A  cap of maintenance is also appropriate when it's too "informal" to wear a 
crown.

Definition of CAP OF MAINTENANCE

1: a cap formerly worn as a symbol of office or high rank and still used as the 
cap of state borne before the British sovereign on certain ceremonial occasions 
and in modified form as the lining of British royal crowns and peers' coronets. 


http://www.royalcollection.org.uk/microsites/thequeensyear/MicroObject.asp?row=0&themeid=1164&item=0

I looked for more examples, but that was all I found. You can see them in 
medieval artwork. 

Kathleen Norvell
[email protected]




-----Original Message-----
From: Elizabeth W <[email protected]>
To: Historical Costume <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, Aug 20, 2013 11:04 pm
Subject: [h-cost] crowns and hats how do you combine them?


Hello everyone, I vaguely remember seeing a link to a collection of images
f people (especially women) wearing crowns in SCA period (i.e. pre
7thcentury) artworks. Does this ring a bell for anyone? I was joking
ith my
usband the other day that it’s a good thing he neither of us does heavy
ighting as if we became King & Queen I couldn’t wear a crown with the
ormal headwear that suits my persona (French hoods for c. 1540s English
omen) and then it occurred to me that other people must have had this
roblem and I wondered how people deal with similar problems of crowns and
omplicated headwear.

- 
-----------------------------------------
lizabeth Walpole
ttp://magpiecostumer.wordpress.com/
ttp://magpiecostumer.110mb.com/
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