Hi, so in case you can't tell my ever-so-creative blog name, this blog is dedicated to Gravity Falls and other related stuff! :) This includes all the other cartoons I'm into (Wander Over Yonder, Star vs. the Forces of Evil, Wordgirl, Animaniacs and other shows that I'm probably forgetting) Please note that you are on my Wordpress site, and everything I post is imported from tumblr, so if something has transfered strangle, that's why. Reblogged posts (which are not mine!) will have giant quotation marks in front of the text, along with the username of original tumblr user who posted it in red text.
âI guess Iâll have a new daughterâ Iâm so glad thereâs women like this in the world because initially I really thought she would have no where to stay
Praying for this poor girl whoever shit is. Her mom is an idiot.
Wait, waitâŚ. Is that seriously it? How their clothes go?
that genuinely is it
yeah hey whats up bout to put some fucking giant sheets on my body
lets bring back sheetwares
When youâre carding, spinning and weaving everything from scratch, using the big squares exactly as they come off the loom must seem like a fucking brilliant idea. 90% (or more) of pre-14th century clothing is made purely on squares (and sometimes triangles cut from squares).Â
How did they get the fabric so fine it draped like that? Was that something medieval europe forgot? Or do I just have a completely misguided image of historical clothing?
The way they could get away with pinking and slashing doublets in the 16th century was partially because the fabrics were so tightly woven that you could simply cut a line on the bias and nothing would fray.Â
Modern fabric machining sucks ass in terms of giving us any kind of quality like the kind human beings produced prior to the Industrial Revolution.Â
*yells about textile history*
Reblogging because itâs fascinating.
The Celts made very fine clothing as well. They invented plaid after all, and the same weaves that have been found at the La Tene/Halstatt salt mines in Austria were also found as far away as western China in the tombs of the Tarim mummies.
Can we talk about 18th century and regency era muslin as well because that shit is gorgeous. Itâs so fine itâs more transparent than silk chiffon and oh the tiny hems you can make with it!! I have an 18th century neckerchief and the hem is about 2mm wide. Not kidding, 2mm!!! Because it didnât fray like our stuff does now. All we can produce nowadays is a rough, scratchy, bullshit excuse for muslin and itâs horrid.
I love this because weâve gotten so blind to what makes âgoodâ fabric now – machine lace? horrible scratchy shit mostly made from poly. Actual lace is handmade, lasts for fucking EVER and looks stunning.Â
Regency gowns fucking rocked in terms of fabric quality – we use muslin as a âthrow awayâ before sewing the real fabric, back then it WAS a real fabric and it was so finely made you wouldnât even think it was the same stuff.Â
Hand hemming is still the best way to finish off anything, but harder than hell because of the shitty weave of modern fabrics.Â
Satin? Silks?!
Pah. Yes, fabric is cheaper, more affordable and varied than before, but it is an area where QUALITY was sacrificed for QUANTITY.Â
(I donât want to seem like Iâm shitting on how great we have it now for clothes and martials or anything, because YAY!! but also, Iâd love to get my mits on a bolt of real Muslin)Â
archaeologists recently found some Bronze Age fabric woven on site and preserved in marsh in England. itâs fine to die for. they were exporting it and trading into Asia.
Iâm not into fashion, but I love reading about the history and evolution of it.