making cute vintage aprons for my vintage kitchen
[AD] Download Love & Pies now with my link: pixly.go2cloud.org/SH3iS
_______
My Instagram: bit.ly/2Qo9rrI
My nudes: bit.ly/2GZN1ur
My merch: bit.ly/2CCq5jE
[AD] Download Love & Pies now with my link: pixly.go2cloud.org/SH3iS
_______
My Instagram: bit.ly/2Qo9rrI
My nudes: bit.ly/2GZN1ur
My merch: bit.ly/2CCq5jE
Пікірлер: 525
[AD] Download Love & Pies now with my link: pixly.go2cloud.org/SH3iS
@lfgifu296
Жыл бұрын
Oh noo I read “Love and Piss”😭😭😭
@andrzejborkowski6476
Жыл бұрын
Here is another cute transparent vinyl (?) apron in 1953 polish vintage film (pictures) "Can you fire the stove?". kzread.info/dash/bejne/n2WOqLaph8a1ZMo.html Apologizes non polish speaking people - subtitles are not available :(
@missvioletnightchild2515
Жыл бұрын
I actually downloaded this last time you advertised it and I really like it! Very cute and fun
@mags7848
Жыл бұрын
@@andrzejborkowski6476 Thank you, Andrzej, for you have helped me immensely, even if this was not your intention. 😂 Curious about the transparent vinyl apron, I peeked at the film and ended up watching it in its entirety. Why? Because I am about to buy an old house with a cooking stove and a tile stove very similar to those in the flick, and the film taught me how to use them! 😊 Brilliant! 👍
@andrzejborkowski6476
Жыл бұрын
@@mags7848 I'm glad you have found my comment useful :) I wish your new home sweet home. BTW There is tile stove at my house too.
I absolutely adore niche content like this. Like, am I into vintage aprons? No. Am I still going to watch a 10-minute video dedicated to nothing but vintage aprons? Absolutely
@vladimirsanchezgarci
Жыл бұрын
this!
@jwedsonnn_214
Жыл бұрын
relatable
@kalieris
Жыл бұрын
Same here.
@angelicaburga4134
Жыл бұрын
Same
@makeda6530
Жыл бұрын
Indeed
As a broke university student, thank you for sharing this and letting us live our vintage fantasy vicariously through you, all the love!
@sofiel.1931
Жыл бұрын
time to pick up some flour bags
@ghostfeII
Жыл бұрын
Lmao!!! Relatable !
@zocansew
Жыл бұрын
I just bought a giant curtain from a thrift store--making them into towels!
@NebulousCreature
Жыл бұрын
This is why the only surviving sheets of mine are the fitted ones
As someone who thinks 5 days before cutting the fabric, I really like your "I don't care" attitude 😊
@jamestolson2804
Жыл бұрын
Just do it
@bondann8
Жыл бұрын
Same here! Sooooo satisfying!
@pitulanek
Жыл бұрын
Right? Like, I analyse everything for years and then if sth turns out wrong, even when not through my own fault, I still get angry with myself because "I could have anticipated it". And here's Karolina just going at it. Good for her!
@colleenorourke1433
Жыл бұрын
Saaaaame. I literally have an upcycling project (from thrift-store clothes) spread out across my floor right now because I have a ~~vague~~ idea what I want to do with it but I'm too scared to start 🙃
@emmettvictor
Жыл бұрын
This sounds like a read but I 1000% agree lol
My Grandmother used to keep all her aprons from across the years. One of my favourite parts was picking out an apron from her collection to wear while we made food. This video brought back a lot of memories from that time in my life, thank you.
@FilbieTron
Жыл бұрын
What a lovely memory 🥺
@yourpalfred
Жыл бұрын
Yes, my grandma did this, too! 😢 I'd forgotten until I read this comment tysm
@mellie4174
Жыл бұрын
Yes! I did this with my grandma too! Loved it!
@mellie4174
7 ай бұрын
Omg! My grandma did the same!
@theorderofthebees7308
Ай бұрын
❤❤❤
Ok now THIS I might actually do. I want to sew clothes for myself, but i feel overwhelmed at how complicated it can be. But an apron is like 1/3rd of a dress, I could totally start with that!
@daxxydog5777
Жыл бұрын
Bunch of squares, easy leash! Great beginner project.
@dees3179
Жыл бұрын
Good place to start. It was a typical starter project for first term sewing class when my mother was at school. They needed them for cooking classes. They had to learn fast. By summer they had to have made their summer uniforms! Partly an economic decision as people couldn’t be providing material for clothing that wouldn’t get worn and certainly it provided an incentive to learn, if you got it wrong you were going to spend summers for the next few years very uncomfortable.
@EsmeraldaWolfsbane7777
Жыл бұрын
One thing I can tell you that is 100 percent true is the more practice you get sewing 🧵 it becomes a piece of cake after a few years..
@ultimateskillchain
Жыл бұрын
Yes, definitely! The best thing about aprons is you can make them super simple--just some rectangles--and then go from there if you feel like getting fancier. Plus, it's an apron, designed to be worked in and stained and etc, so it's OK if it isn't perfect. Good luck with your first project!
@helenahsson1697
Жыл бұрын
And after that you can make an apron-dress (I don't necessarily mean the Viking kind, there's really cute modern dresses that are also called apron dresses 😅)
When I was a teenage…lord so long ago!..you wouldn’t catch me in an apron or hat or dress! Or the color pink! How strange age makes us! I won’t cook or clean without an apron! I live dresses especially in the summer and I love pink and lavender goes so well with my white hair! Yes!! I’m older than dirt but I love your channel! Love your hair! Love your personality! Absolutely love your short mini movies! Hilarious! You should be on the stage!
@m.maclellan7147
Жыл бұрын
@TrulyBombastic 50 years ago EVERYTHING WAS misogynistic - I'm 60.
@moxiebombshell
Жыл бұрын
I wonder if your embracing of those things is easier now that no one is telling you that you *must* wear this or that? My mom always found it so funny that I used to love wearing gloves when I could, for example. She had such awful memories of *having to* wear gloves on certain occasions, hats for church, etc. and thoroughly embraced the freedom of the late 60s and 70s (when she "scandalously" had the audacity to go braless in the downtown department store of her hometown after returning from San Francisco 😲🤭).
@ogsirelean4448
Жыл бұрын
But its ok for your guy’s granddaughters to act like hoes thinking there a man to sleep around like its ok?….Not knowing what they can catch?… 🤦🏾♂️ok…
What I hate about modern aprons is the neck strap. It always either feels like it is pulling, or it is so loose it's hanging down my back. What I love about vintage aprons are the shoulder straps actually over the shoulders or criss crossed in back. Plus they are darn cute with the pockets, ruffles and adorable (but useful) touches.
@dees3179
Жыл бұрын
I do better with a long strap tied my back into the waist rather than round the neck. Hate that pulling my head off feeling.
@bluewren65
Жыл бұрын
Ha, I'm the opposite. I whip my apron on and off all day and shoulder straps make that process so much more arduous.
@saint-miscreant
Жыл бұрын
look at japanese aprons!
@chloeedmund4350
Жыл бұрын
Ikr? The modern designs are kind of eh.
@Lamaspucke
Жыл бұрын
I have an apron where the neck strap is part of the waist strap, which makes it adjustable. It's much more comfortable than a regular apron
As someone who unironically wears an apron while they do all their house chores and cooking - bless this video. 🙏🏼
@DavidCowie2022
Жыл бұрын
I was cleaning my oven yesterday, and I did think briefly about wearing an apron, but I really needed something that would cover my sleeves. Thanks to a combination of caution and luck my shirt remained undamaged without protective clothing.
I remember making a bibless apron for my grandmother, early 1960s. It was green gingham with a cross-stitched grape motif. I had a lot of help from my mother, because I was only about 11 years old at the time. Eventually it came back to me, an old lady in her seventies.
@trillium2917
Жыл бұрын
Loooved this video btw!
@ekitten02
Жыл бұрын
That sounds lovely.
Mrs. Crocombe is SHAKING
@briannawalker4793
Жыл бұрын
She's been real quiet since this video dropped 🤔🤔
@arachnidlupus7625
Жыл бұрын
@@briannawalker4793 She's plotting
@TheFebgw
Жыл бұрын
Now I want a Karolina-Ms. Crocombe collab so bad
@arachnidlupus7625
Жыл бұрын
@@TheFebgw MY multiverse of madness
@arachnidlupus7625
Жыл бұрын
@M.C. Crying, bleeding, pissing...
My favourite don’t have an iron but need an iron hack is a pot of boiling water. Thin towel between it and the fabric you’re ironing in case it’s dirty or to prevent scorching and you’re golden! The water keeps the heat for longer. Used it a lot in university. You can ask use a hair straightener on seams but I feel like people are more likely to have pots and pans than that.
For the red wool bleeding: a trick of my grandmother is to soak the garment in vinegar before you wash it, this will help set the dies and prevent bleeding.
Oh wow - the first apron is advertised in Amoskeag Gingham, which was made at a mill about 30 miles down the road from me in Manchester, New Hampshire! It was apparently the largest cotton textile mill in the world at one point, though it closed up shop in 1935 and now the old mill buildings have all been converted to loft apartments. Thanks for showing that advertisement!
@_lenny_____leonardo
Жыл бұрын
I was wondering if anyone else would notice the Amoskeag detail! Some of the mill buildings are offices - I work in one :)
@emmalinekim9822
Жыл бұрын
I'm from New Hampshire too!
Karolina slowly turning into a vintage grandma makes me so happy! she is making everyone's dream home and it is so cool!! Your amazing love u bye!! ❤❤
Tip for when you have no iron, if you have one of those steel hot water bottles you can fill it with cooking water, put on some oven mitts and roll it over the seams.
@elizabethkenobi1365
Жыл бұрын
What is "cooking water" and how is it different from tap water? Like I'm picturing cooking wine being basically a cheap wine. Lol.
@katierose6424
Жыл бұрын
@@elizabethkenobi1365 I think they mean boiling/hot water!
@Yfress
Жыл бұрын
@@elizabethkenobi1365 haha oops, language difference, i mean boiling
To see if a piece of fabric bleeds, soak a small piece in water, remove it, then scrub it with a paper towel. If the towel stays clean, the fabric should be safe to use.
@elizabethkenobi1365
Жыл бұрын
Yes, I do this whenever I am about to sew pieces of different colored fabric, especially if one of them is white.
I appreciate the pure chaotic energy on display here. Reminds me that sometimes you just gotta go for it and stop futzing with perfection. All of these looked lovely~
Karolinas videos are like a little dollhouse come alive. 🥰
The last one is the winner for me. I bet that will be the one you end up using the most. Maybe sew pot holders underneath at the ends to use the aprin to carry hot pots.
These are all so cute and I love the absolute chaos and audacity of wearing a pleather apron topless. 😂
Omg I missed those clothing sketches sm!! I think last time we saw them was in that “designing an 1890s wardrobe”. Also it feels very nostalgic to hear your videos accompanied by 1916 (or smth) music!!
My grandma used to sew me different aprons, when I was a teenager. My favorite one was the red apron styled on '50. I miss my grandma, this video is somehow nostalgic for me. Thank you.
For the first apron, put a little piece of lace or piping across the top of the pocket so you can differentiate it🙂
I remember my mom wearing aprons when I was a kid in the 60s. In the 70s she started working outside the home. Stopped wearing aprons,and started wearing pants (trousers) as well. 😊
These are all super cute. Cutting straight into the fabric without even making a paper pattern first is bold! (love it). I use my apron as a tradie uses his overalls ie I wipe my hands on them and take absolutely no care with what gets on them. For that reason, cute little aprons without a bib are out, as are aprons made of anything thinner than denim or a canvas weave (sadly). Anything thinner and I risk what is on the apron staining what is underneath.
Apron are not recognised as the gorgeous and useful items that they are, and that is a crime! This video gave me all the inspo for my next aprons! 🎉
Omg a little contrast whipstitch border on the felt apples would be sooooo cute 🥺🥺🥺 especially with like a red yarn contrast stitch around the apron hem!
@crains8087
Жыл бұрын
yes!
One of the things I enjoy about karolina's comments is the diversity in ages of her fans! It's so interesting to see the memories her videos bring up for people of all ages.
With your hairstyle and the apple themed 1930s apron you look just like Disney's Snow White.
I love aprons but always forget to wear them! I have a 60s one which belonged to my grandma. It's apple green and white gingham with white frill trimming, and the front pocket has hand-painted hens and chickens, countryside lush green grass, a far away barn and a sunny clear day. I love it and I hope to pass it down to my future children and grandchildren ❤️ IIRC it was a gift from a close friend of hers when she moved in with my grandad (:
Karolina, as someone who knows literally nothing about fashion the ability you have to just make amazing clothes on a whim is pure fantastical magic to me, it's incredible
If you don't have an iron you can heat a pot of water and use the bottom if you put baking paper over the fabric! Maybe not for very delicate fabrics but for cotton etc. should work okay! 😊 Beautiful aprons btw, I love the one from the 50s especially! What a beautiful color
I was so hoping you’d make the matching “vinyl” cosmetic bag that came along free with the cocktail party apron.
@lestranged
Жыл бұрын
made of genuine plastic!
@mudslicker3122
Жыл бұрын
@@lestranged MCM Quality.
This is exactly the niche content I come here for
Karolina, jak ja się cieszę, że Cię widzę, dziewczyno. Nie ma chyba lepszego sposobu na rekals niż tutorial z szycia fartuszka
Oh my gosh karolina entered her chaotic sewing tutorial era 😭❤️ I need her and micarah tewers being chaotic together
Vintage content with just a little bit of crackhead energy is why I love this channel ❤
I definitely need to sew myself a 1950s apron now! Also even though you were winging it pretty much the whole time, all of those aprons turned out so cute!
The 1940s one is my favorite. Looks cute and more practical. ❤
Every day is a good day when Karolina uploads :D
The 1940s one is similar to my dozens of handmade lolita aprons I made to protect my dresses from my frequent nosebleeds. 😅 so it was my favorite. ❤ but they all are fantastic.
Your dedication to apron history is very impressive!
My paternal grandmother always wore an apron, they were the half length ones and usually had 2-4 pockets that were stuffed with tissues for wiping grubby faces or small spills.I have recently (aka the last 12 months) learned the value of wearing aprons. those 50s and 60s apron patterns really hit me with the nostalgia and must have been the time period Grandma got most of her apron patterns and designs from.
I never thought I'd need a strapless apron to go over my evening gowns, but omg it's so pretty.
I was so dubious when you started talking about the vinyl strapless apron but it looks fantastic with the glamorous silhouette! Amazing what you can do with hot glue and zip ties.
I remember doing cross-stitch on gingham fabrics with my Grandmother for aprons! Both she and my Mother had an apron for each and every holiday, so now I do, too. Total apron nerd. My Groundhog’s Day apron is adorable and my Martin Luther King Jr. Day apron is cotton with the Emancipation Proclamation printed on it! Boom!!!
My current favorite style of apron is this Japanese one that Claire Saffitz usually wears, it’s more like a smock without sleeves though. The apron that my grandmother wore from the 1930s till she died in the early 2000s was similar but it buttoned up the back
Loved this. I still have one of my mum’s aprons from the 60s. A bright blue check, with chickens on the pocket. I still remember her wearing it, from when I was a very small child. 💙🐔🐥
That 50s strapless apron is unhinged in the MOST 50s way!! My mom has a vintage vinyl apron (NOT strapless haha) that is probably the same kind of material as the original and let me tell you that stuff is STIFF, it pretty much stands up on its own. Even though your material was different it still turned out amazing on you!
I was born in 1955. I can guarantee you, no one in the 1950s wore that strapless, vinyl apron unless they were dressing up for erotic play. That ad was for a novelty, something you wouldn't find in a mainstream women's magazine or similar. My relatives and friends' relatives wore aprons all the time. Never saw anything like that, or even an ad like that.
@user-mv9tt4st9k
Жыл бұрын
I thought "girly magazine" or weird advert from the back pages of a pulp comic book. 😂😂
I usually prefer the full-length pinafore aprons, but that gingham one is beautiful
These are all so darn cute. Then she does that backless bit. Please lady I can only upvote so much!
Not gonna lie, the 1950's strapless is the winner for me. Gorgeous 😮
Now you have plenty of aprons. What I would imagine is a lifetime supply of aprons.
I do not know how to sew, but I love watching you sew. It reminds me of watching my mom as a kid. She still sews, but since I don't live at home anymore, I don't get to watch her. I've always been amazed by people with this skill.
I love them all. Looking at the rectangular aprons I find in stores, I forgot how cute they use to be. I would love to have any of those aprons in my kitchen. You did such a good job on all of them.
@birdyfeederz7940
Жыл бұрын
I made a mostly pointless decorative apron from a pair of blue jeans I'd walked the thighs out of once. Used the butt of the jeans with the back pockets as the front, and sewed a sweet little contrasting frill at the bottom. Tie strap made from a strip cut from a leg. It was great🙂
This video had the best kind of personal Easter Egg. The ad for the first apron is made from Amoskeag Gingham. The Amoskeag Mills are a HUGE part of of my home towns history (good, bad and ugly). Honestly, I think it's the driving reason Manchester grew to 'city' status. The Mill itself closed in the 1930s, but the buildings are still present and used for commercial space. And the dorms where workers lived are now apartments. However, despite (or maybe because of) it being such a **thing**, this is the first time I have seen an anything associated with their fabric outside of a museum, library, historical society setting. I no longer live in the area and It brought it was cool to see something from 'home' show up where I was least expecting it.
Watching Karolina paint the hearts by stencil reminded me of how my grandma would cut a stamp out of a potato for projects like this.
Oh these are so cute! Reminds me of the aprons my great-grandmother made and embroidered for her kids. I’ve got my grandma’s (well-worn) apron and have never felt cuter than when I’m wearing it.
I really like listening to your videos while drawing and it makes me want to draw historical clothing or just some vintage pretty ladies each time.
You are a creative machine. Able to rock any of them in style. Happy to see your videos again Karolina.❤
My sister and I inherited several aprons from my Grandma from the '50s & '60s, they look very similar to the examples you found❤.
Karolina, I need to know about your all in one lamp/table/shelf situation in the living room! It's so dang cute! Does this type of furniture have name? Because this felt like love at first sight and I want one now 🥰
@myladycasagrande863
Жыл бұрын
I'm finding similar items just searching "table floor lamp"... it's a cool piece for sure!
Жыл бұрын
there’s a lot of similar pieces like that here in Poland and they’re usually called “standing art deco lamp” - so maybe a phrase like that will be useful in searching?
@rainyhaze2053
Жыл бұрын
@ Thank you so much, I shall look for that!
This was especially fun for me because I've been making an apron for a house-warming hamper! Now I really want that strapless one for myself... so cute!
I've never seen those scalloped aprons from the 1950s before but they're adorable! The 1930s heart one is my favorite of the ones you made 💞
That first apron is SO CUTE! I want to start wearing aprons as everyday fashion tbh
I love the unbridled chaos and whimsy in this video. And the aprons turned out great!
the 1940s and 1950s were my favorite.
I love making aprons! They are a cheap and easy project and a great way to practice stitches.
Nothing more nostalgic than aprons reminds me of the good ole days in those black and white movies love this 🤍I love the seventies aprons that were something like a vest and had buttons with flowers or butterflies on them too🦋
For the 30s 40s one: at my parents house there was an apron that had no ties for the shoulders. The way it stayed put was a little hole for the button of your blouse made on a small lining at the top of the apron. The top of the apron looked sort of like the way you draw a house as a kid, 5 sides with the top two ending on a point . That lining was a bit stiff, triangle shaped touching the top 3 corners. You would just button it on to the blouse and it would stay put since it was stiff.
I think my fav is the 1940s, it’s so cute!!!
Love the "special companion" reference in the newspaper for the 1950s apron. ;-) seems risqué
1:42 I have an apron I made with my mom and we made a huge deal about the pocket blending into it. It’s really cool fabric, and the pockets are kinda like a cool secret.
i love these! i have a collection of 40-50’s ones my grandpa had made by a seamstress for my mother’s trousseau in 1948. yours came out so beautiful, such talent!
I did very much enjoy the apron journey through the decades. That strapless one omg 😍
Shout out to Sage Lillyman whose vintage apron tutorial was the first thing i made with the sewing machine we got a couple of years ago. I made it from an old black table cloth with a scalloped edge (no hemming!) and it has a cross-over back. I made the top part a diagonal fold over with more of the scalloped edge and it's SO CUTE and it was super easy to make. Literally just eyeballing lengths and trying to cut straight 😂 I love making aprons and am now addicted, and i will definitely steal some of Karolina's masterpiece ideas (though I'm not touching vinyl plastic lol)
Yeeesss! The 1960s (1957) one is so cute! I have so much respect for people who sew
@user-mv9tt4st9k
Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Sewing is a labor of love, really. ❤❤
You’re probably the most talented person i have seen so far! Keep up the great work!
I actually made a few aprons myself last year. In fact I still have the fabric that I bought for at least two more. I could definitely do one heart apron. I have a nice sort of wine red linen that I think would look great.
@MissCaraMint
Жыл бұрын
Ok. I’ve moved. Still have my fabric. I’m gonna do it. I’m making that apron. Today.
Some tips: If you don't have an iron and you want to press seams open, run the fabric over a light bulb. This is how my mom used to iron my hair ribbons when I was a little girl. Another tip is, when sewing plastic or vinyl fabric you can't really baste or pin without leaving holes. If you need to hold something in place use masking tape. You can sew right through it and the needle perforates it so that it can be torn off. It might leave little bits that you can pick out with a pin, but the final finished look is worth the effort. I also use this tip when sewing inset lace. You can tape the edge of the lace evenly along the edge of the fabric without it flopping around or bunching up near pins. If the needle gets gummy, just wipe it down with alcohol.
that was a cute way to see different vintage aprons! I hope they all get used
Okay the heart shaped apron is so adorable and cute I love it 🥰
You do it all so well it is AMAZING to witness. You know all of it, be it historical knowledge down to actually making it from bare material. The research, the actual making, the video edit ??? You are absolutely incredible
As to the blending in of The Gingham on gingham my grandmother would have said lace will fix multitude of crimes
@m.maclellan7147
Жыл бұрын
Excellent point!
These were so delightful!!! I have a huge vintage apron collection from my mom, aunts, and grandmother. But of course I wear the one I got from Target because I don't want to wreck my "good" aprons! 😆
So much fun! When I took sewing class in home economics in the 70's, the first thing we made was an apron. It was required to be gingham and we made it based on measurements only, using the gingham check as cutting guide. The pocket on it went the full width of the apron and was fairly deep as well. Once it was attached we were to sew 2 or 3 seams to divide the pocket into 3 or 4 smaller pockets. The ties and waistband were also cut using the gingham pattern as a guide to cut straight. It was fun to do and a very useful apron.
Nothing seems fun and I'm bored so this is a good thing to see ☺️
I think we learned a lot about Karolina here: Sets off to make vintage aprons just with pictures from shopping catalogues - COMPLETE SKILL Consider buying an iron and ironing board before starting - COMPLETE FAIL 😁
I'll watch this later but, seriously, I'm so hyped :D A new video from Karolina is always the best notification 😊
LMAO that ad break scared me i wasn't expecting it 😂 i thought i was glitching or sth 💀
I get notification I run
I loved this. You did an awesome job putting your apron collection together. Now I want to go through my boxes and find my mother and daughter matching aprons from the 1950’s. As I remember, my Mom’s was a full apron with the bib part, but my little one was just to the waist. Can’t wait to get them out now. Ahh, memory lane.
Absolutely adorable! Thank you for sharing your aprons through the decades!
I collect aprons, the older the better for me! Funny thing is that when I cook, I forget to wear them.
What a fun video! Loviong all of these aprons but the strapless one with the lavender hearts was my favorite, you look GORGEOUS and GLAM in it!! You saucy minx!
I love the idea of aprons and think they're so cute. I made two when I was learning how to sew, but still haven't used them 😅. Also, the chaotic energy is relatable.
7:14 "lovely, glamourous, plastic apron." These old ads are always hilarious
"I cut a rectangle from the fabric-" >footage of brutally tearing the fabric with her bare hands