Re: [h-cost] Not tying your bonnet strings?

2011-11-21 Thread Kate Bunting
Linda wrote:

Thank you, Elizabeth W. and Sharon C. - I never realised that wearing a
hat could have so many implications!  I wonder if the idea is modern of
doing honour to the occasion by wearing a hat, which seems to be
coming back into custom and not just fashion.

When I wore a hat as part of my school uniform, ( yes, a very long time
ago), I would have been grateful for ribbons.  In Summer terms, I must
have covered many miles with one hand holding it on my head; Autumn and
Spring terms were not so bad, since our school Winter coats had an
especially wide hood to cover the hat, and that tied with a gathering
string.  Thinking back, we must have looked very sweet . . .

There were certainly rules about never being seen out of doors without
your hat - nor your gloves, (brown leather for Winter, white cotton for
Summer).  Was there some ettiquette behind glove-wearing too?


As you say in your 3rd paragraph, I think before the mid-20th century everyone 
routinely wore a hat out of doors, even if they only had a very shabby one.

We used to sew elastic to our school panama hats. Our winter hats were knitted 
caps, so keeping them on wasn't a problem.


Kate Bunting
Librarian  17th century reenactor


_
The University of Derby has a published policy regarding email and reserves the 
right to monitor email traffic. If you believe this email was sent to you in 
error, please notify the sender and delete this email. Please direct any 
concerns to info...@derby.ac.uk.
___
h-costume mailing list
h-costume@mail.indra.com
http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume


Re: [h-cost] Not tying your bonnet strings?

2011-11-21 Thread Jean Waddie

On 21/11/2011 10:08, Kate Bunting wrote:

Linda wrote:


Thank you, Elizabeth W. and Sharon C. - I never realised that wearing a
hat could have so many implications!  I wonder if the idea is modern of
doing honour to the occasion by wearing a hat, which seems to be
coming back into custom and not just fashion.
When I wore a hat as part of my school uniform, ( yes, a very long time
ago), I would have been grateful for ribbons.  In Summer terms, I must
have covered many miles with one hand holding it on my head; Autumn and
Spring terms were not so bad, since our school Winter coats had an
especially wide hood to cover the hat, and that tied with a gathering
string.  Thinking back, we must have looked very sweet . . .
There were certainly rules about never being seen out of doors without
your hat - nor your gloves, (brown leather for Winter, white cotton for
Summer).  Was there some ettiquette behind glove-wearing too?


As you say in your 3rd paragraph, I think before the mid-20th century everyone 
routinely wore a hat out of doors, even if they only had a very shabby one.

We used to sew elastic to our school panama hats. Our winter hats were knitted 
caps, so keeping them on wasn't a problem.


Kate Bunting
Librarian  17th century reenactor


Have you seen the old film of girls coming out of a mill, with shawls 
over their heads - it was ages before I realised that they were the ones 
who couldn't afford hats - everyone had either a shawl or a hat to cover 
their heads.


Jean
___
h-costume mailing list
h-costume@mail.indra.com
http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume