0:21
How to Pronounce Smock
Learn how to say Smock correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. ...
published: 17 Feb 2013
author: Emma Saying
How to Pronounce Smock
How to Pronounce Smock
Learn how to say Smock correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. Definition of smock (oxford dictionary): noun a dress or top for a ...- published: 17 Feb 2013
- views: 65
- author: Emma Saying
3:50
Smocked outfit, baby Spring and Summer clothing Collection, five little ducks...
http://babeeni.com/ Welcme to babeeni Company... BABEENI is one famous brand name of Babee...
published: 18 Oct 2012
author: Hien Duong
Smocked outfit, baby Spring and Summer clothing Collection, five little ducks...
Smocked outfit, baby Spring and Summer clothing Collection, five little ducks...
http://babeeni.com/ Welcme to babeeni Company... BABEENI is one famous brand name of Babeeni Vietnam Company Limited (The old name is Asia- Crafts and Furnit...- published: 18 Oct 2012
- views: 516
- author: Hien Duong
1:00
ho to make a sheered smock dress
making a sheered smock dress follow the link for tutorial for making this http://www.janse...
published: 23 Apr 2012
author: dilpasand2001
ho to make a sheered smock dress
ho to make a sheered smock dress
making a sheered smock dress follow the link for tutorial for making this http://www.jansewingsolutions.com/smockedsheered-dress-p-2420.html.- published: 23 Apr 2012
- views: 3882
- author: dilpasand2001
0:21
How to Pronounce Frock
Learn how to say Frock correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. ...
published: 03 Jan 2013
author: Emma Saying
How to Pronounce Frock
How to Pronounce Frock
Learn how to say Frock correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. Definition of frock (oxford dictionary): noun chiefly British 1a wo...- published: 03 Jan 2013
- views: 36
- author: Emma Saying
0:16
How to Pronounce Frock
Learn how to say Frock correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. ...
published: 28 Jul 2013
author: Emma Saying
How to Pronounce Frock
How to Pronounce Frock
Learn how to say Frock correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. Definition of frock (oxford dictionary): noun chiefly British 1a wo...- published: 28 Jul 2013
- views: 3
- author: Emma Saying
0:16
How to Pronounce Frocks
Learn how to say Frocks correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials....
published: 28 Jul 2013
author: Emma Saying
How to Pronounce Frocks
How to Pronounce Frocks
Learn how to say Frocks correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. Definition of frock (oxford dictionary): noun chiefly British 1a w...- published: 28 Jul 2013
- author: Emma Saying
2:03
Smock dress, smock clothing, fashion trend 2012 , baby clothing, advertising
Babeeni The leading manufacturer of hand-smocked clothing for children all over the world ...
published: 14 Jun 2012
author: BABEENI VN
Smock dress, smock clothing, fashion trend 2012 , baby clothing, advertising
Smock dress, smock clothing, fashion trend 2012 , baby clothing, advertising
Babeeni The leading manufacturer of hand-smocked clothing for children all over the world We are manufacturer of clothing for children such as: wholesale boy...- published: 14 Jun 2012
- views: 1224
- author: BABEENI VN
3:39
BABY PEASANT SMOCKED CLOTHING, PEASANT STYLE - PEASANT COLLECTION 2013 - GANGNAM STYLE
http://babeeni.com/ BABEENI is one famous brand name of Babeeni Vietnam Company Limited It...
published: 19 Dec 2012
author: BABEENI VN
BABY PEASANT SMOCKED CLOTHING, PEASANT STYLE - PEASANT COLLECTION 2013 - GANGNAM STYLE
BABY PEASANT SMOCKED CLOTHING, PEASANT STYLE - PEASANT COLLECTION 2013 - GANGNAM STYLE
http://babeeni.com/ BABEENI is one famous brand name of Babeeni Vietnam Company Limited It is published copyrighted by our national government. There are mor...- published: 19 Dec 2012
- views: 5400
- author: BABEENI VN
1:31
What to Wear Under Sleeveless Smock Dresses : Dressing for the Evening
Subscribe Now: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehowbeauty Watch More: ...
published: 18 Feb 2013
author: ehowbeauty
What to Wear Under Sleeveless Smock Dresses : Dressing for the Evening
What to Wear Under Sleeveless Smock Dresses : Dressing for the Evening
Subscribe Now: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehowbeauty Watch More: http://www.youtube.com/ehowbeauty You can't just throw on a sleevel...- published: 18 Feb 2013
- views: 292
- author: ehowbeauty
3:53
Smock dress - smock baby dress - baby smock clothes - smock clothing - smock baby longall
Collection of Thanksgiving smocked clothing. smocked dresses and bishop dresses for baby g...
published: 06 Jul 2012
author: BABEENI VN
Smock dress - smock baby dress - baby smock clothes - smock clothing - smock baby longall
Smock dress - smock baby dress - baby smock clothes - smock clothing - smock baby longall
Collection of Thanksgiving smocked clothing. smocked dresses and bishop dresses for baby girls. Smocked rompers, smocked long-all, smocked short-all, smocked...- published: 06 Jul 2012
- views: 13883
- author: BABEENI VN
2:06
Part 1 of smocking tutorial for Plus Size Dress
This is part 1 of my tutorial on how to smock a dress. I go into more detail with more ins...
published: 27 Jun 2009
author: Libby Goldsmith
Part 1 of smocking tutorial for Plus Size Dress
Part 1 of smocking tutorial for Plus Size Dress
This is part 1 of my tutorial on how to smock a dress. I go into more detail with more instructions on my blog post I made about this http://tinyurl.com/mn2j...- published: 27 Jun 2009
- views: 25349
- author: Libby Goldsmith
1:42
MAN IN CHRISTMAS DRESS
A man in a Christmas dress (or frock) riding a pink bike is not something you ever see, bu...
published: 25 Dec 2012
author: billschannel
MAN IN CHRISTMAS DRESS
MAN IN CHRISTMAS DRESS
A man in a Christmas dress (or frock) riding a pink bike is not something you ever see, but there is was right in front of me. I had to find out what was the...- published: 25 Dec 2012
- views: 1738
- author: billschannel
Vimeo results:
11:30
A day at The Great Exhibition
Pathé archive voice over: To few people in a lifetime comes the chance of seeing such a gi...
published: 16 Nov 2010
author: Victoria and Albert Museum
A day at The Great Exhibition
Pathé archive voice over: To few people in a lifetime comes the chance of seeing such a gigantic blaze as the funeral pyre of the Crystal Palace, one of the few remaining links with Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.
Narrator: In 1936 a fire destroyed the spectacular building known as the Crystal Palace - the same building that 85 years earlier had housed the famous ' Great Exhibition' , one of the most important events of the Victorian era.
On 1 May 1851 the Great Exhibition was opened by Queen Victoria. Her husband - Prince Albert - led the development of the Exhibition, which was the first of its kind. It was a bit like a giant museum, full of interesting objects from around the world.
The Great Exhibition was held in London' s Hyde Park in a building that soon became known as the Crystal Palace because of the amount of glass used to build it - and it attracted people from all over the country.
Historical sources like diaries, letters, newspaper articles and pictures tell us about the Great Exhibition. They give us a good idea of what a 'day out' at the Exhibition was like.
Mary Smith, a school-teacher from Oxfordshire, wrote about her visit to the Great Exhibition.
Mary Smith: The time came that we started off on a week' s excursion to London, to see this latest wonder of the world. We travelled, as everyone did, by an 'excursion train' , the first I had experience of, and all our party were very weary of it.
Narrator: Visitors even came from overseas, from as far away as America, China, Trinidad, Australia, India and Ceylon. Less well-off people like Mary Smith went on cheap ticket days, which were very popular.
Mary Smith: Country folks as we were, we naturally made the Exhibition our first object, setting off for Hyde Park directly after breakfast to be there when the doors opened. We went with the common people on the shilling day.
Narrator: It seemed as though everyone was there. If you were really lucky, you might even bump into the Queen herself on one of her many visits.
Queen Victoria: After breakfast we left for the Exhibition. It looked so beautiful this wonderful creation of my beloved Albert's.
Narrator: Lewis Carroll, the author of Alice In Wonderland, found the Great Exhibition very exciting. He wrote that:
Lewis Carroll: The impression when you get inside is of bewilderment. It looks like a sort of fairyland. Far as you can look in any direction, you see nothing but pillars hung about with shawls, carpets, canopies …
Walter Bagehot (coughing and interrupting): The only accurate idea I can give you of the Exhibition is that it is a great fair under a cucumber frame.
Narrator: Walter Bagehot, a journalist and banker, recorded his experience of the Great Exhibition in a letter that he wrote to his mother.
Walter Bagehot: The form of the building is that of a cross, the long stroke being called the nave, and the short stroke the transept. In the exact centre is a stunning fountain made of glass.
Narrator: The Crystal Palace covered an area equivalent to 15 football pitches. It was over 30 metres high and several trees that stood on the site were not sawn down, but were covered by the huge building rather like pot plants in a giant conservatory.
An average of 42,000 visitors from all classes of society came to the Exhibition each day.
Reporter: There were honest fellows in corduroys, agricultural labourers in smock frocks, and rural folk in their full dress of velveteen, with their sweethearts in bright-coloured shawls of scarlet and green.
It was amusing to observe the amazement of these good folks as they entered, and the bewildered look of their upturned wondering eyes gazing up at the roof of the building in stunned and staggered astonishment.
Narrator: There were over 100,000 objects on display.
Exhibits from Britain and its colonies filled one half of the building, and the rest of the world, the other half.
The famous author, Charlotte Brontë, could not believe her eyes.
Charlotte Brontë: Whatever human industry has created, you find there! Railway engines and boilers, mill machinery, splendid carriages of all kinds, glass-covered stands loaded with the most gorgeous work of gold and silver smiths, carefully guarded caskets full of real diamonds and pearls worth thousands of pounds.
Narrator: In the British section, there were manufactured goods such as silk and cotton, cutlery, hand tools and surgical instruments and much more.
Official Guides were employed to show the more well-off visitors around.
Guide: Among the more unusual items to be found at the Exhibition are the following: a piano that four people can play at once, furniture made from papier mâché, a bed that turns into a life-raft, a penknife with eighty blades, a dressing table that doubles up as a fire escape…
Narrator: In the British Machinery Section, there were cranes, lighthouse lamps and huge presses. Mary Smith was intrigued.
Mary Smith: We came upon a world of wonders of mechanical
5:54
Ballgowns: British Glamour Since 1950
From debutantes and royalty to charity balls and the red carpet, 'Ballgowns: British glamo...
published: 15 May 2012
author: Victoria and Albert Museum
Ballgowns: British Glamour Since 1950
From debutantes and royalty to charity balls and the red carpet, 'Ballgowns: British glamour since 1950' charts 60 years of stylish evening wear. The exhibition highlights the styles, silhouettes and colours that have been perennial favourites for many years. Here, designers such as Bruce Oldfield, David Sassoon, Mary Katrantzou, Nicholas Oakwell and Roksanda Illincic describe their thoughts on the glamour of the ballgown.
TRANSCRIPT:
Bruce Oldfield: Craftmanship is what it’s all about. Couture is actually just dressmaking, that’s all, it’s just a French way of saying dressmaking. The French always manage to find a nice way of saying things.
David Sassoon: I’m probably the only designer around today that’s dressed every single member, female member, of the royal family except the Queen.
Mary Katrantzou: It’s quite nice to look back into that time when it was a little bit more formal than it is today.
Nicholas Oakwell: The 40s through to the 60s were a very strong period of time, I think. It was very much ‘Rule Britannia’ at that time and I think Britain was very glamorous at that time with the balls and functions and the debutantes and things like that.
David Sassoon: In the 50s young girls aspired to look like their mothers, but in the 60s the mothers aspired to look like the daughters. All the rules went out the windows so that you really were free to do very exciting and very glamorous clothes. And, of course, clothes could be a little bit more sexy than they had been.
Bruce Oldfield: It has changed hugely in the last 15 or 20 years. The big dress, the occasion dress, has become something that you wear less and less and less of.
David Sassoon: In the 60s and 70s people paid for the dresses, but today red carpet dresses are borrowed so you get stars and celebrities wearing a ball dress.
Bruce Oldfield: People look at a long dress and say, ‘What’s that? Where do you wear a long dress? Oh yes, the Oscars.
Roksanda Illincic: Designing a dress can be really quite versatile and different projects. Sometimes I start with ideas that maybe I just saw on the street.
Bruce Oldfield: I always designed from technique. I would find a technique that I liked, whether it was smocking or draping or pleating or ruching or whatever it might be.
Roksanda Illincic: The ball gown usually demands lots of fabric. There is a place to play, to drape, to draw, to playing with the view of 360 degrees, which is really exciting.
Mary Katrantzou: It starts, I think with a theme. All my collections are very thematic. It’s been perfume bottles and interiors and objects of art.
David Sassoon: A lot of the collections that were designed were based on themes. For instance, we would have an Indian collection or a Chinese collection. I loved doing dresses for Princess Diana. She was very, very charismatic and she could wear all sorts of wonderful colours. Our dress was on the official stamp. These are all the sketches that she would make comments on and write on.
Bruce Oldfield: Bianca Jagger was major in the 70s. Bianca wanted a special red dress for this big ball that everybody went to in Paris. I remember Tina Chow and Marie Helvin and Jerry Hall and all these kind of beautiful … the demi-monde at that time. To be dressing Bianca Jagger for it was quite cool. And the dress is very much a ‘homage’ dress to the dress that Rita Hayworth wore in ‘Gilda’.
Nicholas Oakwell: I think my style – I try to be modern in a way, but still quite romantic with the clothes and try to be feminine and try to think inside what a woman wants to wear. I’m trying to get away from that man dressing a woman and thinking how a woman dresses and what she wants to wear.
Roksanda Illincic: I always have a certain modern woman in mind. She works, she lives in a town, she goes to different events and that’s somebody that I design for.
Bruce Oldfield: I don’t think a frock needs to be challenging, I just don’t, but I think it really should be an amalgam of the woman, the wearer, and the dress. So doesn’t she look fabulous, is good enough for me.
Mary Katrantzou: My idea of glamour is that there’s a symmetry to everything and everything is very considered. I wouldn’t say that my prints are random. I think there’s an essence of classicism there and elegance that still is part of my work, but at the same time I think there’s something about how women in the UK dress up now. There’s still glamour, but again I think it’s a little bit more individual.
Roksanda Illincic: I think what makes Britain different is that sort of effortless glamour. Glamour that is done without trying too hard, without trying too much.
3:07
Australian Smocking & Embroidery issue #87 Launch
Inside this beautiful edition, readers will uncover a plethora of inspiration while creati...
published: 22 May 2009
author: Margie Bauer
Australian Smocking & Embroidery issue #87 Launch
Inside this beautiful edition, readers will uncover a plethora of inspiration while creating something special for children of all ages. There's something for everyone... from an adorable bishop dress and a wrap dress with matching cardigan for toddlers, to a classic 'Sunday Best' frock and a richly coloured sundress for older girls. You'll enjoy re-creating a sweet floral dress in soft pink tones and a party dress for your little princess. Young divas will love wearing the fashionable smocked denim jacket, while a gorgeous square yoke dress is also included to brighten even the dullest day. These projects, as well as readers' letters, photographs and stories, complete an exceptional issue that should not be missed. As with every edition of Australian Smocking & Embroidery, issue 87 treats you to world-class photography, full-sized patterns, complete instructions and ready-to-stitch kits to help you re-create each project.
0:29
Online Dress Shopping - Bajstor
Visit- http://bajstor.com
SMS "DRESS" to +91-9560-214-267
OR
E-Mail: support@bajstor.com
...
published: 31 Dec 2013
author: Bajstor
Online Dress Shopping - Bajstor
Visit- http://bajstor.com
SMS "DRESS" to +91-9560-214-267
OR
E-Mail: support@bajstor.com
Dress items include:
1) Frock, Gown, Skirt
2) 1 piece garment of ladies / woman
3) Formal Dresses
4) Casual Dresses
5) Party Dresses
6) Going Out Dresses
7) Seasonal Dresses
8) Bodycon Dresses
Dress Shapes:
1) Bodycon
2) Jumper
3) Max, Midi
4) Pencil
5) Shift, Shirt
6) Skater, Slip, Smock
7) T-Shirt, Tea Dress, Tulip
8) Wrap
Youtube results:
5:44
ARRSE Dixies Corner Smock Cuffs
A Closer Look at Dixies Corner with Graham sewing cuffs onto a CS95 smock....
published: 15 Apr 2011
author: ARRSEReviews
ARRSE Dixies Corner Smock Cuffs
ARRSE Dixies Corner Smock Cuffs
A Closer Look at Dixies Corner with Graham sewing cuffs onto a CS95 smock.- published: 15 Apr 2011
- author: ARRSEReviews
0:16
How to Pronounce Frocked
Learn how to say Frocked correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials...
published: 28 Jul 2013
author: Emma Saying
How to Pronounce Frocked
How to Pronounce Frocked
Learn how to say Frocked correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. Definition of frock (oxford dictionary): noun chiefly British 1a ...- published: 28 Jul 2013
- author: Emma Saying
0:21
How to Pronounce Frocked
Learn how to say Frocked correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials...
published: 03 Jan 2013
author: Emma Saying
How to Pronounce Frocked
How to Pronounce Frocked
Learn how to say Frocked correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. Definition of frock (oxford dictionary): noun chiefly British 1a ...- published: 03 Jan 2013
- views: 6
- author: Emma Saying
7:38
little girls smocked dresses, spring and summer smocked dress 2013
Welcome to Babeeni the baby smocked clothing world. This is the newest collection for baby...
published: 10 Oct 2012
author: BABEENI VN
little girls smocked dresses, spring and summer smocked dress 2013
little girls smocked dresses, spring and summer smocked dress 2013
Welcome to Babeeni the baby smocked clothing world. This is the newest collection for baby clothing 2013.- published: 10 Oct 2012
- views: 1381
- author: BABEENI VN