Thanks, Kate.
Since I am new to this group, I must have just missed the January
discussion of Sidesaddle and clothing.
Does anyone know if the person doing that research for a paper on
women's equestrian clothing, as mentioned in the archive, has written
the paper or is it still in progress?
As far as this picture,
<<http://www.costumes.org/history/leloir/vol10/48_1692.jpg >> what
makes it a riding habit rather than an everyday outfit? Any hints in
the photo that I should be seeing but don't?
Susan
"Slow down. The trail is the thing, not the end of the trail. Travel
too fast and you miss all you are traveling for". - "Ride the Dark
Trail" by Louis L'Amour
On Mar 9, 2006, at 4:23 AM, Kate M Bunting wrote:
I searched the archive http://sca.uwaterloo.ca/Fashion/ for this year
under "hunting" and found the thread. The picture is
http://www.costumes.org/history/leloir/vol10/48_1692.jpg
Kate Bunting
Librarian and 17th century reenactor
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 08/03/2006 23:20 >>>
Thanks, Kate.
Any one have the link to that print, handy, so I can catch up ?
Susan
"Slow down. The trail is the thing, not the end of the trail. Travel
too fast and you miss all you are traveling for". - "Ride the Dark
Trail" by Louis L'Amour
On Mar 8, 2006, at 11:56 AM, Kate M Bunting wrote:
We discussed a 17th century print of a lady in a riding habit not long
ago. It was in the 1660s that ladies began to wear habits with the
upper half copying masculine attire.
Kate Bunting
Librarian and 17th century reenactor
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