0 Items
About
Vision Statement
Project Team
Advisory Board
Contributors
Contact Us
Objects That Matter
Profiles
The Library
Reading Lists
Bookshelf
Films & Documentaries
Lectures & Panels
Exhibitions & Archives
Scholarly & Popular Articles
Podcast Episodes
Essays & Opinion
Essays & Opinion
‘Our Fashion History’
Community
The Directory
The Calendar
Opportunities
Support
Ways to Support
Donate
Select Page
Films & Documentaries
Showing 1–24 of 107 results
Default sorting
Sort by latest
1930s Chain Gang Prisoners Singing and Dancing
$
0.00
1940s, 1950s Africa, Zulu Tribal Life and Wedding, 16mm
$
0.00
1950s Borneo, Tribal Women, Colour 35mm Archive Footage
$
0.00
1950s Cotton Fields, Cotton Picking and Weighing, African American (USA Archive footage)
$
0.00
1950s South Africa, tribal family used as a living advertisement
$
0.00
1950s Watussi Dancers, Kenya, Africa, Tribal Dancing, Colour Archive Footage
$
0.00
1960s USA New Orleans Jazz Funeral, Children Dancing, African American
$
0.00
1960s, 1970s Africa, Tribal Women in Western Victorian Inspired Dress
$
0.00
1960s, 1970s African American Women Picking Cotton
$
0.00
1990s Costa Rica, Boruca Tribe
$
0.00
2016 Vietnamese Hat (non la) Dance to Y.Ê.U by MIN of ST.319
$
0.00
9 Models on Racism & Privilege in the Modeling Industry | The Models | Vogue
$
0.00
alter-NATIVE Ep. 1 “Bethany Yellowtail: Sun Road Woman and Fashion Designer”
$
0.00
alter-NATIVE Ep. 2 “Native Fashion Now, and Bethany Drops the Mic”
$
0.00
alter-NATIVE Ep. 3 “Bethany and Martin Sensmeier Go to Santa Fe”
$
0.00
alter-NATIVE Ep. 4 “Back Home With Dreams of a Fashion Empire”
$
0.00
alter-NATIVE Ep. 6 “Owning Our Narrative as Native Women”
$
0.00
Antonio Lopez 1970: Sex, Fashion & Disco
$
0.00
Ao Dai | Vietnam’s National Dress | History, Culture and Tradition
$
0.00
Battle At Versailles: The Competition that Shook the Fashion Industry | M2M
$
0.00
BRAID.CORA QUARANTINA 2020 (POST.JUNETEENTH)
$
0.00
Carnival Story Aka Trinidad Carnival (1957)
$
0.00
Chic Point: Fashion for Israeli checkpoints.
$
0.00
Color film was built for white people. Here’s what it did to dark skin.
$
0.00
1
2
3
4
5
→