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Thursday 21 July 2016

Garb Making - 16th C Bloomers (aka underwear, pantaloons, braes)

In my ongoing quest to make one late period outfit I decided a pair of underwear/ braes was the first order of business. I looked around the Internet and found a pair of 16th C undergarments that suited my needs as an example to work from. This image was taken from Met Museum item #83869

I chose to use a very lightweight, almost gauzy, linen so that I can wear these under a dress without getting terribly overheated. I am also hoping the fabric is strong enough to withstand moving, sitting, and squatting.


When I measured myself for these I incorrectly measured my rise, the amount of space your bum takes up in your pants when you sit or squat. This resulted in the addition of a very wide waistband. Since I was using the above image as inspiration rather than making a replica this did not bother me to much.

I flat felled the seams to give them added strength. Unfortunately, I didn't pay close enough attention to the direction I folded them in until it was to late. At the crotch, second image in the set, you can see where I went left on one side and right on the other.

Rather than do a button closure on my underpants I chose to use a drawstring. My drawstring is a braid of silk/ bamboo blend yarn.

Originally, when I looked at the extant example I thought the coloured cord near the waist was a straw string. Now, after looking at the image several times, I believe it is a cord that has been added to embellish the opening at the front of the pants.

I could find no detail photos of the lace on the bottom of the legs so I decided to try to create the overall look of individual peaks and loops with needle lace.

Needle lace is not something I have learned before so my first effort was messy to say the least. I first made single thread loops on the hem of the legs, then used a buttonhole stitch to create each peak working back and forth. First one row, then the second, and finally the third. Only after I completed all the peaks on each leg did I then go back to create the single thread loops, which I now know are called picots, all the way around.

The top image below is the first leg. The second is the other leg. I can definitely see an improvement from one leg to the next. The first leg the various loops are different sizes, and unevenly space. I also know tension, pulling my buttonhole stitches to tight, was also a problem. This caused my peaks to twist and fold over rather than  stand up.

The second leg the picots and base loops are more even. The picots themselves are more evenly spaced along the outside edge. The peaks stand up and create the look that I was going for.

The original lace was made with metallic thread but I chose to go with rayon as a substitute for silk. I was recently told that needle lace was more often made with linen thread instead of silk but if I had known this ahead of time it would not have changed the thread I used for the lace. I chose it as much for the colour as for the materials.

Now that I have completed a pair of underwear inspired by a 16th C pair I find myself contemplating making a replica pair. That would include the gold embroidery, the metallic lace, and the button-up waist band.




 




Monday 27 June 2016

The Jorvik Cap - 10th C

 I generally leave my head uncovered, except at outdoor events where there is not a lot of shade available. At outdoor event I wear a straw hat with a length of thin linen down the back to protect my neck.

I agreed to teach a couple of classes on sewing and embroidery to some of our newest members and thought a simple head covering that could work for different eras would be a good choice. Easy pattern, simple stitching, and then decorated with the basic embroidery stitches to personalize it. And for new members it would also be their first complete piece of garb, a win win in my opinion.

While looking through the vastness of the Internet I came across a website discussing the Jorvik cap. It looked to be just the thing, and it was only a century or two out of my preferred period to play ( 7th-9th C Anglo-Saxon).

The original was made from silk but I opted for linen for a few reasons.
  1. I do not play a Lord or Lady. I play a peasant or a craftsman class persona.
  2. I had linen on hand.
  3. I have a tendency to overheat easily and decided linen was far more breathable and cooler than the other option of wool
  4. I am allergic to most wools and it would have to be lined anyways, increasing its heat factor.
A couple of websites suggested there was embroidery on the original but looking at the image of the extant item, located at the JORVIK Artefact Gallery, I could find no indication of embroidery at all. The only evidence of embroidery were other people's hoods and the decorations they added.

I decided to try to learn the long armed cross stitch and use it as decoration on my hood along the front edge seam. I had tried the long armed cross stitch before but had failed and moved to something easier.

This effort was no different except after the fourth time of starting and removing the stitching, I placed dots every 1/8th inch. I used a ruler so the line was dots was straight and used a soft lead pencil so the marks will disappear in time and with a gentle washing. With the markings this stitch became much easier to do and get even along the entire length.

I opted for 2 strand tapestry wool, 4 strand separated into 2 strand, for the decorative stitching. Once the crosses were done I decided to go back over the X's with a bit of wool to give it a little extra punch. I chose green and yellow as those are the primary colours in my SCA heraldry.

Now that I have done this hood, I am thinking about making a pointed hood just for some variety. I have seen them referred to as the Dublin Viking Hood or the Dublin Cap. I have found several pages that discuss them and show the site owners recreations but have not, yet, found an image or the original or the recreation in a museum. I will, of course, keep looking.

Saturday 25 June 2016

Smocked Apron

Aprons seem to be a pretty popular item in the early and middle Medieval periods. You can find images of aprons n men and women in various manuscripts. This  Larsdatter  page gives lots of links to many manuscripts. While most of them seem to simply be pieces of fabric tied around the waste occasionally, such as in the image of the woodcut Melencolia by Albrecht Durer, you can see a smocked apron being worn by the women.
While I usually play an Anglo-Saxon or Norse persona in the SCA I do like to learn new techniques. In April I was privileged to take a class on smocking at an A&S day hosted by our Baron and Baroness. The concept of the class was to learn how to smock and then create an apron.
I am one of those visual learners. If I see something being done I can usually pick it up immediately.  If I have to read the instructions and look at pictures I will struggle for ages to learn a new skills.


Smocking turned out to be one of the few that I struggled with even though I was shown, not once but twice. I became so frustrated that I put the apron away until we got home. Once I picked it back up I found that a trough, the bit of fabric that was supposed to be down, was picked up and sewn into my pleats on the first row. This completely threw my stitching out of synch.

To correct the issue, after the fourth or fifth time I started and restarted the pleating, I simply doubled up the column of pleats for that one area. That allowed me to complete the pleating and move on to making and adding the the wasteband.


Another mistake I made was using a very light weight linen fabric. This means the apron looks pretty but isn't very likely to be all that useful for cooking or any other task where an apron would be nice to have around. But it does look nice and will look good if I ever decide to dress as a 12th -14th century peasant for one of our indoor events.







Thursday 23 June 2016

Trillium Exchange 2016

I signed up for the Trillium Exchange again. It has been a couple of years since my last one. The Trillium Exchange is a bit of fun where members of the SCA Kingdom of Ealdormere are paired with another participant and then make a gift for that person. Everyone tries to match the gift to their recipient's persona, likes, or possibly even just based on their favorite colours.

My recipient this year plays a 14th Century Englishwoman, the daughter of a rich wool merchant. She likes playing period games so I decided to carve her a game box, embroider a "Game of Goose" board, and carve the game pieces. I am still debating on whether I want to make her a set of dice or simply purchase modern ones.

My inspiration for the game box is housed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/468458. The original is in bone but I am carving it in wood. So far I have managed to get all four panels for the bottom of the box completed and stained.

 This is an image of my carved panels. They were carved in basswood, painted white with acrylic paint, then stained with a thick walnut stain. The excess stain was wiped away. My hope was to make it look like aged bone.

These pieces will be glued onto a box made from poplar. A small box lock has been purchased and will be installed so that the box as closely as possible resembles the original, the pictures posted below.

As with last exchange, the post will not be published until after my recipient as received their gift.

 










Completed Project

I ended up not making any progress posts after my initial one so I am updating this post with the finished work and publishing it before I find another project to distract me.

I ended up making the box, the embroidered game board,  and six game pieces. When the amount of time it took to finish the embroidered board, I decided I did not have time to make the die so I purchased a standard set of white plastic with black pips. In the documentation I included the rules to the goose game as well as a few rules for dice games.

 The game board is approximately 15 inches square. On one page for the rules they mentioned that the original game could include a drinking tile, making it an adult drinking game, so I included a foaming mug of beer on tile 61.

Each goose is freehand drawn so no two are alike. I tried to make the pose different for each goose as well.

Other images include bridges, a house, a well, a labyrinth, a cell door, and a skull and cross bones.

The recipient's favorite colour was purple. I had a violet cotton fabric that I used to line the box bottom and lid. To line the box I glued the fabric over a single layer of cotton batting onto a piece of veneer cut to the right size. This was then glued to the inside of the box.

The game pieces were carved from scrap wood I had laying around. The three lighter pieces are basswood, cedar, and poplar. The well and tower are made from red oak, and the mug is made from a piece of butternut. The handle for the mug was carved separately then joined to the body of the mug.


Once the entire box was done I went back over and made sure all the sides were as similar to each other in colour as possible. My original plan had been to make it white with some aging added with the stain. Unfortunately, the panels absorbed the stain at different rates and strengths so in the end I made the box a fairly uniform light brown with white highlights showing through.

This was the largest project I have completed to date. The relief carving was not a new skill but also not one that I had spent a great deal of time perfecting.

The same can be said for the embroidery. Not a new skill but not one I had spent a lot of time working on over the years.

Lining the box and mounting a flush lock were new skills but the relied on my previous wood carving and fabric skills.

With everything said and done I spent a solid 4.5 months, working every day for 4-6 hrs a day to complete this project. I am quite happy with the results of the carving but I see lots of room for improvement as well. It was good to push myself and I hope to do some more relief carving and embroidery work again soon.









 

Tuesday 22 March 2016

Examing my Expections: The Laurel Apprentice Relationship

A friend of mine was given her Laurel this weekend and I am glad to say I made the effort to attend her Vigil if not the actual Elevation. During my time in the Vigil tent we got off discussing the Laurel Apprentice relationship.

She asked me a question that have had me examining my expectations and desires over the last few days.


Her question was pretty straight forward: What are you looking for in a Laurel Apprentice relationship?

I thought I knew the answer. I said I would want someone who could and would teach me one or more skills, preferably in wood working; someone who would be an advocate; and someone who could guide me through the quagmire that is the culture and politics in the SCA.

Seemed like a good answer at the time. But, over the last three days I have replayed that one simply question and answer 100 or more times and each time I find myself wishing I had said more. I wish I had emphasized certain aspects more than others. Or maybe, just maybe, I did exactly what my friend wanted and that was the really think about what I want and how I want to get there.

So what am I really looking for in a Laurel? Here it is in order of importance to me...

1) I want a deep connection with a person or a group of people that are as enthusiastic, slightly obsessed about Arts and Sciences, who are happy for my successes and commiserate with me in my failures, and who I can really be myself with. I want someone who can give me gentle guidance when I need it, or beat me over the head with a stick when I need that. I want to have the kind of relationship where I feel welcomed and there is a genuine affection for me and I for them. I want a person I can be honest with and who will be honest with me.

2) I want someone who can help me understand the politics, and how to successfully navigate it, within the SCA. If I make a mistake, I want someone who can tell me what that mistake was and how to prevent making that mistake in the first place. I also want someone who can tell me how to go about correcting an inadvertent mistake without having to completely humiliate myself in the procress.

3) I want someone who can help me up my research game, so to speak.

4) I want a Laurel who can and will teach me, guide me, and otherwise encourage me in skills. I have enough interests that I would love to learn from anyone but I am passionate about Woodworking (carving, joinery, finishing, etc), Costuming, and nalbinding.