Hi, I’m alice! I’m a brown goth streamer who loves EGL / historical fashion, bats, tea, dessert, and spooky history! If you enjoy these things, I look forward to your follow! I refuse to shut up about silent hill or alucard. Follow me on twitch! twitch.tv/thecupcakemedic
Two-piece wedding dress (bodice and skirt) in ecru satin, embroidered on tulle with a motif of leaves and flowers in white straws and glass beads. Tight V-shaped bodice with sweetheart neckline, trimmed with silk ribbon, elbow-length sleeves in ecru grosgrain, embroidered on tulle, long winged sleeves with ruched shoulders, hook-and-eye front fastening, back with panels decorated with grosgrain bows. Cloche skirt with pleats taken up on the back, shaped basque and front panel embroidered on tulle with lateral applications of flowers in silk thread and pendants in silk thread and glass beads.
those suck-ass live-action disney reboots are just like “haven’t you always wanted to see what your favorite disney characters would look like in real life????” shut up bro i see them every day in the disney parks
I want Markiplier to be in the fnaf movie but not as a character I want him to have a face cam and act like he’s playing a new fnaf game. Starts off the movie with the HELLO EVERYBODY MY NAME IS MARKIPLIER and then the rest of the movie is just like this.
The John Bright Collection is one of my happy places, and this kind of dress is one of the reason why. Not only are the images beautifully high resolution, but there's an attention to detail in the history and provenance.
This gown, with that gorgeous berry color and florals, dates from the late 1870s, but it's absolutely in conversation with the previous century. From the description:
"The design of this dress owes much to the ‘Dolly Varden’ look, a craze of the early 1870s named after a character in Charles Dickens’ 1841 novel Barnaby Rudge, set in 1780. The style was based on colourful, flower patterned interpretations of gowns of the 1770s and 1780s with skirts looped up into puffs to reveal their underskirts, or petticoats as they were then known."
This gown is so stunning I almost thought it might have been a costume for a film. But no, it's authentic period. The ruching and contrast of silk and lace against that stunning flora silk is absolutely stunning in every way. And you can certainly see just how much the gown takes from the 1700s while interpreting it with the tailoring and methods of the 1800s.