This week we look at some possible ways in which a garment could have been patterned in the medieval period to achieve a fitted look. We do this with a fitted hood.
We consider that the pattern was not an item accounted for in the medieval period, instead that making to measure was. for the home tailor or seamstress shaping and fitting of garments could be also achieved by draping and pinning to achieve the same results.
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Follow us on social media
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/modernmedie...
/ urchincreature
Facebook
/ modernmedievalman
Email
[email protected]
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Intro Music -Traubentritt
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Links and Sources
Textiles and Clothing 1150-1450, by Elisabeth Crowfoot, Frances Pritchard and Kay Staniland, Boydell Press, Woodbridge, 2001, pp 190-8. ISBN 0 85115 840 4
http://virtuquatuor.free.fr/textile_a...
Woven Into the Earth, Textiles from Norse Greenland, by Else Ostergard, Aarhus University Press, Denmark, 2009, pp 95-100; 203-18. ISBN 978 877288 935 1
Medieval Garments Reconstructed, Norse Clothing Patterns, by Lilli Fransen, Anna Norgaard and Else Ostergard, Aarhus University Press, 2011, pp106-28. ISBN 978 87 7934 298 9
Our videos about sewing basic medieval stitches, attaching buttons, making button holes, etc;
Medieval Sewing Made Easy Playlist
• Medieval Sewing Made Easy
An old but good website with quite a few extant examples of hoods:
http://www.larsdatter.com/hoods.htm
Discover lots of references to original dagged hoods at their other page:
http://www.larsdatter.com/dagging.htm
The few examples of women wearing dagged hoods that I was able to find:
Miniature around 1405, Ms. 664 fol. 209v, Biblioteque Nationale, Paris, A courtesan sitting on a French type stryxsitten, wearing a hood with dagged hem and liripipe tied en chaperon, accompanied by and older woman wearing an open hood.
-Tacuinum Sanitatis 1390 Milan 1673 folio 52, A young woman in a dagged pellanda wears a hood with a dagged hem and liripipe draped over her shoulders.
St. Ursula and her followers, from a book of hours produced in Milan c. 1385-1390 BNF Latin 757, fol. 380R
http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1...
Panel 3, verso, Women and wild men, France, probably Paris, ca. 1400, 1 drawing in metalpoint on boxwood, MS M.0346, fol. 003V, Morgan Library and Museum.
Video by Company of the Staple; Medieval Sewing - Seam Stitch from Herjolfsnes
• Medieval Sewing - Seam Stitch from He...
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Our channel is intended to discuss the skills needed to reenact, demonstrate and teach. We also discuss the historic context and research behind our findings.
Popula Urbanum is Latin for people of the city. We are recreating the burgeoning middle classes in the 14th century.
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