Enchanted by Sewing, The Podcast
Showing posts with label antique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antique. Show all posts
Monday, January 25, 2016
Samplers - Early Blogs
Labels:
antique,
blogs,
embellish,
embroidery,
history,
Laurel Shimer,
Metropoliton Museum of Art,
New York,
NYC,
old time,
samplers,
sew,
sewing
Saturday, January 9, 2016
Embellishment Inspiration: Personable Lions - Antique Printed Fabric
I think this design would make a charming modern fabric. A quilt for a child? Definitely! But also I can imagine borrowing this pattern for patch pockets, tote bags, or miniaturized for a border print on a skirt hem or shirt cuffs.
Web Resources: Fashion and Virtue
Textile Patterns and the Print Revolution, 1520–1620
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
Ench By Sew-31: Historical Bathing Beauties
The April Enchanted By Sewing, Episode 31 Audio Show is Up !
Option I) Listen to the Audio right on the web by clicking on this link - No need to download ~ OR ~
Option II) Click on this link to iTunes to download this and other Enchanted by Sewing shows to your mobile device (iPhone, Android, etc.) free from iTunesBathing and swim wear has certainly changed from the cover-em-up days!
Have you ever sewn your own swim or bathing suit? I created a couple of bikinis way, way back in high school, but since then, frankly, I’ve been happier to buy my suits. I do however often stop off at various sewing blogs to sample bathing fashion creations that other sewists have created, and daydream a little at trying my hand at another suit one day.
I also get a kick out of hearing and reading about how bathing suits have changed over time, and thinking about what a shock people must have had to suddenly start seeing others, especially women, revealing so much of their flesh on beaches! The big changes in swim suit styling around the 1920’s seem to have been about the time when the sport changed from ‘bathing’ to ‘swimming’ in the English speaking world. It wasn’t enough just to immerse ourselves in water outside, as we did indoors anymore. Now more people wanted to get some exercise when they went into a pool, river or ocean.
I also get a kick out of hearing and reading about how bathing suits have changed over time, and thinking about what a shock people must have had to suddenly start seeing others, especially women, revealing so much of their flesh on beaches! The big changes in swim suit styling around the 1920’s seem to have been about the time when the sport changed from ‘bathing’ to ‘swimming’ in the English speaking world. It wasn’t enough just to immerse ourselves in water outside, as we did indoors anymore. Now more people wanted to get some exercise when they went into a pool, river or ocean.
This month I’m sharing a walk around an historical bathing suit exhibit I saw at the Vancouver Maritime Museum in the fall of 2014. Won’t you let me know if this show gets you in the mood to sew your own modern day or historically inspired bathing or swimming suit, by posting below?
Babes & Bathers: History of the Swimsuit
http://vancouvermaritimemuseum.com/press/babes-bathers-exhibit-opens-maritime-museum.
Babes & Bathers: History of the Swimsuit
http://vancouvermaritimemuseum.com/press/babes-bathers-exhibit-opens-maritime-museum.
Here is the promotion for the exhibit, from the web link at the museum. Please note that the show is no longer running.
‘
"In a city surrounded by water, swimsuits have always been an essential part of our wardrobe as Vancouverites. From swimming costumes to bikinis, bathing suit styles have fluctuated from the modest to the more revealing, all in a desire to make us fashionable by the water’s edge. Drawing on the private collections of celebrated fashion historian Ivan Sayers, you can now see the modest suits, revealing bikinis, and sometimes outrageous costumes that have been spotted on Vancouver beaches since the 1890s. " http://www.vancouvermaritimemuseum.com/
Labels:
antique,
Babes to Bathers,
bathing suit,
clothes,
exhibit,
fashion,
historical,
history,
retro,
sew,
sewing,
sewist,
swim suit,
Vancouver B.C.
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