I tried to find my kibbe body type | DEEP DIVE + my method

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 3. 06. 2024
  • Trying to find my Kibbe Body Type (or Image ID) was such a JOURNEY! In this video I am doing a deep dive into how I found my Kibbe body type and turned it into a method you can use to help you find yours. The Kibbe body type quiz is often where people start, but here I show you where to go next.
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    Timestamps:
    0:00 the struggle of finding your kibbe body type
    1:02 phase 1: the kibbe body type test
    4:25 phase 2: the kibbe community
    5:54 phase 3: strictly kibbe
    10:40 my 3-step identification system
    10:50 step 1
    12:06 step 2
    14:01 step 3
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Komentáƙe • 277

  • @elliejeanroyden
    @elliejeanroyden  Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +256

    I can see in the comments some demands for some other Kibbe creators, so here are some that have made a huge impact on this community
    - Aly Art
    - Gabrielle Arruda
    - Cocoa Styling
    - Merriam Style
    - Style Thoughts by Rita
    - Elyssa
    - Dear Peachie
    I’m sure there are SO many more, but these are some that I’m aware of and are widely appreciated in the kibbe-community! Xxx

    • @Anouk643
      @Anouk643 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +7

      Style Thoughts* by Rita.

    • @revaconescu6120
      @revaconescu6120 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +5

      Aly Art, Elyssa, and Gabrielle Arruda are all great! Between their videos and your's I've learned a lot- and I'm pretty sure i've figured out i'm a romantic- every video I see the romantic recommendations are things I already have in my wardrobe- bought way before I discovered the kibbe system- altho the more i learn the easier it's become to shop for things i know will work for me and therefore I will actually wear.

    • @cheesycheddar555
      @cheesycheddar555 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +10

      Pls don’t forget style chat, who’s helped so much in clearing all the misconceptions!

    • @nicsza9010
      @nicsza9010 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +7

      It’s so awesome of you to give a shoutout to other content creators. Go, Ellie-Jean 🎉 We appreciate you.

    • @ana-xx6tn
      @ana-xx6tn Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      So a quick question I'm 5.2and something and I do the test and it was dc for me but I read somewhere that you should be very tall for dc so is that mean I did it wrong ?

  • @SoyJGAko
    @SoyJGAko Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +399

    I also want to shoutout Gabrielle Arruda on youtube and tiktok! I especially love her content combining Kibbe body types with Kitchener essences. Her work plus Ellie-Jean's style roots have been so transformational for me!

    • @yusra7634
      @yusra7634 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +13

      loveeeee her! Especially her deep dives. She and Ellie Jean are my go to

    • @ZosiaDabrowski
      @ZosiaDabrowski Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +6

      Yess absolutely!! I echo everything you just said!

    • @ladycarys3008
      @ladycarys3008 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +5

      Same! These 2 women have helped me better understand myself so much

    • @patrycjam.6460
      @patrycjam.6460 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      Love her and her sense of humor 😊

    • @avalonrhys
      @avalonrhys Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +4

      same!!! I love them both for different reasons, combining their ideas has really improved my relationship with my style :)

  • @inspodonut29
    @inspodonut29 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +95

    I actually don't know how I got sucked into this rabbit hole but it just happened and it ruins my sleep schedule 😂

  • @harfir7169
    @harfir7169 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +91

    Glad you avoided the cult x). For me the big learning from Kibby was that different ppl put on weight in different places. It really helped me let go of the idea that my body was "weird" for putting on weight in thighs and belly, but not chest. I know that also aligns with the fruit shape stuff, but Kibby was the one that helped me understand that it's just a body type and not something individual or "my fault".

    • @misslyntheena
      @misslyntheena Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +3

      Yes! I think that’s very helpful, I finally managed to put on a bit of weight and it showed up in my boobs and thighs haha 😂
      Confirmed my TR double curve I think

    • @Rachel-fi4sc
      @Rachel-fi4sc Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +2

      You can rest assured it's not just you who gains weight purely in thighs and belly but not chest! I gained 20kg (thank you, disability) before I went up one bra size lol.

  • @adelaipser1239
    @adelaipser1239 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +159

    Oooh, girl. It took me like 2 years and a bunch of mental breakdowns to finally figure out what I was. I had intense body dysmorphia but unlike others, I find Kibbe body types insanely useful for it. I went from assuming I'm a Romantic, to a Classic until I arrived to a Dramatic. Tried the entire spectrum!😂 I have a pretty similar silhouette to Eva Green or Taylor Swift (somewhere inbetween) and while I'm long and very narrow I also have a bit of a confusing curve. It all clicked when I saw myself in a simple long all-black dress. I finally felt good, comfortable and most of all not like I was wearing someone else's clothes - without the need to constantly check where it didn't fit and the feeling out of place. Learning about the Kibbe features also gave me a feel of which of my features don't necessarily fit the Dramatic look (my face, lack of the Dramatic dryness that people often point out in Keira Knightley for example) and the ability to find effective ways to accommodate them in my own way. Most of this happened thanks to your content so here's a big thank you from a former body-insecure girly, you're incredible ❀

    • @candacepenny9082
      @candacepenny9082 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +8

      This gives me so much hope! I’m a year into reading and watching CZcams videos about kibbe and I feel less decisive than I did six months ago! I’ve started to wonder if I even know what I actually look like. đŸ«Ł But I don’t want to give up because I love the idea of it and have for years felt just a bit off in most of the clothes I’ve bought.

    • @Bunnidove
      @Bunnidove Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +1

      Im still stuck. Im um, fat, so that doesnt make it any easier...

    • @adelaipser1239
      @adelaipser1239 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +2

      @@Bunnidove I promise it's so worth it! If you're lost try to look at even just one piece of clothing that you really really love, for me it was the long dress and also this very simple structured trenchcoat. Try to analyze what specific features about this piece make you feel nice and comfortable, what it is about the material, silhouette or cut that makes it fit you so well. Again, for me it was the long silhouette, narrow cut and structured shoulders that eventually clicked with my actual body type - Dramatic. The thing that you already tend to gravitate toward naturally might just be the thing that leads you to your body type. You'll get there, I believe in you!❀

    • @wilczus222
      @wilczus222 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

      I used to dislike how i looked but learning about Kibbe helped to feel a lil' better about myself, glad it's been the same for you!

  • @johannac5653
    @johannac5653 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +53

    Im such a fan of Gabrielle Arruda, she makes alot of in-depth videos combining your essence with your kibbe body type. đŸ„°

  • @strawberrythiefproductions
    @strawberrythiefproductions Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +87

    The process of elimination test is such a great way of framing it. I've been pretty sure I'm a SD for a while now and have been slowly moving my wardrobe in that direction (and loving the way it looks), but seeing this has firmly convinced me - not only do I defintely have vertical and curve, but a I definitely DON'T have width, petite, balance, or double curve. Love the way you frame all of this as a tool not a rule as well - it makes it feel much more like an artistic method for effective expression as opposed to strict prescriptions about what you are and aren't allowed to wear.

    • @nitely2345
      @nitely2345 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

      I think I might be a soft dramatic (a lot of vertical, wide shoulders, softness everywhere) but then I don’t really have much boob. Yeah I’m a C but it doesn’t really look big on me since my back is so wide. Same with my butt, if you take away my shoulders it looks huge but then against my shoulders it looks normal. Then I gain weight on my lower stomach and it eliminates my waist so I’m so confused. Also a lot of the examples they show of certain body types don’t really look like that type to me. So the whole science seems confusing to me.

    • @strawberrythiefproductions
      @strawberrythiefproductions Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@nitely2345 if you've got wide shoulders you might be some sort of natural - I'm fairly tall but have very narrow kinda pointy shoulders, which I think is pretty characteristic of dramatic types. Width and curve sounds like it could be more of a flamboyant natural to me, but I'm by no means an expert 😅

    • @nitely2345
      @nitely2345 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      @@strawberrythiefproductions shoulders don’t have much say in deciding between natural and dramatic. Sophia Loren and Tilda Swinton definitely present wider shoulders but they’re confirmed dramatics. I am much fleshy to be a natural. Just don’t know if it’s between dramatic or soft dramatic since I’m also slightly above my normal weight right now so that also contributes. I just wanna figure out what’s better to wear so that I don’t waste time while shopping 😭

    • @vermiliongardens
      @vermiliongardens Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@nitely2345 I’m a soft dramatic with ~shoulders~ but the width doesn’t continue to my rib cage and my shoulders are more angular than square/blunt, so you might consider those aspects. I’ve read that soft dramatics tend to gain weight uniformly (vs low abdomen as you said) and that’s been my personal experience. I still have an obvious hourglass even when I gain weight. You might be a natural of some sort.
      Or, and I offer this out of curiosity and kindness, you may look into hormonal imbalances. I went on a particular birth control that made me look like a potato (gained weight primarily in my belly, which I had NEVER done before, completely lost my waist.) Needless to say that didn’t last long.

    • @nitely2345
      @nitely2345 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

      @@vermiliongardens my width doesn’t continue to my rib cage either. I actually have a super ✹ dramatic ✹ curve from my shoulders to my waist. Soft dramatics don’t have to have waist definition. That’s part of why there’s so much yang in them and why often sets them apart from romantics. They can have but it’s not required. I have waist definition just not as obvious when I gain weight because I gain it directly above my hips which interrupts the curve. When you look at Sophia Loren (aka the primary example for soft dramatic) she has most of her weight gain in her mid section. There’s absolutely no way I’m a natural. Too much curve, too much softness. Loose fitting lines look absolutely terrible on me, they just make me look fat because they make my small waist disappear, plus the boho hippy vibes don’t go when I have such a dramatic/romantic face. My doubt comes from whether I still qualify as soft dramatic since my boobs don’t look huge on me or if that automatically makes me a pure dramatic đŸ€ŠđŸ»â€â™€ïž and I don’t believe in taking pills but thanks for your concern.

  • @caravanrose
    @caravanrose Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +54

    Lol yep, Merriam Styles was even more confusing than Kibbe.
    It feels great when you finally figure out your type! I was able to do so by watching Aly Art. As a trained artist she has a keen eye and attention to detail that helped me decipher my type.

    • @vanessasirvent7048
      @vanessasirvent7048 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +4

      Hi, first time commenting on YT ever.😬
      I love this Body & Style channel❀ Thank you for what you do!
      I discovered Kibbe many years ago because of extensive videos from Aly Art. She has an amazing keen eye indeed and so does Merriam Style imo, specially on colorimetry. Her complex system (of the latter) made me understand how as an Autumn type I gravitate towards wearing and feel good in SOFT BABY BLUE, which I could not understand before when I am conspicuously an Autumn (because on her system I'm Warm Delicate - I have hazel eyes, dark brown hair and warm skin and so I feel best in muted colours, and worst in bright saturated colours, and even though that soft blue is not part of my colour palette it does suit me). So I really appreciated that piece of the puzzle with her keen eye and insight.
      I love the Kibbe chats/community, they're fascinating and help filter and narrow down decision making when purchasing and styling clothes. I'm sure I'm between Romantic and Soft Gamine, but leaning more and identifying more with SG (also if you factor in personality/attitude).
      Thank you for your videos Ellie-Jean!❀ & I'm going to use the wardrobe app you recommended

    • @Mysterious_Moon
      @Mysterious_Moon Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +12

      I agree. Merriam personally typed me as a soft natural
. Wrong. Everything was too loose and made me look larger. I’m 5’10”, obvious curve, long vertical line. Soft dramatic lines fit me perfectly.

  • @rebeccajordan4491
    @rebeccajordan4491 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +18

    I’m glad you stuck with SC. The Freely Kibbe comments on your post there were very frustrating to me. The biggest takeaway for me around kibbe - the man drives me nuts, but when he talks about it being ultimately an image id and not a body type, it can become really clear where someone fits in, even when they have strong characteristics of multiple types. You are such a SC essence - your balance and softness shines through, not the lushness and drama of TR. I think the stereotypes can be really helpful in that way.

  • @yusra7634
    @yusra7634 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +120

    I used to be an MBTI / Jungian typing psychology nerd but now I find solidarity w the fashion girlies who have to suffer through the Kibbe / Kitchener typing systems đŸ€ we WILL find ourselves, inside and out...even if we have to spend an unhinged amount of time doing so 😂
    Also did Ellie ever explain why she got excommunicated from the Kibbe group? I love how she went to Kibbe University basically caused to get popular to the point of spamnation, ended up having to leave, now offers her own consultations. Idk what order those things happened in, but dare i say iconic?

    • @stephallen9819
      @stephallen9819 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +19

      Anyone that says they can type for kibbe or makes social media content about the system is automatically breaking the rules. Because Kibbe says only he can type 😼

    • @yusra7634
      @yusra7634 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      ​@@stephallen9819ohhh I see, ty. Tbh its giving gaslight gatekeep girlboss with a hint of cult leader 😂
      I do respect Kibbe's work and I think he's done a good job of his system, but this caveat of his is so wild. I have literally never heard of any pioneer in any field claim that they were the only person who be competent in their speciality. It sounds like a controlling and insecure parent. Gabrielle Arruda oftens mentions how Kibbe and Kitchener were inspired by female fashion professors a few decades before them, and popularised their concepts. New people take up the torch each generation. That should be encouraged, not dissuaded. I feel like Kibbe will realise that within the next 10-20 years that he will effectively be jeopardising his own legacy if the system essentially ends when he passes away. He'll probably change his mind about the typing thing.
      I dont think I'm the type to ever get a consultation, but Ellie Jean seems to be very chill and sweet. I think I would prefer having another woman tell me my body type anyway

    • @janesska1348
      @janesska1348 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +24

      Ellie types people for profit and that is against the official Kibbe rules. The system which tells you "only one person can type you correctly" is just gatekeeping imo.

    • @queenofgoldenhearts
      @queenofgoldenhearts Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +6

      ooooh you’re just like me! i’m a 100% obsessed with psychology/typology (it took me years but i finally found myself) and now i’m on this fashion essence, styles and kibbe journey

    • @janellemaureen8435
      @janellemaureen8435 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      Omg, what's your mbti?

  • @tiffann9514
    @tiffann9514 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +33

    Being objective about my body has been the most difficult process for me. I grew up around family members who are either dramatics or gamine , so I took that as what I must be one also since we were the same hight and weight , but knew what they wear everyday looked horrible on me, so i just thought it was something wrong with how i looked... Then I got a full length mirror for the first time and truly looked at myself for what my body really looked like 😅. It was shocking and discouraging having that image of what I thought I looked like suddenly stripped from me. I am definitely not a dramatic or gamine, but instead lean more towards a romantic...BIG DIFFERENCE! 😅 Seeing my body for how it is and knowing that I am healthy has made such a difference. I am so happy to have found a channel that celebrates every body type for their own unique selfs. ❀☀

  • @amymullen296
    @amymullen296 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +75

    I quite like focusing on this as a dressmaking system. I'm middling sewist, but I know from past experience with patterns that:
    -I have to chop length off everything, including the torso (petite). I'm about 5'1" with long legs and short waist.
    -I have to key patterns off the hips, then alter the waist as necessary. (curve or double curve)
    -I have a large bust for my height. In a front view, my bust pushes fabric out past my shoulders. (curve or double curve)
    And I have narrow shoulders, because straps are forever falling off them. (no width)
    So I have no width or vertical (throws out the dramatics and naturals).
    I have to accommodate petite (so choose from soft gamine, theatrical romantic, or romantic).
    I have either curve or double curve. Double curve only happens where you don't have to accommodate anything except petite.
    I am curve dominant, meaning that the fabric pushes out over my bust and hips, but nothing in my figure interrupts the curves that fabric makes (no long waist, no balance, etc). Since I don't have to accommodate width, vertical, or balance, I have double curve.
    Double curve + petite = romantic.
    So I figured I was romantic, but the "dressmaking approach" does seem to throw out soft classic, which was the other style I looked at.

    • @frenchy2318
      @frenchy2318 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      This is so helpful. I didn't realize that recently, this was a dressmaking system. I'm still new to kibby so I don't know what it means. But I have to add width to the hips and take in as the waist. (Curve or double curve)
      Add length. I'm 5'8 with a longer torso. (Vertical)
      So does that leave me in SD ? đŸ€”

    • @amymullen296
      @amymullen296 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      @@frenchy2318 I'm also new to Kibbe, but I found this video explaining curve and double curve super helpful: czcams.com/video/z7r8cDPpzyU/video.html
      Watch the bit about Sophia Loren (another soft dramatic!) at 1:50; she talks about how to ID curve.

    • @liav4102
      @liav4102 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      Thank you so much for sharing your personal process ❀ I’m not sure I’m even up to a middling dressmaker but the few things I’ve made or altered have clued me into my body in really helpful ways. Also short + short torso

    • @shachardl5360
      @shachardl5360 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      About the shoulder width analysis (with the straps falling), what would you call someone who's straps do fall, but not because of lack of width, but because of "height" (like the space above and below the shoulders is small compared to left-to-right). Maybe it doesn't mean anything but I'm curious.

    • @liav4102
      @liav4102 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      @@shachardl5360 for me it’s part of the overall shortness of my torso that can lead to comically tall shoulders (one time I tried on this dress in a really stiff fabric, with the waist at my actual waist line the top of the shoulders was in line with my earlobes 😂)

  • @LaChickadee11
    @LaChickadee11 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +43

    I also thought i was Theaterical Romantic, but the clothes that I picked out seemed like 'too much softness'. But also, any fabric that was too stiff was too restricting and odd looking on me. Looking deeper into Soft Classic with your videos made everything click! I am excited to play around with more "elegant" pieces in my wardrobe! 😀

  • @Crewelperleology
    @Crewelperleology Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +10

    When Kibbe says that the pure types Natural, Classic and Gamine no longer exist, he might as well just say thta they really never existed. Body types don't come and go, but Image ID's probably due, because it is a construct.

    • @june7rose
      @june7rose Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +2

      Amazing comment. I love studying this and looking into it, and it has helped me. But at the end of of the day, all of this is the opinion of one fallible man who made it up in his head. Does it all really exist? I think it's a matter of opinion and it exists if you want it to.

  • @KN-eb3md
    @KN-eb3md Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +10

    This couldn't have come at a more perfect time! Been in a rabbit hole of your videos for a few weeks now and still stuck on the body type. Hopefully this does the trick, thankyou đŸ„°

  • @aliyahabdon
    @aliyahabdon Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    I love how passionate you are about Kibbe and fashion! Thank you for sharing what you know ❀

  • @KateTalksDating
    @KateTalksDating Pƙed 6 dny

    Your content is so helpful and accessible, thank you! :)

  • @library_of_folklore
    @library_of_folklore Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

    Oh my gosh, just saw the notification. I was literally going to comment for a full breakdown video. I subscribed to you a few days ago when I saw your shorts and was really interested in learning about body types. I tried to find some sites but I found it too confusing so hopefully, this video will help. Will come back...

  • @monicabarnett9231
    @monicabarnett9231 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +4

    I’d like to say how much I loved your typing consultation! So worth it if anyone is considering it! I’m learning to dress my soft natural frame. As someone who wanted to be a soft classic, I’m coming around..!

  • @shaliniupadhayaya2525
    @shaliniupadhayaya2525 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

    Absolutely love your videos. You helped my style so much. Thank you

  • @SassenachAustralis
    @SassenachAustralis Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +3

    This was so helpful, thank you! Your energy and enthusiasm are really contagious 😊

    • @elliejeanroyden
      @elliejeanroyden  Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      That is so lovely to hear thank you!! ♄

  • @emilyannamanda
    @emilyannamanda Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    I literally asore when you post videos I’m just like thank God because I have to three-closets and I really need help dialing it back
    I love that you don’t gatekeep your knowledge, even though it would be worthwhile to pay you as a stylist even still

  • @lea_san
    @lea_san Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +4

    I really love your videos and ur style roots are one of my favorite thing!!! Mine are mushroom, stone and flower, it really helps me knowing them!

  • @bertet9928
    @bertet9928 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +8

    The key for me was realising it’s holistic. As soon as I realised that I knew I was SD. It all made complete sense.

    • @deirdreruth9392
      @deirdreruth9392 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      Exactly - people get off track when they try to break it down by specific characteristics


    • @caravanrose
      @caravanrose Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      💯

    • @bertet9928
      @bertet9928 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      @deirdreruth9392 I've seen this happening too often. I’ve even been told by strangers I can't be SD unless I'm hourglass lol. When it comes down to it, the clothing doesn't lie. Doesn't matter if your head looks small in a photo or your boobs are over a D cup, fabric can't lie. You can’t argue against it.

  • @anna-5104
    @anna-5104 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +7

    Amazing video! I was also obsessing over which type I was, but it helped me when I tried to type my parents. It was especially helpful, when I specifically typed my dad, because I look mostly like him. I typed him as dramatic classic and my mum as soft classic or theatrical romantic and then I got the realization that like my dad I had to be a dramatic classic. After that my 8 month long obsession was finally over and I have never doubted my judgement anymore.

  • @Katieshirleen1649
    @Katieshirleen1649 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    I would love to see full length videos on the body types! As well as which types are more and less common

  • @ZwarteKonijn
    @ZwarteKonijn Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +9

    As many, I've been stumbling with the Kibbe types for a couple of years now. I started out thinking I was theatrical romantic, mostly because I have no clue how tall feet and inches are and an online conversion said I was 5'7 (turns out I'm actually 5'9). I actually switched first to soft natural because of my width, but being a bit more chubby at the time and broad hips, mistook that as having more width, but not height. Loosing weight made me realize I looked a lot taller than I actually thought I did and understanding I'm actually flamboyant natural.
    Steps that helped me the most were;
    -To actually look at the elements and the lines of the clothes recommended, not the models, the style, and the clothing themselves. By understanding that it's not about the shirt, but the neckline, or the fit. To look at it from a distant view, how your body has lines and how the clothing you wear accentuates or change those lines.
    -Switching the perspective. I was too focused on 'finding my body type so I know/will be told how to dress', to 'this is a tool and a guide to learn how to dress'. That it wasn't about me finding my 'type', but about me learning how to dress well and with intention, and that created a lot more space to just have fun.
    -Elyssa's videos about yin and yang, the theories before the Kibbe's system. To understand it from that perspective changed my way of looking at yin and yang balance.
    What NOT helped me, at all;
    -The jargon used. There are too many terms that have a different connotation in day to day life, what can misguide people who don't know it well of what's actually being said. This also played a lot in the 'well, I don't want this because I don't like this term in the day to day life use of the word'. It just feels odd he choose these words. Also just the random changing of words? Why is it for one type flamboyant, but theatrical and dramatic for the other?
    -Not a big fan of most of the pictures used. A lot of pictures of celebrities were there is played with angles, lighting, and photoshop, not always creating a good perception of their body types. Also miss the general use of pictures of people that don't have the time to work out all the time.
    -Guides being influenced by what the creators are insecure about. I've seen too many people who are like 'feminine is what you want', or 'being small is what you want', not really giving a good indication of the types outside of that because they dislike those bodytypes and what they imply for them.

  • @PerplexingIndividual
    @PerplexingIndividual Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +5

    PLEASE do this for Kitchener Essences! It was so informative!

  • @Carrie-sgda
    @Carrie-sgda Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +9

    The kibbie creator videos are a blessing and a curse. Its great that you can get some usable information and some can help you on your kibbie journey. Unfortunately there are contradictions , clothing reccomendations and false descriptions. For instance , claiming gamines have boxy/square shoulders or have some width on the shoulders is always spoken of when referring to a gamine. Some of us have very narrow and delicate shoulders like TRs . This really threw me off and caused me to be confused along with the clothing recommendations. It took me around a year to find i dont have double curve and im frame dominant. So, i am SG but the clothing recommendations are for soft gamines with some shoulder width and at times too much sharpness for my softness and doesnt cater to vertical which is why they do not work for me . When i finally ignored the bs and opened myself up to SG i thought well thats why i look so great in crops , layers and patterns , contrasting colours s d textures. I then could see myself in mostly the faces of the celebrity examples and it made sense. So, I dress in TR lines with the contrasting colours/patterns and textures Gamines are known for. I discovered polka dot through clothing recommendations which is amazing. I never knew polka dot could look so great that even though the dress I bought is black and white, not quite in my colour season, it works because of the lines being fitted and midi length in a soft, light fabric, contrasting colours and has a polka dot print

  • @lizo5551
    @lizo5551 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    Love your channel! Love the shout out :) I saw you as TR at first, but definitely agree now that SC is a better fit for you. You have a posh/elegant essence, something I see in all your videos. Sometimes pictures can miss that. You also look amazing in simple solids in a way that TR's would look undone. Though, many of the same styles can overlap between both SC/TR. I'm happy you found the correct ID! :D

  • @shanathelittle
    @shanathelittle Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +28

    I would love to give credit for every other Kibbe youtouber that started before Ellie-Jean:
    Aly art (the first place where I saw it)
    Gabrielle Arruda - the best one in my opinion
    Elyssa
    I personally loved the Freely Kibbe group and the Blossom styling system by the founder, also I saw the test first from Cozy Rebekah then the Concept wardrobe then Gabrielle Arruda.
    I love your style roots system, but I think we should support all the other creators with great opinions about the topic rather than saying that Kibbe and you are the most reliable sources (as at 12:00)

    • @neon.neutral
      @neon.neutral Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +10

      I rolled my eyes when she said that. Like, reallllly lol

    • @elliejeanroyden
      @elliejeanroyden  Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      I was in no way dismissing any of these creators! They all make incredible content, and are a huge part of the Kibbe wave that’s happening right now it’s so exciting!

    • @shanathelittle
      @shanathelittle Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +9

      @@elliejeanroydenthank you for the pinned comment, I didn't try to read your mind and say that this was your intention. It's only an impression that can be felt by some statements in the video alone, but with the comment section it's now better. Thank you for taking the constructing criticism for what it was intended :) Sorry if my phrasing was harsh I'm not a native speaker.

  • @debbiesivertson817
    @debbiesivertson817 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    Great video and analysis!!! ❀❀❀

  • @nataleenriosgonzalez6687
    @nataleenriosgonzalez6687 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +6

    Aly art is very talented to explain kibbie

  • @kunaikat2232
    @kunaikat2232 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

    thank you ellie jean for introducing me to kibbe!!! it has truly helped me refresh my wardrobe after dressing punk for years!!! its so nice being more classy again and softer as im growing older. you are the best and you help so many women out there struggling with feeling good about style and wardrobe and just overall confidence. you are awesome and i love you haha and kibbe is awesome even though it has cult vibes đŸ€ŁđŸ€ŁđŸ€Ł probably the only cult i will remain a member of 😂😂

  • @Zukhane
    @Zukhane Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    I love how you share your process. And it's so interesting, because lately I have been wondering if you might actually be a TR because some of the stiffer fabrics don't look quite right, I think. But that might just be the angle. Glad you found your category and are happy with it. 😊

  • @the_only_living_ghost
    @the_only_living_ghost Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    Thank you for making all if this more accessible for us!

  • @brittany3559
    @brittany3559 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

    I went through the journey of trying to figure this out and even paid for a few different professional body type evaluations with mixed results. What finally clicked for me was when I started working remotely full time, I’ve spent the last 6 months in zoom calls all day everyday and seeing my video tile next to 20-30 other people’s on any given call has made me realize just how sharp and delicate I am in comparison. It’s undeniable that the thing that stands out most about my features is my yang bone structure. This has also really helped my narrow in on my best colors as well.

  • @user-vd1ys1hh6h
    @user-vd1ys1hh6h Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    Could you please do a video on "classic wardrobe staples" for each body type, f.ex. white blouse/button up, LBD etc. and what each version could look like to fit the body type? Really like your channel BTW!

  • @kuroshimeru2520
    @kuroshimeru2520 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    Thank you a lot for this video! I used to think that I am some sort of natural for a year, but this viedeo and its comment section made me realize that I am a soft dramatic! Finally it makes sense why I felt more drawn to romantic styles, than naturals! Thank you, and your community

  • @mariaokhapkina6971
    @mariaokhapkina6971 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    You have graceful hand movements ❀

  • @neurdogic8909
    @neurdogic8909 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +3

    great video i loved it. ive been into your channel for a while and its become quite the hyperfixation. i like to draw and create chatactwr designs and this has helped immensely for designing clothing and diversifying body types in my art. if you feel like it, id love to see more about typing mens bodies

  • @michelagirotto6184
    @michelagirotto6184 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +14

    Three things I always new about my body: I am moderately tall, I'm curvy and I always felt ashamed of the width of my shoulders. So I could not be D/SD/FN or gamine/romantic. I was only left with natural and classic. By looking at photos of celebrities, naturals were the ones who I could identify myself with the most, but I was thrown off by the fact that to be a soft natural you must have thick lips and small nose, while I have thin lips and large and sharp nose. Then I found a video that went like "you are NOT classic if you have this and that"... and it finally clicked, I am your stereotipical SN 😅

    • @ilariatogni5818
      @ilariatogni5818 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      I really think that comparision between types has helped me the most understanding the system

    • @stephallen9819
      @stephallen9819 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      Kibbe doesn't include the face apparently. That's why internet information can throw us. Glad you found you are SN. I'm 80% sure I'm a SN too. In big part to the fact that I don't fit any other categories either!

    • @michelagirotto6184
      @michelagirotto6184 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      @@stephallen9819 the original test also included the face 😅 But my face is not sharp overall, I have full cheecks and ingenue essence, my lips are thin but soft, my nose is moderate compared to my mom's one, who is a 6' feet FN super model 😂 ... I am 100% SN and I've been wearing my "lines" since one year already...

  • @Starburstnova
    @Starburstnova Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +6

    I've gone so far down this rabbit hole and I'm fairly certain I understand most of the concepts pretty well at this point, dug through all this misinformation, etc. And I've concluded my first instinct just from reading Kibbe's original descriptions was correct.
    On your note about getting other people's opinions, especially ones who don't know about Kibbe, do take this with a grain of salt. I very much have always been told I'm very curvy, was told I look very mature for my age when I was a teen, etc. Before I knew what Kibbe was, this led me to trying to dress like a romantic at times, and left me feeling very frumpy. Even after starting my Kibbe journey, those words stuck in my head. Even asking my husband, he's like "curvy, hourglass...you're a romantic or theatrical romantic!" and it's hard to shake that. But curvy doesn't necessarily mean romantic. All the types have at least baseline curve, and half of them have curve as a prominent feature.
    I do still second guess at times though, especially since Kibbe has apparently said that what a lot of people think soft gamine is actually romantic, and those are the two I'm torn between...although I still very much believe I am SG when I consider the accommodation recommendations. Especially since he's also said that most people underestimate the amount of yang they have...and I'm pretty sure I have a non-insignificant amount of yang.
    Sorry, not trying to make this about me and my journey haha. Point is, take other people's opinions with a grain of salt and try to filter what they say through a Kibbe lens. Their impressions ARE important to help you see yourself objectively and not overanalyze so much, but their wording may not match Kibbe's and it could potentially lead you in the wrong direction.

  • @EmL-kg5gn
    @EmL-kg5gn Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +10

    I feel like it would be really helpful to know how to look at the different aspects (vertical, width, balance, curve, petite, and double curve) individually. I know I have either curve or double curve, that feels obvious even as someone who’s still learning the system. But it’d be nice to know how to determine whether or not I have the others. I have an idea of what it means to accommodate my curves, because if I don’t go out of my way to do that clothes don’t fit me or feel right at all. But how would I know if I have the others? If you did a video on these different aspects I’d absolutely love that!!! It’s so easy to get caught up in the details and forget the main parts of the theory. Also, your style roots system is amazing and really helpful! It’s good to have something I can use right away to narrow down my style while I figure out my colours, body and essence type

  • @ladycarys3008
    @ladycarys3008 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +4

    As someone who has struggled with body image issues and my weight, i really struggled to let go of my knee jerk reaction to the term "width". I am also short and definitely have curve so i played first with romantic but the fabrics and style always were a bit too much and I felt swallowed by them. Then, because my legs are short in proportion to my torso, i looked at soft gamine. That worked much better, but despite having shorter legs, if dressed for petite it didnt look quite right either. It. Wasnt until i allowed myself to really look at my shoulders andlet go ofthe assumption that width meant fat that I was finally able to look more objectively at the natural family. Gabrielle Arruda's deep dive into essances really helped as well an i finally realized that i am a soft natural with strong romantic, and gamine essences. This has allowed me to better embrace the fabrics and silhouettes of the soft natural while still adding some elements of sensual romantic and playful gamine into the details of my outfits which has had 2 main results: 1) I feel so much more at ease and confident in my body and 2) I have recieved so many compliments and questions about my style from women who are also struggling to figure out who they are. I always point them to Ellie-Jean and Gabrielle!

  • @karacat18
    @karacat18 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

    lol mine was very easy to find as a 5'9 curvy gal, but as soon as i learned what works for SD's i bought some new clothes. i immediately got compliments and felt 10x more confident so im happy with my results! the next step in my style journey (and so far has been the hardest part) is finding my color season 😅

  • @loonadeux
    @loonadeux Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +3

    When I first ran into Kibbe, I knew immediately that I was SD, but then got confused because I don’t have long, thin limbs and I wasn’t sure if maybe I had “width.” After months in the rabbit hole, I confirmed my first instinct was right. I also went down the color season and essences rabbit holes. I am finally now beginning to get a feel for clothes that really work for me-things I would never have picked before. I feel like I have a long way to go, but this has helped so much with self esteem and is getting me out of a deep rut. It’s a slog to figure this stuff out, but worth it.

  • @rebeccahernandez5156
    @rebeccahernandez5156 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    This blonde suits you so well! It brightens your face so much, you look so fresh and youthful! ♡♡

  • @wiwiholic
    @wiwiholic Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    I love your haircut❀

  • @Caressa_with_an_E
    @Caressa_with_an_E Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +10

    My mind blowing Kibbe experience started with being measured without shoes on, turned out I'm 2" shorter than I thought (& now it makes sense why I've needed to accommodate a short vertical line when I thought I was 5'7). The other challenge is to accept the beauty that your body reflects, instead of trying to fit into what society considers correct for your gender identity... You may feel that you should be more yin or you're not yang enough.
    And I agree, there is this weird cult like environment in the Strictly Kibbe group... Lots of hoops to jump through before you can even post, with very vague and confusing commentary by the man himself.

  • @anasepetovska
    @anasepetovska Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    You’re videos are always great and I learn so much! I have some thoughts about your body type and your style
 I think you can accommodate more yang than you give yourself permission to. More structure and more contrast in most outfits. Think about which outfits you’ve worn that you’ve felt very powerful in despite looking delicate etc. Anyways, have a good one!

  • @ameliehudini9414
    @ameliehudini9414 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    I've been confused about my body type for years, but with your summary, I think it finally clicked that I'm probably a soft dramatic. I have really wide hips and large breasts, but narrow-ish shoulders and a small waist, so I was always confused, but I'm also tall and my hips don't look "fleshy", so I came to realise that I don't have double curve even though other body type systems would call me an hourglass. So thank you for the summary!
    Also, I'd love to one day get a consultation (when I'm not a student and therefore poor) ❣

  • @PrairieWoman6680
    @PrairieWoman6680 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +4

    Excellent video on the rabbit hole.😂 I’ve been in it for 11 years and I’m hoping someday I’ll get thrown a rope to climb out. Oh wait! You just threw me one. Everything you said was true especially that I can make my own decision. ❀

  • @Zorriel
    @Zorriel Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    This video helped me more than I thought. You saying everyone thinks theyre a theratical romantic has me second guessing 😅 it was that, soft gamine and now im questioning if im romantic ughhh so hard

  • @pinkroses135
    @pinkroses135 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    The dressmaking approach makes more sense for personal style

  • @sansanm9453
    @sansanm9453 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +4

    I couldn't find my type till i took a picture of myself and compared that to kibbe examples. The weight gain patterns also really helped me (can't remember which website just search the title)

  • @emswildworld
    @emswildworld Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    I always thought I was classic but now I’m thinking I might be wrong 😼 I’m on the hunt now đŸƒđŸ»â€â™€ïž

  • @malloriedavis1324
    @malloriedavis1324 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    Aly Art on youtube is an AMAZING resource as Well. I love her analyses.

  • @Morslatke
    @Morslatke Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    i want to add that one of the main things that helped me figure out my type was through kibbe's movie-watching exercise. you're correct that you shouldn't compare your body to images of celebrities, but you CAN and imo should compare your body/vibe to videos of celebrities. seeing movies with elizabeth taylor and marilyn monroe and even dolly parton made me realize that I was a Romantic who had hang-ups about feeling wide (and thinking I was SN). so i'd recommend that exercise to anyone in the research phase of kibbe.

  • @blj1523
    @blj1523 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    why is this not getting more views this is so epic

  • @annnnnnnnnn1188
    @annnnnnnnnn1188 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    ooh love this! my journey started from youtube as well but from aly art's quiz video, and i got soft classic. for a couple of years i just stick with SC and not really questioned it hc it does fit to some extent
    i only dig deeper maybe 2 years ago? but only on youtube and went from SC to C, DC, and FN lol, and this was when i first learned about the vertical thing and i noticed in myself that i do need vertical accomodation despite being short
    and once i went on reddit and learned more i'm now kinda sticking with SD which honestly is one of the types that i would never consider myself in the beginning since it's gotten that mature and sensual aura i guess, and i happen to have an ingenue face lol
    what made me stick with SD for now is bc of the lines recommendations. i really do need the vertical bc if not i'd look like I'm bigger than I actually am, and a little bit of curve accomodation otherwise i'd drown in them 😂

  • @kathilarifari4434
    @kathilarifari4434 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    Love your videos. Started my kibbe journey few years ago but gave up really quickly. I still don't have a clue and it's taking time to wirk through the strictly kibbe tasks. Maybe I'm a some sort of classic as I know I cannot go overboard with anything but I cannot really grab the concept of balance. I feel I am accommodating for vertical, width and curve. I often think I look the best in underwear or swimsuits and it gets worse when I put clothes on.. :D
    I would really love to see a video with verified celebs that are more atypical for their type.

    • @caravanrose
      @caravanrose Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

      See Aly Art for celebrity videos you seek. This is what helped me nail it down.

    • @elizabethsommer7248
      @elizabethsommer7248 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

      I have no idea if this will be helpful at this (or any) point or not- but there is a certain mathematical element to all this. A drawing of Da Vinci's vitruvian man might be helpful in comparing your proportions; for instance, an average person is 8 of their heads tall, average arms (shoulder to wrist) are approximately equal in length to one third of their height, average arms usually have the wrist hit at about crotch length, average legs have an inseam measurement equal to about 47% of the person's total height.
      There is of course a little bit of play in this, but it was helpful for me.

  • @cinnamonbun9849
    @cinnamonbun9849 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    Thank you for this in-depth overview! May I ask what background music you used, it’s so soothingly upbeat

  • @cavewitch
    @cavewitch Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    Great video.

  • @amandamacabre
    @amandamacabre Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +3

    Personally, I found learning what things like vertical/width/curve/petite/etc in Kibbe and how to do the line drawings and then doing it over the standard pose for Kibbe AND other full body shots made it easier. When I was able to just look at some lines on a screen instead of photos of myself, it was a lot easier to see balance and vertical were my dominant features, despite thinking originally I was a soft natural.
    And then I started looking for clothing cuts that I felt flattered those lines (whether Kibbe approved suggestions or not) and that settled my Kibbe journey once and for all ahahah.

    • @patrycjam.6460
      @patrycjam.6460 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      And what did you found out?

    • @amandamacabre
      @amandamacabre Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@patrycjam.6460 sorry! Balance and vertical is dramatic classic 😊

  • @shadowPuppy88
    @shadowPuppy88 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    New here! Could you do a video on how to draw your lines like you did in this video đŸ™đŸŒ

  • @Olga_Efremov
    @Olga_Efremov Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +2

    Ellie, look into Vivien Leigh. She is a theatrical romantic. Your body looks very similar to hers, actually, than to Marion Cotillard's or to Naomi Watts. You just have some classic face features which require that balance you always look for, but your spirit is playful, and as you say you tend to your flower roots, also you are drawn to shiny silk clothes and you do pull them off, which is because you have a theatricality to you. At least, this is what I can see in your body type/identity. 😊

  • @misslyntheena
    @misslyntheena Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    I was a bit afraid when you said most people who use the Concept Wardrobe‘s Test get TR and it’s wrong, bc I did take the test like 4 times and I’m always TR. Once I have enough money saved up, I might book a styling session with you x
    I‘m still pretty sure I’m TR bc all the shapes/silhouettes look fantastic on me but it’s always nice to get another opinion x

  • @Iden_Elihio_1999
    @Iden_Elihio_1999 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    I remember being so damn happy when David confirmed I have width and curve aka Soft Natural ....
    I always thought I was a Tr but I always was jealous of the naturals , specifically Flamboyant Naturals but honestly I would be happy if I was any natural type and I got what I wanted ......

  • @magnolia31611
    @magnolia31611 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    I think I’ve finally figured out which body type I’m closest to, and it’s TR, I have a few features that are slightly sharp, but definitely have double curve, and my shoulders are slightly sharp, but are too narrow to be SG, and my arms are very short in comparison to the rest of my body. My softness is also not based on my bone structure. I’m not moderate enough for SC, and naturals and dramatics are so far from my body type that I know for sure I’m definitely not either of those. I really liked when you said that we might have to settle for what is the closest even if it’s not exact. For instance, I think my face is actually closer to a soft gamine type mostly because I have a very sharp, and small nose, but even there most of my features on my face fall into the TR category. I mostly want to know these things so I can have a better idea of what lines will suit my body best because I always feel like my clothes are just not quite right, either too loose and big, too boxy, and sometimes it’s just that the fit is not quite right.

  • @lili.z9950
    @lili.z9950 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +6

    Thinking about Kibbe in terms of dressmaking really helped me! When you get your clothes tailored, what needs to be fixed. I’m a soft gamine. I like to have all my hems taken up (sleeve, shirt bottoms, skirt and pant hems) and I buy to fit my hips and shoulders, then have the waist taken in. Petite + curve.

  • @SatipatthanaSakuraDragona
    @SatipatthanaSakuraDragona Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

    I literally just went out for months (okay, over a year) and tried on a lot of stuff in stores, took pictures, then studied them at home to figure out what worked for me and what did not. I thrifted pieces, then realized I'd bought poorly, and refined again until I figured out what worked best for me. You start to run into the same problems and solutions (accommodations) after awhile. I'm pretty sure I don't have a kibbe body type. The kibbe system definitely leaves some of us out.

    • @Daymickey
      @Daymickey Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      Interesting! I wonder what Ellie Jean would say if she could type you. 😊

    • @SatipatthanaSakuraDragona
      @SatipatthanaSakuraDragona Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      @@Daymickey Flamboyant Gamine, most likely, but I can't pull off their trademark opposite shape/line top and bottom. I am sharply yang and must accommodate petite. I do not have kibbe curve, width, or balance. I can handle some vertical, in that I actually look chic in monochromatic looks, but can't handle vertical lengths. Clothes tend to overwhelm me unless the fabric is moderate/thick, the style is highly tailored and sleek/narrow all over, and the lengths are short/cropped. My actual lines, as far as I can see, fall more or less into the pure gamine category (which no longer exists). I'm more like a short dramatic or dramatic classic that can't handle vertical.

  • @eykyra
    @eykyra Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    I was surprised when you said theatrical romantic was the most likely answer in the kibbe quiz cause I thought it would be classic. I got soft classic at first and I realized that it's because it's pretty easy, in the way the questions are designed, to get into a middle point on most areas if you don't perceive or have an idea of what would be to have for example "very sharp shoulders" or "very narrow limbs", so you'd tend to get a lot of middle ground answers which the quiz would take as you being very balanced and getting any of the two classic body types. But in my experience balance is very uncommon when you observe people, everyone has features that tends to either one or another extreme, it's just that it's hard to assess what makes a bone particularly sharp or soft for example if you don't have a point of reference.

  • @emskily94
    @emskily94 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +13

    How much did the Image ID part play a role in your journey? I’ve been exploring Kibbe since Jan 2022 - I’ve only really got as far as getting to either in the the C or N families - (people very divided on whether I have width! Most of the time I get DC but I feel like a lot of people get that when your body type is ‘unclear’) now I’m trying to get an idea of how essence/Image ID plays a part to help narrow it further!

    • @stephallen9819
      @stephallen9819 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      I have had the DC comment too when I'm pretty sure I'm SN. What helped me was Ally Arts recent 'dressing soft natural for summer' video. Also I feel like width is something we generally feel about ourselves when picking clothes. I have always felt like I have to 'accomodate' the width in my ribcage. I find it the biggest factor when trying to buy dresses or tops that are structured around the ribs. And also if you look at verified SN celebrities that don't have big line backer shoulders at all, I think that is an internet misconception of width

    • @SoyJGAko
      @SoyJGAko Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      I have a similar Kibbe journey!! I’m basically certain that I’m an SC although I believe I give off SN vibes since I have broad shoulders, but after digging through the Reddit Kibbe rabbit hole I see that any type can have broadness in shoulders without having actual Kibbe width. That being said I would love to see content on the difference between broad shoulders & kibbe width

    • @emskily94
      @emskily94 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@stephallen9819 see I don’t think I’ve ever really had to think about Kibbe width when buying clothes, I have a decent number of blouses made with a pretty structured material that I don’t have trouble wearing, at least not that I’ve noticed!

  • @emilyannamanda
    @emilyannamanda Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    I mean, I can have some triggering feelings from people, bullying skinny people, but I still feel like I can look at this unbiased Lee

  • @anajankovic2523
    @anajankovic2523 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    My process was rather similar to yours (except I was never accepted to the Strictly Kibbe group). The test results said pure Classic, but I figured I had more sharpness than pure C, so I typed myself DC.
    Then I learned of height restrictions. Since I was 5'9", I immediateley fell into the tall types group. I was typed SD by majority, some suspected I was pure D. I settled with SD after having some type resistance at the beginning, and started my style journey.
    After two years of practicing Kibbe, I see myself as a very yang SD, or somewhere in between of SD and D. For SD I have quite a lot of sharpness, but compared to pure Ds I look much softer. I need to blend in recommendations for both types to look my best.
    Some guidelines, that should distinguish between the two types, actually made me more confused at some point. For example, I wear both ornamental / costume and geometric jewelry equally well. I look best in geometric patterns, and sharp structured cuts, but I need the fabrics to be moderately soft. I look blah if I wear outfits that are too soft, but I look overwhelmed in overly sharp clothes.
    My style has changed, but not too much, in total:
    - my skirts are longer (below knees to midi length, as opposed to above knees lenght I used to wear)
    - I've almost entirely ditched the blazers and started collecting knee length cardigans, coatigans, and trench coats
    - I've discovered some new necklines that really flatter me (Carmen neckline, boat neckline, very narrow and deep V nekline, slightly asymmetrical neckline, for example)
    - I don't even try to include floral prints, polkadots, overly drapey cuts, overly stiff fabrics into my wardrobe anymore. I just know these won't work for me

  • @girlysword
    @girlysword Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

    Could you do a video about busts and what they do or maybe rather don't have to do with kibbe body types. I think women with large busts might assume that they are a soft type but from the little bit of research i've done i've that that may not actually be the case?

  • @TheMbroegas
    @TheMbroegas Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    Very informative , thank you. I’m always in doubt as I have double curve , short waist , wide hips that make my legs look taller. On Freely Kibbe most say I have vertical that eliminates my curves so they suggest SD. I have doubts as I am only 5’4 and they say that height don’t matter. It gets rather confusing 😅

  • @Katieudu
    @Katieudu Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    Love this! I’m a fellow soft classic!

  • @forgotmyun
    @forgotmyun Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    Being 5’8, luckily eliminated most of my options down to 3😂😂 I could eliminate D, but now SD and FN are incredibly close

  • @carolynduncan3117
    @carolynduncan3117 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    When I took the quiz I got theatrical romantic as well! Makes me wonder what I really am

  • @trompeta79
    @trompeta79 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    So could you say Ellie-Jean could dress day to day as a soft classic and for big nights out as a theatrical romantic and both work but have different impacts and vibes? Seems like a good way to go about it and have fun.

  • @nattokki
    @nattokki Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    "Use this as a tool, not a rule" SO true

  • @healthydelights867
    @healthydelights867 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    I've settled down with SN I've mostly been told SN AND SD.

  • @Lamasjournal
    @Lamasjournal Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    I would love how to learn to do this for men. I want to help my husband a little with his fashion sense, but I really struggle translating all that I have learned about women’s fashion to men. Any resources?

  • @killerhentai586
    @killerhentai586 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    My jorney wasn't easy either. When i checked the Kibbe body types i saw some of my features in the SD examples. For some time i thought i can be FN, but the deconstructed FN lines were looking sloppy on me. I didn't know where to implement the SD elements, i started to add some form fitted clothing little by little, but for some reason i couldn't wear lush details. Then i have heard that Kibbr is very rigid with his hight limits, and after 5'8 you can be only D,SD or FN (i am 5'9)And i though i can be a D, but the D lines were looking very stiff on. Then i discovered the essences and i tured out to have ethereal-classic blend, which explained why i couldn't wear big bold lush details that well. And i tried to recreate some outfits of Sofia Vergara but with diffrend deals, and some of Monica Belluci's outfits with very small changes and somehow they worked on my frame. Then i said to myself "Aha, so SD it is!" and i sent some photos of myself in reedit group about kibbe in FN,D and SD lines, and most of the people were agree with the asuption i can be SD.

  • @sophierosebisou8420
    @sophierosebisou8420 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +47

    An important tip is “perceived height”! Some people look taller than they actually are. Head size also effects how tall we look, which determines vertical lines. Actually trying on the different “image type” clothing recommendations helped me solidify my Soft Natural type. (Aly Art has great videos explaining the types recommended silhouettes/lines of clothing.). Remember this is NOT fashion style aesthetics, but analyzing the shape of the body.

    • @gaelle8844
      @gaelle8844 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +9

      Perceived height can’t indicate vertical. Head size is also somewhat irrelevant to typing, and imo, aswell as length of limbs compared to torso. It can be relevant in terms of understanding your proportions, but its not enough to make you petite or have vertical (and as for the limbs, be a gamine). I think these two tips have definitely contributed to forgetting that (1) Kibbe’s system mainly has to do with the way fabric interacts with your silhouette. (2) That being typed accurately can only really happen irl. Perception has more to do with the conditions of a picture (ex. distortion, posing, lighting) than your body. You wouldn’t mistake Sarah Jessica Parker (verified FN) as a tall woman when she’s 5’3 irl.
      Vertical is seen from shoulders to the knees. If you have elongation or noticeably straight lines in that area, it can indicate vertical. A good way to confirm is to test different lines, which I really appreciate you mentioning!! For vertical, that means long and more structured fabrics. If your body can handle it, not be swallowed, and you feel you look better than usual, you probably have vertical. *It is possible to be petite+vertical as in needing short but straight lines (FG).
      So from different traits that can define your silhouette (width, vertical, curve, double curve, ect.), you can at least find your family. I don’t remember who said this, but you can’t reverse engineer your way through kibbe. Having small hands isn’t what’s going to make you ex. a romantic, or even petite; your hands aren’t wearing your clothes. It’s about your overall impression, coherence.

    • @bertet9928
      @bertet9928 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +6

      Vertical has NOTHING TO DO WITH HEAD SIZE OR HOW TALL YOU LOOK IN PHOTOS. Everyone looks taller in photos. Sorry but you’ve been given misinformation. Vertical is simply elongation or straight lines between shoulders and knees.

    • @northwoodfalls1403
      @northwoodfalls1403 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@bertet9928 well, yes and no. It isn’t just in photos. And it isn’t just the way fabric flows on your body as another poster stipulated. It’s the OVERALL impression your particular proportions give. What makes babies “cute”? It’s their head to body proportions. Their large heads in proportion to their bodies make them appear even smaller than they are. I had a very long baby, but said baby’s head was very large and round in comparison to their body and looked much smaller as a result. A friend of mine had a shorter baby with a smaller head in proportion to their body and looked longer than they were. If your head is larger in proportion to the width of your shoulders and torso, you WILL appear smaller to people. Even if you are quite tall. One of the features SJP has that lends to her overall impression of vertical even though she is quite petite is that the width of her head in proportion to her broad shoulders and chest make her appear taller than she is. If she had a round, broad head and narrower shoulders and torso, she would appear as petite as she actually is. She obviously cannot have, literally, a “long” vertical line when she is barely 5’3”. It is the IMPRESSION of a long vertical line that ALL of her proportions add up to. It isn’t just “straight lines” from shoulder to knees. There are very curvaceous women who are most decidedly not “straight” who are very tall and hence are classified as Soft Dramatics or Flamboyant Naturals depending on the wether they are narrow or broad, blunt or sharp. The problem with the system is that it is all subjective. You cannot cram any one human body into any one category perfectly. Celebrities are already a bad source to be using for examples because they, as a selected for group, are already outside the norm. They tend to be much more symmetrical and proportionate and we only see them in two dimensional images. It’s very hard to find people in “real life” who conform as neatly as the Kibbe certified celebrities do to the various categories.

    • @gaelle8844
      @gaelle8844 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@northwoodfalls1403 1. Your proportions are not apart of your image identity. Kierra Knightly (D) has long torso/short legs. Sheryll Lee Ralph (D) has a big head. Yet their proportions have not kept them from having a dominant vertical line and being verified dramatics. Proportions as a determinant for kibbe id or accommodations is incredibly limiting, same can be said for using the face or specific body parts to id. That is why plenty consider the kibbe test unhelpful and why Kibbe doesn’t use the face to type anymore, as it has lost it’s relevancy in understanding how clothes fit our bodies. His recent priorities truly concern accommodations.
      2. Babies are inherently “petite”; compact and small scale. Whatever their head shape, nothing can make them vertical dominant.
      3. Zendaya has a very round head and still looks tall. Rihanna (SD) has a very long head and still looks tall. Horizontally or vertically, their heads were not enough to keep me and plenty of others from seeing their height first. They do have ingenue essence tho.
      4. Either way, vertical is a reality: elongation and or straight lines from shoulders to knees. That is the priority, or else there truly is nothing to accommodate.
      5. You can be curvy and vertical dominant (elongation from shoulder to knees). Can also be “yang curves”; see image examples online. You can be petite and vertical (straight lines from shoulder to knees -> FGs).

    • @northwoodfalls1403
      @northwoodfalls1403 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      @@gaelle8844 I think we have a different understanding of what “proportion” means in this context. How anyone can discuss body types and dismiss proportions is quite the puzzle, I will say. I don’t think you understood what I was getting at with anything I said and that’s fine. That could be how I attempted to express my thought. You sound very confident and I’m not even remotely an expert. I do, however, see people struggling to see the lines of their bodies and occasionally I leave comments in case it helps someone shift how they’re thinking about it. Kibbe himself seems to be forever fiddling with his own theory, so there’s that. Unless we all wait with baited breathe for his word from on high about a persons type, we’re not all going to agree and that’s normal and perfectly fine.

  • @caravanrose
    @caravanrose Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    (To parody Saffy Monsoon) Red carpets everywhere (and our eyeballs) might heave a sigh of relief if celebrity stylists were trained in Kibbe body types!

  • @northwoodfalls1403
    @northwoodfalls1403 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

    His eradication of the “pure” types, like the Natural category is ridiculous. He sounds like a nut job to be frank. Not every “natural” type is either very strong in their vertical or soft. Jennifer Aniston is the poster girl for Naturals for a reason. She is neither tall or long looking nor is she soft. Not taking the bones and shapes of your face into account also seems silly. There are hints there that can help narrow down categories. The system has been helpful to me in honing in on the details of my clothing choices and there is definitely something to it. He and the others who have contributed to versions of this system have identified important features of women’s bodies that affect how their clothing looks on them, but like most things once the internet gets it’s hands on it, seems to have devolved into a weird pseudo cult lol. It really was helpful for me to see my bodies underlying structure and not get distracted by my perceived flaws or features I wish I had and all that. It took a while to silence the noise and SEE my body. It was hilarious because my mother had always told me I had an hourglass figure. I thought I had narrow shoulders and that I looked short. *Actually* my shoulders are noticeably broader than my hips, I have a very short torso and I’m alllll leg and long arms, broad blunt bones from head to toe, and people are always surprised to hear I’m not inches taller than I am. Even if I’m standing right next to them and they are clearly taller than me, they always say they thought I was about their height. It is important to be aware of your *dominant* features. I do have curve. Quite a bit of it, actually. But the width and vertical together dominate and if I accommodate for curve as if for soft natural, it throws my proportions off and it just looks weird. The curve I do have means I can sometimes lean in that direction and get away with it, but on the main, the FN lines suit me best. They also gel more with my personality and what I feel most myself in so that wins for me every time.

  • @YouTubeFailed
    @YouTubeFailed Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

    I love the story line here. We've made body typing a science, but it was a niche cult she had to invade. She made some mistakes because she didn't realize it was egg walk time, and gets rejected by the cult. She openly tells us all this as she does her best to educate us... About body lines. I am so glad I found this woman, she has old school reporter mentality. 😂

  • @ihay472
    @ihay472 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    I struggled with finding my kibbe ID for the longest time before giving up. Basically now I call myself a petite SC. I know I have to accommodate petite which means I can't be a SC. But I style myself exactly like SC so... I don't care anymore what my ID is, I claim this one.

  • @shelleygoodwin6371
    @shelleygoodwin6371 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    I considered myself TR reading up on it and from quiz results, I am 5'0 so that's a hard one cause obviously I am very short, I do not and will never look tall.. but I may look taller than I actually am esp in photos. I perceive width to my frame from my shoulders and hips, but trying to look at it more objectively I probably look quite narrow to people purely in my structure, even though there is plenty of curve. I perceive myself as quite curvy cause I know I have a relatively slim waist and I have a big ass butt 😅 so there's a lot of shape and curve there to accommodate in my clothes.. but overall does my line look that curvy to people? Perhaps not 😂 I think sometimes going by style and working backwards, as in these are TR clothes do they look good on me? The answer to that is yes. I NEED waist emphasis, I always shine more if the item has a small detailed pattern or small details on it somehow, I can do lace and frills easily but not necessarily anything too puffy or flowy looks a bit wrong on me, I can do broken lines but I absolutely don't need to. The "flowy boho deconstructed" look that supposedly works great for more natural types, I do like but they rarely look good on me unless they also are particularly feminine and detailed, I also like classic lines but I probably wear them a lot and I tend to look underdressed and daggy in them

  • @ngaiosbrain
    @ngaiosbrain Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    I have width, petite and double curve. I think that my dominant need is petite with width and curve as secondary needs. I think most would type me as soft natural so I do use some natural recommendations but I look best in broken lines and pattern, so I also steal from gamine.

  • @ilariatogni5818
    @ilariatogni5818 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    When i first discovered the kibbe system (years ago at this point) i took the test and since i am on the shorter side with an hourglass figure... i resulted of course Theatrical Romantic (which i am not really) at that time little did i know about "vertical", " Blunt" , "sharpness" and so on...
    If you are not familiar with all this the quiz is pretty misleading!

  • @emilyannamanda
    @emilyannamanda Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    Oh my God, I want to be in this rabbit hole and do the same thing for myself because like I really have to look at my body objectively, but you think it be pretty easy to figure out since I’m 5’8” skinny

  • @kaydunton9303
    @kaydunton9303 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

    I'm thinking a short cut would be to go to a store that has a range of clothes and in the dressing room take pictures of yourself wearing the outfits of each body type and the onye that you look the best in is probably it.

  • @naolucillerandom5280
    @naolucillerandom5280 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    I always think I'm overestimating my width because of insecurities, but between the shoulders, chubby upper arms, and chest, damn does my top half make a prescence in an outline 😂
    I wish I could see more of those outlines, because compared to the one you showed, I can already see that I have a different sillhouette. But I have a suspicion that all roads lead back to Soft Natural.

  • @naturallyingrid
    @naturallyingrid Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +5

    6:34 😂 what did you do?? đŸ€Ł

    • @pinkroses135
      @pinkroses135 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      Improved it and stole the thunder 😂

    • @elliejeanroyden
      @elliejeanroyden  Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +5

      All the information in the group has to be private, and of course I’ve made these social media pages so I can’t really stay (I’m just guessing, they never gave me an explicit reason). If that is the case, I think it’s completely fair - there are privileges of being in the group and I was well-aware of the contingencies - it’s just the way it goes! X

    • @naturallyingrid
      @naturallyingrid Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

      @@elliejeanroyden that’s too bad. I’m sure you’d be such an asset to the group. Their loss!

  • @lillearen2821
    @lillearen2821 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

    Wow, I was not ready to know that being 171 sm automaticly gives me vertical. And not sure it does to be honest. My main complex always was that my legs look short and heavy.

    • @smokee1325
      @smokee1325 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      172 and I feel the same! I've heard there are a few outlier verified celebrities that break the height rule. I also have a really large head so I don't really think I look like I have vertical! it's proportional and frequently I look really short!

  • @Metaphoreign
    @Metaphoreign Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    After a lifetime of dressing in somewhat gamine styles I'm learning that I have to accommodate my vertical (I'm either dramatic or flamboyant natural) and I'm really struggling to figure out what styles of dresses work for me.