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Medieval Costume and How to Recreate It (Dover Fashion and Costumes)

To an expert tailor, to someone who had made a lot of clothes in various sizes and styles, the illustrations would make sense.

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The text is very good, identifying why one outfit is for a peasant, another for a merchant, and still another for an artisan or pilgrim. Mar 11, Jaye Sudar rated it really liked it. A very good book that interprets the paintings and brings to life the clothing of the Middle Ages. Shouldn't have had the how to recreate it part I wanted a bit more direction on how to create. Very poor with that aspect.

Jun 06, Alaina rated it really liked it Recommends it for: Dorothy Hartley's Mediaeval Costume and Life , now renamed by Dover, is a charming and useful book for those wishing to recreate medieval dress. Hartley writes with the fervor of a convert, or perhaps more like a pioneer? As one of the first costume historians, we can forgive her imbalances and biases.

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Her book is aimed squarely at theater costumers, though she mentions in her introduction that costume history can help art historians. Although she provides many original images and refers consta Dorothy Hartley's Mediaeval Costume and Life , now renamed by Dover, is a charming and useful book for those wishing to recreate medieval dress. Although she provides many original images and refers constantly to the "MSS," she never does say exactly where she gets her detailed patterns and construction techniques.

Are they from original garments? Conjecture from close study of the illustrations?

Her absolute self-assuredness implies the first, but it is unlikely that she had access to such rare items, if they even exist. Finally, I just want to add that her recreations, photographed on models, are absolutely charming and look excellent. Sep 05, Rebecca Huston rated it it was amazing Shelves: One of the first books I read about making medieval clothing all those years ago when I first joined the SCA.

Medieval Costume and How to Recreate it : Dorothy Hartley :

For years I had a xeroxed copy as the book was out of print. Very glad to see that it is back. Some of the patterns are a bit strange, but with a little tweaking they do work. For the longer review, please go here: Nov 26, Katy rated it liked it. They have 14th and 15th Century patterns! A delicious decadent historical trifle.

Thick performance jelly topped with lashings of imaginative creamy custard. You may also get a soggy event management sponge finger but it won't cost you hundreds and thousands. She doesn't do patterns for adult's garments because they should be fitted to the individual, not a 'generic' shape. Shop bedspreads online in Australia. It isn't just the historical imperative of being wrong for period: Also when cotton does some into the country as a textile, it is a very high status garment Elizabeth 1's wardrobe inventory I believe lists a cotton shirt and the early C15th arming jackets listed as stuffed with Italian cotton go under plate high status war-wear so are rarer and costly imported items, in a period considering protectionist import embargos and enacting sumptuary statutes.

In the medieval period 'cotton' is actually a reference to a wool surfacing method see "cottoning" - such fabric is still, I believe used in theatre back-drops as the surface texture doesn't give light back and the wool smoulders with a strongly warning smell rather than burning clean and fast from the first. Saving old bedding provides a lot of cost free fabric to drape and discard if you need a radical re-cut.

A king size duet cover yields approximately 8m [4 runs of cm L x w cloth] If I've no use for the toile pieces after the pattern is made, I store large ones away to use when needing pieces for a toile for a smaller item.

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Or re-assembled for under garments suitable to the cut of the finished garment - critical if wearing later supported styles of the crinolette and bustle periods which need such layers to work well. If you have the luxury of cast off linen sheets, go ahead for earlier periods. Just ensure in both cases that you use a natural thread so you can over-dye later if you wish.

Warning - wearing well-washed linen next to the skin is going to ruin anything but the highest quality or finest woven cotton for you! And I always pre-shrink fabrics: Last edited by Alice the Huswyf on Mon Sep 07, 8: That is a question to be decided by a person's group and advised by their authenticity officer. However there is no doubt that there was crappy linen in the C15th, just as there are crappily made tee-shirts now - hence Guild restrictions and internal due process just as we have Trading Standards Officers and court prosecutions.

Victorian Fashions Michael Harris.


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