Assuming some influence from both sides of the merger, what would the
resulting mixed-race culture have worn, several hundred years in? If,
for example, there were a Vinlander GFD, what would it have looked
like? What would the men wear in cold weather? What kind of shoes
would people
I've been wondering-- and maybe this is something that is obvious to others,
just that I've not really focused on Viking or Russian clothing.
I was looking at a Russian lacquer box showing a young woman and saw the lovely
dress (sarafan?) she wore and it hit me-- that's a Viking apron dress!
Is the sarafan a relative of the apron dress??
I don't think so. It has sides, and, in its recent configurations, it
has straps sewn right on. They're wide apart in front and close
together in back. And the garment doesn't seem to go back farther
than the 1600s (I tried researching one for SCA
I had a very frustrating time of trying to locate some items this
weekend to show to a newcomer and have had it with the disorganization
of my costumes, my sewing and assorted art supplies and tools. When
I moved into my house I had a sewing room, then children moved home
and things were packed
Greetings Alex.
I also face the same issue with heat and storage of some of my items. My
current solution is simply to number the box (with a wide sharpie marker), and
then keep an inventory either on my computer, or in a binder (I have a very
thick fabric binder). The inventory list can then
Am hunting the references on this painting -
http://www.flickr.com/photos/liadains_fancies/3963118205/
Picked her up somewhere or other online, and now I really need to know
where she lives and who painted her.
Thanks for looking!
Liadain
THL Liadain ni Mhordha OFO
You get a wonderful
I'm guessing it's a Bronzino painting. You might try Googling on
Bronzinoand looking at the images.
On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 2:36 PM, Tracy Thallas fathal...@collinscom.net wrote:
Am hunting the references on this painting -
http://www.flickr.com/photos/liadains_fancies/3963118205/
Picked
If you get translucent bins, you can slip a piece of card stock down between
the side of the bin and the stuff in the bin. The stuff holds it tight to
the bin, so you can read it. If opaque, hang a piece of muslin over the lip
of the bin, with whatever is in the bin written on the muslin with a
Maybe from his workshop, I would guess it is probably not from the master's
hand.
Monica Spence
PS- I have it too in my files, it just says Florentine.
-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Käthe Barrows
Sent: Monday,
Agnolo Bronzino: Portrait of a Lady
Museo e Gallerie Nazionali di Capodimonte, Napoli
Clearer pic can be found
http://festiveattyre.com/research/secondflor/secflor5.html
or realm of venus.
Not much else online is said about it. maybe someone with a book on
Florentine fashion.
-Original
Thanks, everybody! (Someone on this list always knows everything! :-) )
Googling Bronzino and School of Bronzino found me lots of other fun
stuff to squirrel away (and I noted the details this time!) and the Festive
Attyre pic is beautifully clear for the bit I want.
About the only other
About the only other bit of info I could use it the year - but with the
title/artist/museum, have a great chance of finding that! Thanks!
OK, so what were the dates on the other ones with the same dress?
That should get it within 10 years either way.
--
Carolyn Kayta Barrows
--
“The
Yup. And a decade (1540s or whatever) is plenty close enough for my
needs! (Though someday I would also love to have a facsimile of that
dress)
Liadain
THL Liadain ni Mhordha OFO
You get a wonderful view from the point of no return...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/liadains_fancies
My Grandmother used to staple a plastic ziplock bag over the edge of the box
with the opening down and loose. She'd then put a card in the ziplock bag with
whatever the contents currently were.
Regards,
Anne
-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com
I thought current thinking is that the apron dress has sides as well.
But not having the sarafan before 1600 would squash that theory...
Thanks!
Astrida
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On Behalf Of
Käthe Barrows
On Monday 28 September 2009 3:50:13 pm Käthe Barrows wrote:
Is the sarafan a relative of the apron dress??
I don't think so. It has sides, and, in its recent configurations, it
has straps sewn right on. They're wide apart in front and close
together in back. And the garment doesn't seem to
That is a brillant idea! Much better than mine of taping card stock to front or
in the inside.
Elizabeta
--- On Mon, 9/28/09, Sharon Collier sha...@collierfam.com wrote:
From: Sharon Collier sha...@collierfam.com
Subject: Re: [h-cost] ORGANIZATION
To: 'Historical Costume' h-cost...@indra.com
If you're storing the tubs in temperature extremes, you might need to consider
the stability of the plastic and its outgassing effects on the contents. Just a
word of caution from the textile conservation side of things...
Astrida
-Original
Except I already have the tubs, and most are opaque. I wonder how
attractive the flap of muslin would be to cats that crawl through
everything
alex
On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 4:08 PM, Sharon Collier sha...@collierfam.com wrote:
If you get translucent bins, you can slip a piece of card stock down
Most of what I have to store in the garage isn't what I'd consider of
a quality to be concerned with the long term effect.
My second project is going to making sachets to go into the tubs.
Somewhere sometime someone gave me one and this past weekend I found
the tub with it, it was really nice.
I happened to come across this
sitehttp://www.vikinganswerlady.com/varangians.shtmla few months ago
after I had decided to get around to finishing this
doll http://www.smallwork.com/babayaga.html:
Just before resuming work I happened to have made my first Viking dress. I
am by no means an expert
The Vikings made some serious incursions into Ireand in the middle ages.
Dublin and Cork are both Viking cities (built by conscripted irish labor).
The relationship in clothing is left as an exercise for the student. ;-)
MaggiRos
Maggie Secara
~A Compendium of Common Knowledge 1558-1603
about 1530-32
-Original Message-
About the only other bit of info I could use it the year - but with the
title/artist/museum, have a great chance of finding that! Thanks!
OK, so what were the dates on the other ones with the same dress?
That should get it within 10 years either way.
I can definitely see that typical colonial reaction of anything from
the homeland being better, but sheer scarcity would surely lead the
colonists to make use of what's around them. I'm also thinking,
though, about the many types of native clothing that European
frontiersmen adopted, and how
24 matches
Mail list logo