![]() Fun fact: most menstruating people just wore what they always wore and just added stuff like period aprons (Abby Cox has an interesting video about it)! Karolina Żebrovska also has a video on menstuation and why it’s so hard to learn something about it!Īlso yes, this is primarily women’s wear. You’re probably the 500th person who mentions it. YET ANOTHER EDIT: yes I think we all know by now that you mistook it for menstruation wear. This is why I would encourage you to submit any resources you have or add them below! If you have any book recs or know good pages, please let me know!Īnother edit/note: Pinterest has changed a lot since I made the post, so you need to be signed in now to see more than the first row of the boards, I’m really sorry about that! (Also I tested all the links and on my original post they still work, if you’re having isues with that.) I definitely lack the knowledge to determine what are accurate portrayals of other cultures, and to find content for them is really difficult as well. It really is very European-centric as I am European as well, and I apologise for it if you expected more from it. Short disclaimer: Most pictures show clothes of royalty, aristocracy, and burgoisie as their clothes weren’t worn as much and especially not for labour, which is the issue with farmers/workers’ clothes, which also were reused quite often, whether to sew new clothes or have rags. 100 years of beauty (includes lots of other cultures too!). ![]() also here with lots of historic fashion magazines.here, here, and here is almost everything (and properly ordered).Lots of periods in one spot/ fashion through centuries: ![]()
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