It's entirely possible that by "'headkerchief'" she means the
utilitarian "yardsquare" Henry VIII era head wrapping.  It's not
appropriate to the court wear that I suspect Sharon is aiming for in
the Renn dance perfomance group she belongs to.
--cin
Cynthia Barnes
[email protected]

Sorry, but that description of a 'headkerchief'* resembles more of the
1940s, or an early modern neckerchief,  than a head covering from any  part of
medieval times.

*never heard the term 'headkerchief' before incidentally, although of
course it was known as a 'coverchief'  - I've always used veil for the bit  that
goes over your head (in earlier periods of one piece headdresses, this
being the only part), and wimple for the bit that covers your throat (after it
becomes a separate piece).

Debbie

On Wed,  27 May 2009 19:10:45 +0100 Anne  <[email protected]>
writes:
> Could you describe  more fully what you are terming a "coif" and a
>  "headkerchief"?

You bet! :-) Coif--the ubiquitous little cap-like thing  everyone wore.
Headkerchief--I suppose we'ld call them scarves nowadays.  Take a square
of fabric, fold it into a triangle, place on head, tie two  points
together in the back.
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