This episode we discuss the changing shapes, forms styles of the always fashionable gown. Worn by all members of society during the medieval period, the gown changed in form as the medieval centuries progressed.
We also look at our construction of a gown and discuss it's construction and context in fashion history.
Follow us on social media
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/modernmedie...
/ urchincreature
Facebook
/ modernmedievalman
Email
[email protected]
Follow us on social media
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/modernmedie...
/ urchincreature
Facebook
/ modernmedievalman
Email
[email protected]
--------------------------------------------------------------
Intro Music -Traubentritt
Provided by our good friends, Wayward
Many thanks for the use of their music.
please buy their wonderful stuff here.
https://waywardentertainment.wixsite....
Or
Their Sound Cloud
/ waywardminstrels
---------------------------------------------------------------
Links and Sources
Marc Carlson, Some Clothing of the Middle Ages, Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics/Gowns, Herjolfsnes no.63, 64
http://www.personal.utulsa.edu/~marc-...
Medieval Combat Society, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Century Male Civilian Costume, Monumental Effigy and Brass Timeline
http://www.themcs.org/costume/14th%20...
Manuscript Miniatures
http://manuscriptminiatures.com/search/
Assemblage of Wool and Silk Textiles from Medieval Waste Layers in Prague, , Helena Březinová, David Kohout,
https://www.academia.edu/35702220/Ass...
Wikipedia article on Wadmal
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wadmal
Woven Into the Earth, Textiles from Norse Greenland, by Else Ostergard, Aarhus University Press, Denmark, 2009, pp196-9.
Medieval Garments Reconstructed, Norse Clothing Patterns, by Lilli Fransen, Anna Norgaard and Else Ostergard, Aarhus University Press, 2011, pp104-5
Textiles and Clothing, C.1150-c.1450, Elisabeth Crowfoot, Frances Pritchard, Kay Staniland. Museum of London, Boydell Press, ISBN 085115 840 4
--------------------------------------------------------------
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.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Edited in Blender 2.10
Информация по комментариям в разработке