1 - Dim the lights, grab the popcorn: #threadtalk is going to the (creepy) movies. 🎃🍿🥤

This special edition features a broad list of films that haunt, terrify & sometimes titillate--but always with style. Horror, musicals, cartoons (& odd Disney choices) we've got 'em all. 🔪 The original release poster of the 1975 cult film, "The
2 - NOTE: Inclusion in this list does not mean my personal approval of their director(s), creator(s), actors, producers, etc. Hollywood is nasty on a good day, & some of these films have not aged well.

These are pulled from *my* personal experience in horror films. So, YMMV. Photo by Raúl Nájera on Unsplash  - a sign on a background
3 - I'm beginning with ROSEMARY'S BABY (1968). Starring Mia Farrow as the mother of a the spawn of Satan himself, I definitely saw this movie way too young (thanks, Mom!).

The poster it fantastic, but it's Farrow's innocent pastel wardrobe that makes the fashion statement. This is a poster for Rosemary's Baby. The poster art copyrigMia Farrow in ROSEMARY'S BABY in a striped cotton dress, emp
4 - As the film progresses, Farrow's wardrobe gets frillier and flowerier & for many of the key scenes she's wearing this baby-blue nightgown.

So what, you ask? Blue is the color of the Virgin Mary & audiences at the time would have been totally aware of that intense irony. Mia Farrow in her baby blue nightgown, horror stricken, hold
5 - 1978's THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW went another route. Campy, wild, and absolutely reveling in gender-bending irreverence, it was called "tasteless, plotless, & pointless" by Newsweek.

This footage from '74 shows Tim Curry behind the scenes:
6 - CLEARLY Rocky's legacy was far from pointless. And the costume! I don't have to tell you how life-changing they were for generations.

Sequins, stretch lamé, bondage, corsets, boas... space suits? Every actor owning it every second on screen. Such antici... pation! Columbia from Rocky Horror in her sequined bowtie, hat, and Tim Curry as FrankNFurter - Red lips, big pearls, corset, anStill from Rocky Picture with cast in front of the red curta
7 - 1980 brings my personal trauma, THE WATCHER IN THE WOODS, which came from Disney of all places. Featuring one of the original women of horror herself, Bette Davis, this film had the terrifying phrase "NERAK" and a ghostly reflection of a girl in a funhouse mirror. The Watcher in the Woods, film poster - © Disney, yellow eyA girl in a white dress, with arms outstretched, mouth open,
8 - When I tell you I lost sleep from this film, I don't mean a few hours. I mean DAYS.

The funhouse sequence and that damned pristine cotton white dress & blindfold is etched permanently into my psyche. "HELP ME!"

Trailer is here, if you missed it: Funhouse mirror of the girl in the blindfold, reaching out s
9 - You cannot tell me that RETURN TO OZ (1985) is not a horror film. (Granted our VHS was so worn from overuse that the music was completely distorted)

ALSO because of this absolute nightmare: Princess Mombi. Behold that opulence, the gold & velvet. Also spikes. Because... © Disney - A beautiful woman sitting on a velvet chair with
10 - This bitch had a HALL OF HEADS. Beautiful gowns aside, when she felt like it, she just like... PUT ON ANOTHER HEAD. And she wanted Dorothy's. NBD.

Who needs wigs when you have ENTIRE HEADS. I remember being like, "But who were these other women?!?" Disney, WTF. Mombi switching heads. No head, same dress. Holding her new Three of Mombi's heads on pedestals, as you would display wi
11 - Speaking of missing heads, BEETLEJUICE (1988) could take an entire thread to itself. As far as I'm concerned, it's a costume masterpiece.

But I'm here to talk about Lydia Deetz. Because, personally, when I saw her on screen as a kid, my weird self felt absolutely SEEN. Winona Ryder as Lydia Deetz in BEETLEJUICE, holding a camera
12 - Turns out, at 16, Winona Ryder collaborated directly with costume designer Aggie Guerard Rodgers on Lydia's outfits--some were Winona's own clothes.

And the famous final outfit? That was all Ryder's idea.

Dance break:
13 - THE WITCHES (1990) served up another kind of "kid-friendly" WTF.

We get the luminous and diabolical Angelica Houston as the titular witch in the adaptation of Roald Dahl's book (known to many, of course, as Morticia Addams). Her bob? Her bangs? Her velvet hat? But also... Angelica Houston in the Witches with her amazing purple velv
14 - She. Peels. Off. Her. Face.

(There is so much WRONG in so many WAYS I don't have time to get into the whole thing, and then they made a whole other movie and did the whole thing again.) Angelica Houston before and after, peeling her head to revea
15 - BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA (1992) features Winona Ryder again, but also a delicious Gary Oldman in sumptuous velvets (& muscle armor) with Eiko Ishioka's genius costuming work--for which she won an Academy Award.

I mean, this film is a costuming masterclass. I'm still in awe. Gary Oldman as Dracula in Bram Stoker's Dracula in all grey
16 - Oldman has to play such a range in the film, and the costuming follows him on that journey--no matter the prosthetics, the dramatics, or the sets.

Ishioka's art & vision almost bring tears to my eyes, honestly. Rarely do you see such a complete story in fabric in film. The "old" vampire in red velvet robe, ashen and loGary Oldman wearing the "muscle" armor set, influe
17 - Hot on the vampire trend, INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE (1994) brought us Cruise & Pitt.

But I was all about Claudia (Kirsten Dunst) & that TAFFETA. I'm pretty sure there was about 30 metric tons of taffeta. Sandy Powell just have had to buy in bulk. Kirsten Dunst as Claudia, dressed in taffeta, with her signaBrad Pitt and Kirsten Dunst dressed for their parts--Dunst a
18 - Plus we got so much court style dress in this film. Embroidery! Gold floss! Decadence! Bows! Satin!

And Antonio Banderas just *existing* in crushed red velvet like it was his job. Antonio Banderas. In crushed red velvet. And a long black wi
19 - PAN'S LABYRINTH (2006) is probably my favorite film? The costuming is a story in and of itself, hearkening to Oz, Alice in Wonderland, and beyond--all while maintaining lush, natural textures that play to the story's deep, difficult subject matter. Speaking of taffeta... Ofelia ( Ivana Baquero) wearing a green taffeta dress and Al
20 - For me, the film balances *real* world horror with fantasy horror & it gets me every time. The deterioration of the costumes mirrors the deterioration of Ofelia's family & whew. Emotional gut punching.

And this scene, with the silk brocade? Excuse me while I go weep. Ofelia in her silk brocade gown. © Warner Brothers
21 - BLACK SWAN (2010) scared the living crap out of me. And it's the hat trick for Winona Ryder. I did not go in expecting that a ballerina movie would haunt me for days, but there you go.

The pain of ballet is no secret, and the costumes played up that violence with angles. Natalie Portman in BLACK SWAN, looking straight ahead at the
22 - With a minimal color palette, the costumers instead used lighting, textures & motion to create that hectic, stifling, out of control sense of strangulation and mistrust in the film. Plus TULLE. Lots of TULLE.

Is it cliché symbolism? YUP. Still effective? Also yup. Natalie Portman in BLACK SWAN, wearing a black, crystal embe
23 - ONLY LOVERS LEFT ALIVE (2013) is Tilda Swinton and Tom Hiddleston as vampires.

That's it. That's the tweet. Tom Hiddleston embracing Tilda Swinton. She wears white, he
24 - I would like to say something a bit more intelligent, but really.

Send help (no, don't, it's streaming...) Tim Hiddleston next to a guitar, with Tilda Swinton on his l
25 - That's a wrap! For more reading:
Rosemary's Baby (1968)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosemary%…
forbes.com/sites/joshweis…
refinery29.com/en-gb/2018/06/…

The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1978)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rocky…

The Watcher in the Woods (1980)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Watch…
wickedhorror.com/horror-reviews…
29 - What spooky movies still haunt you today? What costumes inspire you?

Thank for joining!

I do have a tip jar (link in bio!) if you feel so inclined. 🎃👻🦇

Now, enjoy this clip of BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA. Poor Keanu.

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More from @NataniaBarron

4 Oct
1 - 🎃 Welcome to #ThreadTalk! It's the spookiest month & we're jumping right in with a look at ghostly garb👻!

Thrills, chills & blood-curdling horrors await as we take a trip through history & ask the question: "Okay, but what would that ghost *actually* be wearing?" 🎃 October 3, 2021 - @nataniabarron - #ThreadTalk - Ghostly Gar
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This one is from the incredible Bakemono no e, dating from around 1700.
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The colors are natural, pale, haunting. You see in the embroidered closeup, too, all the sea grass & shellwork. Just wow. This sumptuous robe is among the earliest extant kosode (gar
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It's got to have that emotional punch, and a lot of complexity. Otherwise it's like a bad fight scene. Lots of equipment/weapons, and bad choreography.
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I love writing it.
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1 - It's time for #threadtalk! Today's topic, the Grand Dame of Damask: Anna Maria Garthwaite.

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1 - Welcome to #ThreadTalk, #LaborDay edition. Our topic? Mills, Strikes & Textile Labor.

Buckle up, though. There is a distinct lack of dazzle today.

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3 Aug
1 - Hey folks! It's a surprise #threadtalk on the medieval theme of the moment: #TheGreenKnight! I just had to come out of hibernation to talk about what I saw in the theater.

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Do I hate Lancelot? No. I'm mostly French. I enjoy quite a bit of the French stuff. I also like that he sticks it (hahahahaha) to Arthur.

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There are glimmers of joy, but it's rough.
Love means treason; loyalty means war.

Unification means subjugation and cultural erasure.

Mordred isn't the problem. Uther begins the whole dynasty with unspeakable violence and deception. Magic is the scapegoat, but it's a weapon of war just the same.
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