An archery ensemble from the 1820s CE, FIDM Museum, Los Angeles

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An archery ensemble from the 1820s CE, FIDM Museum, Los Angeles

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Costume For Rachel Weisz As Lady Sarah
The Favourite
Designed By Sandy Powell
27th Art Of Motion Picture Costume Design
FIDM Museum And Galleries
Costumes made for "Taboo" (2017) Photos from the FIDM Museum, 11th annual "Art of Television Costume design".
It's the final week of the The Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising (FIDM) - L.A.'s salute to movie costumes of the past year (and according to one docent, this is the last year period that FIDM will be hosting).
What was amongst their wares?
Barbenheimer of course!
AND MORE
Went to FIDM museum for movie costumes, and l'lI share a few of my favorites
(I'm a history and fantasy fan sooooo it's really only going to be that. But if you know a costume was there this season and want to see what I have, just ask)
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
BLACK PANTHER; WAKANDA FOREVER
STUDIO: Marvel Studios
COSTUME DESIGNER: Ruth E. Carter
Namor (Tenoch Huerta Melia)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Day ensemble • Silk taffeta • 1870-72 • The FIDM Museum (Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising), Los Angeles, California
About 1868, the crinoline silhouette went out of style. The smooth, distinctly bell-like shape of the crinoline supported skirt began to change form, with the fullness moving towards the back of the skirt. This new skirt shape required a different kind of understructure: the bustle. Essentially a cage crinoline cut in half, the bustle supported the back of the skirt, while leaving the front unsupported. In the early years of the 1870s, the bustle usually extended from the waist to about the mid-calf.
The bustle was fashionable until about 1875, when it went out of style as skirts were fitted closer to both the front and back of the body. Beginning about 1883, the bustle enjoyed another round of popularity until finally going entirely out of fashion about 1890.
– FIDM Museum
Bustle • British • c. 1871 • Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute
This 1871 bustle is made of metal wire fully encased in cotton fabric. Of the means employed to force the projecting hoops toward the back of the body, the most common were interior fabric tapes or a panel that lay against the back of the body. This solution was not unlike that used to create eighteenth-century panniers. – – The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Back view of the day ensemble
October, 1870 fashion plate from Peterson's Magazine
Of the five dresses in the above fashion plate, three feature strongly contrasting colors – a green and black walking dress, a purple walking dress with black trim and a pale cream house or walking dress trimmed with black. Note that the dresses at the far left and far right feature scalloped trim similar to the green trimmed scallops on the photographed dress.
Supermodel Monique Desiree Taitague: The Duchess of Hollywood; Billion Dollar Fashion Showcase; From Versace,Christian Dior, Paco Rabbane, Louis Vuitton, Monique L'Huillier , Jordan Ruiz and Several other Fashion Designers.
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