some of her lace (that would fit the neckline of your dark fairy tale dress) and embroidered pillowcases, as well as her Singer sewing books. You were indeed brave to take on such a large project for your first smocking adventure. Kudos to you!
7:38 "I was going to be doing yards and yards, if not miles and miles..." and in my head this immediately started playing: "and I will smock 500 miles and I will smock 500 more_".
Oh wow. I did a little bit of English smocking 30-ish years ago when my children were small. I always bought pre-gathered fabric. Doing your own gathering is HARD. I enjoyed it, but quit because I had carpal tunnel problems and early arthritis. Your dress is BEAUTIFUL!
I was thinking about those 2 issues as well.
I think I have also seen some sort of smocking board tool to help with the gathering?
@@robyn3349 yes, the issue of these is the limited width they provide. Something Nicole talked about in her streams about this project
Your ability to persevere through long and complicated projects is so impressive! This turned out gorgeous. Always a huge inspiration to me.
i am experiencing an unholy desire for those sleeves
This is a gorgeous gown. I love those puff sleeves! I am so excited and grateful for this video because I have photo of my great grandmother. She is wearing a smocked gown. It appears to be early Edwardian and this is so helpful in allowing me to understand the process when I try making my own one day.
Haven't even finished the video but liking for your OVER FIFTY HOURS OF STITCHING. 👏👏👏👏🎉🎉🎉(edit:ps. As a hand smocker, your work is absolutely BEAUTIFUL and blows my mind that you haven't smocked before!)
Have to say the BEST part was reading with your pup in your lap… The dress is beautiful!
That dress looks like it truly walked out of a fairy tale! It is stunning! As a kid I never understood why clothing was so expensive before the modern era and I fully understand why now. The hours you put into this garment are mind boggling. I crochet, and it has really given me an even greater appreciation for handmade clothing. The 20-40 hours it takes me to make a sweater put everything into perspective. Excellent work, as always!
Very beautiful! Looks comfortable, too. I imagine smocked dresses and blouses like this would have been a status symbol back in the day, with the large amounts of fabric used and the time the embroidery took.
It amazes me how patient historical garment makers on youtube are. I would have given up after like one row of gathering haha This came out absolutely stunning! Speaking of stunning, that red wig looks incredible on you!
Doesn’t she look amazing with red hair?
Looks so pretty & comfy! Also - Rachel Maksy cosplay vibes! 👸
Hmm... Rachel wouldn't have the patience to do super detailed hand stitches... She would lose her marbles and grab the hot glue gun instead!
@Julie Jay: so true!
You're right though, the initial thumbnail fooled me for a second with the wig colour and just general fairytale vibe! Very Rachel 😆
The Pre Raphaelites were mad for auburn haired "stunners" as they were called back then. The hair really completes the look beautifully.
I am in complete awe.... the patience!! Superb dress
Not only did you do so much beautiful work on the dress, but then you staged it for the reveal! Stunning!
Huge Vasilisa vibes. Here for it. All that smocking must have been a pain but it looks so good!
Amazing how everything comes back around, I remember my Mom doing some smocking I think in the 70's. 1970's that is... Beautiful job as always! B
It was so nice to see how you put together your backdrops, Nicole!
My mother knew how to smock. She was born In Italy in 1913 and she was an extraordinary needlewoman. wonderful work, Ms. Rudolph.
I’ve always thought smocking was SO beautiful and you did a spectacular job!
Nicole! You need to know about smocking dots. They are a heat transfer grid of dots that smockers use. They come in different colours and spacings. Loving this, no shame in using the resources that are out there
They wouldn’t have worked for the curved neckline or for the minor adjustments I made between 1/4” and 3/8” spacing on each of the sleeve rings. Great for basic work, but wouldn’t have helped here!
The sleeves! I love them. And I am very impressed with your perseverance in completing so much smocking. Beautiful and educational as always.
Gorgeous There was a fad for cross stitching and smocking on small gingham checks in the 1950s. It gave the sewist a built-in grid. I have several aprons and tablecloths my great-aunt did.
My secretary, 30-some years ago, had a Pullen pleater--a pretty nifty gadget for drawing up even pleats in preparation for smocking.
Love that long red hair on you, it fits you beautifully. The gown goes along perfectly, allowing your medieval charm to come out.
This is so fascinating! I absolutely love this style of clothing so I really appreciate your making these videos to share your knowledge with the world!
I have long been fascinated with smocking, to the point that decades ago I purchased one of Martha Pullen's smocking gathering tools but have never used it. I also have tried doing a machine smocking using a ruffling foot and some decorative stitching with 12 wt threads, but obviously your hand smocked and embroidered work is totally more exquisite. One of your best costumes in my humble opinion! I hope you manage to wear it multiple occasions! Now, since I only rarely make clothing anymore, although I used to make special occasion clothes decades ago, I have moved to quilted wall art as I have become older, I need to figure out how I could incorporate some smocking on an art quilt. 🤣Great tip on the silk yarn. I managed to find it...I could use it for couching on by machine. Thanks for sharing this wonderful work. It would make a great bridal dress by the way. Cheers, BJ.
I have some of those magazines and just can't throw them out. Children's clothing has been the only thing smocked for so long we don't think of it for adult clothes. In the 70s we wore elastic in the bobbin tops or dresses. Very easy to wear.
A pleater will change your life! Definitely easier than trying to mark and sew all of the little dots.
This is so gorgeous! I'm in love with the dress you made and also with some of the pieces you took for inspiration (the dark purple blouse from Amsterdam, I can't even!!!)! Smocking is already known from the Viking Age and I have to try it at some point. Although maybe not starting with an as elaborate piece as this. Absolutely stunning work and presentation!
You used to be able to buy transfer papers of dots for marking out the gathers. So much easier, especially for a round neck! Alas, they are a thing of the past. You can also use gingham fabric and use the interstices as marks.
The final result with the red wig is absolutely giving P.J. Lynch’s East o’ the Sun, West o’ the Moon 😍
Between you and Bernadette you both blow my mind. I can crochet and knit and used to do embroidery but this is another level. Incredible work. Tfs
Oh I’ve always loved smocking! I remember my aunt making us little smocked dresses. I’m so drawn to it that I must make myself something!
Thanks for doing all the research and hard parts!
You provided all the elements of a good video. You talked about the historical aspects of the smocked dress, discussed the fabric and development of the design, demonstrated the making of your dress, and finally, the creation of the story where you wore your dress. It was charming. I liked it a lot.
Brilliant, as always. The utter softness of every element, from fabric to smocking, was so dreamlike, and the finish on the neckline was the perfect complement. Also, in all of your videos, watching your hands is a real treat -- they're so graceful, it's like watching a "hand ballet". I enjoy these so much, and though I may never make any of them, they do stimulate my creativity, and I think that carries over into other things I do, such as my knitting and crocheting. Just lovely, and so appreciated.
What a beautiful end result. And I really loved the music in this one. Great video Miss Nicole. Thank you.
Wow! I now have a whole new appreciation for smocked clothes.
This and the previous dresses were so beautiful! I loved them and fell into the deepest rabbit hole looking up pre-Raphaelite paintings and Artistic dress fashion plates.
I really wanted to try smocking at one point because we'll it's beautiful. Once I realized exactly how difficult and tedious it is I was like nah. I'm fine not doing that. Kudos to you though. It looks amazing and definitely a labor of love.
I am sooo impressed! The dress looked amazing! I love how smocking looks, but i am super scared of the math 😅
I have long been fascinated by smocking. Not only does it look beautiful, it's a way to add stretch to non-stretchy fabrics without suffering material waste by cutting into them. A very practical thing during a time where clothing was often un-stitched and the fabric reused for new garments. Plus the stretch in the garments meant a more versatile fit.
Not sure I'll ever have the patience to make a smocked garment for myself, but I do admire the technique very much.
Yes. Despite the initial expense, I am curious about whether smocking would be a long term investment if the bottom part of a smocked garment could be unstitched as maternity wear.
From not smocking to spending over 50 hours doing it on your first go?? You’re amazing!! Beautiful dress
I think it's nice how smocking was actually quite egalitarian a technique- yes, the affluent liked it- but so did a lot of common people, & it was also something for males & females; I had an old book on different sewing & needlework techniques- & one of the illustrations in the smocking section was a photo of this old farmer, in a top hat & a long smocked shirt, dressed up for market day- dude looked immaculate!
Next to it was, quote 'a shepherd's smock' - Unisex fashion before it was 'trendy'!
I think it would have been quite good as maternity wear
I have died and went to heaven. Love, love, love that you are covering this. It is wonderful.
Not sure if they can still be found on the internet but Grace Knott smoking plates (patterns) are wonderful for this type of geometric smocking. There are also published books. Can find books from Martha Pullen as well.
Also iron on dots are available to bypass the drawing of a grid. And finally smoking pleaters. It used to be that heirloom sewing stores would sell pre gathered inserts of offered pleasing services so you could just do the fancy stuffer
Lucky for all of us, smocking is slowly regaining popularity, my guess is due to the beautiful dresses that princess Charlotte wore when she was little. Heirloom sewing stores and content creators are still making patterns and tutorials. Add in the costuming community with gorgeous projects like this and the patterns from Clockwork Faerie, and recreating your own liberty dress is attainable. If you can sew a backstitch, you can do English smocking. ❤
These beautiful dresses (villain and princess) are the perfect intersection between comfy and fancy
Oh this looks so beautiful! I had already heard of the reform dress movement, but now I really consider making a dress like this myself. Probably even doing some further research into the german movement as I live there 😊
And the smocking looks absolutely beautiful, I'll totally try that out!
Back in the 70th it was trendy - I made a silk dress with strocking, though in a way much simpler than here. I made parallel stitches with longest stitch on sewing machine where you can pull one thread to geather the buffs, certainly no decorative stitches over it. You've done a HUUUGE amount of work. Extremely beautiful!
The thumbnail looks exactly like a pre-Raphaelite illustration! I love those Liberty gowns, too. My grandmother used to smock pillows and I always thought smocking was very nearly magical!
You can run a line of smocking on the inside as well any place you need more strength or durability, or a little less stretch. It’s a good thing to do first, roughly every 2 inches. This style of yoke is called the “bishop”, you can get guides that help you gather to the right size without having to out it on a body. Amazing job for your first try!
Smocking!!!♥️ I think of my grandma everytime. She made multiple smocked garments for every grandchild, as well as fabergé eggs. She did the English type of smocking. I didn't even realize there were other types. She taught me how to smock in my teens like 20 years ago. She passed away this last fall. I want to get a pleater one day
Helleva work! You cleared up a smocking misconception for me. I have a memory from my childhood when my mom made a smocked yoke dress for me. I think she used a smocking attachment for her sewing machine along with elastic, I was intrigued that the smocking was so stretchy, especially at the cuffs, with no elastic. Very cool.
If she used elastic, then it has to be shirred/shirring.
Singer made an attachment called a smocking or cartridge pleater. They are hard to find. They could be used with elastic bobbin thread or basting thread and then steam set and hand stitching.
This gave me a whole new insight into my great aunts and their friends. I took it for granted that I would get a beautiful smocked dress for Christmas or Easter. I always felt the love that was put in them, but I never understood how much skill it took.
You know I like the juxtaposition of these two fairytale looks. The villainess dress has a hand sewn for royalty feel to it, while the heroine dress has a homemade with love feel.
I love the dress so much. I alread thought of making smocked dress and now I’m determined to really do it.
Truly breathtaking piece ❤
I remember when I was about six my first cousin once removed got married and I was one of the flower girls, so my mother made me a beautiful smocked dress and to this day whenever I think of smocking I think of this bright green smocked dress (actually was kinda like an artistic dress, as much as mid-2000s patterns could be) with these embroidered flowers on it
Absolutely gorgeous work! Seeing the time it takes makes sense as to why my brain associates smocking with kids' clothes: just so much less fabric to have to smock
Ah, smocking! I haven’t seen any in person in decades.
My mom used to work in a small sewing factory with some really old machinery years ago when we lived in South Carolina, they still did smocking, and focused most of their work on children’s dresses.
Beautiful work, Nicole!!! And I loved the little Pre-Raphaelite diorama at the end :)
Smocking! I did it years ago and am impressed with those who are able to do it!
Omg that is how you make those puffed sleeves!!!! THANK YOU!!!!
This is so gorgeous and I am super intimidated by the process but fully enjoyed watching it come together. Your hard work really paid off ! I love love LOVE it!!
WOW! Awesome. Impressive scholarship. Impressive design. Impressive workmanship. Impressive presentation. Awesome. WOW!
This dress is gorgeous, really gives off that fairytale vibe. Looks very comfortable too.
I adore smocking, though I usually think of it as for children's clothing. My daughters wore Polly Flinders dresses (gifted by their grandmother) when they were small. Sadly, I see these dresses no more. I would love to own a beautiful nightgown made with smocking. lovely!!
Smocking is something I've wanted to give a try. Absolutely love how yours turned out. It looks both fancy and comfy at the same time.
You did a great job. I did smocking back in the 80s. The sewing stores carried iron on smocking dots that saved that whole measuring and calculating pain. I found it a quick and easy way to create a dramatic look plus a comfortable stretchy garment.
I enjoy your reveal set setups. You’re one of the few TH-camrs I’ve seen do this and it’s nice to see.
HOLY SMOCKING BATMAN! That's so GORGEOUS! 🤯✨✨
The sheer willpower needed to embroider all that gathering... Props to you 🙌🙌🙌
For a first time you left no crumbs. Absolute perfection!
My first sewing project ever on my landscape will probably have smocked sleeves. Thank you for sharing your wisdom. With every dreamy pose of this listless woman reading in her gown, I gasped at the beauty! 😅
My great grandmother made smocked dresses for my mother when she was little, and they are still some of her most prized possessions! Smocked dresses for little girls are still very popular in the south. Your finished garment is so beautiful!!
Now I must try this, and with the hood, it would make a great renaissance festival outfit.
Whew, I flashed back 26 years to my 1 and only time to smock. My daughters were 3 and 1 yrs old and I had the brilliant idea to make and smock their Easter dresses. In the south ALL little girls needed smocked dresses🤦🏻♀️ It was the longest month and sewing project of my life. I enjoyed cross-stitching so I thought “How hard or different could it be?”🙄 Oh how I was humbled! I finished them and they were pretty, but I swore “never again”. Now that I’m older and have much more experience I would actually like to try it again. I still have them and maybe one day I’ll have a granddaughter that can wear them while I tell the them the epic tale of how Grandma Slayed Sir Smockington in the Year of our Lord 19 and 96. 🤣
Your dress is absolutely stunning BTW❤️
That is a tour de force of sewing; I knew a bit about smocking on a machine but seeing it done on a grand scale is blowing my mind! That dress is an amazing piece of art.
Bravo ! Smocking is really hard. Wonderful dress
this is just incredible! I especially love the three puffs closest to the wrist. Gorgeous!
When I was a kid (1980s), my grandmother made beautiful smocked dresses for all of her granddaughters. We saved them carefully, and they have been and are being worn by the next generation now. Just over this past Christmas, I was talking with one of my sisters and an aunt about her smocking - unfortunately she didn’t pass the skill on to any of her descendants.
This was amazing to watch!! You are truly gifted Nicole!
I can’t tell you how excited I am that you did these videos. I dearly hope you will discuss artistic dress and Liberty garments more, I am so fascinated with this period!
Those sleeves. I would be terribly tempted to bastardize centuries and make them so they were removable as to better enjoy them on all sorts of different ensembles. Gorgeous work as ALWAYS.
An absolute work of art!
Many moons ago I thought I would take up smocking. I never was brave enough. So glad to watch your journey
I can't get over how many stitches have gone into this. it's stunning.
SWOONNNN!! The dress is absolutely amazing, and I’ve been inspired to try smocking now! And unrelated, the red hair looks absolutely glorious on you!
You never cease to amaze me! This is just breathtaking!
The staging for the reveal was wonderful! Thank you for all that work, it gives such a clear picture of the technique but an appreciation for the amount of time and skill involved. Love this series!
I have to laugh at myself when I read all the other comments by people who are now inspired to try smocking. Thank you,Nicole, for saving me from another guilt-laden UFO! Should I try a garment with this kind of shaping, and as a lover of fairy tale style, that's sure to happen, I shall do maybe a smocked neck or the center front of the waist and then resort to ribbon channels or (gasp!) a bit of hidden elastic, for all the other areas. Your patience is the stuff of legends. :)
I might possibly consider smocking a dolls dress. Maybe.
The dress is stunning! Your patience is so impressive Nicole, and what a result! 😍
Smocking = a special and beautiful kind of sorcery 😍
So pretty, I wish that modern day smocking looked like that. It would be expensive but I would save up for a dress with that embroidery technique!
The Tower Princess vibes here are impeccable!
I am positively obsessed with this dress. Time to finally learn English smocking. Thanks for the kick in the pants.
Gorgeous stunning work Nicole!
Oh, that shirt at 1:18 is GORGEOUS! Such a lovely color, and the smocking is so nice! And your final dress is absolutely fantastic, to boot!