medieval clothing - Zauberfeder Verlag
Transcription
medieval clothing - Zauberfeder Verlag
To be dressed historically correct as a medieval re-enactor – it could not be simpler: the range of AKE YOUR OWN MEDIEVAL C LOT H I N G BASIC GARMENTS FOR MEN garments that those interested in the Middle Ages can now make themselves stretches from the High to Late Middle Ages (1200 to 1500), and from a simple maid to lower gentry. Panels with lifelike, coloured illustrations revive the different medieval classes through their clothing and accessories. Clear, easily understandable pictures lead you through all the processes. Starting with the sewing techniques used in the Middle Ages even the layman learns how to neaten fabric edges, attach sleeves and make cloth buttons. treat and add to Wolf Zerkowski’s texts perfectly.” Jürgen Ludwig, www.landsknechtsportal.de “Thus this book is truly a great work, and surely an enrichment for those who seek a fundamental, practical approach to medieval fashion.” Pax Et Gaudium, 2004 MAKE YOUR OWN MEDIEVAL CLOTHING “The colourful pictures and rich illustrations penned by Rolf Fuhrmann turn looking at this book into a pure WOLF ZERKOWSKI / ROLF FUHRMANN Also available from Zauberfeder Verlag: BASIC GARMENTS FOR WOMEN 64 pages, ISBN 978-3-938922-14-9 ISBN 978-3-938922-15-6 www.zauberfeder-verlag.de www.zauberfeder-verlag.de WOLF ZERKOWSKI / ROLF FUHRMANN AKE YOUR OWN MEDIEVAL C LOT H I N G BASIC GARMENTS FOR WOMEN l AKE YOUR OWN MEDIEVAL C LOT H I N G BASIC GARMENTS FOR WOMEN Wolf Zerkowski/Rolf Fuhrmann “Make Your Own Medieval Clothing – Basic Garments for Women” Original edition © 2004 Rofur5 Verlag Original title “Kleidung des Mittelalters selbst anfertigen – Grundausstattung für die Frau” 1st Edition 2008 Copyright © 2007 Zauberfeder GmbH, Braunschweig (Brunswick), Germany Text: Wolf Zerkowski Illustrations: Rolf Fuhrmann Braiding & tablet weaving: Rolf Fuhrmann Translation: Tanja Petry Copy editor: Shaunessy Ashdown Editor: Miriam Buchmann-Alisch Art editor: Christian Schmal Production: Tara Tobias Moritzen Printing: AJS, Kaišiadorys All rights reserved. d No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner. Printed in Lithuania ISBN 978-3-938922-15-6 www.zauberfeder-verlag.de Publisher’s note: This book has been compiled carefully. However, no responsibility is taken for the correctness of this information. The authors and the publishing company as well as their representatives can assume no liability for potential damages to persons or property, or for financial losses. Wolf Zerkowski/Rolf Fuhrmann Make Your Own Medieval Clothing Basic Garments for Women d Zauberfeder Verlag, Braunschweig, Germany CON TE N T CONTENT Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Panels Noblewoman with falcon . . . . Soldier’s wife. . . . . . . . . . . Noblewoman wearing a surcoat. Old woman . . . . . . . . . . . Peasant woman . . . . . . . . . Girl carrying wood . . . . . . . Boy herding geese . . . . . . . . Woman with basket . . . . . . . Girl with baby . . . . . . . . . . Nun of the Cistercian order . . . House maid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 6 8 8 10 10 10 12 12 14 14 Background information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Working techniques On fabrics . . . . . . On colours . . . . . . Seaming techniques . Stitching techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 17 19 21 Headdresses . . . Barbette . . . . . Veil/chin cloth . . Headscarf . . . . Undergarment . . Plain dress . . . . Bliaud . . . . . . Herjolfsnes dress Surcoat. . . . . . Cloak/coat . . . . Hood . . . . . . . Cloth buttons . . Stockings . . . . Shoes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 26 27 28 29 30 32 36 39 40 41 42 43 46 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fingerloop braiding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Tablet weaving . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Alms purse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 4 P RE F ACE PREFACE W hat did the clothes of medieval women look like? What did children wear? And how can someone interested in the Middle Ages sew such clothes himself? This book, with its richly illustrated and easily comprehensible instructions, presents typical women’s and children’s clothing of the Middle Ages as well as corresponding sewing techniques. The author, Wolf Zerkowski, has been re-enacting medieval history, with a special focus on clothes, for many years. According to his strict specifications, Rolf Fuhrmann has created coloured drawings of medieval characters as well as graphics for the instructions in this book. However, to describe the whole range of women’s clothing during the Middle Ages would be an almost impossible task. A short undergarment could, for example, have been worn by a peasant woman of the 13th century as well as by a noblewoman of the 14th or 15th century. Dresses were usually floor- or ankle-length, though there were exceptions, as there were with hoods. For example, certain people wore hoods with long liripipes even when short liripipes were fashionable. Apart from some pieces or combinations of clothing worn by almost all classes from 1200 to 1500, there were regional differences and various specifications for certain social groups or members of certain classes or professions. The examples in this book are limited to “standard clothing”, which could have been worn with few changes during the whole era of the High and Late Middle Ages, that is, from about 1200 to 1500, by women of poor and simple station as well as women of the gentry. For further sewing projects or for specific differences that have to be taken into account for regional portrayals, the reader would have to resort to further reading. This book, revised for the reprint, primarily contains instructions for interested hobbyists. The basic garments described can be remade with relatively little effort in terms of time, money or technical skill. We recommend buying fabrics at sales, or else ordering from a wholesaler; leather scraps are available at leather shops. Also, try to avoid synthetic fibres or cotton, and you will get an acceptable garment fit for any kind of medieval event! For those with deeper interest in medieval reenactment, the appendix offers a list of further reading, recommendable organisations as well as sources for material and accessories of any kind. 5 PA NELS 6 PA NELS NOBLEWOMAN WITH FALCON P ictured is a 12th century noblewoman wearing a dress called a bliaud. Even a noblewoman was controlled by her husband, and was watched and spied upon by relatives, servants and other courtiers during his absence. The pressure put upon noblewomen to bear children – particularly male successors – was especially high. From the 12th century onwards the number of children born to noble families increased, on average about eight to ten children per wife! However, due to the increasing help with parenting and child care by wet nurses, mothers were at least partially relieved of their duties, and were able to relax, for example at a falconry. The bliaud is a typical dress style of the 12th century. In Germany this piece was also called blîat. Originally the name derives from a special fabric woven with golden thread which was used to make these dresses. However, in time the name was used for this cut in general, regardless of fabric. The bliaud, like the surcoat, is worn over a shift and was the nobility’s garment from about 1150 to 1200. Afterwards, it was seldom pictured in medieval paintings or sculptures, but instead also as a dress for common women. During the 13th century this garment went completely out of fashion and was replaced by the surcoat. Above the veil and barbette a golden circlet is worn. SOLDIER’S WIFE W omen played a central role among the camps of medieval armies. Most were members of the lower classes, whose former lives in poverty and dependency as servants, wet nurses or lady’s maids had become so exhausting to them that a life as wife or companion of a soldier seemed a last resort. On their shoulders they carried the complete, if humble, belongings of a soldier’s family. They gave birth to children, most of which did not survive the ordeals of the campaigns. But it was also the women that supported soldiers while looting. As pay was often enough not to be taken for granted, loot was a necessity to secure the existence of the soldiers’ families. It was a fight for survival rather than an inherent criminal tendency that prompted soldiers to steal. Many soldiers lost their wives during a campaign. One reason was because they had to bear children under disastrous hygienic circumstances. And whereas men could quite simply just start a new relationship, the loss of a guardian, be it because of death or arrest, was a substantial threat to a woman. In the case of those women who were already older, had several children to care for or had not taken any material advantage of their previous relationship – something that was usually only possible for married couples – they were in danger of sinking into the socially stigmatised group of unprotected women. Casual labour, begging or prostitution thus became their fate. Gathering the dress, or parts of it, under the belt was a handy way of wearing it, and can often be seen in medieval paintings. A straw hat was worn above the headscarf if necessary. 7 PA NELS NOBLEWOMAN WEARING A SURCOAT F rom the 13th to the 15th century noble women, and later also commoners, liked wearing outer garments with so-called “gates of hell”. They were sleeveless surcoats with low-cut armholes. These were often lined with fur or else embroidered. The term gates of hell was apparently coined by the church, which denounced the “shameless” insights those armholes offered. The headdress pictured is a pillbox. The wimple beneath the pillbox was fastened on top of the head with a pin, the cap itself then pinned to the cloth. The life of a noblewoman was, in contrast to common or rural women, less defined by work and financial worries than by social isolation and often also boredom and lovelessness. Lonely and boring hours were filled with handiwork considered “appropriate”, for example embroideries, which still fill many museums even today. Intimacy was primarily limited to the shared bedroom. Marriage was mostly seen as a way of regulating social relationships, not as a union of body, let alone soul. Too little love was absolutely no reason to divorce; the wedding vows referred only to children and to faithfulness. Due to high mortality in these times marriages usually lasted no longer than 10 to 15 years. OLD WOMAN T he picture shows an old woman from an urban environment. A widow, for example, could not just take control of her further fate and life after her husband’s death. At best, she was able to choose between several candidates for a new marriage that suited her family. In the lower classes the pressure to marry was less pronounced. But the step from poverty to prostitution was not a big one. Financial distress was often followed by a social outclassing of the women, and thus they were subject 8 to humiliation and oppression, especially from men. In many cases only prostitution or begging remained for them as ways to eke out a living. Overall, a medieval woman did not lead an easy life. If she was enclosed in the social network and was compliant, she was at least somewhat well-off. If she, however, dropped out of this network due to some stroke of fate, for example the death of her husband, or perhaps left her traditional role out of her own free will, she could quickly be bad-off. s PA NELS 9 u B A C K G RO U N D I N F O RM AT I O N CHANGES IN WOMEN’S AND CHILDREN’S CLOTHING DURING THE MIDDLE AGES I n the Early Middle Ages, roughly from the middle of the 5th century to the year 1000, women wore simple, shirt-like dresses. They did not have real “cuts” yet, as the width of the dress was defined by the width of the loom. These clothes still followed Celtic or Frankish fashion. It wasn’t until the middle of the 12th century that clothes were made according to special cuts and measures, and as a result of these techniques, a very body-hugging fashion developed. The women’s dresses were now fitted closely to the upper body, by being laced either at both side seams or at the back. CHILDREN’S FASHION T he lion’s share of medieval children, in the country as well as in cities, passed into working life at the young age of seven to help support their family or just to make their own living. The sleeves of those dresses opened like a trumpet from the elbow to the wrist, or else had floor-length loops at the wrists. The bottom half of the dress was wide and often ended in a vast train. By studying medieval paintings it can be seen that during the whole High and Late Middle Ages babies of all classes were always wrapped tightly in bands of cloth. Arms, legs and torso were first wrapped separately, then the torso and the extended limbs were tied up like a mummy with a wider bandage. To gain more width, triangular pieces of fabric called “godets” were inserted into the skirts. The lacing of the upper part of the dress was sometimes highlighted by a belt as well. This type of dress was called a bliaud. Once they had outgrown infancy, children wore, unless there were festive occasions, fairly comfortable and simple clothes such as loose shirts and generously cut little coats or cloaks. Towards the beginning/middle of the 13th century the Another interesting detail catches the eye when looking at children’s portraits: boys sometimes wore girl’s clothes. The main reason for this was probably that children up to the age of three or four had not yet learnt to control their bowels or bladder, and that hygienic conditions hampered staying dry. The wide children’s skirts were more practical than trousers. Also, there were no underpants: under their long skirts the children were naked. They also wore no shoes until they were able to walk. elaborate sleeve types disappeared, as did the train. Sleeves were now worn fitted tightly to the forearm, and the dress displayed excess length all around, so that it had to be gathered up while walking. Belts were still worn at the beginning of this period, but then disappeared quickly, allowing the cloth of the dresses to fall freely and in rich folds. This fashion was kept in Germany approximately until the middle of the 14th century, then body-hugging dresses came into fashion again. Up to this point dresses had been rather high-necked, but women now started to show some décolleté. 16 u WOR K I N G TECH N IQ UES ON FABRICS ON COLOURS uring the Middle Ages, people normally used linen, hemp and wool. Even the nobility’s clothes were made from these materials, yet their fabrics had a much better quality. nother way of expressing one’s social standing in the Middle Ages was the use of expensive colours. Members of the nobility as well as richer merchants and better-off craftsmen were able to afford dyed fabrics whose brilliant colours were much more durable, as costly dying ingredients were used. D Linen and hemp were the most common fabrics for light garments and undergarments, and were often home-made. Outer garments made from linen were rather rare. If the weather was too warm, the outer garment was simply taken off. Wool was the all-purpose fabric for almost all types of medieval clothing – but sheep’s wool, not alpaca or other modern types of wool. Loden cloths are suited best. Silk and brocade were imported from the Orient until the late 13th century. Only the richest could afford it, as it was extremely expensive. Silk produced today, however, does not comply with the medieval one. Brocade with medieval patterns is hard to come by as well. Cotton did not come into use until the late 13th century as a blended fabric with linen (swansdown). Historical finds dating further back must have been imports from the Orient, and undoubtedly rare. Because of cotton being short-fibred, it could only be processed as a blended fabric. You should not be tempted to use pure cotton. It is cheaper, but will ruin your work, as it is not historically accurate! Velvet was first used towards the 14th century. As medieval velvet is in no way similar to today’s velvet, you would best do without it. Leather was mostly worn as working clothes, and was primarily a mark of the working class. It was used for bags, belts and shoes. Incidentally, there was no black leather during the High and Late Middle Ages. Synthetic fibre fabrics should be avoided, too, as the garments otherwise tend to resemble a costume rather than clothing of the Middle Ages. The same goes for borders, keep an eye out for ones made of the above-mentioned materials and not of synthetic fibres. Tablet-woven borders are suited best – everything else just resembles carnival. A The simple folk, on the contrary, normally had to make do with cheaper, undyed fabrics or with ones that tended to quickly lose colour. All colours were fairly strong, so that the street scene during the Middle Ages was quite colourful, and not at all bleak, like many Hollywood movies would like to make us believe. Shades of brown could be dyed with a number of local plants, for example nut shells, and were thus affordable. Shades of blue were the most popular, as they could be made with local dyes (dyer’s woad). Usually they were a pale blue. The only way to get strong, dark blue was indigo, which was very expensive. Shades of red were traditionally popular with the nobility, as they symbolised blood. Red was available quite cheaply from madder, and was also used by the simple folk. Shades of yellow: strong, golden tones were also worn by the nobility, while pale yellow was, in some areas, used to mark outsiders to society (for example to stigmatise Jews and prostitutes). Shades of green were usually very expensive, as they were blended colours. As far as colour symbolism is concerned, greens were commonly associated with young people. Black was almost exclusively worn by the lower clergy, but came into fashion with merchants and other “betteroff” classes at the end of the 14th century. Parti-colour, meaning garments divided in halves, or quarters, with two or more colours, gained in importance among menials, messengers and especially lansquenets during the Late Middle Ages. 17 ll BA R BE T TE Fastening of a barbette and pinning the veil to the hair with barbette pins, 13th century onwards Barbette pins Golden circlet Alternative way of wearing barbette and veil with a circlet. The veil cloth could be made of thin fabric (above) or else of linen (left). 26 l V E I L /C H I N C L O T H Chin cloth Veil Chin cloth attached to spiral braids Typical combination: chin cloth with veil (“Gorget”,“Schleier” or “Wimpel”) Headscarf/veil from the back Somewhere between 70 x 90 cm and 90 x 110 cm 27 BL IAU D T BLIAUD he bliaud or bliaut, an early type of women’s dress, was worn combined with the chemise and was a figure-hugging dress with trumpet-like sleeves and a train. Originally the name derives from a special fabric woven with golden thread, which was used to make these dresses. However, in time the name was used for this cut in general, regardless of the fabric. The undergarment was fitted tightly to the neck, so that as little skin as possible could be seen. The sleeves were either sewn together at the forearm after putting the dress on, or else laced, so that they, too, fitted tightly. Variant with lacing at the side seams This type of women’s dress was worn from around 1150 to 1200, almost exclusively by noblewomen. Afterwards, it was seldom pictured, but also served as a dress for common women. It can be guessed that this type of dress went out of fashion quite quickly and disappeared completely around 1225. An example of the bliaud is in the Marienschrein in Aachen, Germany (dating back to 1220). A midwife pictured there is wearing a bliaud-like dress, with its trumpet sleeves hitched up and tied together in a knot behind the shoulders. More evidence, dating back to 1145-1155, can be found at the cathedral of Chartres, France. Lacing at the back 32 This type of dress was laced to be quite figure-hugging – either at the sides or at the back. The lacing at the back indicates that the woman must have been nobility, as she would have needed someone to actually close the lacing in this inaccessible place. BL IAU D Variant with lacing at the side seams 33 CLOTH B U T TO N S CLOTH BUTTONS The making of cloth buttons (metals were precious!) according to Textiles and Clothing, Museum of London. Buttons were fastened directly on the edge of the button-facing. The button-holes were placed extremely close to the hem of the garment as well, and the overlapping of the button and button-hole sides was minimal! l Buttons were mostly made of tin, sometimes bronze, gold or silver. The first buttons appeared in the middle of the 13th century, and were used almost exclusively by the nobility. 42 STO CK I N GS STRETCHABILITY OF THE FABRIC For making stockings, you should choose a stretchable fabric, as they should fit your leg tightly, but on the other hand the calf has to fit through the narrower knee area. Woollen fabrics, however, are generally quite inflexible: the warp threads that go through the whole length of the fabric are just as inductile as the weft threads crossing them. “Warp” is what a weaver calls the threads attached to the loom, forming the frame for the woven fabric. “Weft” is the crossing threads, which are “shot” through the warp threads with the shuttle. However, if you turn the fabric by 45° before cutting it, so that warp and weft run diagonally, you will get a surprisingly stretchable fabric lengthwise as well as in cross direction! Weft threads Warp threads 43 h F I N GE R LO OP BR A IDI N G CORDS AND LACES I f plaited bands were used to lace pieces of garments together, the ends of those cords were often covered by pointed metal tips. How to make these tips is described in detail in Make Your Own Medieval Clothing – Basic Garments for Men. Numerous types of fingerloop braiding are common in many old cultures all over the world. The medieval use of bands and cords made in such a way are documented for the era between 1150 and 1450 by textile findings in London (see: Crowfoot/Pritchard/Staniland, Medieval finds from excavations in London, London 1992). Fingerloop braids were, however, also used outside this era, as period paintings show. This technique is easy enough to learn, and once you have understood the basic principle, many different types and thicknesses of cords can be produced by using different braiding variants. Serging the holes through which the laces or cords are pulled Points Lace with point Such fingerloop braids were very common in medieval times. They were, for example, used as laces on garments, for alms purses and as edging for hair nets. The cords of the London findings consisted of twice-wound silk strings and were usually of one colour. Bands plaited with two, three or four colours were an absolute exception. We can, however, assume that linen and wool were used in addition to silk for making those braided cords. By plaiting bands with different colours, some simple patterns can be achieved. As an example we will present the braiding of a five-loop band (=ten threads). This was, beside cords made with seven loops, the most common thickness. Five- and seven-loop bands can be made by one person alone; for more complex bands an assistant is required. Lacing on a dress 49 T A B L E T W E AV I N G BANDS, BELTS AND BORDERS WORKING TECHNIQUE Tablet weaving is a band weaving technique already exercised about 2500 years ago, and its use is documented in Scandinavia, Northern and Eastern Europe as well as Asia, North Africa and Egypt. During industrialization – due to the possibility of machine-woven bands – the tradition of this weaving technique was almost lost in many cultures. Tablet-woven bands were used as borders on garments, as belts or as garters. They are both strong and decorative and were, for example, even used as bridles and cinches in ancient China. TOOLS AND MATERIAL Besides thread and the necessary cards – the basic implements – two screw clamps for mounting the threads and a piece of wood for keeping the gaps between the threads, called the shed, apart while pushing through the weft come in handy. The cards themselves should not be too thick, as the deck of cards that has to be moved tends to get bulky and hindering otherwise. On the other hand, they should not be too thin, to prevent them from bending during the weaving! All cards and holes should be as congruent as possible to avoid an irregular tension in the woven piece later on! The breadth of the woven band is always defined by the number of cards used, as well as the thickness of the thread. Each card is one warp thread in the finished band. The thread for the warps (picture p. 56) has to be strong enough not to be rubbed through by the constantly moved cards. It goes without saying that the edges of the cards and those of the holes in them must not be jagged or sharp. 54 The technique of weaving means joining parallel threads (warp threads) with a crossing thread (weft thread). As a means of coordinating and twisting these warp threads during the weaving this special technique uses cards with holes in them, through which the warp threads run. Depending on the number of holes, how threads of different colours or of the same colour run through which holes and how the cards are twisted during weaving, different patterns and structures develop. Contrary to fabric made on a loom, however, the weft thread is only seen on the edges of the woven band and has no influence on the colour of the weave! Concerning the technique, tablet weaving is a mixture between fingerloop braiding and weaving on a loom, as elements of both techniques come into play: the twisting of the different threads with each other and the joining of the threads with a weft thread. The tablets were, depending on the regional conditions, made of wood, horn, stone, parchment, leather or bones. Threads used were wool and linen as well as cotton, hair, silk or even threads of silver and gold. Surviving bands from the Middle Ages, as for example a belt made for the Bishop Witgarius of Augsburg, southern Germany, around 879 AD, show an unbelievable craftsmanship. The use of this handicraft practise was at first restricted to the peasant population, who used undyed woollen threads for it. But in the Early Middle Ages, tablet weaving developed more and more into a respectable pastime for noblewomen, with correspondingly richer materials like silk, gold and silver. The revival of the art of tablet weaving in Western Europe was triggered by the research of Margarethe Lehmann-Filhes and her book Über Brettchenweben (On Tablet Weaving), published in 1901. g A LMS PU R SE ALMS PURSE A n alms purse is a simple, rectangularly cut, baglike pouch. It was either fastened directly to the belt with a cord, or to the ring of a small metal holder riveted to the belt. As medieval clothing did not have pockets, money or personal effects were kept in the purse. It was called an “alms purse” because wealthier people wore, when going to church, special, richly decorated pouches containing small change, which was given to beggars as alms, so that they would pray for the salvation of the donor. Many of the surviving examples were also decorated with tassels and embroidered. They were usually made of cloth, but those for everyday use as a purse or bag for small things like steel and flint were sometimes at least partly made of leather. Small knives were, just like the purse, part of the basic equipment of a medieval person. As a host did not provide cutlery as we know it today, people used their own knife as all-purpose tool. Sometimes it was combined with a pricker, a kind of stiletto, to pick up pieces of meat. The belt had no loop behind the buckle to hold the loose end. Instead, it was common in medieval times to wrap the belt’s end around the belt, then tuck the end through the newly-formed sling and let it hang down One of the sources for these pouches is the Codex Manesse, which contains many pictures of such kinds of bags. freely. From the first half of the 13th century the belt started to disappear from women’s fashion. Buckle variant from around 1200 to 1350 Pursehanger, variant of the 12th century Buckle variant from around 1350 to 1500 Fastening of the pursehanger on the belt 59 B O D Y M EA S U REM E N T CHA RT Name: Date: Height: cm . Weight: CAPTION . kg K 1 – End of one shoulder to end of other shoulder Kc ____cm Kd ____cm Ke ____cm Ka ____cm K 2 – Arm length with bent arm from shoulder to wrist bone Kb ____cm K 3 – Side of the neck to end of the shoulder K k ____cm K1 ____cm K 3 ____cm K2 ____cm Kh ____cm K4 – Bust circumference around the fullest point K42– Circumference under the bust Kf ____cm K 5 – Waist circumference approximately at the navel Kg ____cm K 6 – Hip circumference around the fullest part of the buttocks K4 ____cm K 7 – Thigh circumference K 8 – Calf width K42 ____cm K5 ____cm K6 ____cm K a – Head circumference Ki_____cm K b – Neck width K c – Wrist K d – Forearm circumference K e – Upper arm circumference K7 ____cm K f – Shoulder to waist K g – Waist to hip K8 ____cm K h – Back waist length from back of the neck to waist K i – Hip to ankle joint K k – Shoulder to bust For photocopying. This page is also available for download at www.zauberfeder-verlag.de. Body measurement chart from “Make Your Own Medieval Clothing – Basic Garments for Women” To be dressed historically correct as a medieval re-enactor – it could not be simpler: the range of AKE YOUR OWN MEDIEVAL C LOT H I N G BASIC GARMENTS FOR MEN garments that those interested in the Middle Ages can now make themselves stretches from the High to Late Middle Ages (1200 to 1500), and from a simple maid to lower gentry. Panels with lifelike, coloured illustrations revive the different medieval classes through their clothing and accessories. Clear, easily understandable pictures lead you through all the processes. Starting with the sewing techniques used in the Middle Ages even the layman learns how to neaten fabric edges, attach sleeves and make cloth buttons. treat and add to Wolf Zerkowski’s texts perfectly.” Jürgen Ludwig, www.landsknechtsportal.de “Thus this book is truly a great work, and surely an enrichment for those who seek a fundamental, practical approach to medieval fashion.” Pax Et Gaudium, 2004 MAKE YOUR OWN MEDIEVAL CLOTHING “The colourful pictures and rich illustrations penned by Rolf Fuhrmann turn looking at this book into a pure WOLF ZERKOWSKI / ROLF FUHRMANN Also available from Zauberfeder Verlag: BASIC GARMENTS FOR WOMEN 64 pages, ISBN 978-3-938922-14-9 ISBN 978-3-938922-15-6 www.zauberfeder-verlag.de www.zauberfeder-verlag.de WOLF ZERKOWSKI / ROLF FUHRMANN AKE YOUR OWN MEDIEVAL C LOT H I N G BASIC GARMENTS FOR WOMEN l