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Making Some Frilly Victorian Underwear || 1890s Combinations

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  • čas přidán 8. 02. 2019
  • Basically a documentary on how I made a pair of c. 1890s Victorian combinations using Victorian patterns and stitching techniques.
    THINGS MENTIONED:
    Agnes Walker, ’Manual of Needlework and Cutting Out’ (for the pattern) archive.org/de...
    Bertha Banner, ‘Household Sewing with Home Dressmaking’ play.google.co...
    Hecht Sewing Machine and Motor: 304 W. 38th St. NYC
    For a more modern (read: practical) construction diary of 90s combinations, Enchanted Rose Costumes has one coming soon! / enchantedrosecostume
    Shoes worn at the end are the ‘Gibsons’ by American Duchess.
    MATERIALS USED:
    White cotton: Fabric Garden, NYC. 1.5 yd
    Insertion lace: Joyce Trimming, NYC. 24 yds single edged lace (to be doubled)
    Waist and cuff insertion lace: East Coast Trimming, NYC. 2.5 yd
    Satin ribbon: M&J Trimming, NYC. 2.5 yd
    Closure ribbon: M&J Trimming, NYC. 1/2 yd
    Cotton thread: John Lewis
    Silk thread (for seaming insertion lace together and attaching to cotton): John Lewis
    Cookies, approximately 8 needed to fuel finishing
    IMAGE CREDITS:
    1. “Drawers”, 1887, the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Accession number C.I.46.27.4 www.metmuseum....
    2. “Underwear” (chemise), 1860-65, the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Accession number C.I.44.48.12a, b www.metmuseum....
    3. “Combination”, 1890-1900, the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Accession number 2009.300.2368 www.metmuseum....
    Want to get started with hand sewing?
    🧵
    🕯Check out my Skillshare original course, “Hand Sewing Basics: Working Wonders with Fabric, Needle & Thread”. To sign up for a free trial and take the class, visit skl.sh/bernade...
    This channel is made possible through the generous support of Patreon members. To become a patron, visit / bernadettebanner (although videos will remain free for you here regardless).
    Beyond CZcams:
    IG @bernadettebanner / bernadettebanner
    Management contact for business enquiries:
    bernadette@helmtalentgroup.com
    bernadettebann...
    MUSIC CREDITS:
    “Web Weaver’s Dance” by Asher Fulero, CZcams Audio Library
    Local Forecast by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommon...)
    Source: incompetech.com...
    Artist: incompetech.com/
    Waltz (Tschikovsky Op. 40) Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
    creativecommons...

Komentáře • 4K

  • @Arthur-yf9yv
    @Arthur-yf9yv Před 4 lety +4530

    "For pity's sake Bertha, it's going to be _under_ your clothes, and even when someone has reason to see your undergarments, darling, they should _not_ be preoccupied with inspecting the blessed _whip stitching!"_
    - The obligatory sensible aunt character

  • @bedroombunny9529
    @bedroombunny9529 Před 5 lety +3872

    "You are probably bored-"
    You underestimate how entertained I am by repetitive tasks.

    • @cheryllgates181
      @cheryllgates181 Před 4 lety +67

      Bedroom Bunny I found this simply fascinating, not repetitive at all.

    • @jessirarara
      @jessirarara Před 4 lety +45

      Absolutely this! And at the risk of sounding a smidge creepy... she has lovely hands.

    • @nathanaelraynard2641
      @nathanaelraynard2641 Před 4 lety +31

      "You underestimate my power"

    • @Alltheshiny.reneeowens
      @Alltheshiny.reneeowens Před 4 lety +28

      exactly.. i can drop what i'm doing and watch her hands stitching at any time.. no shame.. i have nothing more important to do, i must sit here and watch her hand stitch, i MUST!

    • @lokiscoffeerose663
      @lokiscoffeerose663 Před 4 lety +25

      Watching this series always makes me want to go and hand-fell a frilly, exciting garment of my own.

  • @a.rodriguez4037
    @a.rodriguez4037 Před 3 lety +2028

    Bernadette: "These videos Are. Not. Tutorials."
    Quarantine me, halfway through whip-stitching the lace: "Huh. Wonder who that's for."

  • @denisewarrick4461
    @denisewarrick4461 Před 4 lety +1335

    I have sewn all of my life. I made my own clothes back in the 70's during the polyester era when I wanted and needed cotton clothing for work. I made my daughters clothing up until I went back to work when she was 9. Then when we bought a house I made curtains, duvet covers, pillows etc. I have in the last 15 years been making quilts. I am no stranger to sewing. I just finished watching this video and I am amazed at what saw. Your sewing is absolutely beautiful . The tiny stitches. the pattern drafting. the material you used all are beyond anything I could imagine. Your work is far beyond my realm of expertise. Congratulations on a task superbly accomplished.

    • @lindareed9776
      @lindareed9776 Před 3 lety +49

      I couldn't agree with you more. Bernadette is a perfectionist .a beautiful young working woman.

    • @astrothsknot
      @astrothsknot Před 3 lety +46

      @@lindareed9776 you're already ahead though, cos BB is a firm believer in being able to make and repair your own clothes. I can repair clothes, but i can't make them. I've just bought a sewing machine, so hopefully soon that will change.

  • @thepeacefish
    @thepeacefish Před 5 lety +5114

    Real life obligations: nah I don’t have time sorry
    Bernadette making antique underwear for 47 minutes: yes absolutely *makes popcorn*

    • @annaforevermore
      @annaforevermore Před 5 lety +11

      Same!

    • @belindacoba5158
      @belindacoba5158 Před 5 lety +22

      Same although I did try to do my taks to properly enjoy this video

    • @emmaleebuzzard1023
      @emmaleebuzzard1023 Před 5 lety +10

      This is me right now 🤣

    • @joannasmith4793
      @joannasmith4793 Před 5 lety +7

      Same .. lots of things go do. Under things making video

    • @101boertjie
      @101boertjie Před 5 lety +30

      I so agree with you, she makes things look interesting, and she is educational at the same time, not many people can educate in an interesting way.

  • @helengrimshaw7696
    @helengrimshaw7696 Před 5 lety +3971

    My new aesthetic:
    Bernadette using modern slang in her own articulate way (“I was no small part SaLtY”)

    • @WeskersCheeksEnjoyer
      @WeskersCheeksEnjoyer Před 5 lety +224

      Also when she said that this period of clothing was "her jam" :P

    • @clydeogborn8141
      @clydeogborn8141 Před 5 lety +155

      Salty is not just modern slang. It was also used as slang in the 1860's meaning racy, sexy. It was used to mean irritated or angry by 1920 often in the phrase "jump salty". If it was found in writing in 1860 it was probably in use in speech a long time before that. The slang meaning hasn't really changed. I often heard the word used in this way when I was a child. It has recently come into use again. It is not new slang. It is just new to you.

    • @charleshills1408
      @charleshills1408 Před 5 lety +69

      My new aesthetic:
      Bernadette
      Just
      Bernadette

    • @theresebrandser
      @theresebrandser Před 4 lety +37

      This is the proper way, but ain’t nobody got time for that. 😂 Stuck with me from a previous video

    • @vincelestrade3758
      @vincelestrade3758 Před 4 lety +22

      @@clydeogborn8141 I do not even want to know how you know that lol. The etymology of slang is interesting, though.

  • @illiengalene2285
    @illiengalene2285 Před 3 lety +567

    "Nobody's going to see the undergarments, [...]"
    Months later at costume college: *wearing the combinations for the pool party*

    • @dbseamz
      @dbseamz Před 3 lety +40

      I get this is probably a joke, but she used silk ribbon for trim and also said to NEVER let water touch silk.
      ...Come to think of it, why put silk ribbon in the "washable" layer?

    • @mellyb.1347
      @mellyb.1347 Před 3 lety +13

      @@dbseamz that was bugging me a bit the whole time 😆 Tis pretty though.

    • @ChocolateWitch13
      @ChocolateWitch13 Před 3 lety +29

      @@dbseamz you take it off when you wash it

    • @gigiw.7650
      @gigiw.7650 Před 2 lety +13

      @@dbseamz
      You take the ribbons out when you wash them? Yes?

    • @dbseamz
      @dbseamz Před 2 lety +4

      @@gigiw.7650 I think so, but would the person who wrote the above comment remove the ribbons before wearing it to the pool?

  • @m.murano749
    @m.murano749 Před 2 lety +325

    "These Happy Golden Years" by Laura Ingalls Wilder--quote from the preparations for her August 1885 wedding to Almanzo: "All the white sewing was quickly done on the machine. Laura brought out the dozens of yards of white thread lace that she had knitted and crocheted, and like magic the machine’s flashing needle stitched the lace edgings to the open ends of the pillow cases, the throats and wrists of the high-necked, long-sleeved nightgowns, the necks and armholes of the chemises, and the leg-bands of the drawers." Sounds like permission to machine sew undergarments in period!

    • @MickeyMallone.
      @MickeyMallone. Před 2 lety +23

      I suppose it could be a replacement for the fact that Bernadette doesn't make her own fabric like Laura, so goes with the next best thing? Also, if her descriptions of the agony it was for her to sew weren't just childhood exaggerations, Laura hated hand-sewing- that was Mary's thing, even after she went blind.

    • @rosequartz4102
      @rosequartz4102 Před 2 lety +22

      Imagine the time it took to tatt all that lace!! Yards and yards? Heavens.....

    • @lacegardener
      @lacegardener Před rokem +9

      @@rosequartz4102 once you get the pattern down it (tatting) does go faster, and "in the day" you were working on your "hope chest" items well in advance anyway.

    • @lisalu910
      @lisalu910 Před 11 měsíci

      @@MickeyMallone. Where did Laura make her own fabric? She knitted or crocheted the lace, but she never wove fabric.

    • @MickeyMallone.
      @MickeyMallone. Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@lisalu910 I'm going to go out on a limb and say that I was probably referring to the lace as fabric.

  • @MsDaniBub
    @MsDaniBub Před 4 lety +3946

    Me, lying in bed, never having made a piece of clothing in my life: “ye babe defo go for the button loop the lace is too delicate”

    • @Saskatchetooner
      @Saskatchetooner Před 4 lety +36

      Love that 😋

    • @MsDaniBub
      @MsDaniBub Před 4 lety +78

      Olivia Litton “yeah babe definitely go for the button loop the lace is too delicate” sorry haha I’m so bad with my typing slang

    • @hawkenparker1790
      @hawkenparker1790 Před 4 lety +25

      Oh my god. Someone heard me yelling in the past.... I said the same thing. Hahaha!

    • @kateglazier3726
      @kateglazier3726 Před 4 lety +6

      Hawken Parker I just love that name ‘Hawken’ where is it from?

    • @hawkenparker1790
      @hawkenparker1790 Před 4 lety +12

      @@kateglazier3726 Hawken is an old black powdered rifle

  • @KnittwittGoblinLady
    @KnittwittGoblinLady Před 4 lety +6215

    Imagine having your underwear displayed in a museum.

    • @asheshurricane391
      @asheshurricane391 Před 4 lety +864

      imagine being a vampire, going to a museum and seeing your underwear. like how embrassing would that be😂

    • @CanalTremocos
      @CanalTremocos Před 4 lety +403

      @@asheshurricane391 In this scenario I'm the most excited about the museum that opens at nighttime.

    • @asheshurricane391
      @asheshurricane391 Před 4 lety +61

      @@CanalTremocos yeah i totally agree

    • @TheSchnieder6
      @TheSchnieder6 Před 4 lety +176

      @@CanalTremocos vampires are kinky, their sunscreen is SPF Latex

    • @lilenwasnothere6867
      @lilenwasnothere6867 Před 4 lety +162

      @@TheSchnieder6 please never say that again

  • @jeanpotter4603
    @jeanpotter4603 Před 4 lety +267

    I’m just trippin because my grandma was born in 1898 (she was 45 when she had my mom) so she could have been dressing in Edwardian fashion in her teens. Grandma- wearing britches?! And layers upon layers?? Wow

    • @bethhull8463
      @bethhull8463 Před 3 lety +60

      My grandmother was born in 1899, and her mother had been a seamstress for wealthy women before she came to Michigan as a bride. The garments she made for her daughter's were stunning.

    • @peterdeane4490
      @peterdeane4490 Před 2 lety +8

      My grandma was born about the same time (1902 I think). I'm not sure what she would have worn as a young girl, but I think that her life as a homesteader and farmer wouldn't have run to a lot of lace. She lived to be 100.

    • @Choosefaithnotfear
      @Choosefaithnotfear Před rokem +2

      One of mine was born 1896, my grandpa was born about ten years earlier, I think lol . Crazy to think o 10:25 f all these women went through… like dreaded wash days. 😊

  • @mayflowermatriarch5284
    @mayflowermatriarch5284 Před 4 lety +554

    The thought of hand-sewing makes me break out in hives. So why, pray tell, do I find these videos mesmerizing? The enthusiasm? The verging-on-obsessive attention to details? The marvelous diction? All of the above.

    • @lafemmeanglaise
      @lafemmeanglaise Před 3 lety +26

      "So why, pray tell,..." I think she's rubbing off on you. :D

    • @mayflowermatriarch5284
      @mayflowermatriarch5284 Před 3 lety +18

      @@lafemmeanglaise Ah, no, I've always had an antiquarian tendency. However, I am more persnickety in grammar than in sewing. I love fine clothes but have neither the patience nor the talent to produce them myself.

    • @lafemmeanglaise
      @lafemmeanglaise Před 3 lety +2

      Annag Chandler the same here. :)

    • @kansmill
      @kansmill Před 3 lety +12

      @@mayflowermatriarch5284 There’s something beautiful in watching a master at work if you have even an ounce of appreciation for the results. For that reason, I’m in awe of musicians and am not one myself in any significant degree.
      It also annoys me no end when people who have a month of ballet lessons try to claim equal mastery of techniques that I had 7 years worth of training in (and wouldn’t have claimed anything approaching mastery for another 7 years more).

    • @imfriggenpride8503
      @imfriggenpride8503 Před 2 lety

      I honestly agree

  • @iqraaaliya1230
    @iqraaaliya1230 Před 4 lety +4830

    *It's 3am and I need to sleep, instead I'm here watching this pretty talented lady make historically accurate undergarment.. nice*

    • @lexibyrd4930
      @lexibyrd4930 Před 4 lety +79

      Why am I doing the same thing 😂

    • @donnakeeley7924
      @donnakeeley7924 Před 4 lety +138

      6:15am... Sun is shining... Cats fell asleep waiting for me... Can hardly keep my eyes open... Watching this person drawing and sewing, underwear... I've finally lost all common sense.

    • @kevinmillard1323
      @kevinmillard1323 Před 4 lety +27

      and now you can stay up to 3 am every night.

    • @sammiperry4516
      @sammiperry4516 Před 4 lety +15

      Iqra Aaliya I relate to that. I watch her videos late night all the time

    • @kezkai
      @kezkai Před 4 lety +18

      Just turned 3am and here I am lol

  • @gmkgoat
    @gmkgoat Před 4 lety +4086

    You ever wonder if people 100 years from now will sit around trying to recreate our underpants? I hope there's a lady with a nice voice poring over a book of photos of Hanes undies.

    • @notmyopinion4981
      @notmyopinion4981 Před 4 lety +406

      she will probably talk like this: 'y'all need to excuse my stupid ass for f*****ing up.' Bc that be our era

    • @m.service5584
      @m.service5584 Před 4 lety +44

      What a hilarious thought!

    • @sphong0610
      @sphong0610 Před 4 lety +565

      2119: Sooo, ya bi*ches see dat dis Victoria's Secret bra is polyester n cotton rite? Dis was before graphene infused nano silk was available to the public in the 2050s. Of course, now we just wear holograms.

    • @opalplisetsky6762
      @opalplisetsky6762 Před 4 lety +52

      @@sphong0610 🤣

    • @youmakemehappy7
      @youmakemehappy7 Před 4 lety +12

      Hahahhhha

  • @Pheluv
    @Pheluv Před 4 lety +394

    I inherited boxes of my great-grandmothers undergarments, they are incredible, they almost make me weep when I look at the amount of work that went into all the tiny stitches and embellishments the care they put into it is inspiring.

    • @jayneterry8701
      @jayneterry8701 Před 3 lety +27

      This is why I wondered if there was any older woman in her building or life that could have help interpret the parts she got stuck on? Stories from elders can add amazing fulness to our life!

    • @suzannemortimer9752
      @suzannemortimer9752 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Oh I envy you!

  • @bluefeenyx5040
    @bluefeenyx5040 Před 4 lety +175

    I would love to make a pair of these in black to satisfy my little goth heart. Absolutely stunning

  • @Djoodibooti
    @Djoodibooti Před 5 lety +2801

    Call me a harlot if it pleases you, but I would absolutely wear that combinations out as a complete outfit.

  • @leveticki4293
    @leveticki4293 Před 4 lety +4038

    Tired Victorian mother with 7 kids making something: Yea I don’t care about stitches, if it holds together they will wear it.

    • @notscarlet8321
      @notscarlet8321 Před 4 lety +696

      "if my kids tear this apart, I'm going to scREAM-"
      - some poor mother, probably

    • @denscomet9163
      @denscomet9163 Před 4 lety +6

      Lol

    • @ginamoncada78
      @ginamoncada78 Před 4 lety +260

      My nan (who is now 89) always made her twins all of their clothes. Back in the day that was very much the norm. She also made and used her own cloth diapers and had no washing machine (obviously). I have no idea how mother's did all they did back then (and had so many more children than we do now!) but I do know that everything was cared for, handed down and adapted to the new wearer. Nothing went to waste, all clothes were fixed (even under garments!). I completely admire women/mother's of the past. They had so much to do!

    • @benlucas3625
      @benlucas3625 Před 4 lety +22

      No, sounds like modern people. They took more pride in things well done back then.

    • @donaldgrayson3817
      @donaldgrayson3817 Před 4 lety +80

      @@benlucas3625 Hand made things were relatively speaking cheaper back then. You had your choice of dozens of tailors, dressmakers, etc. in even a small town. Buying something bespoke now can be a major expense. There is also the aspect of style. Modern styles change every year, whereas historical styles lasted for lengthy periods, so there's less reason today to desire clothing that lasts.

  • @aliciagarcia8603
    @aliciagarcia8603 Před 3 lety +191

    This crazy attention to detail is so satisfying and therapeutic. The calm she gives even if things don’t go right is like a bob ross feeling.

    • @catslove3884
      @catslove3884 Před 2 lety

      Why do people refer to Bob Ross? Who or what is a Bob Ross? I don't understand.

    • @magnum_cx8805
      @magnum_cx8805 Před 2 lety +6

      @@catslove3884 He was a painter who did tutorials back in like the 80’s and they’re all super calming, encouraging and inspiring.

    • @ladyzapzap9514
      @ladyzapzap9514 Před rokem

      Better than bob ross.

  • @jesusgirl2016
    @jesusgirl2016 Před 4 lety +135

    The curved waistband is something I think we have lost in modern clothing. As a very curvy, plus sized women, I have found that straight waistbands don't lay nicely, but curved ones fit better and allow the top to sit nicely and gives way for the garment to sit nicely on the hips. Jeans truly benefit from curved waists. The leg movemen has be so interested and I'm curious how jeans and pants would work with that. I will be playing it myself for sure!

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU Před rokem +13

      Agreed. so many pants look ugly because they don't respect the natural curve of he waist, nor follow the natural shape of the leg.

  • @kscheuerman5378
    @kscheuerman5378 Před 5 lety +1274

    I am a grandma (57 yrs. old) so when I tell you, you are wonderful in so many ways you know I mean it. There is something that is so special about you. I appreciate your desire for authenticity and accurate detail. You are a joy to watch!! Thank you! God Bless.

    • @sylvievicenza179
      @sylvievicenza179 Před 5 lety +43

      I am 59 years old and not a grandma (I do not think I will ever be) Lucky K . Scheuerman! I agree with grandma K. I love to watch what you do and love your ideas. I am agnostic! lol (hugging K anyway)

    • @kscheuerman5378
      @kscheuerman5378 Před 5 lety +17

      @2012endofanerror I came back to Bernadette's site because my daughter's friend told me I left a message here & I wanted to re-read it & I found your comment. Sorry I missed it. No plagiarism here we just are in complete agreement! Take care.

    • @kscheuerman5378
      @kscheuerman5378 Před 5 lety +11

      @@sylvievicenza179 I am sorry I missed your cute comment from 1 month back. Take care.

    • @slyremarcs
      @slyremarcs Před 4 lety +20

      I hit the big 6-0 this year and I love this gal! Her sense of humor and ability to take her work seriously but herself not too seriously, AND offer me a cookie on the way out is priceless.

    • @blondebimbowannabe
      @blondebimbowannabe Před 4 lety +48

      This comment chain warms my heart for some reason. I am also astounded by her talent!

  • @theostheories6548
    @theostheories6548 Před 4 lety +1881

    “My good friend Bertha banner” everyone knows it’s just you, an immortal.

    • @marselsidbskd4503
      @marselsidbskd4503 Před 3 lety +15

      Ryn’s randomness gcgdfveygd exactly

    • @nicolakunz231
      @nicolakunz231 Před 3 lety +76

      Shhhhh. Don't out immortals, they will do so when they are ready.

    • @silentcreature136
      @silentcreature136 Před 3 lety +64

      Omg yes this now has to be a full conspiracyyyy. She's making these videos to act as proof that she didnt just "pop out of nowhere" so that the government won't get sus. They're to show how she learned what she knows, but really, she's Bertha banner and has possible ghost written other famous sewing guides just so that she can prove that her techniques are authentic because otherwise we would only be learning second rate techniques from second rate tailors and seamstresses who just wanted fame.

    • @Skye_Writer
      @Skye_Writer Před 3 lety +26

      Watch. The day will come when she's filming on the street and has to whip out a sword to defend herself, shouting, "There can be only One!"

    • @CloudyCoraYT
      @CloudyCoraYT Před 3 lety +4

      y e s

  • @ModernLady
    @ModernLady Před rokem +103

    A pair of combinations, Bernadette Banner made,
    With historical sewing, her skill was displayed.
    The fabric was chosen with care and precision,
    The colors were chosen with a great decision.
    The pattern was intricate, with a hint of surprise,
    The waistband proved to be quite the price
    The lace were chosen with a great eye,
    and sewed into the fabric with a skillful try.
    The seams were sewn with a great finesse,
    The combination proved to be a great success.
    From the Metz to Bernadette with a great care,
    The combination was made with a great lace flair.
    These combination is a work of great art,
    Shared with her viewers with a huge heart.

  • @kassandracox7047
    @kassandracox7047 Před 3 lety +42

    This didn't quite cure my depression, but it did make me feel a lot better.

  • @amandahanley7930
    @amandahanley7930 Před 4 lety +503

    You know, I'd never considered it until you pointed it out just now, but those dresses really weren't washed every wear. No wonder "spilling" something on someone is seen as so savage an insult in period dramas and such.

    • @patmaurer8541
      @patmaurer8541 Před 3 lety +48

      No doubt they wore aprons over house dresses during daily activities, to keep even those presentable ;-)

    • @astrothsknot
      @astrothsknot Před 3 lety +5

      @@patmaurer8541 depends on how posh you were

    •  Před 2 lety +7

      Plus soaps weren't as developed as they are now and bleach ruins any fabric pretty quickly if it's overused or added in too much quantity.

  • @lamedrawings
    @lamedrawings Před 4 lety +1168

    "I'm so hyped to get started"
    I've never heard of someone getting so excited on making antique undergarments that is historically accurate.
    I think this might be the best channel I've found this year.

    • @gabreality6656
      @gabreality6656 Před 4 lety +7

      I've watched this series 5 times now and I'm enthralled

    • @littleprincess4615
      @littleprincess4615 Před 4 lety +1

      I’ve watched this VIDEO 5 times and I can’t stop myself anymore

  • @LMADesignsBoutique
    @LMADesignsBoutique Před 10 měsíci +13

    Your uncontainable excitement while talking about your machine being repaired & everything along with it is just so absolutely, wonderfully pure & wholesome; I had to pause the video & my own sewing to tell ya that. Also, thank you sooo much for making your videos, it's like having a friend to sew with and I really appreciate the information I learn from watching (:

  • @MissHargraves1
    @MissHargraves1 Před 4 lety +102

    "Doing it without any modern persons interpretation of how it should be done. This will just be my own interpretation..." Evidence that you're not a modern person, lol. You came from that era :)

  • @Em-xw6vk
    @Em-xw6vk Před 4 lety +1326

    Bernadette speaks with a British person's vocabulary but without the accent lol I love it

    • @JustJenn1192
      @JustJenn1192 Před 4 lety +204

      For the longest time I believed she was british, until I suddenly realised that she doesn't have a British accent

    • @thanhvannguyen1770
      @thanhvannguyen1770 Před 4 lety +48

      @@JustJenn1192 she would be really fit as a British honestly

    • @alizard_love
      @alizard_love Před 4 lety +27

      I was trying to desperately find out what was going on because she sounded like when I was a kid and we played kings and queen and stuff and we would use bad accents and vocabulary.

    • @hannahdiane8451
      @hannahdiane8451 Před 4 lety +60

      She has stereotypical british vocabulary , yeah , a lot of brits don’t actually speak with such vocabulary

    • @amsodoneworkingnow1978
      @amsodoneworkingnow1978 Před 4 lety +39

      @@hannahdiane8451 I believe she was educated in a higher class British university

  • @cassienix2471
    @cassienix2471 Před 5 lety +581

    I'm so old I just realised all the sewing techniques my grams and mum taught me are Victorian techniques. Who knew?

    • @bettybutler1686
      @bettybutler1686 Před 4 lety +76

      I'm a 72 year old survivor of ten years of 4-H (starting in 1958) and years of upholstery for an antique Shoppe and making bridal gowns. I realize my teachers and mentors all instructed us using Victorian ways and means!!!

    • @sherdil3717
      @sherdil3717 Před 4 lety +4

      i mean they dont really change much, just saying

    • @mariahzeh9405
      @mariahzeh9405 Před 4 lety +4

      Betty Butler way off topic but 4-H as in raising and selling animals? I’m in 4-H so that’s why I’m curious

    • @Carlie_flower
      @Carlie_flower Před 4 lety +18

      @@mariahzeh9405 4-h is much more than just animals. There's needlework groups and history groups and archery groups. Many many many different types of 4-H clubs out there. 👍🏻 Go to a local 4-H Fair sometime and you will see there are tons of groups at the fairgrounds and almost all of them are 4-H groups lol

    • @catriziacat1756
      @catriziacat1756 Před 4 lety +9

      I mean is it's not broken don't fix it right?

  • @caitlinquinn79
    @caitlinquinn79 Před 4 lety +162

    Whoever did the captions, thank you for the effort, as a hard of hearing person I appreciate it, and secondly, I love the commentary in brackets 😅 Bernadette does have gorgeous handwriting, and I also am scared to imagine how long the hand stitching took 😛

    • @tf7602
      @tf7602 Před 3 lety +12

      As far as I know Bernadette commissions the captions, to ensure they are up quickly after the video goes up. Though there has to be something g said about community captions. Some videos I've seen have like, 5-10 different languages of subtitles, amazing.

  • @Galaxy_Kal
    @Galaxy_Kal Před 4 lety +292

    Me, a tailor with ADHD: soul dies from watching all the hand sewing I would never be able to do

    • @littleprincess4615
      @littleprincess4615 Před 4 lety +47

      I always run into the same issue when I want to hand sew ANYTHING but the one time I got up to do some hand sewing I didn’t stop until 9 hours later and when I finally stopped the entire thing felt like the more pleasant version of a fever dream

    • @Galaxy_Kal
      @Galaxy_Kal Před 4 lety +13

      @@littleprincess4615 That sounds like something I would do too! I know exactly how it feels, and after you're like " why am I so tired :D "

    • @mohammadherati8067
      @mohammadherati8067 Před 4 lety +23

      That's why ADHD is the best thing. Once absorbed, you are unstoppable 🦸‍♀️

    • @MissPoplarLeaf
      @MissPoplarLeaf Před 4 lety +14

      hyperfocus goooo

    • @erinm2765
      @erinm2765 Před 3 lety +30

      As a bona fide ADHD Human ®️ i will tell you that (once you get the hang of it) it is a perfect repetitive task to keep your hands busy when you have to sit still and watch/listen to something :)

  • @phoebeel
    @phoebeel Před 5 lety +802

    this really helps me appreciate why clothes used to be so expensive!

  • @nannasbraindump6343
    @nannasbraindump6343 Před 5 lety +1329

    "Once we have legs.."
    Me, panicing: "WE DON'T HAVE LEGS?!!"

    • @gorillaau
      @gorillaau Před 5 lety +25

      I can not feel my legs!

    • @Quntah888
      @Quntah888 Před 4 lety +12

      gorillaau I read this in the voice of Olaf (from the Disney movie Frozen 😅)

    • @kinsmansteve
      @kinsmansteve Před 4 lety +23

      I have to admit, I said aloud, "I've always had legs."

    • @El-ee6hz
      @El-ee6hz Před 4 lety +7

      gorillaau I can’t feel my legs when I’m with you

    • @craftgrrl14
      @craftgrrl14 Před 4 lety +1

      "Still got legs! Yes!"

  • @karendepauw7287
    @karendepauw7287 Před 4 lety +50

    Every time I look at extant items I think to my self "my goodness that must have taken quite a bit of time." And then I watch your videos and think, "why yes, yes it did take a long time!" :-)

  • @melissascripts
    @melissascripts Před 3 lety +61

    I want a pair of these for loungewear! Yes, hello 2020. I've not worn "real" clothes for months.

  • @mageillus
    @mageillus Před 4 lety +1596

    Bernadette: “whilst”
    Me: ... subscribes*

    • @emilycheshire
      @emilycheshire Před 4 lety +26

      Wait, isn't "whilst" used nowdays? (English is only my secondary language so I actually use the words I understood and some words like this, so I thought it is normal and used by everyone.)

    • @Deniera
      @Deniera Před 4 lety +30

      @@emilycheshire (beware, English is only my second language as well) I think nowadays "while" is used more commonly. I've lived in England for some time and I don't think I ever (consciously) heard someone use "whilst" in everyday vocabulary

    • @emilycheshire
      @emilycheshire Před 4 lety +17

      @@Deniera Oooh, that is interesting.
      Thank you for the info!
      I actually thought theese words didn't die. I write stuff but somehow the older words seem more welcoming.

    • @happyjellycatsquid
      @happyjellycatsquid Před 4 lety +39

      My English teacher leaves an « archaic » note on my papers when I use whilst. However, I shall never stop using whilst as to me, making a clear difference between the meaning of while and whilst makes more sense. Therefore, in my head, while is A while, a moment whereas whilst is DURING said moment. Is it a weird assumption??

    • @fardareismai4495
      @fardareismai4495 Před 4 lety +11

      @@happyjellycatsquid well, it doesn't really matter whether that is the case. You prefer one over the other, so you should be able to use the vocabulary you like. Free variation is a beautiful thing, we need linguistic diversity, and these little preferences enrich language use in my opinion. Go ahead friend, give whilst the place it deserves in your own personal mental library of words.

  • @daisanders82
    @daisanders82 Před 5 lety +851

    This makes me want to make more combinations just for lounging around and being beautiful trash on a chaise lounge.

    • @Chibihugs
      @Chibihugs Před 5 lety +27

      Oh I completely agree with this sentiment!

    • @Anastas1786
      @Anastas1786 Před 5 lety +33

      You'll be the talk of the local opium den!

    • @makeda6530
      @makeda6530 Před 4 lety +14

      A resonance has been felt within my soul. Frilly home clothes.

    • @elizabethpenton2306
      @elizabethpenton2306 Před 4 lety +14

      This is the superior version of "athleisure"

  • @lisettegarcia
    @lisettegarcia Před 3 lety +33

    Interesting that in Spanish slips (without a pantlet aspect) are still sometimes called combinations. I never understood what was being combined but now I see it is just a legacy term that outlived the reversal of this undergarment back to a shift only shape.

  • @tinamcdonald93
    @tinamcdonald93 Před 4 lety +236

    As an eco-conscious (and budget conscious) historical sewist - have you considered using used linen and cotton bed sheets as the fabric for your undergarments, or at least your mock-ups? taking them directly to a laundry service who can wash in very hot water and a very hot dryer for plague control? (because no lie, that is what the bulk of donated masks for heathcare workers were made from when the stores ran out of cotton fabric during the stay at home orders) I can't tell you how many dresses and slips my dear Grandma (who was born in 1893) and my mom made me of sheets and flour sacks when I was little.

    • @sweetiedahling8137
      @sweetiedahling8137 Před 3 lety +36

      _takes notes for next thrift shopping trip_

    • @kathleentroutman9254
      @kathleentroutman9254 Před 3 lety +29

      I've always kept my sheets for sewing projects. They are large pieces of cotton fabric! Thrift stores are great sources. I've also been gifted sheets from friends who are still into "shopping" for something to do, I think.
      I love these videos!!! Started more handsewing. It's a lovely meditative activity.

    • @bettifortier2
      @bettifortier2 Před 3 lety +18

      I currently have a lovely floral print peice of 300 thread count cotton that I intend to turn into a pair of curtain panels. The accompanying pillow cases will be turned into valances. Pray for me. I have Never sewn anything in my life!

    • @starsun6363
      @starsun6363 Před 3 lety +16

      I've done this. Gonna be honest with you, it sucks. Great for mock ups but not for much else. It sucks to hand sew through. It's cheap poly fabric loosly woven together. Not great for historical accuracy or long lasting clothes.

    • @tinamcdonald93
      @tinamcdonald93 Před 3 lety +13

      @@starsun6363 that's why I specified cotton and linen bedsheets. I find Egyptian cotton sheets with a higher thread count than any retail fabric available at thrift stores for less than $5 USD for a king size sheet SET. That's less than 50 cents a yard, even when I Include the cost of the anti-allergy laundry additive to the wash.

  • @angstygrandma1037
    @angstygrandma1037 Před 4 lety +774

    I'm getting married next October and I'm making my wedding dress and watching your videos is SO painfully tempting to hand sew the whole dress

    • @aniketmakhija474
      @aniketmakhija474 Před 4 lety +32

      DO IT!

    • @stephenwoods4118
      @stephenwoods4118 Před 4 lety +91

      "I'll do it but I'll probably hate myself in the morning" Bugs Bunny in "Little Red Riding Rabbit" 1944

    • @AraCod
      @AraCod Před 4 lety +28

      Unless you are a Great seamstress with a body form that is your size Don't do it. You screw up your dress and you will never forgive yourself.

    • @cerbean
      @cerbean Před 4 lety +16

      Ara Cod!? Ara Cod!? Not necessarily it all depends on what you like and the reasoning for making the dress

    • @AraCod
      @AraCod Před 4 lety +7

      @@cerbean My Grandmother was a seamstress. It is your only wedding day right?

  • @marianp.781
    @marianp.781 Před 4 lety +1270

    31:53 “once the garment is roughly together”
    me: “don’t you mean ruffle-y together?”
    ...sorry i had to...

  • @cyan1616
    @cyan1616 Před 3 lety +30

    I remember my mom having some old victorian pieces, having several generations of stitchers in my family. As far a I remember, they did in fact use the loops for small buttons (see some old gloves too). But they weren't always single pieces of thread, they were more of a lace string, almost like mini crochet work. I just remember that little detail for some reason.
    Just research and experiment, the affect is really quite beautiful.

    • @pkmcnett5649
      @pkmcnett5649 Před 2 lety +2

      They are several pieces of thread covered in buttonhole stitches...most likely.

  • @Jinx_mori_
    @Jinx_mori_ Před 4 lety +32

    "You're probably bored of watching this"
    No please give me more!!

  • @alicecooper1977
    @alicecooper1977 Před 4 lety +787

    "these videos are not tutorials"
    me, currently making a corset like urs: huh, cool...

  • @kirstenpaff8946
    @kirstenpaff8946 Před 5 lety +532

    I know this project is part of a historical lady Sherlock costume, but when I hear Sherlock, I immediately think of the Benedict Cumberbatch portrayal of the character. This resulted in me bursting out in bouts of giggles throughout this video, because the thought of that version of the character having frilly undies is pretty freaking hilarious.

    • @jennymulhall816
      @jennymulhall816 Před 5 lety +42

      I don't know if you've seen the BBC series with Jeremy Brett as Holmes (for me, the far superior Holmes) but Jeremy in frilly ninnies is even more hilarious!

    • @LunarisArts
      @LunarisArts Před 5 lety +17

      @@jennymulhall816 My first and favourite Sherlock Holmes. The Sherlock Holmes I vision whenever reading about the detective.

    • @Sonia_47
      @Sonia_47 Před 5 lety +8

      @@jennymulhall816 Yes! The definitive Holmes.

    • @magnushelin007
      @magnushelin007 Před 5 lety +7

      @@jennymulhall816 For me, Jeremy Brett will never be surpassed as Sherlock Holmes. Conan Doyle must have had Mr. Brett as inspiration for our favorite detective.

    • @rafaeterna1081
      @rafaeterna1081 Před 5 lety +1

      @@bernadettebanner ofc, we wouldn't mind to have you as a lady Sherlock Holmes

  • @glasslinger
    @glasslinger Před 3 lety +20

    Those underthings are SO expensive now days, only being available from specialty companies making renaissance clothing. I always am amazed at how much hand stitching you do! I'm lazy and use the machine for everything! I wish you lived next door!

  • @LaRana2315
    @LaRana2315 Před 4 lety +49

    Okay but lowkey the one on display at 1:11 is something i would genuinely want to wear as a romper even though it's undergarments.
    Kinda wanna learn sewing now so i can just make myself some frilly 1890s combination inspired rompers...

    • @melikatalks7676
      @melikatalks7676 Před 2 lety +4

      This is soooo damn beautiful I'm crying, It would be wasted as underwear
      It could look gorgeous with a catsuit underneath ....

  • @ireysword
    @ireysword Před 5 lety +453

    The adventures of Lady Holmes: The secret of the unseen undergarments

  • @magicattic
    @magicattic Před 5 lety +547

    I think your cheaper lace is pretty accurate actually. It was the cheaper machine lace of the industrial revolution that allowed so many women from different circles of society to have "frilly" underthings. Previously, far from being simply a matter of preference, it was more a matter of what you could afford. The more humble garments, devoid of any decoration , would have belonged to the poorest working classes. The more frills, the more handmade lace, and therefore, the more costly the garment. The industrial revolution was the great equalizer of much of society. Many women from varied classes were dressing the same way, whether they were wealthy or not, because so much fabric and trim was available at moderate prices. The massive socio economic upheaval/change of the time was reflected so succinctly in this relatively small way.

    • @jacmcw
      @jacmcw Před 5 lety +11

      Nice catch. That make sense.

    • @Kunstpost
      @Kunstpost Před 5 lety +20

      It depends which rich people you mean: you refer to the new rich not the old rich. the last one only wore lace on Sundays. modest but well made for instance handmade woven linen without knots held a lifetime. you could say that it is the difference between style and fashion. Also lacemakers were found in the underclass and could make it for themselves and it depends on their attitude and work environment when they could wear it. Industrialisation can't change that.

    • @athenathegreatandpowerful6365
      @athenathegreatandpowerful6365 Před 5 lety +10

      One thing to take into consideration-"cheap" circa 1890 is a lot more "expensive"/handmade/skilled than "cheap" circa 2019. Just sayin...

    • @stahppls2293
      @stahppls2293 Před 5 lety +8

      @@Kunstpost as a craftsman I've noticed people who specialise in fashion items often never wear what they make 😂 I make a shit ton of handmade jewelry and never wear them unless I need to

    • @ajrwilde14
      @ajrwilde14 Před 5 lety +4

      Yeah and the Rich were not happy that Everyone Else could now dress in a way that made it no longer clear who was who. Not one bit.

  • @Britt11777
    @Britt11777 Před 4 lety +34

    I have watched a few of your videos and I was wondering if you would ever be interested in doing a sort of "origin Story" video. Like when you first got interested in sewing (what age you were, where you were at that time in your life etc.) and making your own clothes. What had inspired this interest. Was it a move you watched? Was it a relative who had a similar hobby? Was it something you'd see while on vacation in Europe? just as a few examples. Your first ever sewing project? Do you still have it? What you knew then compared to now?
    I would love to see a video like that. Sincerely,
    a fan!

  • @rodneyferris4089
    @rodneyferris4089 Před rokem +17

    All that beautiful hand work and it would be all covered up by the outerwear!! Such a fascinating process. I could watch you and your friends stitch all day.

  • @lindabeebe7065
    @lindabeebe7065 Před 5 lety +472

    Whenever I see someone on CZcams who’s just watched a sewing tutorial, ask,....”can I sew this by hand? I don’t have a sewing machine.” I wish I could show them this. Yes people, you can make things sewn by hand. I think your project came out beautiful.

    • @dutchik5107
      @dutchik5107 Před 5 lety +28

      You can. But you'll hate your life.

    • @iwakuralain1459
      @iwakuralain1459 Před 5 lety +15

      I made a denim backpack completely by hand and yes, sometimes I just wanted to burn my house down with the backpack in it but sometimes you just have to take a break and keep going later.

    • @CologneCarter
      @CologneCarter Před 5 lety +12

      The problem people have when it comes to doing something by hand for lack of the machine is that it takes a lot of time and effort. Modern times are so fast. Everything has to get done in spiffy without much effort and still look like quality work. Way back when it took time and effort to make something, from garments to furniture, it was done with the thought in mind that it should last for a long time too. These days everything is treated like disposable stuff, easily replaced and without much cost.

    • @iwakuralain1459
      @iwakuralain1459 Před 5 lety +2

      @@CologneCarter yep, it's true

    • @alexusr3964
      @alexusr3964 Před 5 lety +8

      sewing the pieces together by hand isn't the hard part, its the edges falling apart and having to hem them around every side *sobs*. (Sergers are godsent and magic).
      My grandmother used to have me hem all by hand as a 9 year old before we started embroidering by hand next. I hated it but now i have an appreciation for technology and for the delicacy of handwork.

  • @painoftheheart12
    @painoftheheart12 Před 5 lety +723

    The way you talk is so appealing because your passion and enthusiasm bleeds through. It's like watching Steve Irwin with animals. Love the content.

    • @sarahmackeprangesquell6660
      @sarahmackeprangesquell6660 Před 4 lety +9

      Perfect example! Both are 100% genuine, no BS! Refreshing in this world of selfies and self-proclaimed 'influencers' 😍

    • @TheMadWrldEffct
      @TheMadWrldEffct Před 4 lety +3

      Or Bob Ross with his paintings

  • @ericadaily8282
    @ericadaily8282 Před 3 lety +16

    I greatly appreciate your determination to never sacrifice precision. True art (fashion is art) deserves that level of quality, and indeed cannot be achieved with shotcuts, haste, and refusal to backtrack on mistakes. It's your dedication to the craft you love that convinced me to subscribe to you. I, as a fellow artist, respect and relate to your need to do it right.

  • @cmmc3400
    @cmmc3400 Před rokem +4

    I began sculpting about five years ago when my health had me housebound. I never thought I would have the level of success I do now, fully satisfied for the first time in my life with the dedication to the art as never before. I feel your joy from creating
    Each time I started to make something I had never tried before, I poured over videos, books, examples, everything short of going to a fair where like artists would be selling. Always experimenting then practicing to my satisfaction.
    Recently I traded a 1 3/4" polymer clay and resin cherry pie for a real pie made from homegrown cherries. It was as wonderful as the reaction to my pie. I crimped crust, dusting it with colored chalks to show that it was baked. The pie wasn't stuffed with scrap clay or foil, it was ALL cherries! I made sure to make decorative openings to see inside and I made the pie pan to specs from a 1902 Sears catalog. I even cut out a piece of the pie, laid it on one of my 1" plates and made a working knife along with a non working fork to set the feeling in the kitchen for my friends dollhouse.
    I had always loved miniatures and ended up making an entire gardens worth of veggies and fruits for her Victorian Dollhouse. I even made "Heritage" creations. As this grew from making jewlery I decided everything had to be classic but a bit over the top. Beauty came first. I made her special things for the house then built a "produce stand for all the fruits and veggie's. I even made a stand for her granddaughters to play with their barbies so the jewelry the girls made could be "sold" beside grandma's stand. If you can't tell, I am in love with this aspect of the medium I was told back in highschool that I would never master.
    Shortly afterwards I made a replica "washing machine" from the Sears book and now there are cast iron pans and cauldrons gallor. I live in a small house so I am cramped for space but this hobby fits just right.

  • @ashleyhasenbein1297
    @ashleyhasenbein1297 Před 4 lety +375

    Anyone else notice:
    Victorian- Bertha Banner
    Modern Victorian- Bernadette Banner
    ???

    • @PmpknHead
      @PmpknHead Před 3 lety +48

      Bernadette is just an immortal

    • @Son_Daughter_of_Slaanesh
      @Son_Daughter_of_Slaanesh Před 2 lety +11

      @@PmpknHead She probably has an picture of herself painted by the famous Basil Hallward stored in her attic.

    • @MickeyMallone.
      @MickeyMallone. Před 2 lety +5

      Son/Daughter of Slaanesh It takes on all the injuries she gets from her sewing and crafting endeavors.

    • @Son_Daughter_of_Slaanesh
      @Son_Daughter_of_Slaanesh Před 2 lety +3

      @@MickeyMallone. Ha i knew it!

  • @xxweird_personxx_9096
    @xxweird_personxx_9096 Před 4 lety +613

    46:46 “isn’t time travel fun though?”
    Proof that Bernadette Banner is indeed a witch

    • @monroe8566
      @monroe8566 Před 4 lety +36

      A very cute witch

    • @brenyselira3714
      @brenyselira3714 Před 4 lety +27

      A time traveling witch

    • @queen_gemini_8864
      @queen_gemini_8864 Před 4 lety +34

      a time travelling immortal witch

    • @stephaniecass6567
      @stephaniecass6567 Před 4 lety +20

      Or a TimeLord.

    • @MattPhonee
      @MattPhonee Před 3 lety +9

      Yes, the amazingly talented time travelling sewing witch that pulls open the curtains, tells us to get out of bed, and teaches us about the amazing world of 19th century clothing.

  • @wendymalik6784
    @wendymalik6784 Před 4 lety +16

    I can never get enough of your stitching. It make my world seem more orderly. This is my 3-4 time watching this video. I’m getting ready to start my combinations. Everything is ordered & on the way. I my have to watch this another 3-4 times.

  • @skibbitypapp
    @skibbitypapp Před 2 lety +5

    Can we take a moment to think about how scandalized the owner of the original combinations would be to know that her under garments were on display in a museum?

  • @PatrickPoet
    @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +620

    This is my second full time watching this, although some parts have been seen a bit more. I want to thank Bernadette for how she handles background music. About a third of us humans have something called Auditory Processing Disorder which makes it difficult to pull voice out of noise. Many videos have the background music up too high and watching is a struggle, sometimes rerunning parts to catch what was said and sometimes deciding, "Oh bother!", and moving on to a different video. Bernadette, though, does it perfectly, dropping the music down each time the voice over comes in. Just thought you'd like to know that she's perfect in another way that may not have occurred to you;) If you want to know more about Auditory Processing Disorder, Wikipedia has a good overview.

    • @PatrickPoet
      @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +11

      @@angrytrees7519, maybe get him to read the wikipedia article so he maybe realizes it's a thing and stops being such a dick? That's just hostile behavior.

    • @angrytrees7519
      @angrytrees7519 Před 4 lety +1

      @@PatrickPoet it is worth a shot!

    • @PatrickPoet
      @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +2

      @@angrytrees7519 let me know!

    • @autumn_west
      @autumn_west Před 4 lety +2

      @@angrytrees7519 best of luck with this, if you haven't already spoken about it

    • @thevoid1858
      @thevoid1858 Před 3 lety +2

      Only your second time?

  • @grandcarriage1
    @grandcarriage1 Před 4 lety +1554

    No lie: when Covid19 quarantining is getting to me, I make mint tea and watch a video of hers. She is quite literally getting me through this...

    • @bees4106
      @bees4106 Před 4 lety +27

      Are.... Are you me?

    • @silverrose1408
      @silverrose1408 Před 4 lety +8

      Your not alone

    • @suzienada7253
      @suzienada7253 Před 4 lety +8

      It's gonna be okay!

    • @valentinanunez3708
      @valentinanunez3708 Před 4 lety +4

      how you doin so far?

    • @lafemmeanglaise
      @lafemmeanglaise Před 3 lety +14

      Same here; I have found her videos extremely calming and, yes, they are helping me to get through this time of worldwide madness. (Even though I have never made a single piece of period clothing. :))

  • @miss-petrolea
    @miss-petrolea Před 3 lety +9

    Rewatching this in my series of rewatching all Bernadette's "Underthings-videos", prompted by the new Pirate Shirt :)
    Can I just say that her enthusiasm for this project is so very wholesome and contagious and apparently EXACTLY what I needed in our current plague times.

  • @kosmosvanhartland747
    @kosmosvanhartland747 Před 2 lety +3

    "But we do, because we do things right." most beautiful statement!

  • @dawn8293
    @dawn8293 Před 5 lety +461

    "you know what? No one's gonna see the undergarments."
    * Posts it online *

    • @silviatonapetian6932
      @silviatonapetian6932 Před 4 lety +10

      Dawn Harper that's exactly what I was thinking, but also in her costume college vlog, she wears her undergarments out for the first night😂😂 bless her sweet historic soul regardless

  • @anagabrieltrevino5439
    @anagabrieltrevino5439 Před 5 lety +271

    Somehow, I can picture Bertha Banner. She would be a severe and aged woman who, though long disillusioned with the art of teaching young women how to sew in the proper manner, would rediscover her love of sewing thanks to a youthful seamstress in training: Bernadette. Impressed by her great passion for learning, Bertha Banner would be proud of her young protegé and would teach her with much glee any litle detail she had yet to learn!!
    We are all proud of you for the exquisite work you did on this piece!! You are researching, planing, teaching yourself how to make entire garments, even the most accomplished Victorian seamstress would be impressed!!!

  • @xfallenxlostx3254
    @xfallenxlostx3254 Před 4 lety +5

    I think the combination turned out absolutely stunning. Mistakes are how we learn, so don’t worry. You know for next time and for now you have something beautiful.

  • @maryhutto
    @maryhutto Před 3 lety +2

    And I thought I was a perfectionist when it comes to sewing! All that "reverse sewing" and re-cutting! Only a dedicated seamstress would not throw in the towel after the first fitting.
    You truly have the soul of an artist when it comes to recreating works of needle art.

  • @MorganDonner
    @MorganDonner Před 5 lety +471

    I loved the chatting on the floor! :D It made me smile. I 100% agree that revisiting one's documentation after making the thing makes a huge difference in your understanding of the thing. I always catch myself afterward having done some element not entirely correctly 😱

  • @comradeautukov977
    @comradeautukov977 Před 5 lety +505

    As I am a dude who's only interest in the Victorian era is mostly Hats and most machines I find it weird that I keep getting recommended your channel even weirder is I actually watch it

    • @makeda6530
      @makeda6530 Před 4 lety +35

      It's fun to learn and hats are grand.( ◜ᴗ◝)

    • @semenandgayuncle
      @semenandgayuncle Před 4 lety +11

      Duddeee hats are rad! I _adore_ 1800s century hats!

    • @MrsStevenBrown
      @MrsStevenBrown Před 4 lety +34

      A crafty person admires other crafty people....you may learn or appreciate something new and take it back into your craft...like I do for my antique dolls 😎👍🏻

    • @colinbignall7036
      @colinbignall7036 Před 4 lety +26

      We dudes appreciate sewing skills

    • @asheshurricane391
      @asheshurricane391 Před 4 lety +10

      😁it's like an addiction. once you start watching, it's hard to stop.

  • @vloogle4924
    @vloogle4924 Před 3 lety +7

    I love time traveling. Listening and watching you makes me feel like I am back at my grandmother's and my great grandmother's, watching them create lace doilies and such.

  • @leticiaaparecida7587
    @leticiaaparecida7587 Před 4 lety +10

    After watching the entire video (and loving every second of it), I've come to the conclusion that I NEED FRILLY UNDERGARMENTS IN MY LIFE. I hope one day I'll be able to make something as mesmerizing as this hahaha
    Thanks for sharing! I'm new to your channel, but I already love it so much!

    • @luminariel3765
      @luminariel3765 Před rokem

      Right? I'd prefer this over too-tight modern undergarments, especially since most modern underwear is synthetic material. Plus, I love the frilly

  • @ZackTheKack
    @ZackTheKack Před 5 lety +308

    You sucked me in by offering some insight into the likely historical truths of corsets, and then I got trapped into watching 47 minutes of sewing. Well done.
    Seriously though, there's something about your videos that are just completely intriguing.

    • @jess290
      @jess290 Před 4 lety +6

      Zack Lujan same here, honestly when i was recommended to watch the masque of red death(is it right? im not sure) i was immediately drawn in...it's weird as im not fond of sewing and yet im interested in the process. it also gave me quite a lot of inspiration to draw:)

    • @69bethy
      @69bethy Před 4 lety

      Same

  • @estelledesigns
    @estelledesigns Před 5 lety +807

    Congrats on making your first feature length film! 😂I've been looking forward to this all week! Now time to sit down, relax, and enjoy the movie 🎥🍿

    • @estelledesigns
      @estelledesigns Před 5 lety +25

      @@bernadettebanner Just finished watching it. Absolutely brilliant video! The production value and quality is amazing considering you did this all by yourself! 😱Your combinations turned out beautifully and I am in awe of your neat little hand-stitching - it doesn't matter if it's not invisible or perfect by Victorian standards - it gives it a personal touch and like you said, it's all an experiment from which can learn and discover more from! You should feel so proud of what you have accomplished. Thank you for putting so much hard work and dedication in this video 💕Take care not to overwork yourself making the corset, the rest of Lady Sherlock AND video content. Slow (well, moderate) and steady wins the race 👍

    • @Ali-cn1du
      @Ali-cn1du Před 5 lety +2

      That was funny. Tee Hee

  • @sierrabaker4565
    @sierrabaker4565 Před 2 lety +1

    You getting so excited over this genuinely gives me hope for humanity because there are still people who crave the old ways and get excited to share these things.

  • @ladhernaTG
    @ladhernaTG Před 4 lety +2

    I am not great with the needle but manage enough to sort out stuff around the house. My mum (trained as a child by a seamstress) taught me that hemming stitch and yes, you definitely need to put your finger under the fabric for tension. I was absolutely thrilled to see that this is a thing (a historical thing!) as my mum taught me the basics without any terminology (a.k.a. "this is how it's done, now shut up and do as I said")

  • @scythescythe884
    @scythescythe884 Před 4 lety +290

    cookie tips:
    1. get a cookie jar with a rough textured inside and burn a small amount of sage in it. sage smoke is very heavy inhibits mold spore growth.
    2. store some bread with your cookies! this keeps them soft!
    3. make more than humanly possible to eat at once. so you have cookies to put in the jar!

    • @elyse1961
      @elyse1961 Před 4 lety +2

      How do you know this? I'm genuinely curious where you get this information...

    • @JacquelineUnderwood
      @JacquelineUnderwood Před 4 lety +15

      A very quick google search of “does sage inhibit mold growth?” comes up with absolutely 0 results in favor of your statement. Please list reliable sources.

    • @jamiejam9976
      @jamiejam9976 Před 4 lety +12

      you underestimate my cookie eating skills

    • @froggdoggs8551
      @froggdoggs8551 Před 4 lety +11

      Bold of you to assume I would actually need to save cookies for any reason

    • @nora-en2gi
      @nora-en2gi Před 4 lety +18

      @@JacquelineUnderwood
      www.greenmedinfo.com/article/medicinal-smoke-can-completely-eliminate-diverse-plant-and-human-pathogenic-ba
      "We have demonstrated that using medicinal smoke it is possible to completely eliminate diverse plant and human pathogenic bacteria of the air within confined space."
      www.ellejamesinteriors.com/elle-james-what-is-smudging-why
      "In high enough concentrations, burning sage will eliminate negative ions and can clear the air of mold spores, pollen, pet dander, odors, cigarette smoke, bacteria, viruses, dust and other hazardous airborne particles."
      naturalmentor.com/surprising-reasons-you-should-smudge-your-home/
      " the medicinal smoke is believed to release negative ions, which bind to positively ionized particles like bacteria, viruses, mold spores, pet dander and other allergens, dust, and other hazardous particulates."
      actually finding sources wasn't too hard

  • @alexaustin6092
    @alexaustin6092 Před 4 lety +464

    How...did I get here....and why do I feel anxious about buttons on lace?

    • @cnsohm
      @cnsohm Před 4 lety +7

      I'm asking myself the same question, friend

  • @dianagreene4257
    @dianagreene4257 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I'm watching this video for the umpteenth time, but the first time since I have started drafting patterns from Edwardian guides and I FEEL BERNADETTE'S EXCITEMENT. It's SO satisfying.

  • @angelagrimes8237
    @angelagrimes8237 Před 4 lety +2

    My grandmother was a professional seamstress in the early 1900's and this is the kind of process she said she had to do. Wow. Thank you Bernadette. This brings me closer to the memory of my Nana. I understand now much more what skills she had.

  • @namikosugans
    @namikosugans Před 5 lety +286

    All of Bernadette's videos should be, at the very least, 45 minutes from here on out. All in favor say aye. 😊

  • @HappyKatRocks
    @HappyKatRocks Před 5 lety +118

    Petition to bring back combinations? I sat through all 47 minutes in complete glee. Bernadette, it is a joy to watch you work.

  • @ashleyharrison6077
    @ashleyharrison6077 Před 3 lety +12

    Love this series! I keep rewatching over and over. I was surprised to see you sew down the silk ribbons because combinations were body layers meant to be washed regularly and washing that burgundy ribbon would ruin your combination with red bleeding. Most of the extant examples I've seen that still have their ribbon have the ribbon loose and tied in a bow. I imagine one might remove the silk ribbon to wash much easier that way. I image you aren't intending yours for daily wear so you probably won't be washing them as often as the victorians so it's definitely not a big deal.

  • @copywritersofficial4102
    @copywritersofficial4102 Před 4 lety +1

    can confirm that after months of watching her, her voice is just as comforting

  • @rdaniceh-s7442
    @rdaniceh-s7442 Před 5 lety +211

    Thank you so much for the delightful sharing of your project! Am 67 and sewing since my childhood, though it was out of necessity. My grandmother was born in 1867, lived with us for at least 10 years. She demanded that my sister and I learn to sew without a sewing machine because it was as important as walking. Want you to know that your techniques are marvelous and your voice is very precious. Can hardly wait to view your entire composition of this project!

    • @belindaholdsworth5344
      @belindaholdsworth5344 Před 5 lety +16

      Wow Danice, you will be the epitome of a walking reference for so many little bibs and bobs. Do your children sew? What a wonderful legacy to hand down.

  • @neldahargo29
    @neldahargo29 Před 5 lety +283

    the long chatty videos including distraction are really quite enjoyable. thank you for this and a cookie was consumed in your honor.

  • @NativeKayKay
    @NativeKayKay Před 3 lety +3

    Let's just talk about how absolutely elegant she stitches and how she carries herself, beyond me!😍
    Youre so beautiful I wish modern day styles were still hand stitched and crafted. Brilliant work!

  • @MirjaHPrivate
    @MirjaHPrivate Před 2 lety

    My goodness you have the patience of a goddess and the curiosity, research and investigation drive of a true scholar, and the sewing hands of... a Victorian seamstress? I applaud and salute you!

  • @deploribusunum3894
    @deploribusunum3894 Před 4 lety +130

    I saw in a move once a woman using a glass cylinder full of water as a magnifier. Looking through one side while sewing on the other. It struck me as pure genius.

    • @ThatClassic70sGirl
      @ThatClassic70sGirl Před 4 lety +4

      Which movie was this? do you remember? It sounds interesting. Was it historical?

    • @texassweetgrl
      @texassweetgrl Před 3 lety +1

      I don't know if its the same one that @DEploribus Unum was thinking of, but The Man in the Iron Mask has one of the female leads sewing, or embroidering (I dont remember which as its been a while since I've watched it), with a water filled glass between and a close candle for better light. At least I think it was that one, I haven't movied in a long time, it was one of those musketeer movies for sure. 🤦🏽‍♀️ I have now rambled myself a long way from the certainty I started with.

  • @KacielNolwen
    @KacielNolwen Před 4 lety +164

    Bernadette : You're probably really bored of watching me stitch this together
    Me: Literally rewinding to see how she's stitching certain parts of the lace on
    Also I love how she's calling it "the youtube" I might have to start calling it that too x)

  • @cameo86
    @cameo86 Před rokem +1

    The joy and excitement in her voice just make me smile

  • @MaddelineEFinn
    @MaddelineEFinn Před 2 lety

    the excitement at finding cool shit related to your niche interests is just so tangible in this video, it's infectious! listening to the way someone goes on and on about things you don't really understand or care about that much but you can just tell they're having so much fun, they're so excited, that you can't help but be excited for them, lol. did i ever think i would be /this/ happy that some girl in new york i've never met got a free set of old sewing needles for her antique sewing machine or that she found a cool sewing pattern that's easy to follow? no, but here i am, grinning like a fool.
    y'know, people talk about parasocial relationships and how detrimental they can be (and i'm not arguing that they're not) but there's also the flip side. transmissible excitement from watching someone do something they're clearly enjoying immensely!

  • @christinemacmacleod4880
    @christinemacmacleod4880 Před 4 lety +88

    When I was a girl, so long ago now my grandmother taught me to make little button loops with very fine thread that were tied together using the same knot that attaches boats to a deck.

    • @edwardstrinden
      @edwardstrinden Před 4 lety +12

      I hope you teach your granddaughter to make those knots.

  • @drewc9947
    @drewc9947 Před 5 lety +224

    I love this channel with all my heart. Seeing someone talented and creative nerd out hardcore over something they are passionate about is the best part of this whole website.

    • @meganrichardson6471
      @meganrichardson6471 Před 5 lety +8

      I can't even sew, though I do love historical things. But i totally agree with this! I love her enthusiasm, and how incredibly smart she is. I love how she approaches it like a puzzle. I love your description "nerd out hardcore" lol!

    • @maxxron
      @maxxron Před 5 lety +3

      I could not agree more. Bernadette's enthusiasm is most refreshing.

  • @rebeccarankin9455
    @rebeccarankin9455 Před 3 lety +1

    Rather than boring, I find it soothing to watch your neat, precise stitches while listening to your pleasant voice. Thanks for the lovely videos!

  • @webchez69
    @webchez69 Před rokem +1

    I am a leather crafter, and stumble onto your videos by accident. I have been watching many of your segments, and think you are wonderful. You are so talented, and a very dedicated historian, not to mention how you are so easy on the eyes. I wish you much success in your career, and hope to hear your name in the future, as you become the next Edith Head!!

  • @corvuscarmichael6801
    @corvuscarmichael6801 Před 4 lety +67

    I'm 100% positive Victorians would absolutely love how much research and care you put into your projects

  • @StitchingUpChaos
    @StitchingUpChaos Před 5 lety +232

    Listening to your voiceover, at the front of my mind, as ever, was the insistent thought: "Good grief, this lady is as adorable as an entire basketful of kittens..."
    That said, the combinations are utterly gorgeous (why don't we wear amazing clothes like this anymore??) and watching the process of putting in insertion lace was very interesting. Can't wait to run through the other Sherlock videos!

    • @DAYBROK3
      @DAYBROK3 Před 5 lety +9

      Kathleen Pannell, the amount of work it takes is why we don’t have clothes like this anymore. 😕

    • @StitchingUpChaos
      @StitchingUpChaos Před 5 lety +13

      @@DAYBROK3 Yeah, fair enough. But that said, clothes made this way generally would last a hell of a lot longer than cheap mass-produced garments. I guess it's a balance of where you want to spend your time - on good long lasting products or on something you need to replace every five minutes :/

    • @Inconsistent-Dogwash
      @Inconsistent-Dogwash Před 4 lety

      Kathleen Pannell it’s so sad isn’t it!😩

    • @m.service5584
      @m.service5584 Před 4 lety +8

      Agreed, Kathleen. I would suspect that there are actually a growing number of folks these days who are willing to put a bit more effort into sewing (by hand or machine) their own clothing if for no other reason than to avoid spending their hard-earned money on cheaply-made clothing (often at exorbitant prices, not quite fitting, and certainly not LASTING!)

    • @veralenora4033
      @veralenora4033 Před 4 lety +2

      'Adorable!" yes, I also have a window open on my computer to "TinyKittens" live. L (but not OL).

  • @lornayeo3303
    @lornayeo3303 Před rokem +2

    Wow…so beautiful and inspiring! Just love all the hand-stitching and shots of the pretty lace!

  • @TheMagnoliaWitch
    @TheMagnoliaWitch Před 2 lety

    You may think these videos are not tutorials, but I swear I've been watching this particular video so much that I can hear your voice in my head while whip-stitching lace to the cuffs of my overalls.