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:p
1. Lancaster (1430-1460) Heart-shaped and Turban Headdresses 2. Lancaster and York ( 1425-1480) Barbe, Loose Hair
(shows up to inktober two weeks late with a slurpee) oops? anyway happy halloween from your favorite necromancer
[image description: a mildly realistic drawing in profile of an elf with white hair and grayish-purple skin. his hair curls behind him, and the side of his head that is immediately visible is shaved. his visible ear has multiple silver piercings. his visible eye has a black sclera with a glowing yellow iris. close to the profile is a skull drawn in a very cartoony style in dark purple.]
WIP
Last weekend’s project was a personal favorite of mine. I’ve blogged before about Burgundian Gowns when I wrote about the DOTW French Court Barbie. They’re my favorite 15th Century style. It was nice to go back to history for a weekend, while we waited for some other fabrics to arrive. Though, TBH, this design has been in my mind for a long time as part of our LOTR Costume Project. It’s something I see the Princesses of Emyn Arnen wearing at some point in the Fourth Age. But this is my headcanon speaking and not actual Legendarium chronology by any means.
1 - Research
That’s easy. I’ve been researching and hoarding images of Burgundian Gowns since forever.
Above: Retour d'Isabelle de France en Angleterre. Grandes Chroniques de France, enluminées par Jean Fouquet, Tours, vers 1455-1460 Source: Paris, BnF, département des Manuscrits, Français 6465, fol. 338v. (Livre de Charles IV le Bel).
Above: Detail of The presentation of Christ in the Temple by Hans Holbein The Elder. Kunsthalle Hamburg. Source: Wikipedia
Above: Workshop of Rogier van der Weyden, Portrait of a young woman of the Burgundian gentry. National Gallery, London. Source: Wikipedia.
These are just some images out of my research. They teach us two things about Burgundian Gowns: The partlet usually comes in contrasting colors, and Burgundian Gown are always accompanied by a very specific headgear: the hennin. So, to complete my doll’s look, I made one too.
2 - Sewing Process and Results:
For my Burgundian outfit, I’ve chosen the conical hennin, more common around the 1430′s. I also love the truncated hennin, but I want a truncated hennin in darker colors, and since I’m going for light colors here, and for a “fairytale princess” look...
As far as color references are concerned, Burgundian Gowns’ paintings often show them in darker tones, jewel tones, or black. But I went out of what’s shown in sources and made a Burgundian out of the same taffeta I used for the last Sideless Gown mock up we’ve shown some weeks ago. The plastron was done in the same green silk as the Sideless Gown’s bust. But as you’ll notice in some pictures, I’ve forgotten to stiffen the silk properly by adding a buckram layer to the lining. Ugh. Things that lack of time do to my brains...
The hennin also didn’t get as good as I wanted. It ended up not covering the doll’s hair properly. It needed to be larger to accomodate the hair inside and still go down to where it should be on the doll’s head. A modern doll’s hairline is different than what was fashionable in the 15th Century - a more receded style, that you can see in the research pictures above. Think Faye Dunaway in “The Messenger” (1999).
In order to achieve that look I needed to have sewn a larger hennin, that would fit the doll’s hair inside and still come further down on her head, and I also needed to add lappets to it. But I forgot. The original pattern in “Patterns For Theatrical Costumes” lacks them. But I knew that “Patterns for Theatrical Cosumes” is not a source of historically accurate patterns and I knew I needed to design the lappets to build them into the hennin pattern provided by the book. And still I forgot to do it. I’m very sorry about that guys. I’ll do better next time around.
And here comes the tricky part: Most Burgundians I’ve ever seen have fur details at the neckline, wrists and/or hem. That is actually because these dreses were lined in fur. Sometimes in all these places, sometimes in two out of three. But fur (faux or real, though I’ll never use real fur for anything in my life) gets too brute and too big for the proper scale on a 12 inch doll if you’re not sewing something big like a cloak with a large shawl collar, or a hippie fur-vest. But there’s a trick that works pretty well in these moments: velvet. It’s “furry” enough and small enough to look in scale. And I had just the right caramel shade to go well with eggshell and green!
Here are the results! As always, this is a modern doll, so please forgive the smoky eye and blue eye shadow. It’s not period and it feels misplaced. I’m working on gettin more “period adequate” dolls for our photoshoots.
The Heart Shaped Hennin C. 1405 - 1470
The "Heart Shaped Hennin" started life as the "Crispinette" from the reign of Richard II. From the Crispinette it developed into the "Cross Tree Headdress". As the Cross Tree Headdress was very wide and was considered "Ugly and Unbecoming" by some, another headdress developed at the same time. This was the "Heart Shaped Hennin".
^Crispinette with fillet (the headband)
It still had the golden fretwork, the "Caul" confining the hair on either side of the face, but no longer had the fillet over the cauls. It had a padded roll instead. This echoed the silhouette of the Cross Tree Headdress at first, width being the dominant feature.
^Cross tree headdress
Gradually the padded roll started to extend upwards as did the wires of the Cross Tree Headdress. Both headdresses were often referred to as the "Cow Headdress" because of the resemblance to cows horns. A holy Bishop preached from the pulpit about fashionable women resembling "Horned Snails" and that women were "Abusing their crowning glory by covering their hair".
As the outer edges of the padded roll extended upwards, the middle of the padded roll descended into a dip at the centre of the forehead and was made from coloured silks, velvets or linen. It became encrusted in jewels, pearls and plaques of enamels. Over these were draped semi-circular or square veils all of which were hemmed with "rich stuff".
In 1440 the top edges of the padded roll of the "Heart Shaped Hennin" were drawn closer together still, producing yet another style of headdress called the "Forked Headdress". A Long "Tippet" or "Streamer" type veil was attached at the back or side of it.
^forked headdress
The Heart Shaped Hennin continued to be used by upper and middle classes throughout this period in time but discarded it completely after 1470.
(info from Kat’s Hats)
Medieval henin headdresses
lyrics from lincoln’s st bernard
(image description: a small block image of an elf’s upper face, showing their eyes, forehead, ears, and little else. the image is colored in black, gray, and red, with white text overlaid. he looks off screen with vacant eyes, a conflicted expression on his face. his eyelashes are prominent enough to suggest eyeliner or some equivalent. his hair, lighter than his skin tone, is curled and held back behind his ear, which has a small piercing. the overlaid text reads: “i said make me love myself, so that i might love you,” lyrics from the song st bernard by lincoln.)