From one religious and Marxist content creator to another I just want to thank you for all of your amazing educational work. Just know that despite all the hate you get there are people out there that truly admire your work, your worldview and your wonderful fashion sense - thanks, comrade!
@LadyIzdihar9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the kind message of support, it's greatly appreciated 🙏🏻
@TheEsotericaChannel9 ай бұрын
Of course I've been thinking about doing a live stream about being both Marxist and religious, if you're interested. @@LadyIzdihar
@LadyIzdihar9 ай бұрын
Definitely! Send me an email 💌 ladyizdihar@gmail.com
@ljkking6226 ай бұрын
Marxist on the capitalist KZbin. You can’t get much more hypocritical than that. I take that back. Mix it with Islam and you’re really off your rocker. I guess some people just like being oppressed.
@samaval99205 ай бұрын
@@TheEsotericaChannel1) Christian socialism’s, non Marxist, started in 19th c. Marx criticized at least I faction, See Wikipedia artickes Christian lSocialism JewishSocialism Buddhist Socialism Islamic Socialism etc. US 20th c. Catholic Wotker Movement of Dorothy Day SMK of Iran, at least at 1st-- Show Islam& some sort of leftism, but now…? TheologybofbLiberation in Latin America & Brasil, 🧢1960s70e-- hugely influential Haïti later Marx & many early leftists were atheists , but they missed the populist or early socialist aspects of many religions, or at least those factions ,
@sebastiangorka20010 ай бұрын
>Stranger sees badge >"Is that a member of your family?" >"Yes, it's grandpa Lenin"
@aluisious10 ай бұрын
Badge? I went to meet my girlfriends parents, all Chinese immigrants from the Maoist era, and they all giggled and laughed for about 20 minutes because I *look* like Lenin. "You see you see anyone who grew up in a Communist country saw the image of Lenin many times." - forty seconds later - "You see, anyone who..."
@pcrocomo10 ай бұрын
Since we got a huge catholic population where I live I always say it's a Saint Vladimir medal
@KennyHache9 ай бұрын
It's a pin, bratie. Not badge
@Birmanncat9 ай бұрын
"And our grandpa Lenin was a very good chief He decomposed into linden honey and mould"
@sebastiangorka2009 ай бұрын
@@KennyHache English is my 3rd language, sue me.
@TIG-ku7lz10 ай бұрын
I’m a simple communist i see Lady Izdihar I click
@adamlamascus443810 ай бұрын
Reminded of a conversation I had about 15 years ago (yikes) with a guy who grew up in Czechoslovakia and he was saying how even after having lived in the US since the fall of the USSR, it still confused him when people here would talk about how “everyone” had more conservative values back in the ”the good ol’ days” and he would always just think “uh my parents, my grandparents, and most of the adults I grew up with were communists.”
@anetakobularcikova584110 ай бұрын
Moji predkovia boli socialisti. To bude asi tým, že u nás nikdy komunizmus nebol. Ten musíš ísť hľadať na o chvíľu bývalé teritória Ukrajiny.
@mariaavalon37309 ай бұрын
Communism is actually a very Conservative ideology. Most Communist states were always authoritarian, anti individualist, with conservative views on sex, gender etc. Which is why Communist states were extremely pro Natalist and jailed and executed LGBT people. Really Ayn Rand a refugee from the USSR said it best Christianity is the kindergarten of Communism and Communism like Fascism are just Christian heresies in the same way that Marx and Giovanni Gentile the founder of Fascism were mentored by Christian Theocrat Hegel.
@Moosemoose19 ай бұрын
@@mariaavalon3730 Uhhhh...you do realize that the first Gay marriage in Philippines history was in a Communist guerilla base, right?
@Bluebelle519 ай бұрын
@@mariaavalon3730 Ayn Rand was a dullard, who wrote boring books about how wonderful it is to screw over the poors, she was always full of shite
@brunatheprincess8 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Ayn Rand had to study in soviet union cause at the timr if you were a woman in the west capitalist countries you COULDN'T GO TO UNIVERSITY! she also only lived as long as she did because of FREE HEALTHCARE.
@teddymcfarland9310 ай бұрын
My fashion choices can easily be described as "1930s Butch Lesbian Communist With A Love For Black Clothing".
@ilse52209 ай бұрын
you sound like the coolest person alive
@hydratejsn9 ай бұрын
I would love to see those outfits!
@mariaavalon37309 ай бұрын
And those Communists would execute you as a butch lesbian for being a useful idiot. The Soviets certainly did.
@teddymcfarland939 ай бұрын
@@ilse5220 Aw thank you!!!
@teddymcfarland939 ай бұрын
@@hydratejsn It can also be alternatively described as “If the Peaky Blinders crew had a goth occultist who was too obvious about his political leanings.”
@Sully_Iqbal10 ай бұрын
Making my fashion choice reflect my values is such an amazing thought! I defo will consider this going forward!
@janefrericks848810 ай бұрын
romanitizing the bourgeoisie in fashion is such an interesting concept. I've literally been thinking lately about the "feminine energy" and elegance training movement type thing trending and wondering if its about working women trying to emulate the owning class as a kind of self improvement. I don't know if it is or if you know what I mean. Thought provoking concepts here with a visual feast of symbols
@bionodroid5479 ай бұрын
I think it specifically has to do with high society being the subject of a lot of media, and thus the princess or mistress trope being something some people try to emulate. Most of the children I know want to be a KZbinr or something like that when they grow up, and so did I when I was younger, but that’s just because you want to emulate the subjects of the media you consume when you’re young. I also think it has to do with the idea that we’ve gotten “too casualized” and that “people don’t have class anymore”. In reality I think people have just become hyper alienated and so old world ideas of class become appealing as a way to differentiate oneself.
@joanofarcxxi9 ай бұрын
No, let's instead mindlessly romanticize communist fashion. lol
@janefrericks84889 ай бұрын
@@joanofarcxxi where is emulating communist asthetics mindless? Surely not here where people are consciously choosing style both for what it symbolizes and retro, used clothing to not be mindless consumers as if new fashion clothes are a necessity
@VivaCubaRoja10 ай бұрын
Hey, all those Soviet clothes are dull and grey! “The pictures are in black and white film.” The anti-communists always have the most infantile complaints. The US in the 30s, 40, 50, had segregation, inequality for women, African Americans, Indigenous Peoples, immigrants, non-Protestants, homelessness, joblessness, higher education, healthcare, and other necessities as commodities(most of these problems still exist), yet because they had blue jeans, Coca Cola, and fancy clothes(for those who could afford it), the US is liberty and democracy and Stalin ate babies for breakfast. Another great video, comrade.
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
I almost said something about that, how people misconstrue black and white photography for dull clothing
@vadimk348410 ай бұрын
I think this myth is one of the stupidest and easiest to debunk. All one has to do is watch a Soviet documentary or movie from the times when color film became commonplace.
@greyfells28299 ай бұрын
The soviet Union in those decades was colonizing the Baltics and purging innocent people.
@mariaavalon37309 ай бұрын
The US had problems but not nearly as much as the Soviets. For one the Soviets were very racist especially towards Jews, they slaughtered re;igious minorities, LGBT people, Kulaks and honestly did things like Nazino Island. Nothing the US did compares to Stalin's cannibal Island. Not to mention the famines because Communists can't farm, starvation, poverty (except for the Communist elite), Gulags etc. Hell Stalin didn't even have too much a problem with racism. The Soviets were even briefly aligned with the Nazis and the alliance only ended because Hitler betrayed them.
@badaoe3stratsonly1309 ай бұрын
I mean. What I don't understand, is why the Soviets had such a hard time manufacturing blue jean's. They had money for ICBM's that could reduce cities to ash and kill millions of innocents in the blink of an eye. But somehow blue jeans were too expensive to produce? They should've cut back on expensive uranium enrichment, and simply reverse engineered some Levi's. God knows they had plenty of examples imported into East Germany to study.
@joelpace203910 ай бұрын
Interesting video. I liked the final point about having meaning behind what you wear. I know a lot of POC in the vintage community feel like wearing the clothing of the American bourgeoisie is radical in itself since their ancestors weren't able to dress that way.
@samaval99205 ай бұрын
What are UZS corporate class fashions? Real ones are too expnsuve for most, but people can wear cheaper copies & still look like less wealthy capitalists. By that way s mère reversal, still trapped in 2nd stage of dialectic- NOT 3rd stage transcendence by wearing new synthèse fashion-- part old poor, part old rich, part innovation
@therat111710 ай бұрын
I would indeed like to have vintage values, if those vintage values were indeed those of a fellow communist! I have nothing but respect for the radicals of history, especially when they did so much in such harsh times as they lived in for an ordinary member of the working class.
@greyfells28299 ай бұрын
I can understand why someone would be attracted to modern leftism, but vintage communists were murderous opportunists who literally recreated the elitist society they claimed to have torn down.
@Gerfreiter13 күн бұрын
Why would you support communism? Millions of lives were lost and affected by it. You clearly live in a capitalist country living your life through the benefit of capitalism.
@winichskorn97610 ай бұрын
I agree with the points made in the video, though I’d like to add that: In a truly classless society where self-determination really exists, I do think everyone should be able to truly wear what they want, even clothes traditionally associated with the bourgeoisie (unless those clothes require the need for capital accumulation by their wearers, of course); and there were those who wore relatively bourgeois clothing and still advocated for radical ideas as well. Marx himself wore the frock coat (which is a standard for most bourgeois men at the time). If I’m not mistaken, he also owned a monocle (which is perhaps the most bourgeois eyewear ever). Edited: additionally, the dandyish poet Oscar Wilde, who supported socialism, also wore highly debonair outfits (which would typically be considered bourgeois)
@humanbean788410 ай бұрын
There's also people who explicitly wear clothes with bourgeois associations, sometimes with a twist, to subvert those values and appropriate them, like those modern dandies in Congo, or the aesthetics of opulence and glamour in the ballroom scene. It might in some ways romanticize the bourgeoisie, but also kind of suberts their aesthetics by making them for the most marginalized and sometimes parodying their sensibilities. It also allows marginalized people to experience the feeling of success and thriving in a society that bars them from having having a decent life
@lc4n33310 ай бұрын
Not all upper class people were evil. The earlier scientists, leaders, thinkers, they were born from wealth. You need to have power to do great things. We should not forget that.
@RedArrow80810 ай бұрын
@@lc4n333don’t care. we poor rightfully resent them and that resent will have to be dealt with it’s not going away anytime soon.
@Vict0r198410 ай бұрын
@@RedArrow808yes but it's illogical to expand that resent to the fashion of the elites. Look at the Chinese Hanfu revival movement for example - some of those gorgeous silk dresses/robes are based on what the landed elites wore during the Ming, Song or Tang dynasties, yet there are many Chinese socialists that wear them too. It goes in a similar way for bowler hats and fedoras with three piece suits, or for dresses with floral hats from the early 1900s - if these things are worn by working people for mere aesthetic reasons or as an expression of their personality, without those people having bourgeois aspirations or libertarian political views or anything, then I see no problem with it. I'm a communist too, but with all the destruction wrought on this world by neoliberal capitalism and impending irreversible climate catastrophe, we've got far greater issues to worry about and organise and fight against than bourgeois or elitistic fashions...
@mariaavalon37309 ай бұрын
Well Marx like most Communists came from extreme wealth and privilege. He basically spent his life bumming off his family and Engels. Marx literally was the original Champagne socialist. My brother a Doctor who works harder than Marx ever did in his life and isn't a part of an ideology that comes in only to Christianity and Islam in how much people they killed accurately said that "Communism is a rich person's disease."
@elizabethr.249110 ай бұрын
Just discovered you from Tiktok and as a fellow vintage fashion radical values comerade, I am so here for this! ❤
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
Welcome 🤗
@ainsel9810 ай бұрын
i was not expecting to hear "as-salam alaykum comrades" today but im glad to have found your channel ❤ great video, really good insight, might look into moving my clothes more vintage tbh also that Wendy's commercial lmao 😂
@GCarty809 ай бұрын
Shades of how George Galloway used to address Muslim audiences.
@stuheevun10 ай бұрын
Oh this video is excellent, I really enjoy how you signposted many of the changes to different historical moments.
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
Thank you Steve. I'm really enjoying your KZbin videos as well! Honestly it inspires me that you've switched to posting here so much!
@agluebottle10 ай бұрын
Aaaaand subbed.
@Tnega7410 ай бұрын
Let's talk about why people shouldn't aspire to be the bourgeois, that would be a great video.
@commenterthe3rd9 ай бұрын
actually you could make a good vid out of this in modern times most peoples hopes are about being rich this goal is not that possible for everyone and people unable to do it get depresed etc
@felipe5horas9 ай бұрын
There’s a famous quote by a Brazilian educator called Paulo Freire that is something like “if the education we provide is not freeing, the oppressed kids will always dream of becoming the oppressors”
@bionodroid5479 ай бұрын
Alternatively, intentionally co-opt monopoly pilled capitalist-core aesthetic in an ironic manner, adorning oneself with jewelry and badges of radical progressive values, as a form of rebellion against the upper class. Maybe it wouldn’t hit as hard as it would if people were still wearing frock coats but it lets anyone use any fashion they prefer for how it looks, and mirrors the militant aesthetic of punk and hardcore which similarly parodies Facism.
@chreeess9 ай бұрын
@@commenterthe3rdI think this is at the core of, or a major contributor, to why young men are turning towards the “manosphere”. They aspire to be like Tate and aren’t told that we can’t all “make it”. So when reality hits and the young man fails or falls short, he then turns back to that “manosphere” for validation. It’s a cycle that just sets young men (and women) up for more failure and mental anguish. We aren’t given role models with attainable values, we are given millionaire influencers
@4everseekingwisdom6909 ай бұрын
Yes, strive for mediocracy!!
@j-e-q191710 ай бұрын
This video really means a lot to me as a fashion design student. My last collection for my third year was actually inspired by lamanova and early soviet workers fashion while dealing with socialist movements in the 20s. Thank you for bringing more light to this. Doing research on all of this was very tedious and its great that there's more accessible content on it now
@j-e-q191710 ай бұрын
Also as someone with someone with my expressed radical values it's important to find ways in which people throughout history have attempted to revolutionize fashion in a way that doesn't feed into the ever increasing exploitation and destruction
@BobHawksley210 ай бұрын
What a great service you do. You are humanizing Soviet Russia, and helping everyone understand that no two peoples are so distinct as to resort to hate. I too enjoy vintage fashion: I’m a cowboy, and have had radical values since my early youth.
@RedArrow80810 ай бұрын
I doubt you are. Just like to play dress up.
@BobHawksley210 ай бұрын
Well, I’ve fallen off a horse twice, grown alfalfa, driven tractors, delivered calves, saved steers with bloat in springtime, dug trenches for irrigation pipe, installed electrical in barns (two I lived in), drilled wells, used ATVs to mend fence without seeing anybody for days, and more. Being a cowboy is a whole lot more that a costume; it’s a culture of gentlemen and ladies that would never second guess what someone says they are. 🤠
@TheEsotericaChannel9 ай бұрын
For more pins !
@Moosemoose19 ай бұрын
The fact that Communists loved black leather jackets as a sign of revolutionary rebellion makes me love leather jackets even MORE
@Zhicano10 ай бұрын
I wish my house looked like your place... actually I kind of wished I had a house in the first place.
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
Believe it or not I'm in a cramped one bedroom apartment. My Office/filming space/living room/ Library is all one big box 😭
@Zhicano10 ай бұрын
@@LadyIzdihar Well you make your one bedroom lively enough to seem bigger than it is 👌🏽
@TheStatesianBolshevik10 ай бұрын
Aw Hell Yeah! A New Lady Izdihar Video! 🎉 I haven’t even seen the whole video yet, but I can already tell that it’s gonna be good. Solidarity Comrade. ✊
@malik-ug6cs10 ай бұрын
I always look foward to when you upload. I know you get alot of demeaning comments but please keep up the good work. Insha'allah more people will discover your work
@comradethatmetalguy10 ай бұрын
Is nice to see you making videos for youtube, I miss them. I'm never been too interested in clothes or fashion, but you make me think a lot about it, for the best. Thank you always for inspiring us. Salud comrade ✊🏼
@Tadfafty10 ай бұрын
I've told people many times, my values did exist in the past, just only to a select few. Because for certain not everybody was this far right thing that has taken over the vintage fashion we love. Comrades, we need to appreciate and use vintage fashion just the same. There are a surprising number of communists in the vintage spaces. I like this video, I will be sending it to many people.
@Tadfafty10 ай бұрын
The working class certainly did have beauty and style, yes. Communism is about art more than any other ideology - art for all.
@BobHawksley210 ай бұрын
What a great service you do. You are humanizing Soviet Russia, and helping everyone understand that no two peoples are so distinct as to resort to hate. I too enjoy vintage fashion: I’m a cowboy, and have had radical values since my early youth.🤠
@albertcapley689410 ай бұрын
Renaissance faires are rife with people dressed up as kings, princesses, knights... The only way you're gonna see someone dressed as a peasant is if they have a skit they are playing a part in that requires them to be. Amusingly enough, you see some of the same aristocratic outfits being worn in attendance at a coven meeting, because, as we all know; witches are exclusively from the Italian peninsula and the 1500s... This kind of thing has always... Maybe bothered is too strong of a word, but it's always made me kinda scratch my head nontheless. But I guess it's kinda like how people think "I'll dress like a cowboy" and then their ensemble has no dirt on it, boots look all expensive and shiny, etc, etc. An idealized and consumerist interpretation of the thing itself.
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
This is a really good example actually. I always wear folk dress to Renaissance faires. Which would be essentially the kinds of clothing my ancestors would have worn on special occasions or like to church LOL. Every time I wear folk wear I get tons of people commenting that they wish they saw more people dressed that way at the fair! I think it's every historian / researcher's worst nightmare to try and expect historically accuracy at a Ren faire tho
@rachelgray679010 ай бұрын
My girlfriend and I actually wore peasant garb to the ren faire last year, and we got tons of compliments! Ironically, I guess we looked unique!
@albertcapley689410 ай бұрын
@@LadyIzdihar very true, and I can't judge too harsh anyway because I have gone to a ren faire in a straight up wizard robe, with runes on the sleeves and everything lol. The local ones are a mesh of historical "cosplay" and fantasy cosplay for the most part, and I jive with it, it's good fun tbh. I'm personally very fixated on the different hats of the early Bolsheviks, is there a specific name for the flat cap styles which were common for them, or are they just flat caps?
@albertcapley689410 ай бұрын
@@rachelgray6790 that's awesome! Even though I did the wizard robe thing at a Ren faire before, lol, I like the idea of wearing the tunic+trews+belt if I dress up for one again.
@cluckcluckchicken2 ай бұрын
Most people at Ren Faires don't even try to wear historical dress. I see more elves, fairies, and wizards than any sort of "Renaissance" clothing! 🤣
@breezyashell10 ай бұрын
awesome this was fun! halfway through the video I tried out a red bandana, then a kuffiyeh as a headscarf + biker leather jacket combo and I look sick
@piccalillipit921110 ай бұрын
*THE BEST SOVIET MEDAL* I have ever found was a "Awarded For Not Bineg Arrested Drunk For 2 Months" It was in a junk store here in Bulgaria and I didnt by it - I wish I had... I would love to know how much the "GOOD WORKER OF THE WHEET HARVES" and such badges meant to people - did they really care about them, or were they seen as junk...?
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
Omg I have to look that up! I really love Soviet anti drunkenness campaigns
@piccalillipit921110 ай бұрын
@@LadyIzdihar When I first moved to Bulgaria 15 years ago there were thousands of them in the junk shops, also lots of enamel factory signs - they were super cool.
@piccalillipit921110 ай бұрын
*AS A CARD CARRYING COMMUNIST* and bespoke tailor of men's historical fashion - I _guess_ this video is for me...? EDIT: I enjoyed that immensely...!!!
@richardhill19410 ай бұрын
It seams like most of the vintage mens wear channels are always talking about suits and fancy dress. but Ive mostly gravitated toward workwear. I dont know if everyone should dress like a worker, but I actually do work in a woodshop and want to dress like similar people from another era. workwear is also usually close enough to modern jeans and a tshirt in many ways that it doesnt feel wierd wearing around town in everyday/modern life. I hadnt thought about it as political before, but Im all for it.
@mavrospanayiotis5 ай бұрын
I started with vintage literature to get outside of an oppressive and flattening propaganda... i discovered beautiful classics from long gone decades and an incredible variety of points of view, ideas, experiences from wich really shape my personality. This video on the value and potential of vintage fashion is really inspiring! Thanks!
@ariverdreaming10 ай бұрын
I love this!! I’ve really been enjoying sewing my own western European peasant style clothing, it’s really cool to see how people made practical and beautiful clothes that conserve fabric and last. Gonna be wearing my berets more now too!
@MideoKuze10 ай бұрын
A little sad you didn't go with "vintage fashion; vanguard values"
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
THATS SO GOOD!! Now I'm sad too
@Moosemoose19 ай бұрын
@@LadyIzdihar That could be the phrase for a vanguard party when discussing its uniform choice
@Hakaimono10 ай бұрын
The Wendy's commercial 🤣
@RicSpivey10 ай бұрын
I haven't heard you speak much about your husband! So good to hear of some of the shared values you have. That's so awesome and something I truly hope to find in life also. GREAT information as always comrade. Thank you!
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
People get weird when I mention him, but I felt that anecdote really fit!
@RicSpivey10 ай бұрын
The only comrade in the world, I Believe, that would have me putting serious consideration into fashion! I certainly recognize the need to reject the bourgeois styles and show solidarity. Thank you again!
@RicSpivey10 ай бұрын
@@LadyIzdiharit really did fit. As much as I love the short bits on tiktok, you did a lot in a great way with the longer format. I've missed your dives into details!
@CoriandreVonEmiel10 ай бұрын
Loved hearing about this, thank you so much! In the past, there was a blog called steampunk Emma Goldman in which the writer tried to explain what it was to dress steampunk/ Dieselpunk from a more leftist side of history. It prompted me to investigate what spanish guerrilleras wore, and try to compose my own outfit, since it's part of my family history. It was a very empowering thing :)
@joshuacheek16679 ай бұрын
Is that blog still active? I'd love to check it out!
@alexcarson698910 ай бұрын
glad to see you posting long form content again!!
@tishw85805 ай бұрын
I love love your style. It is so beautiful. When I watch old movies, I see the wonderful tailoring and beautiful quality woolens and silks from the 1940's and 1950's and want so much to recreate them and I am not thinking of the political values at all. I'm more honoring history and evolution of thought over time.
@Damascene-Syria10 ай бұрын
Your videos are always so enjoyable and fascinating! Love from a Syrian ❤
@williamterry831610 ай бұрын
Another devastating video by the incomparable Lady Izdihar. Yea!
@alberteinstein52709 ай бұрын
Hello Lady Izdihar.Your chanel is very important for keep the memory of Soviet Union.
@mirunapopescu10 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your perspective! I have mixed feelings about deeming things that are typically bourgeois as bad. You know, as a queer person living in Romania....the whole "bourgeois degeneracy" stuff still has a very real, very painful effect on my life Moreover, queer fashion is often flamboyant and let's say.....more resembling of "bourgeois" styles. That's a whole other discussion, I know pink washing is a real problem, I know the west has often used us in order to harm socialist movements (tho I would note that the opportunity to do so was created by the way we were treated by our very tovarăși).....anyway, I'm sure you get the point Moreover, why is it that unisex styles mostly mean women adopting men's styles? But as soon as it's something very feminine, it's "bourgeois"? In any case, you have given me a lot to think about, and as always, thank you for sharing your perspective! I think that, regardless of how we choose to dress, we all have some deconstructing to do
@rando393910 ай бұрын
I think when it comes to access to particular commodities and proliferation of specific aesthetics, something being “bourgeois” is relative to said access and proliferation. At one point in history, simple tables and chairs where things only the ruling classes had access to; in that period these now common objects could be considered bourgeois because the proletariat had none. Now that these things are everywhere the same can’t exactly be said. Same can be said for fashion sense
@rando393910 ай бұрын
And in the USSR specifically, industry was heavily focused on infrastructure and military rather than a variety small commodities. This would come to be helpful housing people and playing a major role in WW2, but people simply like nice things, and a lack in variety of clothing and simple commodities was a genuine gripe from the Soviet peoples. If the opportunity and resources had been there, I’m sure Soviet fashion could’ve and would’ve gone far beyond the utilitarian focus of clothing; which in my opinion was still very cool.
@mirunapopescu10 ай бұрын
@@rando3939 thank you for sharing! What I'm hearing is that ultimately, the context is really important. I don't know exactly how to express myself, I feel like I need a guided journal just to work out my feelings about all this, but maybe with time I'll get there :))) Also, about the actual fashion sense, it sure was cool! Maybe not my style, but if I lived through a war, it might have been. Living through a pandemic seemed so out there, but when it actually happened.....idk, it makes perfect sense when you're actually in that situation Also, that Wendy's ad from the videos....is funny if only because of how wrong it is :))) Romania was not having a good time in the '80s, but I know what my family was wearing during that time, and there was so much variety compared to what they're portraying. Even before becoming a communist I could tell the west is exaggerating those things
@rando393910 ай бұрын
@@mirunapopescu indeed, it’s truly mind boggling how deep the anti-Soviet propaganda really goes
@NotInMYName_AntiZionistJew6 ай бұрын
I would absolutely love to get your take on the recent extremely controversial Met Gala and how it has sparked comparisons with “The Hunger Games”.
@Artemisiagentileschia9 ай бұрын
I do love fashion history and communism but it was so hard for me to not be obsessed with the bourgeoisie style so this video helped me thank you
@maratkaidauloff358510 ай бұрын
In Saint-Petersburg I still live in a vintage flat! My wallpapers are in stile of 1950ss
@greyfells28299 ай бұрын
That's a shame, it is the worst era of design here in eastern europe.
@maratkaidauloff35859 ай бұрын
@@greyfells2829 I don't think so. 50s were great in terms of stile, compere to minimalist 60s, or God forbit, brutalist 70s
@joshuacheek16679 ай бұрын
Just discovered your channel. What a surprise and a treasure! I also did not expect to hear "as-salam alaykum comrades" - more power to you! I have been a longtime student of the Soviet avant-garde and I really appreciated your showing that aspect of design. I deeply respect what you're doing here and I would LOVE to see you do a video essay on what is... or what Revolutionary aesthetic could/should be? When I was in Shanghai I had a lovely friend who was a member of the CCP (she specialized in Marxist research) and we had some fascinating talks about what role aesthetics and the arts could play in society that would be consistent with the goals of Marx without succumbing to bourgeoisie conspicuous consumption.
@Taradoxxi9 ай бұрын
Oh my God, I’m a communist and a giant historical /vintage fashion nerd, and the fact that your channel exist at the intersection of these things brings me so much joy. How have I not discovered you before?!??
@ShimKwetYung9 ай бұрын
On the subject of "why is the clothing of the working class inherently less desirable", I love the blue samfu, which is both considered the ethnic clothing of Hakka people like me, as well as the working class attire of Han Chinese people historically.
@PennisDrager10 ай бұрын
Reminds me of labels associated with food production. Organic food is considered newfangled and modern while chemically fertilized, factory-farmed foods are viewed as "traditional".
@Soviettiger8410 ай бұрын
Oh my mummified Lenin! This is gold dust! Thank you form making this! Yes! I would like to see a video about female military uniforms from the Great Patriotic War! Amazing work, please keep up!
@badatspeling137810 ай бұрын
I vibe with this take so much! I'm Creole with mostly African/ west Asian descent, and while I am interested in African history and culture before the colonial rule I never felt attracted by the fashion of any African diasporas. I've always been attracted to vintage European and slavic fashion
@brokenursa998610 ай бұрын
I need me one of those leather jackets. Those are proof that you can be class-conscious and look snazzy at the same time.
@brandonmorel265810 ай бұрын
If only they weren't so expensive.
@barabashkacash387810 ай бұрын
Thank you for your work!
@georgekostaras10 ай бұрын
I continue to love your work and all you do
@Tnega7410 ай бұрын
Great video, I love your fashion and values!!!
@milenaB2310 ай бұрын
This video made me happy to represent my class in my clothes, because the saying notion of "being fashionable" is to imitate the rich, which has always caused me strangeness.
@felipe5horas9 ай бұрын
You have NO IDEA how glad I am I the algorithm send you my way!!!
@trah6669 ай бұрын
Wow, this really hit me. I am a union steamfitter, and both in my work cloths and in my nonwork cloths i try to be purposefully and wear cloths that look well and age in a way that i find esthetically pleasing. I do see it as a way to concent to the labor radicals of the past and havr found it as a useful way to concent to the current radicals still out there on the jobsite today. I havent seen anyone else explain it in such an eloquent way
@piccalillipit921110 ай бұрын
*I AM WEARING MY BEST PROLATERIAT* historical clothing today - having watched your video yesterday, I made the effort...!!! 😀
@yvettet985510 ай бұрын
I think the problem is that a lot of big name vintage fashion/historical costuming influencers ARE the same class as the coal barons and servant havers. If they were dressing up in working class vintage, it would be class cosplay.
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
A fair point. Interestingly in real life, everyone I know who's into vintage fashion, myself included, mainly got into it because they grew up only able to shop at thrift stores. So you build a love for old styles.
@arko91519 ай бұрын
I'm a socialist who love vintage clothing but also hiphop and streetwear so i try to kind of blend all my interests in my own way
@DrAnarchy695 ай бұрын
I dress like a 1950s housewife who organizes her workplace with the IWW (I’m a proud Wobbly so it fits)
@SINISTERsmile6410 ай бұрын
Amazing video Lady Izdihar! I haven't thought about fashion in this way before so thank you!
@andrewblair37010 ай бұрын
This video reaches me at the height of a desperate, desperate fashion inspo drought. Thanks for this! I will be doing plenty of research and would love to see anything else you put out on historical working class fashion.
@Taquinqua9 ай бұрын
This is cool and brings up a lot of good points! Decided to subscribe :) I gotta say though, I think a lot of people into vintage fashion don’t start by saying “I want to dress vintage! Okay cool, now I’ll pick the class and time period and social context.” I feel like folks get attracted to images of styles, which unfortunately are obviously very biased in favor of folks who aren’t in the working class, and pursue wanting to look like *that.* Saying “hey it’s awesome you’re into that but what if you try dressing like a garment worker instead?” feels like it’s sidestepping that a big reason people want to dress in styles is because of the styles in particular not the label “vintage fashion.” To be fair though, I’m more into historical costumes than “vintage fashion” per se, so I’m not the most informed on why people get into that in particular.
@techtraash9 ай бұрын
I Discovered the channel with that video, And as a communist (As 99% of subscribers), i became addicted in all videos about topics that i never found videos about, like Abraham Lincoln brigade and your work in combat fake-news about communism and the soviet experience in general. With comradeship, From a member of the Brazilian Popular Unity.
@Rotfvx10 ай бұрын
OMG, I am so glad that I stumbled over your channel. Exactly what I have been thinking for most of my life.
@LuLu98J4 ай бұрын
Loved this video! I have definitely come across that expression "vintage fashion, not vintage values" and I have never reached the realization of how vague and politically fragile it is. I love this better, more aligned with my political and social views! And not only that, most importantly this video made me think how much my research into vintage fashion has been uncounciously dictated by mostly US and more generaly western fashion trends that not always were aimed to be worn by working class people, even though I have strong opinions against so-called "haute culture" brands that are actually luxury brands (that a lot of times don't present clothing that should be considered high fashion, i.e. made with special attention to the quality and the making of the clothing, from design to the finishing details) and the whole season oriented consumist capitalist fashion culture. But, now that you've brought this to my attetion, I do recognize that the parts of researching vintage fashion that ignite my interest the most are the ones when I find some link between the material and superstrutural conditions of a society and how that influences the making of the clothing that working class people would wear on their everyday lives. I will definitely keep it mind the symbolism and the political & historical context of the pieces of clothing and the people who wore it when doing my vintage fashion research, sewing, making, thrifting and wearing from now on. Thank you so much for making this video!
@xernax184110 ай бұрын
How does this video has less than 100k views? That's super interesting!
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
Might be too niche of a topic 😄
@AmberOrtolano10 ай бұрын
Ohhhh this was such a great video !!!!
@estebanmaldonado13959 ай бұрын
"Most of us are one miss paycheck away from houselessnes".....it was said...!!!
@violetagardenia10 ай бұрын
This needs a entire chapter concerning fashion during the stalin govt and onwards
@brandonmorel265810 ай бұрын
Stalin himself had drip. You should take a look at his white Great Marshall uniform, that man had style.
@redleaderantilles126310 ай бұрын
Great video. Could you explain why Che chose the beret though? You said it was a very intentional choice on his part, but what context was he referencing. If this video does well you should do one on some of the older fashion symbols of radicals, like the Phrygian Cap and Sans Culottes.
@emzetkin110010 ай бұрын
Mayakovsky is a great example of vintage fashion, radical values, I like to think he's something of an inspiration for how I dress.
@FelipeAviles-r2l10 ай бұрын
Keep going you're amazing and informative
@Streetpartymarty10 ай бұрын
More anti bourgeois content please :D But seriously I really enjoyed the perspective in this video, something I've only ever "felt" subconsciously without really thinking about it. Thank you!
@НикаА-л8я9 ай бұрын
I always have veeery mixed feelings when I see collections of soviet medals. They are not just some random objects, they were given to specific people for specific achievements. So as for me other people kinda don't have moral right to posess these medals. And also a lot of these medals were sold by their owners during 90s because of extreme financial circumstances. My father's relatives were about to sell medals of their grandfather because of tough conditions. Fortunately, my father had some money at the momen, so he helped them and convinced not to sell grandfather's memory. And I understand that collectors have nothing to do with it, and it would be worse for these people who had sold their awards, if no one was buying. But still. These collections are extremely controversial subject for me.
@LadyIzdihar9 ай бұрын
Sure I agree, medals are very different from commemorative pins however.
@НикаА-л8я9 ай бұрын
@@LadyIzdihar of course, pins like baby Lenin are different thing) my comment is only about medals
@RevolutionaryRhetoricPod10 ай бұрын
This was great! Definitely do more like this. About to go buy a flat cap 😂
@bionodroid5479 ай бұрын
I think we ought to wear political pins as a rule, so that our values are conspicuous. Beyond that, there is some anachronism in judging old clothes by their contemporary standards in the modern context. For example, the bowlers you mentioned being associated with the bourgeois were considered a very practical working class garment for most of the 19th century, especially in the western US. Nowadays, wearing any type of suit, vintage dress, or other such garment is considered by most people as bourgeois, and vintage clothing in general, whether authentic or reproductions, tend to command hefty prices most people can’t afford as a regular expense, assuming they are created by people who are paid enough (that’s leaving out material and sustainability concerns, which raise the price further). Sure, you can find vintage clothes and styles if you have time to scout eBay and your local thrift stores and estate sales all the time, but even then you’d be spending more than a modern outfit from Walmart, and you’re suffering an immense opportunity cost. Not feasible for people who are impoverished. So then if it’s mostly the middle class who can afford this fashion in the first place, what’s the judgement on clothes of the middle class from history? Most of the time, the middle class, while not themselves bourgeois, had access to the same institutions, resources, and clothes that higher class individuals outside of the super wealthy had access to. For example, the poor would have never been invited to a white tie affair, but it might be something a middle class family had experience with. That same family would have benefited to a greater degree from slavery and colonialism than the poor. The middle class has also had a large part in revolutionary activity, since they are still part of the working class, just better off. All in all, good video, I think that it has good political use to dress like radicals of old, but that we can also envision a future where class divide originating in clothing is behind us, and people can wear what they want, so long as us modern progressives are clear with our intentions and values. After all, the upper class has been casualizing since Victorian times when traditional peasant fabrics like tweed and tartan were co-opted along with the romanticization of the country side and whatnot. Modern billionaires deliberately wear casual clothing to send a message, we might do the same by contradicting them the same way punks have co-opted the aesthetics of Facism to push radical ideas and force fascists to alter their own aesthetics.
@seneketh10 ай бұрын
Thanks for your video! Wonderful! I try to make my own clothing, am inspired to let my values shape them !
@OdinpowerBRM10 ай бұрын
Hey first video of yours that I watch, and this is great stuff definitely keep it up, I sincerely need more Radical Left English content on my front page! Big love and respect from a member of the Brazilian communist community!
@lemon57309 ай бұрын
Just discovered your channel! Super cool! This is so awesome, really cool to see this kind of combination of working class politics and the common human experiances of clothing and life. Looking forward to more, thank you comrade!
@homieslice19965 ай бұрын
19:33 check for pictures of Rodger McAfree (of my home: the Fresno area of California) who sold his around 400 acre dairy farm to bail of Angela Davis in 1972, which gave him much scrutiny, motivated threats against his kids who went to school in Raisin City, and which led to him leaving the area - he wore the flannel, denim jeans, and most likely the boots that San Joaquin Valley and many other farmers wore and wear; farmworkers and farmers in this Valley still wear flannel and jeans, but some who are more heat exposed in the summer (like those working with floor crops) wear light jackets to protect them from direct sun (I do, and have always done, the same):
@Rocinante048910 ай бұрын
Yes to everything you said at the end
@ViktorReznov194510 ай бұрын
DEAR LORD.... I'm in love
@GAIVSCALIGVLA10 ай бұрын
Back the fuck off, I saw her first.
@rando393910 ай бұрын
Stop being weird you two!
@ViktorReznov194510 ай бұрын
@@rando3939 can't comrade I'm down bad
@Zamundani9 ай бұрын
new fan from sudan.🌹
@HaitiSpaceAgency10 ай бұрын
This was wildly interesting thanks for the video
@tainahollo85677 ай бұрын
The best vintage channel ever! ❤
@mattda13att9 ай бұрын
i had to skip the wendeys commercial lol. i couldnt bear it
@r.i.t.i.k.a10 ай бұрын
Damn i've always loved newspaperboy hats :)
@greenghoul1579 ай бұрын
I think it's incredibly based to wear clothes that represent an interest in history and not care what anyone thinks
@dialecticalveganegoist172110 ай бұрын
Great video, a really perspective on vintage fashion
@LadyIzdihar10 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
@lunaflora75429 ай бұрын
I love the video! I have begun to collect many USSR items and some clothing. I am hoping to find some more articles of clothing to incorporating into my wardrobe, and express myself better.
@babaksenia2532Ай бұрын
Now, I'm not a Communist, but I agree with everything you've said in this video. I live this way in my fashion journey, and I hope I can continue to do so. My views are certainly "radical" lol. I represent my own people and their struggles against oppressors thru all history.
@BeTeeEl9 күн бұрын
Baby Lenin as a family member reminds me of everyone’s beloved uncle Ho Chi Minh!
@giantmonsterman10 ай бұрын
This is wonderful!
@pedrofranca696310 ай бұрын
That's such a great topic! Fashion is a powerful tool when imparting proletariat ideology. Great job, Lady Izdihar, I love your videos
@sinthoras191710 ай бұрын
Highly interesting, Thank you for this video
@warguy194510 ай бұрын
Loved the analysis comrade! Please do more videos like this! I’ve never thought much about fashion until recently, and I have recently gotten into military surplus, especially vintage surplus (60s era US surplus and East German is my favorite) It’s practical, durable and can be styled with my band shirts, I can take it to work and camping. As you might guess, this specific hobby is infested by right wingers. But that doesn’t mean that those are my values. If anything, I feel wearing old military surplus is a form of rebellion against conformity.