500 Years of European Maternity Clothing ft. Kass McGann of Reconstructing History

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You probably clicked on this video thinking  that we were going to be trying on 500 years   of maternity fashion. Well guess what, most women's  clothing was maternity clothing. So before we jump   into things, I just want to make a little bit of a  disclaimer. Firstly, in this video we're going to be   talking about very sensitive subjects related to  infant mortality and unfortunately about misc***age   as well. So if it is something that is very triggering  for you or is very upsetting for you, I would not   recommend watching this video and clicking off now.  Additionally, because we are talking about women   throughout history this video is going to include  extremely gendered language due to the fact that   we're talking about people in the past. Without  further ado, let's jump into things. So hi Kass.   Hi, how are you doing? Good. Welcome back to the channel. You want to briefly tell everyone who you are. I'm Kass McGann. I'm the owner of Reconstructing History Patterns. I'm a clothing historian. I've been working as a clothing historian for 20 years. We're here today to talk about maternity clothing through the ages. Just a little spoiler, neither of us is pregnant. [Laughs] Yeah, two not pregnant women talking about maternity clothing! Maternity clothing is a fascinating subject that I think there are a lot of  misconceptions surrounding. Why not talk to a   fashion historian about the actual reality of what  it might have been like for women. I don't have children so I've never been pregnant.  However, I get a lot of questions from my customers   and visitors to my website throughout the years  about, "oh I'm pregnant and I want to continue   reenacting but I don't know what to wear. What did  they wear when they were pregnant?"   The shocking answer is, the same thing they wore every other day [laughs]. In the 21st century, it's hard for us to imagine that that would be the case because our experience is so incredibly different. As we're going to find   out throughout this video there are reasons why  most clothing for women was maternity clothing.   There's a statistic that i want to hit you with  right up front because it's very important to   understand why this was the case. There's a book  called Women's Work by Elizabeth Wayland Barber.   Wonderful book, it's one of the first books  I read in 1995 that got me interested in the   study of clothing, and she reveals in this book the  average shirt, or tunic, whatever man's upper body   garment, took about four years of a woman's spare  time to make and that's spinning, weaving, sewing.   So four years that she wasn't cooking and cleaning  and taking care of children and in childbirth and   all those things. And the average shirt lasts about  four years. We don't think about this modernly how   very labour-intensive it is to make clothing before  the modern era. It's not that you simply weren't   rich enough to afford a maternity wardrobe, it's  that no one was and also you were pregnant so   often why would you have different clothing? It would have just been like any other day for them really. Women's clothing isn't only good for maternity. It's also good for you lose weight, you gain weight, you get older. Women's clothing has to be malleable and your clothing has to fit. When we're talking about a pre-modern time period, you have one set of clothing and it has to fit you through all the changes. Let's start with the year 1420. What was going on in fashion in the 1400s? Why would you say it would qualify as maternity clothing? If you look at the silhouettes in art in the 1400s, there's no better example that I can give you than the Arnolfini Portrait by Jan van Eyck.   And this is a portrait that many people,  many people who don't know the time period or who   aren't familiar with art, think that the woman in  the painting is pregnant. She's not pregnant. It's   a betrothal picture. She is not yet married  to this man. And there's a lot of symbolism   showing his wealth, her family's wealth, their  devotion to each other, but one of the things that   is not symbolic is the dress that she's wearing. It  is a beautiful rich dress. It shows that she comes   from a very wealthy background and she can afford  this luxurious fabric. However, the way that she's   holding it in front of herself, this volume of  fabric and the fact that it fits her breast area   and then it's huge from there on down, if she were  pregnant, we wouldn't know [laughs]. It's not meant to hide   pregnancy, it's meant to imitate pregnancy because  a pregnant woman, a pregnant wife, is a prosperous   wife. All women's clothing from this time period is  very voluminous, even the clothing of common people   fitted over the shoulders and into the bust area  but very voluminous below. You would look pregnant   even when you weren't. We have pictures of people  picking crops in the field where they're wearing   not quite as voluminous clothing, but they are  wearing clothing that is not tight around their   waistlines. And we have a wonderful bunch of  extant garments called The Greenland Finds   that were found in Herjolfsnes, Greenland in the 1920s.  These garments are an amazing record of what was   worn in the 15th century by normal people. Every  single one of the garments that's been identified   as a female garment has a gore that starts just  under the bust line and flares out. None of them   have a waist seam, some of them have a more tapered  waist than others but there's not a single one of   them that you couldn't go through at least eight  months of pregnancy and not have it be tight.   The idea that you would have different clothing  when you were pregnant, well you didn't need it.   What was the style of this specific gown called?  Did it have a specific name? The noble people's garment was called a houppelande, but the common  people's garment, I mean this is just kirtle, dress,   cotte, whatever language you're speaking, it  means dress. But yeah, the houppelande was the   big voluminous garment and meant to show off your  wealth by the fact that you could afford this much   fabric. The Greenland Finds, these are people who  couldn't afford the extra fabric and yet they're   still making clothing that has that kind of a-line  shape to it. And that's their normal, daily clothing.   That's every single woman's garment, not just one  or two. Now when we move into the 1500s, so say by 1520, what is going on in fashion at that point and why would you think of this as maternity clothing? [laughs]   This is quite a different time period you have  progression from what we consider the Medieval   period to what we consider the Renaissance  periods. The very end of the 15th century   into the 16th century we have what's  generally termed Tudor fashion. Typically   dresses have a structured bodice, a waist seam, and  a skirt. The bodice and skirt are sewn together but   they're separated by a waist seam which is kind  of the revolution of Renaissance fashion, is that   a waist seam happens, and once you have a waist  seam you can do two things; you can make the bodice   tighter without restricting the legs and you can  make the skirts incredibly big because you don't   have to take that volume of fabric and fit it into  the top of the body. We don't quite have anything   we could call a corset yet, but there is the very  earliest iteration of corsetry, it's called "a pair   of bodies.' So a pair of bodies is the two halves of  your bodice laced together. Anything you can lace,   you can unlace. Anything you can lace tightly so  the two ends come together, you can leave open.   Much like the stays I'm wearing today that don't  fit me anymore. [laughs] My stays right now are open down   the back a good four or five inches, but they still  work to do everything stays need to do and that's   one of the reasons that we see lacing in women's  garments throughout the ages and we don't really   see lacing in men's. We see buttons in men's, we  see hooks, we see permanent joins. But in women's   you always have to have this, "oh today I'm going  to lace very tightly, oh today I'm going to   leave this open because I'm uncomfortable, or I've  gained weight, or I'm pregnant." In the Tudor period,   we look at these gowns and we think, "oh that's  a very stiff gown. It has a very defined bodice.   And that bodice must be that size and it can't  change," but one of the things that's not apparent   when you're looking at a Tudor gown, there's  lacing down the centre front that's covered by   a placket. If you left that lacing open, and there  are some pictures, early Tudor pictures where you   can see the kirtle underneath is left open and you  can see the edges of the kirtle, the tops of the   edges sticking out from under the placket that's  on top of them. In some portraits you have women   who only have maybe an inch couple, centimetres  space, and other women their lacing is so wide   open it's almost to their armpits. Even though they  are stiffened bodices, and they're not quite boned   yet but stiffened bodices, stiffened linen, sometimes  some cording to make the bodice be that kind of   ice cream cone shape that we see in later  centuries. It's stiff but it's still malleable because of lacing. Lacing is probably going to be  one of the themes throughout this entire video   especially as we get into 18th and 19th century  it's all about lacing. Another portrait is a very late 16th century portrait of An Unknown Lady  by Marcus Gheeraerts II. She's obviously pregnant.   I mean she's got, the belly bump is all the way up to  her breasts. She's got basically the bottom of her   bodice completely unlaced so it's laced over her  breasts, it's laced open but it's still laced over   her breast, and then it's just completely unlaced  below where a modern bra strap would be.   And that's another benefit of lacing, you don't have  to lace the whole thing. You lace them as far down   as you need and then you just leave them open. The 1600s, I feel like this is kind of the century that everyone forgets about. [Laughs] It's my favourite century! It's my favourite century. Say 1620 to 1720, what is going on at this point in history? There's a real progression from the 16th century into the 17th century. In the beginning of the 17th century women are wearing much what they   were wearing at the end of the 16th, of course. You  know, no one throws out their clothes just because the century changed.   Except the Victorians. Except the Victorians. [Both laugh] Because they're crazy! The 1620s, the typical dress of women of all classes, both upper class and working-class women, were wearing jacket and petticoat combinations. Much like what you see working women wearing in the 18th century, both working women and noble women were wearing this in the 17th century. The waist in the 1620s wasn't empire waist but it wasn't natural waist either. It was about halfway between. This is why no one talks about 1620s. It's a waistline that to modern eyes we think is ugly. It's a very strange place to have a waistline, and in order to have a waistline there,   because your body doesn't go in there, you have  to create that and how they created it was with a   boned bodice. So you had a bodice that was boned  into the v shape but then the bottom of the v   stopped at your high waistline and then below that  it was just a pleated skirt or a gored skirt.   You had these tabs that made the skirt and the skirts  started at your high waist.  At this point, were they called stays or were they called pairs of bodies still? They were called stays at this point. You started hearing stays, but boned bodice was also something that was said. The word 'stays'   starts coming in, I'd have to look this up, but I  believe that the first instance of the word stays   comes in the very, very late 16th century. By the  1620s that people were calling them stays, would   not be unusual. Now you have a high waistline and  you could get through many months of pregnancy   with that laced completely closed because it  stops before the pregnant belly. Right there   again, we have this kind of return to that  idea in the 15th century where a woman was   beautiful because she looked pregnant. If  you look at pictures of Henrietta Maria, who is the   Queen of Charles I of England, she's  always got this high-waisted bodice. That's the   waistline of the time. In common women, the  waistline tends to be lower because it's more   functional and they're not you know exaggerating  for fashion's sake, but lower-class women were   still wearing their waists higher than at natural  waist. And again, if you've got a pregnant belly   to sit your waistband on, it pushes everything up. And what was the name of the typical dress that people wore at that point? That's a really good question. [Laughs] Really, honestly the answer for the most part is dress. When you read period references to clothing of the time period it just uses the generic term 'dress' because they're not calling something specific. This is perplexing as someone especially that wears a lot of Victorian and Georgian fashion because   it apparently gets so insanely complex by the 18th  century as we're about to find out. It does because by the 18th century you have an increase in  production, the industrial revolution happens, so   you have more opportunities to wear different  styles of dress rather than wearing the same   thing all the time. So you start having terminology.  And as a clothing historian, historians like terms   so we want to say, "and that's a gúna, and that's  a kirtle, and this is why it's different. When we   say kirtle we mean this kind of sleeve and this  kind of closure and...," but they didn't. And as   a historian that's also something we have to be  careful about because historians put labels on   things that the people who wore these things every  day would never have used. By the 1680s, the 1690s, I have seen quite a drastic shift in a silhouette  by that point. What would you say is happening?   Yeah, by about the 1670s, I like to call it the  Revolution in Fashion, the Glorious Revolution of   Fashion, because it happens about the same time  as the Glorious Revolution happens in the United   Kingdom, which wasn't the United Kingdom yet,  in Great Britain. You have this silhouette that   becomes something very familiar to us, that ice  cream cone top and the inverted ice cream cone   bottom. Which we started to see in the Tudor period  but we never see it as exaggerated as it's going   to be in the 18th century. We start seeing the  beginnings of that in the 17th century, about 1660s   1670s. And what you've got there is a very rigidly  boned set of stays and a petticoat. So women are   wearing these stays and they're very long-bodied.  It's a myth that women couldn't sit down.   Of course, women could sit down. [Laughs] But in very, very fashionable circles there may have been a bit of a   fashion arms race. "Oh my bodice is so long, I can't  possibly sit down." This kind of competition, but   that would have been very, very elite and we  don't have knowledge that that necessarily happened.   The silhouette was a very long waist so the  waistline drops and in order to make that   look that way, you have to have a very long set of  stays. So now instead of having the bodice end at   the waistline, you're having the bodice continue  into the hips so you're making a very smooth line.   By the 1670s, you have everyone looking very tall  because they have these lengthy bodices on and   then they also added to that by stacking their  hair in rolls on top of their head, it's called   a tour, which is the French word for tower. Also  putting a veil called mandilla on top of their head,   the typical spanish lace headdress came out of the  1670s but they were wearing it all over Europe at   that time. Exaggerated silhouette like that, it's  not comfortable. Women wanted to be comfortable,   and they wanted to be fashionable, but they also  wanted to be comfortable. What happened was women   started wearing robes that they got from the  Middle and Far East. This is, you know, the golden   age of trade. This is when the Dutch were trading  all over the world and the Portuguese, and   so you have them bringing back silks and spices  from the Near and Far East. One of the things   they brought back were robes from Asia, and these  robes are very simply constructed like a T.   So you had no shoulder seam, the fabric went you  know from the back over the front just folded. The   sleeves were not separate, they were part of the  fabric, and then they closed up the front. And women   started wearing these over their stays. You know,  you could receive visitors at your home and you   would have on your stays and petticoat and this  robe. And that robe became the mantua, mantua named   after the city Mantua in Italy, which was a great  trading port. The mantua turned into the robe anglaise  the robe française, all of those typical 18th century  gowns are the evolution of the mantua, but at the   beginning the mantua was just this very plain  t-shaped robe from another country that you would   pleat with your hands and stick a couple pins in  it, pin it to your stays so it would stay in place   and put a belt around it so your waistline would  show off. In pregnancy, what do you do? You pin the   mantua a little differently because you're a bit  bigger. When you're pinning the mantua to your stays   you have the space in between the opening of your  mantua. You don't want people to see your stays, I   mean maybe you do, but maybe you want them to see  something more pretty than the front of your stays.   So you get a beautiful piece of embroidered silk  and you pin it to your stays before you pin your   mantua to your stays. And that's how the stomacher  was born. People are putting this piece of fabric   on the front of their bodices way back in the  Tudor period, we spoke about that how they   were covering up their lacing with this. The same  thing happens with a stomacher. So stomacher was   sometimes set behind the lacing and you would  have decorative lacing over the front of it, but   sometimes the stomacher just pinned right onto  your stays and then your gown didn't have to meet   in the front. You could pin the gown along the  sides of the stomacher. If you were pregnant, you   just pinned it further out here, and if you were  were not pregnant, you lost some weight, you were   thinner, you just pin it closer in. You could change  out these stomachers because, while they were very   beautiful silk and wonderfully embroidered and  very decorative, they're very small so you could   have a bunch of different ones and it would make  your entire outfit look different just because you   had a different decorative stomacher on the front. Now going into say the 1710s and 20s? There was a garment called the mantua still in the 1720s and it was basically the old mantua from the 1670s but it was more sewn into shape. Whereas in the 1670s you were putting on this robe and pleating it however you wanted it to be and then you would unpleat it when you took it off. By the 1720s, they are permanently pleating the mantua so that when you take it off it still has that shape but still   it has this open bit at the front. And that open  bit either closes by pinning it to your stays,   pinning it to your stomacher, or it laces zigzag  across the front across your stays or stomacher.   The mantua looks different but it's still the same  animal if you see what I mean. It's just evolving over time. Just like an animal. Yeah like an animal [laughs]. And now you've got stays in this time period where, and I don't think there's a time period where you don't have them, that could have lacing in front as well as back. You hear this myth banding about that women who had servants had back lacing stays and women who were common women,  who didn't have servants had to have front lacing   stays because they had to dress themselves, and  this just isn't true. We have stays that are only   front lacing in the collections of noble people,  and we have stays that are back lacing that are   clearly common people stays. The reality is  that no woman is an island, you know? Nobody lives   completely alone and can't find somebody to lace  them into their stays. It's not this idea that, "I'm   portraying a working-class person I can't have  back lacing stays." You absolutely can, matter of   fact, stays that are only back lacing are far more  common in the surviving record than stays that   are front lacing. You tend to have front lacing  stays that stay laced the same amount in front   and you adjust them in the back where no one sees it. Yeah, much like I have a pair of stays that are based off of an extant from about the 1780s and  they've got maybe like a halfway down slit that   laces up in the front and then fully laces in the back. And you know what that slit is for? For nursing, yeah because we're talking about maternity clothing but we haven't touched on the fact that   a woman who is pregnant eventually is going to  have that baby and then she has to be able to nurse it. Coming into the 1740s and 50s, Rococo is  starting and these other more artistic movements,   then we're going into the middle-late part of the Georgian period. What is going on and why is it maternity clothing?  This is just a magical question we're gonna keep asking. When we look at clothing from the 1670s and the 1720s and the 1740s, 50s, 60s, 70s, we see something very radically different,   but the fact of the matter is, the details  are different but the basic structure is the same.   You still have a set of stays. You still have  petticoats from the waist down, and you have a   dress that is open in the front. And whether it's  open in the front straight down the centre, or it's   open on the front and you pin it to your stays  or you lace it across the front of your stays,   they still close the same way. One of the ways  that women often close things in this time period   is by the use of pins. You know, sometimes you  have lacing across the front, but more often   you have women pinning their clothing closed  and sometimes you pin it closed, you just bring   the two edges together and you put pins down the  front. And if you need it to be smaller, you just   overlap the edges and pin down the front. So this  same thing keeps happening. We don't think about   using pins this way in our modern lives, but in  the 18th century you had pins like crazy. I mean   you were using pins for everything and pins were  an essential part of a woman's wardrobe. I strongly   debate the use of pins in sewing. Most pins that  we find are dress pins, are pins for holding your clothing together.  I guess basting would have been the norm then, just basting things together, not even pinning them. Pinning to sew is a very, very modern idea. So just to play devil's advocate, I wear a lot of equestrian clothing especially 18th century riding habits and redingotes and these   are all closing with buttons. Would you say that this is an exception to the rule that most women's clothing is maternity clothing? Well it is an exception but it's an exception to a bigger rule.   All women's riding costume is an imitation of  men's dress, and more importantly men's military   dress, which always has you know buttons, almost as decoration. Sometimes the buttons on men's military   dress aren't even functional. In 1588 there was a  document called Stubbes Anatomie of Abuses which is   basically a rant by a puritan preacher in England  who was railing against women, "wearing doublets   like unto the men." The only time women are wearing  doublets is when they're riding, because a doublet   is a man's upper body garment. So women are wearing  them when they're riding and one of his complaints   was that women look like little men, and that  wasn't to be had. Women have to look like women   and men have to look like men, and never the twain  shall meet. And this kind of complaint about women   dressing as men, these complaints by conservative  ministers or other people who were professional...  complainers, I suppose, about women wearing men's  clothing you know, happens over and over again.   So one complaint is that, "oh they look like  men." Which clearly they didn't, but that was the   complaint, but the other thing is that they're not  being feminine and that's all about the buttons.   That's all about the military-style clothing.  And you can't be pregnant and wear that clothing,   so therefore you're not a proper wife. Riding side saddle was incredibly dangerous, I mean riding   side saddle was dangerous in the Victorian  period as well, because your skirt could get caught   and you could get dragged. Before then, you didn't  have any place to hang your leg that crossed   over the horse, so you were literally sitting  sideways on a chair on the back of the horse with   nothing really to hang on to. So a woman out riding  is already risking herself and therefore risking   her family because she is carer of her children, she's the person who runs the household. Women   riding was something that was not really applauded,  and women riding during pregnancy, I mean that   would have been the ultimate thumb of the nose to  the establishment. Because you're putting   yourself at risk, and more important than you is  your baby. You're out riding pregnant? I don't think   you'd get out the front door. So you have this  situation where, yes, absolutely, women are wearing   riding costume, and riding costume has buttons and  therefore isn't malleable. You can't wear riding   costume in pregnancy unless you made a completely  new riding costume for every stage of pregnancy,   which we don't know that anyone did that. You  wouldn't be allowed to ride in pregnancy because   it was so very dangerous for both you and your  baby, that you know if anyone could stop you,   they would. So the idea that riding costume would  have to accommodate pregnancy, it just wouldn't.   Women must have been potentially confined to being  at home at a certain stage because of the fear of   the risk? Because the Georgians weren't stupid but  they only had as much knowledge as they did, and if   they couldn't understand the science, they couldn't  see the baby, or see them on an ultrasound, they   wouldn't have had the knowledge to be able to  discern what was and wasn't safe. In the Georgian period they didn't know these things so if a  woman had a misc****age they would try to blame it   on something and if if she was exercising, you know  if she was taking a walk and she had a misc****age,   well the next time she conceived you don't let  her go for a walk anymore. Correlation does not   equal causation. So you're saying oh well she went  for a walk and then she lost the baby, so therefore   the walk killed the baby, so now you can't go for  a walk anymore. Women were confined to their house,   and sometimes confined to their beds, for months  of their pregnancy. In Georgian England in the   18th century and in the United States, the bedroom  was less of a private space than it is now.  If you had friends visiting you, you would often  receive them in your bedroom, you would receive   all of your friends in your bedroom, and you  would have parties in your bedroom. Women who were   confined would be confined to their bed and would  be sitting up in bed jackets, which are incredibly   shapeless 18th century garments, but they're not  allowed to get out of bed or they're at least   not allowed to leave the room, and certainly not  allowed to leave the house for probably at least   the last three months of pregnancy, if not the  last five months of pregnancy. So is this where the casaque and the battante and these types of gowns come into play? Oh yeah, absolutely, I mean all of the jackets all the things that the the 18th  century jackets the cassette the robotons you're   wearing them over stays but they're wrappers  they're early wrappers when you're wearing   something like that it doesn't matter what your  shape is underneath it the the point is look at   this beautiful silk don't look at the shape that's  underneath it while women did wear cassacks and um   and robotons when they weren't pregnant certainly  it was a great way to disguise a pregnancy or to   cover up a pregnant belly it's very new that it's  okay to have your belly out there so you know the   cassette the the the robotons all of the the  bed gown all of these rather a-line garments   look the same on someone who's pregnant  and someone who's not now if we go into   1790s the waistline is starting to go back up with  the whole french revolution fashion and everything   like that and now going into as well regency  because in a way regency really does start i would   say around 1790. it does absolutely does because  that's when the fashion changes so drastically we   start to see ground gowns and all these different  styles i suppose it's the higher waistline once   once again accommodating for pregnancy you can  wear regency era stays quite late into pregnancy   because they don't touch your belly they're higher  yeah the high waistline of the late 18th century   and the early 19th century really accommodate  pregnancy quite well we still have the the same   thing we have clothing that closes by laces we  have clothing that pins to stays so the shorter   waistline makes it easier for regular clothing  to be pregnancy clothing there's no maternity   clothing because normal clothing does the job  now we're entering a period where i would say   it's the most difficult to wrap our heads around  how that could possibly be maternity clothing   and that's the victorian period core sets were a  lot longer they definitely covered the uterus in   a lot of cases can you talk about why you would  think that victorian clothing is also suited for   maternity let's think about the victorian period  exactly what it means victoria took the throne in   1838 and died in 1901 so that's a whole lot  of decades clothing changed very radically   from when she first took the throne until when  she died in the 1840s you still have a fairly   high waist you return to that kind of weird waste  that they had in the early 17th century it wasn't   high and wasn't natural and then in the 1850s  1860s the waist it's at a natural level but it's   still artificially high because you're putting  a crinoline underneath it which kind of pushes   everything up so corsets in that mid victorian  period are shorter than corsets become in the   1880s they're very short i wear mid victorian  all the time and they're so short you can go   quite late into pregnancy before you'd have  to do anything about changing your corset and   again leaving your corset open those things still  work and then we start seeing corsets made from   maternity now that have extra slashes in them  in the bottom part of the corset that lace open   so as your belly gets bigger you lace those  pieces open so you're still wearing a corset but   the pieces over your growing belly are allowed  to be become wider and wider would you say that's   around the 1870s when the switch is beginning to  happen yeah i think 1870s 1880s um because you're   starting to get cheaper fabrics and cheaper  labor and the sewing machines invented in   in the 1840s but by the 1880s women are having  them in their houses not that wealthy women are   making their own clothing but still if a woman  has a sewing machine in her house she can sell   her labor to women and be a dressmaker because the  corset lengthens in this 1870s 1880s now you have   a corset that covers your hip bones so it's it's  rather long so you have to do something different   because you can't wear that corset over a pregnant  belly it's just it's not going to accommodate it   you can unlace yourself a bit in the back for  the first couple months but you can't wear it   very long so you have to wear a different corset  and then the victorian's well-earned reputation   of being a bunch of prudes the whole idea of a  woman's confinement expanded even more it was   absolutely scandalous to be seen in public with  a pregnant belly you know a working-class woman   would show her belly because she had no choice she  has to work but a woman who was not working class   a woman of of the middle and upper class would  never go out and allow people to see that she   was pregnant in the victorian period the the upper  class victorians looked on common working people   almost as if they were a different species as if  they weren't human she is a big pregnant belly but   that's just the same as my horse having a big  pregnant belly that's so horrible it is really   horrible but it is the way people thought of of  each other in that time period the victorians kind   of had this crazy idea about not being animals not  being mammals being something else somehow and i   think that people before the victorians were just  more cognizant of their relationship to nature   in the victorian period you have the first  great movement from people the exodus from the   countryside into the cities the majority of people  live in cities for the first time in history   that changes your relationship to the natural  world think about victorian cities they're not   lovely cities we have today that have parks  and greenways and this kind of stuff they were   industrial choked with smog and there was this  this difference between the upper class and the   working class that difference was not as stark  in the previous time periods by the victorian   period it got to be like almost two different  species and there was also a big thing in the   victorian period about how things appeared  people lived these very quiet private lives   and they were crazy behind closed doors but to  the world they appeared normal and that was so   important to them and i think that is why people  spend so much money on on clothing because clothes   are the ultimate way to show someone an appearance  it's literally what we put on our bodies   in upper class women you have regular day dresses  that have buttons all the way down the front   it looks beautiful but you can't have buttons  on a body that's going to change but if you do   have buttons on a dress like so much of victorian  fashion it is a statement of wealth it's saying   this dress is my size now and if i change sizes i  will buy a new one because i can afford it buttons   become this statement of wealth a victorian woman  who's pregnant is not letting herself be seen so   she's still wearing the same kind of the wrappers  that you wear around your house what you wear to   the morning breakfast table she's wearing that all  the time and she's not leaving the house and it's   extraordinary to us but that's what was happening  it's upsetting for you know for a modern day   woman definitely because it's like well this  sucks you know that that was like the reality   for for for women back then urban life was not  safe the first time in history that you had that   huge concentration of people in this small  area all living in a small area well crime rose   exponentially and it was also dangerous to be  outside in the streets the air was horribly   polluted we have um statistics that talk about the  height of londoners versus the height of people   who lived in the country in england at the same  time period and the londoners are always shorter   and the victorians are shorter than the tudors  and the georgians the victorians are the shortest   people if you were a person of wealth you wouldn't  leave the safety of your house to go out in the   streets and also it was incredibly dirty i mean  we don't we don't think of this but the streets   mostly weren't paved and also people are throwing  out their chamber pots into the street so there is   literally excrement that you're walking through  on the street and horses and horses which just   makes more excrement yeah bigger excrement yeah  um so incredibly dirty incredibly dangerous so   if you were a pregnant person who didn't  have to leave her house why would you   your house is safe and if you're wealthy  everything you need is going to come to you it's   funny to me because i think the corset is probably  the least dangerous part of the victorian period   you're absolutely right you're absolutely right  there's so much more there's just everything else   moving into dress reform because i'm sure things  are beginning to change now and by the 1890s we   get very sports specific clothing as well how did  all of this accommodate for pregnancy i think you   have a carry-on from the victorian period because  it didn't change in the edwardian period or the   19 teens it was cheaper to buy clothing it was  cheaper to have clothing made for you we're still   living in a world where there's no off-the-rack  clothing there's no sized clothing you can't   just go and buy something if you're wearing  clothing that you didn't make yourself or didn't   commission to have made for you you're wearing  somebody's hand-me-downs and you can you can   buy second-hand clothing i mean there's a trade in  second-hand clothing is is centuries centuries old   so people who lived in in the edwardian period and  the teens had access to cheaper clothing but they   also had that same ethos you know the victorian  ethos didn't go away they still had the same idea   that a pregnant woman shouldn't be seen in public  their everyday clothing wasn't as accommodating to   pregnancy as the clothing of the georgians and and  the tutors and the stewards working-class women   are still wearing that stuff that pins down the  front that laces that ties on the side that will   accommodate different sizes that you can hand it  down to your daughter who's much smaller than you   or you can give it to your sister who's much  bigger than you and it'll work for you know not   just people in um different stages of pregnancy  but people who are different sizes to end on   the final decade final decade of our little  thing the 1920s yay 1920s so that waistline oh   no made for pregnancy yeah there's no waistline  you know i mean i've had so many women say to me   oh i can't wear 20s fashions because i'm not that  skinny like why do you think everyone in the 1920s   was skinny because i can show you pictures of  women who definitely aren't skinny in the 1920s   i have a couple of extent patterns that we  reproduced our company and the bust measurement   of these patterns is 52 inches the big difference  in silhouette in the 1920s is there is no waste   the clothing doesn't go in at your natural waist  it doesn't go in at empire waist it doesn't go   in at a high waist it just drops from your  bust line to your hip line patterns from the   1920s don't even have a waist measurement so you  could be a pregnant woman and wear a 1920s dress   you know undoubtedly women in the 1920s much  more liberated than than the previous decades   but they still had that idea of you shouldn't  show off a pregnant belly so once their dresses   got tight enough that it showed they would wear  bigger dresses from there you get real maternity   specific clothing in in every day but in the  1920s you just didn't need it because your dress   would cover it anyway and i guess that the real  maternity clothing correlates with rack clothing   as in clothing that is pre-sized pre-sized  clothing is something that comes in in the 1920s   1930s well this has been thoroughly fascinating  thank you so much cass for sitting down and just   to let everyone know we're going to continue these  500 years of series progressively throughout the   upcoming months and years and such that way  we can talk about some more topics and see   how they've evolved over 500 years i'm very  excited about the next one we're going to do   it was such a wonderful idea you had and i'm so  happy that you asked me to participate with you   because i'm having a great deal of fun thank you  for having me yeah thank you so much to cass sure
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Channel: V. Birchwood
Views: 269,406
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Keywords: maternity clothing, maternity, pregnancy fashion, historical pregnancy fashion, maternity clothing through the ages, historical fashion, historical clothing, georgian fashion, victorian fashion, medieval clothing, women's historical fashion, historical ladieswear, maternity fashion, historical fashion youtubers, historical fashion youtube channels, historical costuming, fashion history, tudor clothing, tudor fashion, georgian clothing, victorian clothing, history of fashion
Id: D-88plYTyAs
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 39min 51sec (2391 seconds)
Published: Thu Sep 23 2021
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