Snowflake Challenge #5
Jan. 9th, 2023 10:19 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

Challenge #5Rather than reccing Wookieepedia again, I am going to follow the footsteps of someone I saw last year using this prompt to promo resources for historical accuracy in historical fiction fandoms, however I am going to focus less on timelines and more on the realities of day-to-day living.
In your own space, tell us about 3 creative/fannish resources, spaces, or communities you use or enjoy. (One or two is fine, especially if you're in a smaller fandom or like many people at the moment, fannishly adrift right now) Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.
Day-to-day life was very different prior to the Industrial Revolution, and as much as I try to turn my nitpicking side off when I'm reading fic for historical stuff, it really throws me out of the narrative to see things like cooking stoves and kitchens counters (or screened-in porches and iced tea in tall glasses) in fic set in/around 1715.
So, here are some living history resources from Youtube to make your historical works (fanfic or original) feel more authentic! I'm afraid they're primarily Western/European sources, but since most of my personal fandoms are western in origin these are the resources I have on hand. (If you've got more diverse living history channels or websites, I would love to hear about them!)
- Townsends is a living history youtube channel focusing on life in the 18th century American colonial frontier. They have a ton of videos on historical cooking and recreating recipes from antique cookbooks, as well as some about building/crafting some of the essential things we take for granted in the modern era (building a log cabin, digging a well, crafting hinges, etc).
- Bernadette Banner is a youtuber who focuses on historical sewing techniques and garment recreation, often in the Victorian and Edwardian periods, but she does spend time on other eras. I also especially like this video she made on how the concept of "historical accuracy" is not completely applicable to fantasy media, but one can apply logic and practicality to the established worldbuilding to achieve something equivalent to "historical accuracy" in a fictional setting (it's a Game of Thrones case study).
- Morgan Donner is another youtuber who does a lot of historical sewing and garment recreation, although her focus tends to be more on the Medieval period. Rather than highlighting her sewing videos (which are excellent!) I wanted to focus on two of her videos on her experiments with recreating historical hairstyles: this one focuses on using Iron Age tools to recreate hairstyles from a ~800BCE gravesite, and this one is about Elizabethan hair taping and and similar hairstyles.