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This is the third in a 3-part series about making a 15th-Century Inspired Maleficent Costume. First video here (the kirtle): • How to Sew a Medieval Supportive Kirtle Second video here (the accessories): • Making Maleficent's Historically-Inspired ... In this video, I walk you step-by-step how I drafted and constructed my 15th-century inspired Medieval Maleficent gown. This "fashionable gown" or "houppelande" is a gown worn by both feminine and masculine people from the 15th century. According to the Medieval Tailor's Assistant, this is the last unisex garment before masculine and feminine styles began to split and transform in their own trajectories. Inspired by the animated Disney film Sleeping Beauty, I go into detail about the construction of this dress, from concept to completion, including some bumps in the road and some EXTREME silliness in the meantime. While my materials and sewing techniques aren't 100% historically adequate for this project, I draft and hand-build the entire thing using the Medieval Tailor's assistant. The gown is made from cotton twill, China-weight silk, lightweight buckram and acrylic and poly trim. Chapters: 00:00 Making a Medieval-Inspired Maleficent Costume 02:44 The Concept 06:32 Drafting the Houppelande 08:00 Drafting the Fire Sleeves 09:10 Drafting the Collar 10:33 The Mockup 14:42 Cutting out and preliminary construction 16:50 The Trim Conundrum 18:10 Basting and second fitting 21:53 Sparkle-fying 26:38 Attaching the trim 29:11 Pocket interlude 29:50 Cutting out the lining 30:52 Lining the sleeves 32:50 Lining the gown 33:29 Assembling the collar 35:12 Collar modification 39:31 Sewing the collar onto the dress 41:16 Setting in the sleeves 42:04 Facing the hem 45:02 The Reveal 46:35 Final thoughts 48:34 Bloopers Resources: Medieval Tailor's Assistant: https://www.amazon.com/Medieval-Tailo... Supplies: Black cotton twill from Fabric.com: https://www.fabric.com/buy/0269369/co... (I call it broadcloth in the video, sorry for the mistake! Purple China-weight silk from Dharma Trading: https://www.dharmatrading.com/fabric/... Both trims from Joann's Lightweight buckram from Mood: www.moodfabrics.com (Don't recommend this. Use millinery buckram, instead.) The fastenters I used are bead squares I bought from Michael's years ago, and just glued to some pin backs. Houppelande image by Boccaccio. Photo credit: Source gallica.bnf.fr / Bibliothèque nationale de France. "Giovanni Boccaccio, De Claris mulieribus, traduction anonyme en français Livre des femmes nobles et renommees", page 253. Socials: Follow me on Instagram: / fantasticalfolliescostuming Follow me on Twitter: / jnmoffa My Website: https://jackimoffa.com/ Music by Bensound.com/royalty-free-music License code: OZTLIDRRY2TIKAQQ Sound effects by Zapsplat https://www.zapsplat.com/ #maleficentcostume #historicallyinspireddisney #historicalcostuming #medievalcostuming Support this channel by buying me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/fantasticalfollies