>1600s >heavy woolen clothing >only set of clothes >no visible water source to clean >work out in fields eating mostly tubers
What does it smell like?
>1600s >heavy woolen clothing >only set of clothes >no visible water source to clean >work out in fields eating mostly tubers
What does it smell like?
That t-shirt that gets left in the wardrobe unworn for months or even years on end.
This movie was fricking retared, You're telling me that a puritan family who has cultivation and paesant work in their blood, decides to start growing crops near a pine forest instead of moving from one community to another, or just find a more fitting place.
I'm alright with the fact that the horror has to happen but this is absolutely moronic from the getgo, totally ruined my immersion.
The father is le prideful and dooms them by being stubborn
Omg the movie would've made way more sense if he was a bronze age mindset Chad who built an awesome homestead for them and defeated the witch easily
No I don't think that would have fit the themes as well
The dumb women would STILL frick the goat after
The world didn't have those degenerates in Connecticut or *shudder* Rhode Island yet.
Yes, because that sort of thing happened in real life
Population density was radically less.
I like the bawdtish looks she cast her brother
I wish I could find out.
When I take too much DXM and or hallucinogens and need to calm myself, I imagine mother Europe holding me, and pray to her for such
Wool is actually antibacterial so it doesn’t smell as much as polyester clothing after sweating.
This, wool is crazy amazing. Also
>no visible water source
There is a river/stream right next to them.
The river is literally in the picture lmfao I didn't notice that
The river doesn't matter. 1630's new Englanders didn't bathe. They'd wash their hands and faces. Old Europe had bathhouses that were used from the roman era-through the medieval era. But the Renaissance caused a new understanding of proximity-caused diseases, which made bathhouses seem unhygienic and unhealthy in popular medical thought. The new Christian puritanism of the 1600's would have hated bathhouses as being sinful. And that's just for hot-water bathhouses. Any cold water, like a river, is considered a death-sentence; cause you'll catch cold and die.
They would take water home, heat it up and wash.
I watched a hilarious video on youtube a long time ago about some angry beaner explaining how the aztecs taught conquistadors and other Europeans how to bathe and what soap was. The coping was astounding.
His wife was White, too. Which made it 100x better because he spent the entire video ragging on Whites.
>1630's new Englanders didn't bathe
You have to be genuinely moronic to believe this.
>Any cold water, like a river, is considered a death-sentence; cause you'll catch cold and die.
homie you don't know the concept of drying yourself and then putting on dry clothes?
Grass and dirt and a bit of woodland
>What does it smell like?
Fish. Smells of fish.
I'm imagining the smell
>What does it smell like?
Nothing. Reminder that there's no industrial revolution in 1600s, therefore the air is still fresh, water is not contamined by plastic, and you can easily get rid of body odor by taking a bath.
shut up
The witch cults were actually real. Christgays never fully got rid of paganism and European folk religion and many people made deals with local spirits or Satan or demons. Plus all those grimoires didn't come out of nowhere. Unironic pedo child sacrifice cults to devils have plagued humanity since the beginning of history and beyond.
What's a tuber bros?
>What's a tuber bros?
Its a sausage
IT'S NAHT A TOOBUH