I am blown away by how talented and how incredibly stunning you look at the end re-creating this 50s dress with your own beautiful unique design I absolutely love when you took the taffeta piece and flipped it over the embellishment in the back it looked much better and definitely purposeful I think it looked so pretty and much better oh my goodness this look like out of a Dior fashion magazine!!! You are amazing!!!
And absolutely you are 1000% correct I would totally wear this to a formal event today with a little bit updated hair modern handbag and gold jewelry it would look just like all the red carpet. Oh my goodness beautiful video
@@missgworl3918 They also padded the hips like they did in the Edwardian era. Dior's 1947 collection began this trend as he wanted women to look more feminine after the severe war uniforms.
wedding gown alterations person here: Always include a hook and eye at the top of your zipper enclosure - it helps keep everything in place while you're zipping up and helps to avoid any warping of the zipper or accidentally catching fabric in it.
The draping was exquisite! I would love to see Morgan Donner do her own Met Gala gown every year. Not only would she get the theme correct, a beautiful garment would be created. A huge thank you for making me appreciate 1950's silhouettes and designs.❤️
The Italian actress is Gina Lollobrigida. She is alive. After the successful movie career she developed her talents in other areas. Truly outstanding person⭐️
Glad I saw your comment as I was going to say that looks like... She has shown through the decades as a beautiful pillar of class. Your dress certainly evokes her look.
Yeah, the shenanigans pants was true her conversion moment. I came to Morgan's channel for the medieval older history bound stuff, and stayed for the "juzzing" and shenanigans.
Morgan, I am loving all these fun and interesting explorations of various clothes, times and mashups. So good and a great way to show how sewing can translate to making a multitude of amazing things. You looked ever so stunning in the gown and the voluminous butt cape perfect. Viva la corset!
So... This might sound really dumb but when I was working with plastic boning I used nail clippers to cut it. If you cut it in two passes you end up with really rounded ends that don't need much sanding. Might not work for everyone but it makes for a good shortcut for me.
oh my god!? this is beautiful!?!? the 'mesh' corset would be such a beginner friendly way of wearing a corset too, or if you want to wear something structured without the corset being visible underneath!
Honestly kinda want to add mesh corset to my future project list. It just looked so pretty on top of her clothes but unlike the fast fashion corsets it still had an actual function
I got married in my grandma's 1950s wedding dress... It fell into the very structured bodice category with a lace overlay and off shoulder straps, and then the skirt was a ton of floof with just a huge tulle skirt. Closed with a super simple side zip. Cool to see this run down of the fashions of the time. My grandma was a seamstress and I think about her a lot when I'm doing my own sewing.
Your Grandma's Wedding dress sounds gorgeous. I had a ball gown style with lots of tulle in the skirt. It had a sweetheart neckline, and the bodice was embroidered.
I am inspired by your creativity! Not to disparage other “creators”, but you are my absolute favorite of the usual suspects. From steampunk to choose your own adventure to Kevlar armor to glamour, you’re always new and interesting. I love your experiments, and your honesty when they don’t come out ideally.
I felt exactly the same and wanted to write it as well. I adore your creativity and the way you approach each of your projects and the way you just radiate pure curiosity and interests in so many ways. I love that you are real, if things don't work out or aren't easy you will say it and be able to overcome it and show us the beautiful result. Thanks a lot for you channel
Precisely this! You are the perfect combo of fun and relatable and lighthearted, but backed with immense skill and research and very clearly hours upon hours of hard work. I adore your variety of content and dedication (as I see your evolving fun hairstyles and colours I think of and often re-watch your utterly amazing hair video, which is probably the single best thing I have ever seen on TH-cam). Love you, Morgan!
I had taken a couture sewing class several years ago and the instructor had us use white flannel for the base (soft against the skin, sturdy enough for the boning). We used the book by Susan Khalje, Bridal Couture, as a reference. It was very helpful.
Built in corselet dresses are the best! Seeing your process is an inspiration! But if budget/time/skill is an issue for anyone considering, I can speak to the benefit of adding as little as 2-4 plastic boning channels in contemporary off the rack dresses. As a not-busty gal, it helps sell the illusion of something fancier and keeps me from pulling up strapless dresses.
Am I barmy or is that "corset" pretty by itself? You could add some beautiful embroidery on the mesh and put it over a dress or a top and it would be so lovely!
Okay, I was just going to alter an off the rack dress for my wedding, but… this. This is beyond inspirational and I am going to throw myself down a 1950s rabbit hole!
That draping is awesome! For the tension issue on the zip, many dresses of that era had a zip or hooks/eyes for the foundation layer, and then a separate zip for the outer layer. The two layers would be connected in the front and then separate either from the side seams back, or about 4-6 inches from the center back. That way, the outer layer fabric and zip aren't under strain.
That makes so much sense. Considering how tight these dresses are I always wondered how the outer fabric seemed to float over the inner structure without pull lines. Having two layers of fasteners is very smart!
I love the comments sections of costube videos almost as much as the actual content! Even when coming back for a rewatch, one can pick up the most interesting &/or useful extra info in here, be it historical anecdotes or technical tips 😊 (And there's often a lot of great extra humour too! 😁)
Seam ripping speed tip: rip out every fourth or so stritch from one side of the stitching. You should then be able to pull the thread from the other side out in one long piece. Not that I’d know from experience, of course … lol!
The tail bit over the top of the butt cape is rather bustle-era especially with all the other draping. It reminded me forcibly of the astheticists of the victorian era (re: Abby's video several months ago). It also had some very solid Grace Kelly vibes. I approve. Well done indeed. It makes me a little braver to try something like that myself! I've wanted one of the chiffon-style gowns for a good long while.
Oh wow, this is so stunning, you are such a creative genius. Also your hair at the start of the video is giving strong princess Diana vibes and I love it.
I recently bought a Marchesa gown at a rumage sale. I had never seen a high end dress irl and I was amazed that It had boning inside. It's a 1950 inspired silhouette.
My daughter recently bought a genuine 1950s evening gown at the op shop. It's only lightly boned, but going by the style and the size, it was intended for a very young woman with a slim waist and not much bust.
@@jayneterry8701 It was quite unexpected. I trembled when I saw It. The silk fabric caught my eyes. It looked like a good fabric from a distance. When I pull out under the pile and saw the Marchesa tag I almost screamed.
FYI the reason the new mesh corset didn't fit your dress form properly is because the dress form already has a corset built-in so it was like putting on two identical corsets at once. The one on the outside now has farther to cover buy just enough that it no longer fits the same way. 🥰😢 Hope this helps.
The main reason is that a dress form doesn't squish like a real body. Even a slim body with not much "fluff" is far more malleable - skin, fat, muscle and ribcage are all compressible or displaceable to some degree.
@@rachelboersma-plug9482 The dress form was shaped around the external dimension of the green corset as worn by Morgan, which are obviously a bit larger than the internal dimensions of the same corset.
My grandmother had vintage ball gowns and she called the corseted undergarment a merry-widow. It had hook & eye closures, but they were on center front instead of on the back.
In my opinion, draping the "taffeta flounce" over the "butt cape" is slimming visually. Not that it's needed, because you have such a cute figure, but just saying... Making a gown that can be worn in so many ways, with just simple rearrangements and accessories is actually a dream to me. I have no reason to own a gown at all these days, but if I did own one, I would want it to be so versatile as this. Thank you so much!
This was great. Draping like that is hard. So scary to cut the fabric! This is sort of how I made my daughter's prom dress, but no draping ! I built a corset out of the lining fabric with boning. Then using the same pattern I cut out the main fabric and the lace overlay. Then the outside got stitched onto the lining. I made the top and skirt separate. It was my first foray into corsetry.
As an Australian man, I wondered why your channel dropped into my feed, but as soon as I clicked on your video, I found you and your topic fascinating. Bravo!
Super fun. For my wedding dress I had a store bought corset that kept pulling down the bust. I spent the whole afternoon grabbing it back up. Super attractive right? This is a hundred percent improvement. Probably worth the time and the money.
I did not realize I needed a butt cape and now I've never wanted to sew my own so bad. Need butt cape. I am shooketh. Morgan, this is stunning. Love the wrap flounce over the butt cape so it's full glory can swirl in the spin!
I do alterations on formal wear for a living, and have even done some reconstructions where we've taken mothers' dresses from past decades and re-worked them to be more wearable for their daughters. I find it super interesting that the built-in structure was common in the 50's, as the 80's and 90's seemed to have seen the gowns themselves having less structure and essentially being heavily-decorated slips that went on over other structural garments and petticoats. That being said, the built-in structure has absolutely made a comeback in the modern era.
They aren’t silly, the corsets a Hollywood costume designers make are not made for comfort. They aren’t properly corsets, because god forbid the 24 inch waist of the actress gain two or three from the thickness of the corset and the actresses are constantly made to tightlace. Celebrity actresses do not experience corsets the way that they’re meant to be worn normally.
@@Sarawarawara- Omg the amount of times they do it innacurately just so that the actors don't look not extra skinny... they would have padded most of them at the time, exaggerating the silhouette, and often certain eras don't accentuate the waist, but God forbid they do something that doesn't make them look "beautiful", so they change it. It makes me sad to see so many beautiful historic representations being ruined by stupid beauty standarts that make the actors, the costume designers and the audience uncomfortable when we compare our bodies to theirs. It's deppressing that beauty standarts hurt so many, including creativily.
You're saying 'It's not perfect' and in my head I hear "Wow is she pretty". Your dress fits you like it was made just for you darlin. Very nice work, bravo.
i an glad I am not the only one who made a mockup of a corset, got it to fit well enough, and then never made the final version... I am just glad mine was a very pale blue
Hi! Beautiful design, love it!!! I've been on a 1940's-50's streak myself, since I found some veeeery beautiful photos of my grandmother last month! For the dart in the corset, just so you know, I think it was, in fact, Atelier Sylphe that acquired a 1900's summer corset that was adjusted with tiny darts at the top, just like you did, so this kind of tiny fitting adjustement to prevent gaping might probably have some historical value! ;-) Maybe it wasn't done in the 50's, but since it appears to have been a thing in early 20th century corsets, well, y'know... XD
For my senior prom which was in 1982 my mother made up a classic Vogue pattern for me of a fitted water stain taffeta that was 300 plus inches around the bottom with a fully integrated corset with a waist tape and the whole nine yards. I still have it it's one of the most amazing dresses other than my wedding dress that she has made for me. So when you picked up that taffeta I'm like that perfect at least in my opinion 🥰
I love taffeta!! Last yr I remade the mom’s wedding gown, about 25+ yrs old for the daughter. The detail in the design & the workmanship were off the chart. The bodice & long sleeves very tailored & feminine. The skirt w/ cathedral train so full… soft gathers embellished w/ lace & beading. But it had a regal aged look about it from another time. Love this channel!!! Love the beautiful fabrics & designs ❤You rock girl!!!
The extra skirts I have seen have been double layered with tulle in the middle. My mom was in an orchestra and had many 50s formals. They aren’t as heavily structured although they are bones. She always had foundation garments under them. My favorite was a long line strapless bra. I was also able to use it, and it was incredibly comfortable.
I so appreciate how you teach, not talk for ever. Your imagination is amazing, your talent at sewing and construction chefs kiss. Thank you for the peek each video into how your creative mind works.
Absolutely love your journey to make this dress and all the 1950 photos you used . My mum always had wedding dresses cut out on the floor so I learned to put into a zip simplicity pattern before a spark plug in a ford ! I’ve made clothes all my life. My grandfather taught me to knit !
This is beautiful. The version with solid tail over the patterned Cape is totally pretty, and to me looks great. I preferred it. Thanks for sharing this project, just love your take and ability to make all these beautiful and fun clothes!!!
Love the science inspired fabric of your dress, I've just started creating my own 50s inspired clothes. My first circle skirt isn't the greatest but I'm inspired to be as skilled as you one day.
This takes me back to my corsetmaking days. Super well done on creating a mesh corset! The zipper is … speechless … It like pockets in a dress.. that feeling!
Morgan, you look phenomenal! That dress really sets off your complexion and figure! I LOVE the back skirt with the back gather pulled through. I notice in costumes and in wardrobes for plays and musicals, when people try to do those draped styles WITHOUT the firm foundation, it really shows and looks crappy. If the foundation isn't there, the whole dress doesn't work. For a play in high school, I had the opportunity to have a dress of my mother's from the 1950s altered for me to wear as my prom dress in "Grease." It looked amazing and fit beautifully. Then in my 20s, a dress shop proprietor suggested that I wear a black dress with a very similar neckline to the one you created with a tulle skirt. Both dresses were cocktail length and I felt so grown-up and glamorous wearing them.
They wore girdles under all that. (Born in 1953 here) and they continued to be used through the 60's by my Mom's generation. (Probablt even longer through the 70's ) 😀
Oh, yes! I still have a girdle, and I was born in the 60's. I don't wear it now, but I did wear it with my wedding dress, and a corset, which for some reason the bridal store salesperson called a 'Merry widow'. It was the 80's, so rebranding, I guess. True Fashion cycling.
Yep!! Along with other undergarments to give them that shape- the dresses really didn’t do that much! Plus they already had small waists, in the 50s avg waist was 27 inches
former haute couture dress maker here: Achieving the right form, fit and function of the under or integrated corset is for the dress the same as a skeleton is for the rest of a body. Often the worry is that your over constructing the corset, but you'll find (like i think you have in this video) that a sweet spot appears, with future upgrades or fabric choices for the next dress coming to mind during the process. (i stopped to comment at 10 min so i might be prematurely commenting but that's what i think so far. Oh also the stuff you used for the corset base was called nylon crinoline where i worked. Probably not the same thing its called else where, because as far as i can tell the melting pot that is higher sewing causes all languages and names to end up in the same space.)
It is interesting to also think that in the 1950s ( though in "vintage" fashion in general), on top of all that garment structure, they would wear lingerie that would add even more structure to it . (The decades/era I mean when I say "vintage" is the 1920s to the 1960s) (I am not sure about all kinds of 1950s lingerie that were worn for special occasions, Merry-windows is one of the few I can recall)
My Mom called them her "Foundational Garments", the bra, panties, girdle, and half or whole slip over those, then the dress. Early Spanx, I guess! I'm old enough that I had a pregnancy girdle with a wierd criss-cross mesh under the tummy. It did help hold up my (9 1/2 pound each) babies during 2 pregnancies. Only one baby each time, thank goodness! I love the butt cape. I really love that it's optional! So clever.
I got an I Love Lucy vibe with the different draping and long skirts (plus all of the pictures). I always loved all of those fancy, fancy dresses from the 50's.
I don’t sew, I have absolutely no interest in learning to sew & yet I LOVED your video!!! This is DEFINITELY your calling! You have such a bright personality, your research, your explanations were ALL fascinating. And the end product, seeing how it all came together - WOW. Thank you for a delightful 35 minutes!!
This is amazing. Well done. I’m evolving a crochet jumper in a similar experimental way at the moment. Sadly I look rather less glamorous! More like a tea cosy.
Morgan, as a fantasy artist, and all around geek I love your videos. long ago I worked in a theaters costume shop as what they called craft fabrication,(my job was more prop related) and all the people who were sewing and making those costumes amazed me, with their skills. (sewing being a skill I never picked up). But I loved seeing how clothing was made, seeing what go's into the making a 1950's evening gown is fascinating.. As an artist I always found myself hanging with people who made amazing clothing, whether it was for cosplay, of historical reenactment I always thought of them as wizards with fabric.. So Thank you for sharing your skills and knowledge.
Morgan, you make the complicated look doable and for that I thank you. Your instructions and process has really helped me in my explanation of patterns from different era’s.
Morgan, I am always SO happy to see your content! You are such a joy! I watched one of your videos with my mom, and she was like, "who is this lady she is very fun!" :)
Absolutely STUNNING! I love all the playing around with the drape and the general construction, it felt like a delightful journey we got to take with you!
Every new video you seem to have more and more fun making. And it looks good on you too. This dress is defiantly one to go to an opera in. I like it’s versatility too since you can add the butt cape or change the position of the dress tail. Very fancy.
i have no business following your channel. I do not like dressmaking at all, I never wear fancy dresses, I do not really care, yet here I am: thoroughly entertained and amazed by your craftswomanship. Loving it
Audrey Hepburns Sabrina, has a very nice dress that I didn’t realize till now was like the ones you reference, you make really beautiful accurate replicas ❤️❤️
That is exactly how my wedding dress was made. I remembere when I went to get it altered I said something off-handed about trying to find a bra and the seamstress was like honey you don't need a bra with this dress it basically is one. And she was right she altered that thing to fit my measurement and got one minute of that day that I worry about my undergarment or my boobs that dressed it all the work
honestly mine was very very similar in construction and shape too! if you make it in a cream white and add a lot of white sparkles, it's pretty dang close
Hi. I just discovered your channel. I am fascinated by the inner construction of 1950s Couture. I love how your foundation turned out. Traditionally, these foundations did not have that many panels or that much boning (although sometimes they did). The bust was usually shaped by using darts and not panels, so you did not have to stress out about your dart. We have to remember that these were not necessarily to shape the body but to provide structure to the dress itself. Dior was known for creating very shallow bust cups on his corselettes. As you mentioned both hooks and eyes and zippers were use to fasten the corselette. They would use a very long zipper to fasten the inner layer foundation bit, leaving a very long zipper tail. Usually the dress is attached to the corselette at the neckline just like you did. However, about 3 inches is left loose at center back on both sides of the closure and a second zipper would be added to close the actual dress. Ultimately the skirt and the bodice would be attached together and a single zipper would be used to close the outer layer of the dress.wonderful
Morgan - I'm a non sewer. I literally fell into your video this morning and was immediately hooked. Your explanations were clear with the final dress and you looking fabulous. Thank you - a great start to my Sunday. You make me want to sew😁
Thanks for this vid…I am planning on making myself a human version of Barbie’s red velvet/white satin dress from the 50s & wondered how to keep the top supported. Now I know. Awesomeness! U rock! ❤️
Loved watching this. I was a young woman in the 1950’s and your show brought back a flood of memories about several of my dresses. Yes, this is what we wore. Fashion was exciting then. New subbie here.
Oh come on Costube devotees - this video should have AT LEAST 2 million views - Awesome video Morgan. I am an intermediate sewer & you have given me the confidence to have a crack at this. I have spent more time sewing failed mock ups than I have sewing actual garments but I just LOVE the process
woah this is crazy. I was just looking for pantsuits with a train, just like this dress with the same bodice and outerskirt, except with pants instead of the inner skirt. Great timing!
That dress and accessories is stunning! I love the shawl as well. And I think the corset liner is perfect. Unless it's uncomfortable. I find watching all these different artisanal videos, carpentry, pottery, tailoring etc so relaxing to watch. But watching you and Bernadette an Nicole doing your interesting things just rivets me!
WOW Morgan, looks amazing. I like the "tail piece" on the outside of the skirt cape. Your hair is brilliant, loving it; it has really started to grow again.
I had low-key given up on making clothes because my perfectionism doesn't let me "waste" fabric, and my last practice mock-up ended up being WAY too awkwardly shaped. But seeing you make amazing stuff like this, and be so chill about it, really helps. I think I'll pick up one of my projects this week and be brave about it. Probably my slightly-more-than-circle-thanks-to-errors skirt project. :) Thank you for being you, Morgan. It's always wonderful to see your new videos.
Love, love, love it! I almost wonder if Diana's Revenge Dress was a corset understructure like this 🤔 Because it definitely has that sort of sturdy understructure and then draped over feel?
„not perfect, but passable“ -what are you talking about?! It‘s AMAZING! It‘s so cool! The visual references you gave of 1950s gowns were really helpful as well. Wonderful video! I learned so much, and that dress is stunning.
Morgan, This dress is FANTASTIC!! I personally love the tail poof on the outside of sparkly butt cape. I learned so much watching you drape, and re-drape, and playing with different silhouettes. I have always loved watching you learn and create. I feel inspired when you start something new. You look beautiful in that 1950's inspired stunner!! Your hair is looking so fun too. Keep doing you, it's always amazing and fun. With love, Audri
Morgan you've got it going on. You're the perfect combination of knowledge, nerdiness, humour, experimental adventuress. You inspire and you delight. Thank you for all your hard work. I'm particularly pleased by this video in that it covers a time period where the fashion really is stunning.
Yesssssss I loved this. It's always inspiring to watch someone else's creative process. Loved the editing btw, the side by side comparison of butt cape vs no butt cape was very well done.
I love the period, and your execution of the style is just beautiful. You made it look easy, and you looked wonderful in the finished gown. Thank you. It made me smile.
This was fabulous. I admired dresses like that. So much room for variety compared to now. My late Aunt told me a story about going to a show, probably musical variety, where her seat was off to the side so she could see in the the edge of the wings. My Aunt had always wondered about how those shoulderless dresses worked. One of the female performers would haul her dress bust up just before she went back out on stage. Sometimes I watch old Perry Mason and I love Lucy to look at the clothes.
Check out zelouffabrics.com/
Use code MORGAN at checkout so they know I sent ya ;)
I ALWAYS thought that they just had a naturally small waistline! I never knew that corsets were still used in the 50s! THANK YOU BESTIE!!! 💕
I am blown away by how talented and how incredibly stunning you look at the end re-creating this 50s dress with your own beautiful unique design I absolutely love when you took the taffeta piece and flipped it over the embellishment in the back it looked much better and definitely purposeful I think it looked so pretty and much better oh my goodness this look like out of a Dior fashion magazine!!! You are amazing!!!
And absolutely you are 1000% correct I would totally wear this to a formal event today with a little bit updated hair modern handbag and gold jewelry it would look just like all the red carpet. Oh my goodness beautiful video
Could you have pulled the boning out of one of two of the newer channels to relax the fit?
@@missgworl3918 They also padded the hips like they did in the Edwardian era. Dior's 1947 collection began this trend as he wanted women to look more feminine after the severe war uniforms.
wedding gown alterations person here: Always include a hook and eye at the top of your zipper enclosure - it helps keep everything in place while you're zipping up and helps to avoid any warping of the zipper or accidentally catching fabric in it.
Sounds like the button you always find above pants' zippers
@@Zestrayswede ty for mentioning that! I always wondered why that was there!
@@Zestrayswede men's pants/trousers often use a hook & eye too, just a bigger & flatter version
@@yadborthose are hooks and bars, some office-y skirts have them too (and historical skirts).
Wedding gown alterations gal here too! So true on the hook & eye. It definitely serves a purpose. ❤
The draping was exquisite! I would love to see Morgan Donner do her own Met Gala gown every year. Not only would she get the theme correct, a beautiful garment would be created. A huge thank you for making me appreciate 1950's silhouettes and designs.❤️
Omg yes I would live!!
Upvoting! +++
Maybe we could buy her the tcket for the event and she would walk the red carpet with us squealing like mad and most people going 'Who?'
@@Isilsartari76 love too, but I hear tickets START @$35,000 USD!
All of our historical fashion people need to crash the Gala and show them how it's done.
The Italian actress is Gina Lollobrigida. She is alive. After the successful movie career she developed her talents in other areas. Truly outstanding person⭐️
She is one of the "know on the spot" actresses here in Italy, especially if we talk old/classic movies!
In fact she just turned 95 a few days ago.
Came here to say that
Glad I saw your comment as I was going to say that looks like... She has shown through the decades as a beautiful pillar of class. Your dress certainly evokes her look.
grazie per il servizio alla comunità parlando della lollobrigida🙏🙏
i love how ever since the "very silly pants" video morgan has slowly succumbed to the dark side- i mean goth fashion
She's gotten more modern-adventurous and I am here for it
😁
Came here to say this, I noticed it starting with the Latex dress. Love the daring looks. You absolutely Rock Morgan!!!
Yeah, the shenanigans pants was true her conversion moment.
I came to Morgan's channel for the medieval older history bound stuff, and stayed for the "juzzing" and shenanigans.
Morgan, I am loving all these fun and interesting explorations of various clothes, times and mashups. So good and a great way to show how sewing can translate to making a multitude of amazing things. You looked ever so stunning in the gown and the voluminous butt cape perfect. Viva la corset!
Gotta keep trying new things, makes life spicy.
“Viva la corset!” I love that! 😂
So... This might sound really dumb but when I was working with plastic boning I used nail clippers to cut it. If you cut it in two passes you end up with really rounded ends that don't need much sanding. Might not work for everyone but it makes for a good shortcut for me.
You don't sound dumb at all! Using a tool designed for rounding off a strangely similar material is smart and resourceful
The plastic boning is meant to imitate the properties of baleen, which, like fingernails, is made of keratin.
Oh thats actually such a good idea, i was using my dad's shop scissors and shooting bits of plastic off at mach 3 lmao
What a smart idea!
That's actually a super smart idea, I will have to use that!
oh my god!? this is beautiful!?!? the 'mesh' corset would be such a beginner friendly way of wearing a corset too, or if you want to wear something structured without the corset being visible underneath!
really want to learn how to make these so i can look snatched but im a beginner
@@ruthanneparkes1464 this is part one of a very in depth tutorial on a specific way to make a corset :)
th-cam.com/video/cu7LfbRH6iY/w-d-xo.html
Honestly kinda want to add mesh corset to my future project list. It just looked so pretty on top of her clothes but unlike the fast fashion corsets it still had an actual function
I got married in my grandma's 1950s wedding dress... It fell into the very structured bodice category with a lace overlay and off shoulder straps, and then the skirt was a ton of floof with just a huge tulle skirt. Closed with a super simple side zip. Cool to see this run down of the fashions of the time. My grandma was a seamstress and I think about her a lot when I'm doing my own sewing.
That dress sounds gorgeous !
@@katieb8718 getting married in it was magical, I felt like a princess and I love how much family history is attached to it!
@@katieb8718 my mom and aunt also wore it for their weddings!
Your Grandma's Wedding dress sounds gorgeous. I had a ball gown style with lots of tulle in the skirt. It had a sweetheart neckline, and the bodice was embroidered.
The skills our loved ones shared are the most enduring gifts
I am inspired by your creativity! Not to disparage other “creators”, but you are my absolute favorite of the usual suspects. From steampunk to choose your own adventure to Kevlar armor to glamour, you’re always new and interesting. I love your experiments, and your honesty when they don’t come out ideally.
I felt exactly the same and wanted to write it as well. I adore your creativity and the way you approach each of your projects and the way you just radiate pure curiosity and interests in so many ways. I love that you are real, if things don't work out or aren't easy you will say it and be able to overcome it and show us the beautiful result. Thanks a lot for you channel
Precisely this! You are the perfect combo of fun and relatable and lighthearted, but backed with immense skill and research and very clearly hours upon hours of hard work. I adore your variety of content and dedication (as I see your evolving fun hairstyles and colours I think of and often re-watch your utterly amazing hair video, which is probably the single best thing I have ever seen on TH-cam). Love you, Morgan!
I had taken a couture sewing class several years ago and the instructor had us use white flannel for the base (soft against the skin, sturdy enough for the boning). We used the book by Susan Khalje, Bridal Couture, as a reference. It was very helpful.
Built in corselet dresses are the best! Seeing your process is an inspiration!
But if budget/time/skill is an issue for anyone considering, I can speak to the benefit of adding as little as 2-4 plastic boning channels in contemporary off the rack dresses. As a not-busty gal, it helps sell the illusion of something fancier and keeps me from pulling up strapless dresses.
What a great idea!
I'm not busty , this helps me alot !
Can you still out them in a washing machine with those plastic bones? That's such a smart thing to do!
@@mirjanbouma I never tried; I've kept my modified dresses as dry clean only.
@@HosCreates I had a seamstress add them into the side seams of the bodice, and the under bust portion of any princess seam lines
And here we have Morgan, casually making haute couture ball gowns.
I love it. The tail out over the butt cape is my favorite look!
It's a happy accident, but I'm into it too!
Am I barmy or is that "corset" pretty by itself? You could add some beautiful embroidery on the mesh and put it over a dress or a top and it would be so lovely!
Frieda Leopoldo did exactly that! She called it the tulle skeleton dress.
I was thinking the same thing! It really does look good alone!
Okay, I was just going to alter an off the rack dress for my wedding, but… this. This is beyond inspirational and I am going to throw myself down a 1950s rabbit hole!
Now, all you need are reservations! For an evening of fine dining and dancing! Beautiful work resulting in a beautiful dress!
That draping is awesome! For the tension issue on the zip, many dresses of that era had a zip or hooks/eyes for the foundation layer, and then a separate zip for the outer layer. The two layers would be connected in the front and then separate either from the side seams back, or about 4-6 inches from the center back. That way, the outer layer fabric and zip aren't under strain.
That makes so much sense. Considering how tight these dresses are I always wondered how the outer fabric seemed to float over the inner structure without pull lines. Having two layers of fasteners is very smart!
I love the comments sections of costube videos almost as much as the actual content! Even when coming back for a rewatch, one can pick up the most interesting &/or useful extra info in here, be it historical anecdotes or technical tips 😊 (And there's often a lot of great extra humour too! 😁)
Seam ripping speed tip: rip out every fourth or so stritch from one side of the stitching. You should then be able to pull the thread from the other side out in one long piece. Not that I’d know from experience, of course … lol!
Ooohh, thanks for the tip!
I do this too!
oh like the lady who was mad at her husband who then laughed herself into labour
11:05 mic placement 10/10
Omg, I didn't even notice it was there xD
The tail bit over the top of the butt cape is rather bustle-era especially with all the other draping. It reminded me forcibly of the astheticists of the victorian era (re: Abby's video several months ago). It also had some very solid Grace Kelly vibes. I approve. Well done indeed. It makes me a little braver to try something like that myself! I've wanted one of the chiffon-style gowns for a good long while.
Oh wow, this is so stunning, you are such a creative genius.
Also your hair at the start of the video is giving strong princess Diana vibes and I love it.
Thank you so much!!
I know, just in dark hair. And the style of the dress isn't that far off of the 80s/90s fancy couture.
@@Nikki-tx6kh I thought that too about the gown
@@MorganDonner +1 for the smashing hair; I love the current length and colours!
I recently bought a Marchesa gown at a rumage sale. I had never seen a high end dress irl and I was amazed that It had boning inside. It's a 1950 inspired silhouette.
WOW!! That is SUPER EXCITING!
@@alexandraaaron9705 more so because it was Marchesa at a rumage sale.
My daughter recently bought a genuine 1950s evening gown at the op shop. It's only lightly boned, but going by the style and the size, it was intended for a very young woman with a slim waist and not much bust.
@@jayneterry8701 It was quite unexpected. I trembled when I saw It. The silk fabric caught my eyes. It looked like a good fabric from a distance. When I pull out under the pile and saw the Marchesa tag I almost screamed.
FYI the reason the new mesh corset didn't fit your dress form properly is because the dress form already has a corset built-in so it was like putting on two identical corsets at once. The one on the outside now has farther to cover buy just enough that it no longer fits the same way. 🥰😢 Hope this helps.
The main reason is that a dress form doesn't squish like a real body. Even a slim body with not much "fluff" is far more malleable - skin, fat, muscle and ribcage are all compressible or displaceable to some degree.
@@rachelboersma-plug9482
The dress form was shaped around the external dimension of the green corset as worn by Morgan, which are obviously a bit larger than the internal dimensions of the same corset.
My grandmother had vintage ball gowns and she called the corseted undergarment a merry-widow. It had hook & eye closures, but they were on center front instead of on the back.
I'm really digging this new era of Morgan's style evolution! Experiments and exploration!! Wonderful!!!
In my opinion, draping the "taffeta flounce" over the "butt cape" is slimming visually. Not that it's needed, because you have such a cute figure, but just saying...
Making a gown that can be worn in so many ways, with just simple rearrangements and accessories is actually a dream to me. I have no reason to own a gown at all these days, but if I did own one, I would want it to be so versatile as this.
Thank you so much!
Audrey Hepburn's white and black Givenchy gown from Sabrina iconic and a personal fave
You look like a billion dollars in that. I love the versatility of the gown in the way you have made it. Time for the red carpet.
This was great. Draping like that is hard. So scary to cut the fabric!
This is sort of how I made my daughter's prom dress, but no draping ! I built a corset out of the lining fabric with boning. Then using the same pattern I cut out the main fabric and the lace overlay. Then the outside got stitched onto the lining. I made the top and skirt separate. It was my first foray into corsetry.
As an Australian man, I wondered why your channel dropped into my feed, but as soon as I clicked on your video, I found you and your topic fascinating. Bravo!
It’s called a corselette, made with cotton tulle or with power mesh if you’re feeling a bit more atelier Versace!
Super fun. For my wedding dress I had a store bought corset that kept pulling down the bust. I spent the whole afternoon grabbing it back up. Super attractive right? This is a hundred percent improvement. Probably worth the time and the money.
I did not realize I needed a butt cape and now I've never wanted to sew my own so bad. Need butt cape. I am shooketh. Morgan, this is stunning. Love the wrap flounce over the butt cape so it's full glory can swirl in the spin!
I do alterations on formal wear for a living, and have even done some reconstructions where we've taken mothers' dresses from past decades and re-worked them to be more wearable for their daughters. I find it super interesting that the built-in structure was common in the 50's, as the 80's and 90's seemed to have seen the gowns themselves having less structure and essentially being heavily-decorated slips that went on over other structural garments and petticoats. That being said, the built-in structure has absolutely made a comeback in the modern era.
Another case for how silly the celebrities with 'corset-phobia' are.
So much fun to walk with you through your creative process.
They aren’t silly, the corsets a Hollywood costume designers make are not made for comfort. They aren’t properly corsets, because god forbid the 24 inch waist of the actress gain two or three from the thickness of the corset and the actresses are constantly made to tightlace. Celebrity actresses do not experience corsets the way that they’re meant to be worn normally.
@@Sarawarawara- Omg the amount of times they do it innacurately just so that the actors don't look not extra skinny... they would have padded most of them at the time, exaggerating the silhouette, and often certain eras don't accentuate the waist, but God forbid they do something that doesn't make them look "beautiful", so they change it. It makes me sad to see so many beautiful historic representations being ruined by stupid beauty standarts that make the actors, the costume designers and the audience uncomfortable when we compare our bodies to theirs. It's deppressing that beauty standarts hurt so many, including creativily.
You're saying 'It's not perfect' and in my head I hear "Wow is she pretty". Your dress fits you like it was made just for you darlin. Very nice work, bravo.
At 11:30 ..."Don't look" gave me Ferris Beuller vibes and I cackled!
These boobs move pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss them.
Not to be weird but the shot of putting the pin in on the zipper, after unpicking the hooks, was just GORGEOUS
When you held the tail up higher so it covered the back zip - that is my favorite. Extra drama, and bonus, it hides the plain Jane zipper.
I think the waist tape is what really does it. Adding it in your dresses gives the most shapely fit without doing a ton of work
i an glad I am not the only one who made a mockup of a corset, got it to fit well enough, and then never made the final version... I am just glad mine was a very pale blue
It is shocking how a single sponsor transition can completely sell me on a video- the comical subversion of expectations is hilarious
A fabric sponsor? 10/10 for good fit and attractive to me as a content consumer
Giving delightful Ms. Frizzle vibes with that science-y dress! :D
Hi! Beautiful design, love it!!! I've been on a 1940's-50's streak myself, since I found some veeeery beautiful photos of my grandmother last month!
For the dart in the corset, just so you know, I think it was, in fact, Atelier Sylphe that acquired a 1900's summer corset that was adjusted with tiny darts at the top, just like you did, so this kind of tiny fitting adjustement to prevent gaping might probably have some historical value! ;-) Maybe it wasn't done in the 50's, but since it appears to have been a thing in early 20th century corsets, well, y'know... XD
For my senior prom which was in 1982 my mother made up a classic Vogue pattern for me of a fitted water stain taffeta that was 300 plus inches around the bottom with a fully integrated corset with a waist tape and the whole nine yards. I still have it it's one of the most amazing dresses other than my wedding dress that she has made for me. So when you picked up that taffeta I'm like that perfect at least in my opinion 🥰
I love taffeta!! Last yr I remade the mom’s wedding gown, about 25+ yrs old for the daughter. The detail in the design & the workmanship were off the chart. The bodice & long sleeves very tailored & feminine. The skirt w/ cathedral train so full… soft gathers embellished w/ lace & beading. But it had a regal aged look about it from another time. Love this channel!!! Love the beautiful fabrics & designs ❤You rock girl!!!
The extra skirts I have seen have been double layered with tulle in the middle. My mom was in an orchestra and had many 50s formals. They aren’t as heavily structured although they are bones. She always had foundation garments under them. My favorite was a long line strapless bra. I was also able to use it, and it was incredibly comfortable.
This dress is gorgeous, love the gloves, I grew up in the 50’s wearing gloves. Love love love 💕
I so appreciate how you teach, not talk for ever. Your imagination is amazing, your talent at sewing and construction chefs kiss. Thank you for the peek each video into how your creative mind works.
Absolutely love your journey to make this dress and all the 1950 photos you used . My mum always had wedding dresses cut out on the floor so I learned to put into a zip simplicity pattern before a spark plug in a ford ! I’ve made clothes all my life. My grandfather taught me to knit !
My mother cut her patterns on the floor, too! As I got older, she had me do the pinning and cutting, ha ha.
This is beautiful. The version with solid tail over the patterned Cape is totally pretty, and to me looks great. I preferred it. Thanks for sharing this project, just love your take and ability to make all these beautiful and fun clothes!!!
When I was a kid my mom went to the "Foundation" Dept in the store. Gotta keep it a together...
Love the science inspired fabric of your dress, I've just started creating my own 50s inspired clothes. My first circle skirt isn't the greatest but I'm inspired to be as skilled as you one day.
This takes me back to my corsetmaking days. Super well done on creating a mesh corset! The zipper is … speechless … It like pockets in a dress.. that feeling!
Morgan, you look phenomenal! That dress really sets off your complexion and figure! I LOVE the back skirt with the back gather pulled through. I notice in costumes and in wardrobes for plays and musicals, when people try to do those draped styles WITHOUT the firm foundation, it really shows and looks crappy. If the foundation isn't there, the whole dress doesn't work. For a play in high school, I had the opportunity to have a dress of my mother's from the 1950s altered for me to wear as my prom dress in "Grease." It looked amazing and fit beautifully. Then in my 20s, a dress shop proprietor suggested that I wear a black dress with a very similar neckline to the one you created with a tulle skirt. Both dresses were cocktail length and I felt so grown-up and glamorous wearing them.
oh my god a CORSELETTE!! I have been wanting to make one of these for years. You did an amazing job on your dress! Thank you for the inspiration! 💜
They wore girdles under all that. (Born in 1953 here) and they continued to be used through the 60's by my Mom's generation. (Probablt even longer through the 70's ) 😀
Oh, yes! I still have a girdle, and I was born in the 60's. I don't wear it now, but I did wear it with my wedding dress, and a corset, which for some reason the bridal store salesperson called a 'Merry widow'. It was the 80's, so rebranding, I guess. True Fashion cycling.
Yep!! Along with other undergarments to give them that shape- the dresses really didn’t do that much! Plus they already had small waists, in the 50s avg waist was 27 inches
former haute couture dress maker here: Achieving the right form, fit and function of the under or integrated corset is for the dress the same as a skeleton is for the rest of a body. Often the worry is that your over constructing the corset, but you'll find (like i think you have in this video) that a sweet spot appears, with future upgrades or fabric choices for the next dress coming to mind during the process. (i stopped to comment at 10 min so i might be prematurely commenting but that's what i think so far. Oh also the stuff you used for the corset base was called nylon crinoline where i worked. Probably not the same thing its called else where, because as far as i can tell the melting pot that is higher sewing causes all languages and names to end up in the same space.)
It is interesting to also think that in the 1950s ( though in "vintage" fashion in general), on top of all that garment structure, they would wear lingerie that would add even more structure to it .
(The decades/era I mean when I say "vintage" is the 1920s to the 1960s)
(I am not sure about all kinds of 1950s lingerie that were worn for special occasions, Merry-windows is one of the few I can recall)
Merry-windows? Can you elaborate on that? I searched Google but that did not give me much to work with.
@@SaaryLilla
Oh sorry, that is a typo.
I meant to type "Merry widows"
@@davriecaro3036 thanks, that makes much more sense!
Yes they wore girdles and other pieces too
My Mom called them her "Foundational Garments", the bra, panties, girdle, and half or whole slip over those, then the dress. Early Spanx, I guess! I'm old enough that I had a pregnancy girdle with a wierd criss-cross mesh under the tummy. It did help hold up my (9 1/2 pound each) babies during 2 pregnancies. Only one baby each time, thank goodness!
I love the butt cape. I really love that it's optional! So clever.
I got an I Love Lucy vibe with the different draping and long skirts (plus all of the pictures). I always loved all of those fancy, fancy dresses from the 50's.
Love it. It's kind of Edith Head does Madam X. So beautiful
I don’t sew, I have absolutely no interest in learning to sew & yet I LOVED your video!!! This is DEFINITELY your calling! You have such a bright personality, your research, your explanations were ALL fascinating. And the end product, seeing how it all came together - WOW. Thank you for a delightful 35 minutes!!
Can I just say that about 13 minutes in, the bound mesh corset looks really cool over the pattern you are wearing?!? 😍🤩😍
This is amazing. Well done. I’m evolving a crochet jumper in a similar experimental way at the moment. Sadly I look rather less glamorous! More like a tea cosy.
What a stunning dress. I can definitely see why this decade was calling to you!
Morgan, as a fantasy artist, and all around geek I love your videos.
long ago I worked in a theaters costume shop as what they called craft fabrication,(my job was more prop related) and all the people who were sewing and making those costumes amazed me, with their skills. (sewing being a skill I never picked up). But I loved seeing how clothing was made, seeing what go's into the making a 1950's evening gown is fascinating..
As an artist I always found myself hanging with people who made amazing clothing, whether it was for cosplay, of historical reenactment I always thought of them as wizards with fabric.. So Thank you for sharing your skills and knowledge.
Morgan, you make the complicated look doable and for that I thank you. Your instructions and process has really helped me in my explanation of patterns from different era’s.
Morgan, I am always SO happy to see your content! You are such a joy! I watched one of your videos with my mom, and she was like, "who is this lady she is very fun!" :)
Absolutely STUNNING! I love all the playing around with the drape and the general construction, it felt like a delightful journey we got to take with you!
I now want butt capes in every colour. Morgan, this gown rocks!
If you are ever invited to a red carpet event, you are set and eye poppingly so, if I may say so. So gorgeous. So well done. *chef's kiss*
Every new video you seem to have more and more fun making. And it looks good on you too. This dress is defiantly one to go to an opera in. I like it’s versatility too since you can add the butt cape or change the position of the dress tail. Very fancy.
i have no business following your channel. I do not like dressmaking at all, I never wear fancy dresses, I do not really care, yet here I am: thoroughly entertained and amazed by your craftswomanship. Loving it
As a high school science teacher, I need a dress like yours.
Audrey Hepburns Sabrina, has a very nice dress that I didn’t realize till now was like the ones you reference, you make really beautiful accurate replicas ❤️❤️
That is exactly how my wedding dress was made. I remembere when I went to get it altered I said something off-handed about trying to find a bra and the seamstress was like honey you don't need a bra with this dress it basically is one. And she was right she altered that thing to fit my measurement and got one minute of that day that I worry about my undergarment or my boobs that dressed it all the work
honestly mine was very very similar in construction and shape too! if you make it in a cream white and add a lot of white sparkles, it's pretty dang close
I love this. Beautiful! Also, 33:55 I got serious glam parent trap vibes. Lol.
Super dress could you make a New vidéos where you put this dress with lingerie? And tights
Hi. I just discovered your channel. I am fascinated by the inner construction of 1950s Couture. I love how your foundation turned out. Traditionally, these foundations did not have that many panels or that much boning (although sometimes they did). The bust was usually shaped by using darts and not panels, so you did not have to stress out about your dart. We have to remember that these were not necessarily to shape the body but to provide structure to the dress itself. Dior was known for creating very shallow bust cups on his corselettes.
As you mentioned both hooks and eyes and zippers were use to fasten the corselette. They would use a very long zipper to fasten the inner layer foundation bit, leaving a very long zipper tail. Usually the dress is attached to the corselette at the neckline just like you did. However, about 3 inches is left loose at center back on both sides of the closure and a second zipper would be added to close the actual dress. Ultimately the skirt and the bodice would be attached together and a single zipper would be used to close the outer layer of the dress.wonderful
Morgan - I'm a non sewer. I literally fell into your video this morning and was immediately hooked. Your explanations were clear with the final dress and you looking fabulous. Thank you - a great start to my Sunday. You make me want to sew😁
Thanks for this vid…I am planning on making myself a human version of Barbie’s red velvet/white satin dress from the 50s & wondered how to keep the top supported. Now I know. Awesomeness! U rock! ❤️
Loved watching this. I was a young woman in the 1950’s and your show brought back a flood of memories about several of my dresses. Yes, this is what we wore. Fashion was exciting then. New subbie here.
What a gorgeous gown!
Thank you!!
Oh come on Costube devotees - this video should have AT LEAST 2 million views - Awesome video Morgan. I am an intermediate sewer & you have given me the confidence to have a crack at this. I have spent more time sewing failed mock ups than I have sewing actual garments but I just LOVE the process
woah this is crazy. I was just looking for pantsuits with a train, just like this dress with the same bodice and outerskirt, except with pants instead of the inner skirt. Great timing!
Check out what Princess Mabel of the Netherlands wore to the wedding of Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden.
That dress and accessories is stunning! I love the shawl as well. And I think the corset liner is perfect. Unless it's uncomfortable. I find watching all these different artisanal videos, carpentry, pottery, tailoring etc so relaxing to watch. But watching you and Bernadette an Nicole doing your interesting things just rivets me!
WOW Morgan, looks amazing. I like the "tail piece" on the outside of the skirt cape. Your hair is brilliant, loving it; it has really started to grow again.
I had low-key given up on making clothes because my perfectionism doesn't let me "waste" fabric, and my last practice mock-up ended up being WAY too awkwardly shaped.
But seeing you make amazing stuff like this, and be so chill about it, really helps. I think I'll pick up one of my projects this week and be brave about it. Probably my slightly-more-than-circle-thanks-to-errors skirt project. :)
Thank you for being you, Morgan. It's always wonderful to see your new videos.
Love, love, love it! I almost wonder if Diana's Revenge Dress was a corset understructure like this 🤔 Because it definitely has that sort of sturdy understructure and then draped over feel?
„not perfect, but passable“ -what are you talking about?! It‘s AMAZING! It‘s so cool! The visual references you gave of 1950s gowns were really helpful as well. Wonderful video! I learned so much, and that dress is stunning.
Yes the gown is beautiful, but we can we talk about how she always looks so good in them?! Iconic
Morgan,
This dress is FANTASTIC!! I personally love the tail poof on the outside of sparkly butt cape. I learned so much watching you drape, and re-drape, and playing with different silhouettes. I have always loved watching you learn and create. I feel inspired when you start something new. You look beautiful in that 1950's inspired stunner!! Your hair is looking so fun too. Keep doing you, it's always amazing and fun.
With love,
Audri
this looks AMAZING! the way you tailor stuff for your body is sooo dreamy. you're so talented and skilled and creative ahhhh I just LOVE this
The serve!! Literally everytime I watch your stuff it makes me want to sew my own clothes 🥺
Morgan you've got it going on. You're the perfect combination of knowledge, nerdiness, humour, experimental adventuress. You inspire and you delight. Thank you for all your hard work.
I'm particularly pleased by this video in that it covers a time period where the fashion really is stunning.
Yesssssss I loved this. It's always inspiring to watch someone else's creative process. Loved the editing btw, the side by side comparison of butt cape vs no butt cape was very well done.
Wow that over skirt is absolutely fabulous!! Beautiful beautiful beautiful
I love the period, and your execution of the style is just beautiful. You made it look easy, and you looked wonderful in the finished gown. Thank you. It made me smile.
This was fabulous. I admired dresses like that. So much room for variety compared to now. My late Aunt told me a story about going to a show, probably musical variety, where her seat was off to the side so she could see in the the edge of the wings. My Aunt had always wondered about how those shoulderless dresses worked. One of the female performers would haul her dress bust up just before she went back out on stage. Sometimes I watch old Perry Mason and I love Lucy to look at the clothes.