This engaging educational video invites students on a virtual "field trip" to a museum of American fashion to explore how clothing trends have historically mirrored and catalyzed major societal shifts. Hosted by an energetic narrator named Mia, the video uses the lens of fashion to examine four distinct pillars of U.S. history: the environment, political change, the economy, and social change. Through specific artifacts like Levi's jeans, flapper dresses, flour sack clothing, and zoot suits, complex historical concepts are made tangible and relatable. Key themes include the relationship between natural resources and apparel (such as the impact of the feather trade on bird populations), the connection between women's suffrage and the liberation of female dress codes in the 1920s, and the stark contrast between the luxury of the Roaring Twenties and the resourcefulness required during the Great Depression. Additionally, the video delves into how fashion serves as cultural expression and a flashpoint for prejudice, specifically highlighting the Zoot Suit Riots and the Mexican-American experience during World War II. For educators, this resource offers a unique cross-disciplinary approach to teaching 20th-century American history. By anchoring abstract eras in concrete visual examples—like the transition from restrictive Victorian gowns to loose 1920s silhouettes—it helps students visualize the "spirit of the times." The video is structured with built-in pause points and guiding questions, making it an excellent tool for inquiry-based learning, prompting students to analyze how material culture reflects the values, struggles, and economics of the people who wear it.