I know the book very well. IMHO, you would be better served by using a more modern bit of research. Harmand's book is c1928. It's chief value is the prolific references to all those wonderful illuminations in the BNF and the quotations from Jeanne d'Arc trial. May I suggest you look thru the London excavations books or Fashions in the Age of the Black Prince for the detailed answers to your question? If all you want is a pattern & working method, the the Medieval Tailor is more up to date than Jeanne d'Arc and accessible in a language you read. This really isnt my period, so I cant answer your question directly. Best, --cin Cynthia Barnes [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [h-cost] Hose lining To: h-costume <[email protected]> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Hi, I'm solving a little problem, the lining in joined hose in the 15th century in general. Was there any - if yes, how did it look, did it cover the whole hose, how often one could see hose with lining and hose without - and also was there lining in hose in earlier periods? I could only find something in Adrien Harmand's book, but my French is not excellent and I'm not sure whether I understand everything... If there was a thread on this topic, please point me to it by telling me the name of the subject:-) _______________________________________________ h-costume mailing list [email protected] http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume
