Lydia Plath revealed there “wasn’t a heavy emphasis” on modest dressing rising up — however the ladies did draw back from displaying an excessive amount of pores and skin.
“Sure, we grew up sporting skirts and clothes for essentially the most half,” Lydia, 21, mentioned on the Wednesday, September 10, episode of the “Jinger & Jeremy” podcast.
The Welcome to Plathville star defined, “One of the simplest ways I can describe it’s my mother simply went purchasing for us once we had been little as a result of, you already know, 5 12 months olds don’t store for themselves more often than not. So we grew up sporting clothes our mother purchased us.”
Lydia famous that her mom, Kim Plath, didn’t at all times put on skirts or clothes. “My mother would put on pants,” she mentioned, however added, “It was by no means off limits.”
She additional defined, “After I was 13, 14 [I] began choosing out my very own garments and stuff” and shorts weren’t taboo.
“Particularly [if I was] gonna be out in the summertime or out within the warmth within the summertime portray for 5 hours on daily basis, yeah, I’m going to get some shorts,” Lydia mentioned. “It wasn’t like, ‘Oh, my goodness, I’m sporting shorts.’ It was like, ‘OK, properly that is going to name for this.’”

Lydia Plath Courtesy of Lydia Plath/Instagram
Lydia added that as she “grew up finding” her “personal fashion,” there was a “stage” the place she didn’t know find out how to essentially assimilate.
“I used to be uncomfortable in sure issues. Like clothes that had been too showy, or shorts that had been too brief,” she remembered. “It took a very long time to search out my fashion.”
Lydia famous that whereas it took time to search out what seemed good on her, “It wasn’t a mindset I needed to shift.”
Lydia was raised in a non secular family alongside her eight siblings — Ethan, Hosanna, Micah, Moriah, Amber, Isaac, Mercy and Cassia — with conservative values. Whereas the household hasn’t overtly commented on their precise perception system, many speculate that they’re Fundamentalist Christians.

Lydia confirmed on Wednesday that she wasn’t raised “IBLP,” which stands for Institute in Basic Life Principles, like fellow actuality TV household The Duggars.
She defined that there are some similarities between the 2 households, together with their sheltered upbringings, however her mother and father raised them by saying issues like, “The Lord led us to homeschool.”
“It’s not like [they said], ‘That is the scripture,’” Lydia added. “And that is how, like, if we step outdoors of this, we’re outdoors of God’s will.”
Welcome to Plathville airs on TLC Tuesdays at 10 p.m. ET.