From: owner-h-costume-digest (Historic Costume Digest)
To: h-costume-digest@lunch.engr.sgi.com
Subject: Historic Costume Digest V3 #153
Reply-To: h-costume
Errors-To: owner-h-costume-digest@lunch.engr.sgi.com
Precedence: bulk


Historic Costume Digest      Thursday, August 3 1995      Volume 3, Number 153

Important Addresses:

  Submissions to the list:  h-costume@lunch.engr.sgi.com (or reply to
			     this message).
  Adds/removes/archives:    majordomo@lunch.engr.sgi.com
  Real, live person:        h-costume-request@andrew.cmu.edu

Topics:
    Re: Accuracy of primary sources
    pattern making
    Re: What do you wish you knew?
    Elizabeth R video Correction
    Re: pattern making
    10th Century Costume Booklet
    Re: H-Costume Digest, Volume 357, 8/2/95
    Seeing Through Clothes
    Re: What do you wish you knew?
    RE: pattern making
    Re: getting the chainmail info...updated.
    Many Thanks
    Academic gown
    _Seeing Through Clothes_
    Bata shoe museum and thanks

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 2 Aug 1995 20:56:35 -0400 (EDT)
From: "Katherine L. Rodman" <afn25136@freenet.ufl.edu>
Subject: Re: Accuracy of primary sources

And yet another post on the accuracy of primary sources.  One of the best 
pieces of advice that I have received over the years about costume design 
is to look at the art work, try and find extant examples of the period 
and then create the look you are going for using the guidelines set 
therein.  (This won't work for SCAers so please ignore this)  This is 
costume design and while adhering to the period as much as possible is 
prefereable, too much attention paid to a seam could deprive the costume 
of the design element you are going for.  I look to my research for 
inspiration and education and then I wing from there.  If an audience 
member can tell that a seam is not quite right, then something is wrong 
with the play, not my design.

(SCAers: you can read again)  I just saw First Night and other than the 
fact that they totally butchered the Arthurian myth, I was bothered by 
the amount of blue in the the film.  It was too rich and too deep and too 
many people wore it.  Now correct me if I am wrong (this is not a period 
I have designed much for and it's not one of my favorite periods to begin 
with), but would the common folk have worn the same colors as the king.  
In many of the crowd scenes, I saw townsfolk wearing the selfsame blue as 
Arthur wore.  Oh and could she please put her hair up.  

Kat
Katherine L. Rodman
Gainesville, FL
afn25136@freenet.ufl.edu

"Historical accuracy and costume design do not neccessarily go hand in 
hand"  John Conklin

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 02 Aug 1995 21:19:13 EDT
From: SCHG13A@prodigy.com (MS DIANNE BELL)
Subject: pattern making

- -- [ From: Dianne R. Bell * EMC.Ver #2.10P ] --

Hello,

I've been involved in 18th century re-enacting and costume making for 5
or 6 years, and have worked out some pattern making techniques.  I'd
like the list member's feedback on how these can be improved, as my
last formal training in this area was around 30 years ago.  
  To make a pattern from one of the reference books with a gridded
background (ie. "Patterns of Fashion" or "Tidings From The 18th
Century", I first scan the page as a black and white image with my hand
scanner.  I pull the resulting .PCX or .TIF file into Photofinish and
use the selection tool to mark a rectangle that contains one complete
pattern piece, trying to place the selection boundaries on both
horizontal and vertical grid lines.   I  cut the selection and then
save it  to a separate file.  I count the number of  horizontal or
vertical cells and note the width (or height).  From the print menu, I
select Poster and Smooth Resize and then scale the piece up until the
print dimension match the grid dimensions.  I print the pattern piece
and tape it together (assuming that the full size pattern is larger
than a letter size page, which it usually is).  After repeating this
process with the rest of the pattern pieces on the original scan page,
I theoretically have a complete, full size pattern.  Of course, it is
sized for the normal 18th century figure, which seems to be (for
women's clothing) about a modern size 8.  

To enlarge patterns to fit the more well endowed 20th century figure
I've used two separate techniques.  The first is to trace my taped-
together pattern onto tissue paper, which I then place over a multiple-
sized 20th century pattern.  I line up the center front or center back,
and use the 20th century pattern lines to trace in a larger size, while
trying to keep true to the 18th century styling.  This has worked
fairly well, but only if I've already purchased a pattern that is
similar to the one I'm trying to enlarge.  

The second technique has been to trace the pattern onto and  cut it out
of muslin, cutting the center front and center back lines true to the
taped pattern, but all other seam lines several inches larger.  I then
fit the muslin onto the person who will wear the finished garment. 
(Obviously, this doesn't work very well for garments I'm making for my
own use.)

My questions are:
  Are there any proven ratios where I could enlarge the pattern before
printing it?  For example, if I wanted to scale the aforemention size 8
up to a size sixteen, could I do it by printing the pattern 30% larger
horizontally and 10% vertically?  

  If there isn't any way to do this in the computer, is there some way
to do the same thing when I trace the pattern onto tissue paper?  
(Without going to the expense of purchasing a pre-printed pattern to
approximate size?)

Thanks in advance.

Dianne R. Bell
Meriden, CT

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 2 Aug 95 23:34:36 -0400
From: kl94ag@badger.ac.BrockU.CA (Kathleen Leggat)
Subject: Re: What do you wish you knew?

>The curator went on to say that medeival and renaissance paintings are 
>simply chock-full of symbolism which, for the most part, escapes us 
>today. In other words, painters were often conveying more than an account 
>of someone's appearance and in fact could alter that appearance to make 
>way for the other message.
>
>I wish I could remember the specific portrait the curator was referring 
>to. If it shakes loose from the cobwebs, I'll let you know, if you're 
>interested.

        Renaissance literature and art were often allegorical...figures and
symbols were representative of sometimes multi-layered allusions.  A
literary example of this is Spenser's The Faerie Queen, where Red Cross
Knight represents, at once, a Christian, Christ himself, all the virtues of
a Knight, etc. etc. etc. 

        However, most basic portraits aren't allegorical.  Occasionally
you'll find Elizabeth I represented as a classical deity or some such, but
you can usually tell because of some really unusual detail...like an
anachronistic costume detail, or the Queen holding a live weasel in her hand
(yeah, right!).  In those cases, she is represented as a classic figure
which, in turn, represents certain virtues...i.e. Elizabeth as Diana to show
Elizabeth's chastity)

        Kathleen (Catriona)

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 2 Aug 1995 23:57:08 -0400
From: Etienette@aol.com
Subject: Elizabeth R video Correction

I thought that you might like to know that Elizabeth R is now on video.  (I
have already ordered my copy!!!!)  The set is $149.98 + shipping from
Britannia Video Collection.  The phone number is 1-800-778-7077.  They do
take Credit cards and will do monthly installments to the Credit card.  The
order # for the videos is #42578.

Correction....

Sorry,

The number is 800-778-7077, on the fax that I received... I called the 800
directory assistance.... the number is suppose to be 800-778-7007????

Good luck
Etienette

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Aug 1995 00:21:49 -0500 (EST)
From: "D. R. Leed" <aleed@indiana.edu>
Subject: Re: pattern making

When I try to make my-sized patterns from Janet Arnold or those 
itsy-bitsy pattern layout pieces you see in costume books,  I first xerox 
the piece I need, then tape it to the lower left hand corner of either a 
big piece of paper or really big newsprint.  Taking a yardstick/whatever, 
I place one end on the lower left hand corner of the paper and have it 
run over the pattern itself, noting at what measurement the ruler crosses 
the lines of the pattern.  
	Having previously worked out the scale of the pattern (no mean 
feat in some cases), I multiply the measurement at which the ruler hits 
the edge of the pattern by what the scale is.  For instance, if the 
measurement is 1 to eight and the ruler hits the edge of the pattern at 1 
inch away from the bottom corner edge,  I make a dot with a pencil at 
eight inches.

If you fan the ruler gradually from vertical to horizontal, keeping the 
end on the corner and measuring the pattern in 1/4 inch increments, ou 
end up with a pretty accurate dotted outline of the pattern at 
life-size.  then you just connect the dots.

I have a feeling I've lamentable confused people;  it's actually pretty 
easy to do.  If time consuming.  And hellish for fraction-haters.

Drea
=============================
C Code
C Code Run 
Run Code Run
Run Dammit Run
=============================

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Aug 95 10:06:54 BST
From: jennyb@pdd.3com.com
Subject: 10th Century Costume Booklet

A few people are interested in copies of the booklet I produced.
In principal I am quite happy to share any information I have freely, but
there are a few problems:-

(a) I wrote this years ago, I would still stand by the sections on shoes
    cloth, and sewing, but I've learnt so much more about clothing that I
    don't like the patterns any more, I think the cut is over-simplified
    & in the light of new information the section on women's clothing needs
    a re-write (which I don't have time for right now, see below).
(b) There are 70 or so pages & that's a lot to copy & expensive to post
    particularly since I'm in the U.K. & most people who want it are in 
    America.
(c) I'm in the middle of moving house, have had two house purchases
    fall through just as they were about to complete, have nearly all my
    belongings in store & am therefore not in a good position to start
    distributing booklets right now.
(d) it was produced for a U.K. re-enactment group & therefore has sections
    on how to make our safety equipment which are totally irrelevant to
    other groups.

If anyone is still interested would anyone in the USA who has access to a
copier be willing to take a copy of the booklet & arrange copy the relevant
sections for other people & post them on?
(There are no copyright problems as I own all the illustrations & text).

Normally I love sharing information & hearing from other people
interested in his field, but I have been so busy lately dealing with 
solicitors surveyors mortgages removal men storage companies etc. etc.
that I just haven't got time even for fun tasks. 

A while back a load of people asked me for the shoe making information &
I tried to get those parts of the booklet scanned into electronic form
but I'm still waiting for the scanned images to be done so I can pass them
on, I still think scanning is a good solution, if any of the people
interested have access to a scanner perhaps they could scan a copy &
distribute it by email?

Failing any arrangement like that the best bet is anyone who is really
interested write to me in a couple of months when all our housing problems
will have been sorted out (Hopefully!)> Meanwhile apologies, but I'm just
not in a good position to start doing mass copying right now.

Jennifer

jennyb@pdd.3com.com

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Aug 95 10:01:54 BST
From: Alan Braggins <armb@setanta.demon.co.uk>
Subject: Re: H-Costume Digest, Volume 357, 8/2/95

> I read an article about commuters on the Blue Mountains train (journey
> to Sydney approx. 1 1/2 hours then) and one guy spent three weeks of
> these trips making wire loops for Chain Mail for his Roleplaying
> character.

Making the loops is easy, its joining them all up that is timeconsuming,
though apparently some people even have the patience to rivet them.

When this was discussed before on the fantasy list Diane said

"in case anyone wants to check out the existing sources, here's the relevant
archive info:

Send e-mail to majordomo@lunch.engr.sgi.com, the body of which is:

   get h-costume hcos.941031
   get h-costume hcos.941101
   get h-costume hcos.941109
   get h-costume hcos.941110
   get f-costume v01.n026
   get f-costume v01.n027
   end

and majordomo will send you all these files.  You can edit them down to
the chain mail specifics as you see fit!"

- ------------------------------


>         A codpiece is a fabric pouch that contains the male genetalia.
> With hose constructed of two seperate legs, you can see the need for
> this!  They were (usually?  always?) constructed of a fabric that
> contrasted with the fabric of the hose.  As with any fashion...at times
> this became a grotesque, padded thing that jutted out in an inhuman fashion.

Those who have seen "Blackadder" may remember "The Black Russian", a codpiece
that resembles the hump on Mr.Punch's back in size and shape. I don't think any
real codpiece got that extreme, though I'm happy to be corrected.
(For those who haven't, its a BBC comedy, with different series featuring
essentially the same character (presumably descendents of each other, though
none are shown as having children) in different time periods - unspecified
medieval (or possibly specified but I wasn't paying attention), Elizabethan,
Regency, and WWI)).

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Aug 1995 07:06:08 -0400
From: Schuess@aol.com
Subject: Seeing Through Clothes

In a message dated 95-08-02 08:40:45 EDT, jaelle@access.digex.net (Judy
Gerjuoy) writes:

> There is a good book that discusses this called 
>SEING THROUGH CLOTHES, my copy is lent out, so I don't have the author's 
>name handy,
>
>

It's one of my favorites, and I know it's by Anne Hollander, but I can't give
any other info because I've moved five times this summer and can't find my
copy (grrr). 
Anyone?

Melanie
schuess@aol.com

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Aug 1995 08:57:18 CDT
From: "Cindy Abel" <BRUJNE@hslpharmacy.creighton.edu>
Subject: Re: What do you wish you knew?

From:          Edward Wright <edwright@microsoft.com>
To:            h-costume@andrew.cmu.edu, kl94ag@badger.ac.BrockU.CA
Date:          Wed,  2 Aug 95 11:36:28 TZ
Subject:       Re: What do you wish you knew?


I guess for costume historians, Edward VI and Mary I got grouped in 
with Daddy Dearest Henry VIII because neither reigned long enough to 
make a fashion impact.  Also Henry VII was not exactly a clotheshorse 
compared to his son who overdressed more the older and fatter he got!
|         Don't most costumers divide the 16th century into Tudor (the reign
| of Henry VIII), early Elizabethan and high Elizabethan?  As far as I know,
| Henry VII isn't included in the costume division of "Tudor", yet he
| obviously was one too! <g>

I've never taken a poll.  But if they do, they must assume that no one 
wore clothes during the reigns of Edward VI and Mary I. :-)



|         This is interesting!  All the sources I have read, specify the
| Spanish farthingale as the cone-shaped hoops, and the French farthingale as
| the cartwheel hoops.  They refer to the stuffed bolster as a bumroll.  Could
| you look up Vardingale for me, and see if they mean the cone or the
| cartwheel?  (And where *do* you find access to such wonderful primary
| sources!)  Now...far as I know, the different shapes actually originated in
| the countries they are named for.  It may be that the French farthingale is
| a modern term because that's where it originated...perhaps contemporaries
| didn't differentiate between them with different names???  Any ideas?

According to Linthicum (Costume in the Drama of Shakespeare and his 
Contemporaries), the word farthingale apparently originally comes from 
the Spanish "verdugado," which may in turn be derived from 
"verduguillos," the Spanish word for withes or twigs (which were used 
in the construction of farthingales).  The original, or Spanish, 
farthingale did indeed originate in Spain and was brought to England, 
apparently, by actors.  The cartwheel type you refer to appears to have 
originated in Italy and was known as the "Catherine's wheel 
farthingale."  That does not mean it was not called by other names, of 
course -- words do change meanings, often confusingly so.



|         I'm aware of the limitations of secondary or tertiary sources, but
| what are the limitations of primary sources?  Other than bad spelling, bad
| handwriting and bad artwork?  I figured primary source artwork was safe,
| since more emphasis was placed on accurate detailing of costume than on
| accurate portrayal of the face.  (Surely Jane Seymour wasn't *really* that
| ugly!)  If you are dealing with a work by a popular artist of the times,
| such as a Holbein or a Hilliard miniature...what are the limitations?

First of all, there's the question of bias.  The notion of journalistic 
or historical objectivity is a fairly recent one (and even so, it is 
honored mostly in the breech). For most periods, you can pretty well 
assume that the writer favored one side or the other. Even if the 
writer was trying to be honest, the accuracy of his work is still 
limited by the limits of his own knowledge. If you relied only on 
primary sources of the period, you would be forced to conclude that 
Africa was inhabited by headless giants, that giant serpents filled the 
seas, and a race of pygmies lived at the North Pole. The tales and 
illustrations of clothing seen by travellers were almost as wild -- any 
period source that purports to show costumes of remote areas such as 
Africa, America, or even Scotland should be taken with a grain of salt.

You must also allow for artistic licence and artistic convention. 
Artists sometimes painted subjects wearing costumes that never existed 
or costumes that were created (often by the artist) for a masque or 
play and never intended to be worn anywhere else.  (Feathered capes are 
a good example of this.)  Many people (including quite a few authors) 
have looked at pictures of coats of mail and identified quite a few 
different types of mail worn in different periods. In fact, what these 
pictures show is not change in the type of mail worn, but changes in 
the artistic conventions used to portray mail.  Later, in the 
Rennaissance, artwork became much more realistic, but no painting is 
ever an exact photographic representation.  (And even with photography, 
details can look quite different due to small changes in lighting, 
focal length, depth of field, etc.)






Cindy Abel
Health Sciences Library
Creighton University
2500 California Plaza
Omaha NE 68178-0400
Phone: 402-280-5144

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Aug 1995 9:41:16 -0500 (CDT)
From: Deb <BADDORF@badorf.fnal.gov>
Subject: RE: pattern making

Actually, it's not the scaling up which is hard  (you just get
one of those cardboard sewing surfaces (sold in any fabric store), 
which have one inch grids marked on them ... then you copy 
square for square on your tracing paper).  

The tough part is sizing it to fit any particular person.
And, no, I doubt that this can be automated.   (1)  No
particular person is an exact size, at least not for garments
which are meant to fit quite tightly   and (2)  the patterns
in books are NOT all size 8.  They are whatever size the
original garment is.  And that surely must vary per garment!

I measure the pattern pieces, after they are scaled
up, and see how much waist room they have.  Then I measure
the model  and add enough room to make it fit.   Ditto for
all other areas -- bustline, etc.   Prefereably one uses
the proper slash & spread  and other flat-pattern making
techniques  (but I'll have to learn those some day!).  Then
you make up the garment in muslin and adjust AGAIN!   And
perhaps again.

>I then
>fit the muslin onto the person who will wear the finished garment. 
>(Obviously, this doesn't work very well for garments I'm making for my
>own use.)

Au contraire, I prefer to sew for myself and nobody else.  I am
always around to fit to,   and I know how much ease I require in
a garment.                To each his (her) own!

Deb Baddorf

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Aug 1995 07:39:58 -0700 (PDT)
From: close (Diane Barlow Close)
Subject: Re: getting the chainmail info...updated.

Re: making chain mail info
> When this was discussed before on the fantasy list Diane said

Thanks for passing on that info, Alan!  I've moved the archives around
since that time, so the "get" command looks a bit different, and there
are a few more files you can add to that list.  Here's the updated info:

> Send e-mail to majordomo@lunch.engr.sgi.com, the body of which is:
 
  get h-costume hcos-94/hcos.941031
  get h-costume hcos-94/hcos.941101
  get h-costume hcos-94/hcos.941109
  get h-costume hcos-94/hcos.941110
  get f-costume fcos-94/v01.n026
  get f-costume fcos-94/v01.n027
  get f-costume v02.n002
  get f-costume v02.n015
  get f-costume v02.n016
  get f-costume v02.n017
  end

> and majordomo will send you all these files.  You can edit them down to
> the chain mail specifics as you see fit!"

Since the fantasy costume's lists archives are open to anyone, you don't
have to be a member of the list in order to request and receive archived
issues.  Ditto with historic costume.
- -- 
Diane Close
   close@lunch.engr.sgi.com
   I'm at lunch all day. :-)

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Aug 1995 12:03:10 -0400
From: Tudorldy@aol.com
Subject: Many Thanks

Learned friends,

Many thanks to each of you who have provided me with considerable food for
thought for the scope of my book on beginning late period clothing.  There is
actually a marked consensus on some matters, which to some extent was news to
me.  I'm glad I asked!  If anyone has any further thoughts on this, please do
drop me a line.  Again, my gratitude is boundless.

In Service,
Elizabeth Blackdane
(Meagn E. Maguire -- who, at her first riding lesson (age 6) knew all the
parts of the horse, the tack, and the names of the gaits and different
breeds, because she had already been passionately studying the subject for
the previous year(!).  Is it my imagination, or  are a lot of us historical
clothing types also dedicated horsewomen?)
TudorLdy@aol.com

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 3 Aug 1995 11:11:02 -0500 (CDT)
From: Shirley Matheis <smatheis@dordt.edu>
Subject: Academic gown

Can anyone tell me if there is a commercial pattern for an academic gown?
- -- 

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 03 Aug 1995 12:38:26 -0400 (EDT)
From: MELLYRN@ENH.NIST.GOV
Subject: _Seeing Through Clothes_

Some folks wanted info on Anne Hollander's _Seeing Through Clothes_.

The Library of Congress lists 3 versions:
	the 1978 Viking Press, $25.00, probably hardback,
		ISBN 0670631744 ;
	the 1988 Penguin Books $14.95 paperback,
		ISBN 0140110844 ;
and the 1993 Berkeley, U. of Calif. Press version,
		ISBN 0520082311 .

In case your libraries will do an interlibrary loan with the LoC, 
their LC call numbers are:

N8217.C63 H64 1978
N8217.C63 H64 1988 and
N8217.C63 H64 1993, though this last is not yet at the LoC.

FYI, telnet locis.loc.gov
gets you to the Library of Congress main menu.  Select item #1 first,
as some of the other selections will assume you know "browse" and 
"select" and other commands; going to #1 assures you of a page of
instructions!

Happy browsing!

- ---mellyrn

------------------------------

Date: 03 Aug 1995 13:07:52 -0400 (EDT)
From: Library - Vineland Research Station <LIBRARY@ONRSVI.AGR.CA>
Subject: Bata shoe museum and thanks

If any of you are planning on being in Toronto, you may be interested in
visiting the Bata Shoe Museum. It's supposed to be the only museum in
the world dedicated to footwear. It's at the St. George Subway Station,
327 bloor Street West, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1W7.

I particularly enjoyed the present display "The Gentle Step: 19th Century
Womens Shoes Exhibition" with costumes from the McCord Museum, Montreal.
I was thrilled to see a selection of shoes from the early 19th c./Regency
period, including sandals, boots and splatterdashes (gotta make a pair of
those, even though I'm not the ruffly fem type).

By the way, I think I forgot to thank everyone for their advice on sources
for batiste, linen and silk velvet! I was frazzled preparing to attend
a conference, then I had to catch up on my return to work.

By the way, the Bata Shoe Museum  did have a German book on medieval/or
later footwear in their gift shop. I can't supply any more information
because I didn't have a pen that day. Even my lipliner was worn flat!

Sheridan Alder

------------------------------

End of Historic Costume Digest V3 #153
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