They won’t show this on TV.
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Samoseli Pirveli (meaning “first garment”) is a shop that specializes in traditional Georgian clothes, which differ according to the “strata and regions of Georgia” (source). One style of garment is called a “chokha” and another, “kalakuri kaba” (meaning “city dress”). Each image has a line of English categorizing the clothing style.
Kimonos and Skirts, Dragonfly, Butterfly and Moth Wings and Cloaks and Capes, by Costurero Real on Etsy
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Blue-haired Karen on the street in Harajuku wearing a crop top, Noise and Kisses skirt, Demonia platform sandals, a Glad News winged backpack, and accessories from Never Mind The XU, Restyle, Bubbles, Vongola, and Vivienne Westwood. She listens to visual kei music. Full Look
“We Wear Culture” is a collaboration between Google and more than 180 museums, schools, fashion institutions, and other organizations from all parts of the globe. It’s part of Google’s Arts & Culture platform, which is digitizing the world’s cultural treasures, and functions as a searchable guide to a collective archive of some 30,000 fashion pieces that puts “three millennia of fashion at your fingertips,” Google says.
But it isn’t just a database. Google has worked with curators to create more than 450 exhibits on different topics—say, how the cheongsam changed the way Chinese women dress—making the site an endlessly entertaining, educational portal filled with stunning imagery touching on everything from modern Japanese streetwear to the clothes worn at the court of Versailles.
i can already tell this has made writing for historical fandoms – the worst part of which, for me, is absofuckinglutely hands-down the clothing – much easier.