http://lacma.wordpress.com/2010/10/14/fashioning-mannequins/
Great post, thanks for the opportunity to see it,
-C.
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Actually, the first shirt of B 4486 (the collarless one)is really close to a
late 1500's shirt/chemise. Just remove the gathers at the top of the sleeves
and add a straight collar (rectangular piece of cloth.) You may want to
remove some of the fullness at the cuffs also, it's hard to tell from
-Original Message-
Butterick 4486 looks a LOT like his shirt,
De: the lacing and the ruffles of this pattern is not pre1600s. Here are
men's Italian extant shirts
http://realmofvenus.renaissanceitaly.net/workbox/extmencam.htm
Likewise,
Simplicity 3758 is probably only somewhat close
Oh, foolish me. I have the Tudor Tailor. Why don't I think of it when I'm
dealing with questions like this one?
Perfect solution - draft it out of TT.
Thanks!
Laurie
-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Sharon Collier
Just call it birdseye cotton (at least I think that's what diaper
cloth is called...)
Sandy
At 04:00 PM 10/17/2010, you wrote:
Hehehehehe.
Yes, especially considering how fussy this kid is! Telling him diaper cloth
would be a disaster! Funny, but still a disaster!
Thanks for the
-Original Message-
But the shirt that he already has is 100% cotton -
I know - not period - but very comfy and again, he likes it.
De: Going by memory, I believe that someone on the Italian list that i am on
said that in the late 1500s you do find some shirts and shifts made of
cotton
The main wool swatch set I know of is in the book All About Wool : Fabric
Dictionary and Swatchbook. It is a bit pricey, which is why I've not picked up
a
copy yet.
I've also received some nice wool swatches from Wm Booth, Draper, which they
can
send to you on request. You have to email