In the second picture, I don't see any type of veiling hanging from the
back. Do you think it was a caul or just that the veil can't be seen?
Sharon 

-----Original Message-----
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Sagittarius Uisce Beatha
Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2009 2:15 PM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: Re: [h-cost] late Elizabethan headdress

I'm going by what it looks like to me.
http://elizabethangeek.com/costumereview/images/13.jpg in that picture the
back shape looks like the QEI picture except this one covers the ears.
According to the site that you just linked me to, it says later period
french hoods are more often referred to as billiments because the hood
itself had gotten so small.

http://elizabethangeek.com/costumereview/images/48.jpg This one doesn't
cover the ears and you can see the crescent nicely.  It's pictures like
that, that make me say french hood.

On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 4:49 PM, Melanie Schuessler
<mela...@faucet.net>wrote:

>
>
> I don't think this is any variety of French hood at all, but rather a 
> caul or cap made of a circle gathered to a band.  You can find 
> diagrams and instructions on the top half of this page:
> http://www.elizabethancostume.net/headwear/caulmake.html
>
> I should amend my statement in my previous email about cauls not being 
> made of linen--that was in reference to upper-class cauls.  Clearly 
> lower-class women did wear white linen cauls, as can be seen in many 
> Flemish genre paintings.
>
> Melanie Schuessler
>
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