The Only Travel Dress You'll Ever Need

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024
  • In this video I will show you how I made my stylish convertible travel dress, perfect for a budget backpacking trip.
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    Bustier pattern:
    www.etsy.com/u...
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    If you are interested, follow me on instagram: / seth.saiph And check my costume illustrations on Art Station: www.artstation...
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    Music provided by Epidemic Sound

Komentáře • 16

  • @cypriennezed5640
    @cypriennezed5640 Před 2 lety +14

    Thank you for going over the options for fixing the skirt - it helps beginners like me a lot! Glad you are feeling better!!

  • @merari2307
    @merari2307 Před 2 lety +8

    I really like your camera work and your dress look so airy.

  • @imjustdandy9799
    @imjustdandy9799 Před 2 lety +2

    Not this coming out when I have a weekend trip at the end of the month 🌟 seriously perfect timing

  • @beeticket
    @beeticket Před rokem +4

    Please come back I miss youuu 😭

    • @AspiringCostumeDesigner
      @AspiringCostumeDesigner  Před rokem +2

      Awww 🥰 Next week I will release my video, I promise! I was planning to do it this weekend, but I had to work on Saturday 😞

    • @beeticket
      @beeticket Před rokem

      @@AspiringCostumeDesigner yay! ٩(●ᴗ●)۶

  • @imjustdandy9799
    @imjustdandy9799 Před 2 lety +2

    I’m glad you are doing well!

  • @camib2864
    @camib2864 Před 2 lety +2

    I love this dress, it is perfect and airy and lovely!

  • @29jgirl92
    @29jgirl92 Před 2 lety +4

    Glad you feel okay! Love this dress, have to try it soon!

  • @beenak2957
    @beenak2957 Před 2 lety +6

    I am from India. Are you interested to collaborate with us to create innovative works using our heritage signature handloom clothes and clothes dyed in Ayurvedic medicinal herbs?

  • @eunbiasedfan2873
    @eunbiasedfan2873 Před rokem +1

    I have a fashion question; when you look into “traditional clothes” of places in Asia, from the Middle East to India to Japan, most of the clothes seem like pieces that nobles and rich people would wear. However when you look into “traditional clothes” of Europe, they seem to be clothes that peasants or poor people would wear. Why is this the case?

    • @AspiringCostumeDesigner
      @AspiringCostumeDesigner  Před rokem +7

      It's a survival bias, working class people used their clothes and passed them down until it was no longer wearable, and then they turned them into rags for cleaning or something. Rich people could afford to not wear their clothes to death, so more of those garments survived for us to see. The other thing is that during the 1830s rise of nationalism throughout all of Europe the city people started to develop an interest in identifying their country's "traditional costume" and they turned to the villager's clothing. They started to catalogue those clothes, set up societies, collections etc. to keep them and I think this effort is why you will find "peasant " clothes when you google traditional costumes of a country. Many of the societies strated then still exist in a form or another and their efforts meant that we still identify "historical clothes " with those random examples of that era they decided to protect.
      I'm not sure of the same wave of nationalism ever happened in asia, but I have a hunch that it did not, and that's why their "peasant " clothing might not be that well preserved.

    • @victoriavidaud
      @victoriavidaud Před rokem +1

      Actually, I can shed a little light on this, at least in Japan’s case.
      Originally, Japan brought over Chinese fashion, and then when they started developing a national identity, they started to solidify what would become “Japanese” dress: the kimono, which literally means “wearable things”. Once it started taking shape, it’s all that everyone wore, just differing in fabrics (higher class fabrics for higher class people, lower for lower). The biggest change was the end of the Heian period when the kimono became closer to what it is today, and just little tweaks to the design made the silhouette change. The poor and rich alike wore the same garment, for the most part, especially until Western countries starting importing and exporting with Japan, which brought some of their “historical” clothing out (the uchikake that you see in a lot of Japonism paintings was out of trend by that point but no one knew any better and assumed that was what they wore still).
      Today, kimono are still widely used for certain professions (some traditional restaraunts, Geisha, etc) and formal events, as well as cotton versions used in the summer. It’s still around, and many people hand them down through generations, so they are much more similar overall between classes and ages than many other cultures, like European cultures, and now are mostly just thought of for formal occasions, but they are/were for all classes. More like a “uniform” through the ages, I guess? Don’t mess with what works? Lol
      I think that may be a long-winded and late answer to your question, but I hope it helps some (at least for the very specific knowledge I have for Japanese fashion lol)

  • @Ashley_tipsyshades
    @Ashley_tipsyshades Před 2 lety +2

    What fabric did you use as the fashion fabric? It's stunning and I want it 😅

    • @AspiringCostumeDesigner
      @AspiringCostumeDesigner  Před 2 lety +3

      Unfortunately I have no idea 😄 I bought it in a shop where they sell end bolts from random countries, this one supposedly came from Morocco. Sorry 😞