veils-msg - 1/31/12 Use of veils in period. NOTE: See also the files: headgear-msg, snoods-cauls-msg, gloves-msg, jewelry-msg, coronets-msg, belts-msg, beads-msg, netting-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ From: habura at bcbp18.bio.rpi.edu (Andrea Marie Habura) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: How to wear veils? Date: 17 Mar 1995 16:31:51 GMT Organization: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy NY How to fasten a veil depends a lot on what period you're trying to emulate, what class you're trying to emulate, and the exact composition of the veil and any other head superstructure. Have I scared you off yet? :) I'll go from easy to hard. If you are wearing a wimple, keeping your veil on is child's play. Put on your wimple, pinning it firmly to your hair. Pin the veil to the wimple. The pins and the friction of fabric against fabric will keep your veil on in all but high winds. This style is appropriate for about 11-13th c. Anglo-Norman, all classes, and through the 14th c. if you are not trying for an avant-garde look. If you are wearing any form of sturdy understructure on your head (a 15th c. heart-shaped padded headdress, for example), pin the veil to that. If you are wearing the 14th c. style of a double-peaked (wire? I think so, but I need to hunt down that bibliographic citation from _Textiles and Clothing_ to be sure) framework with a veil over it, the veil can be pinned to itself. Also, the sources I have imply that the veil was sewn to the wire framework, but I need to get that other book through ILL to be sure. If you are going for a 14th or 15th c. lower-class look, loosely knot the veil behind your head into a sort of drapey cap. Check out some of the female peasants in the _Tres Riches Heurs_ for examples. If you are looking for 14th c. avant-garde (no wimple), which is the style I usually wear, the solution I've found is to wear a small cap pinned to the hair (there are a few examples of illustrations of women ready for bed, who are wearing nothing *but* such a cap), and pinning the veil to that. Be sure to carefully dig the pin ends into the cap, especially if you have a husband who likes kissing you on top of the head :). Or, you could give up entirely and wear some other headgear appropriate to your time period. I generally wear a hood when camping or when in high winds, because it's much easier to handle and is equally appropriate for the clothing I wear. Alison MacDermot *Ex Ungue Leonem* From: rousseaua at immunex.wa.com Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: How to wear veils? Date: 17 Mar 95 16:38:09 PST Organization: Immunex Corporation, Seattle, WA kjwegner at mtu.edu (Kimberly) writes: > Ok.... I have a veil. I just can't figure out how to keep it from > slipping off of the back of my head. I remember a thread a few months ago > that went over this but I didn't know how to save it then. Could any of > you be able to post hints (or full fledged directions) on how to solve > this little problem of mine? Thank you VERY much. > > Kimberly/Cyneburh Hello from Anne-Marie in An Tir. Cyneburh asks how to keep a veil on...Mistress Hilary of Serendip gave me this one. Fasten a band of "toothy" fabric, like a heavy twill cut on the bias aorund your head, like a hair band. Use hair pins to keep it in place. Fix your veil to the band, and it won't slip. Good luck! I wish we were all better about head coverings... --Anne-Marie d'Ailleurs From: sniderm at mcmail2.cis.McMaster.CA (Mike Snider) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: How to wear veils? Date: 22 Mar 1995 11:40:17 -0500 Organization: McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. I too have had endless trouble with veils in the past and have switched to wimples. Before you resign yourself to duct tape however, try gathering your hair, or a portion of your hair, high on your head and braiding it. Sew a comb into the veil and fix it firmly down into the hair just before the braid. This will prevent the backwards slipping that is so annoying. I also find hair pieces work well for many time periods. The false piece can be tyed into the hair very firmly and sprayed in place, then the veil can be sewn or pinned to this. It has worked for me. As your personna is so early, you might want to try a soft leather of fabric fillet, rather than a circlet. Many soft fillets had decrative metal mounts and were quite spiffy. If you find something else that works, please post back. I am always looking for better ways of keeping discreet! Elizabeth Cadfan or Kestrell the Demure to my friends. From: iys6lri at mvs.oac.ucla.edu (Lori Iversen) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: How to wear veils? Date: 22 Mar 1995 21:54:43 GMT Organization: ucla sniderm at mcmail2.cis.McMaster.CA (Mike Snider) says: >...Before you resign yourself to duct tape however... > > Elizabeth Cadfan or Kestrell the Demure to my friends. Alexis here, to correct an apparent misunderstanding! When I mentioned that I have fastened my wimple/barbette with duct tape, I *didn't* mean that I have taped them to my head!! I meant that in the absence of pins I have used duct tape to hold the ends of the wimple/barbette together; i.e., overlapping the ends and securing the overlap with duct tape. I *cringe* at the thought of taping my wimple to my hair, and the thought of someone taping his cup to his ...er... naughty bits is just...awful. Alexis Vladescu Lori Iversen WyvernHo-ette (IYS6LRI at mvs.oac.ucla.edu) Altavia, CAID The Valley, CA Newsgroups: rec.org.sca From: ojid.wbst845 at xerox.com (Orilee Ireland-Delfs) Subject: Re: How to wear veils? Organization: Xerox Corporation, Webster NY Date: Thu, 23 Mar 1995 17:08:29 GMT For keeping my veil where it belongs, I personally prefer the barbette - the band of cloth that runs from under your chin to the top of your head. And you don't need to duct tape it : ) If you find pinning the barbette and veil in place to be too fussy, try sewing the barbetter together at the top of your head so it fits snug. Then, position the veil exactly where you want it and pin it in place. Then, remove the two pieces still pinned together and put a few stitches in where the pins are. This will keep veil and barbette attached together at all times and makes it easy to just put the whole thing on in one step. And, your veil will stay in place! (You can put the stitches in about where your circlet falls and that way they won't show.) Orianna AEthelmearc, East Date: Wed, 17 Dec 1997 22:29:24 -0600 From: rockwallshire at webtv.net (Shared Account) To: sca-arts at raven.cc.ukans.edu Subject: Re: FW: 12 - 13th Head gear or head wear Unto Merouda comes greetings from Merouda. :) In reply to your query regarding headbands with ribbons being appropriate for the 12-13th centuries, I would say that you may want to stay away from that. I won't say nobody ever did that in those centuries, but I can't find any examples of it in that time frame in my costume and illumination library. :) Secondly, although fashion in period changed far more slowly than does modern fashion, there is a definate difference between the clothing of the Normans and the clothing of the court of Edward I. I took the liberty of scanning thru my references for a style that was used for a majority of that time. Based on your name (Merouda is a Cornish name, as I suspect you know, but which may not be known by others on this list), I searched primarily through English examples, as Cornwall had been pretty much brought under English control by that time. For a great deal of this time, the veil was typically worn with some sort of anchoring device. The devices I'm thinking of have various names, but they all boil down to some sort of circlet; perhaps the thin metal band we usually think of when hearing "circlet", or perhaps the wide, stiff, standing cloth band of 2-3 inches height I usually think of when envisioning someone wearing a barbette. Considering how close 12th night is, and the wide time period you are considering for your persona, AND the fact that a major holiday is falling into this short span of time, may I make a suggestion? At the fabric store, find a lightweight, woven, white, non-slick material to make a (period) veil, and then trot over to the bridal section. There you should find a section for making bridal veils which, naturally enough, will contain forms for making your hat (gotta anchor all that frufru to something, yes?). One of the most typical of hat forms (or whatever you might call those buckram & wire thingies used to mount frufru on your head ;) is a circular band of about 1 inch height. If you cover this with a piece of the material of your choice, you'll have a "plain vanilla" circlet. This arrangement will allow you to have head covering that is at least similar to something that would have been worn thru the 12th & 13th centuries, without nailing it down to a specific time and place (as much as a hat of that period can be said to do). It will also make your bangs less noticable. Furthermore, this head covering may still be useful to you after you have done good research and have a better idea of your place and time. :) Your Servant, now and evermore, Merouda Pendray, writing thru the Rockwall account. :) From: Margo Anderson Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Securing veils (Was:First experiences) Date: Tue, 24 Mar 1998 11:27:59 -0800 Organization: Global Valley Internet, Sacramento I. Marc Carlson wrote: > Take a 1" band of cloth and wrap it around your head like a head band. > Then make a band that wraps around under your chin and over the top of > your head (this is called a "barbette". Pin those together at the temples > (or where ever they cross). You then pin the veil to that. You can also just use the band of cloth around your head, without the chinstrap, if you don't want that look. Then you can hav one of those wondrous draped veils that don't have a circlet on top. It does help keep it on if the band is strectchy, which I discovered by accident when, in an emergency, I was forced to use a leg from a pair of pantyhose. BTW, I've found that pantyhose make an excellent foundation for all kinds of headresses, if you put them on your head with the elastic around your hairline they keep the wisps of hair from escaping. Wrap the legs around your head turban style and your have a tight, secure base you can pin into. Of course I know this isn't period! It is, however, a good substitute for having lots of long hair to attach to. Margo Anderson "One Tough Costumer" Date: Wed, 08 May 2002 14:09:42 -0700 To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org From: "Laura C. Minnick" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Non-Europeans (mostly, but not completely, OT) At 04:31 PM 5/8/02 -0400, you wrote: >> I chose to be Near (not Middle) Eastern and i live in Europe (Cordova >> in southern Spain). I chose my time and place because women didn't >> have to wear veils (and European women do most of the time), > >*blink* where did this come from? European women are depicted wearing >headgear a lot, but not necessarily veils. Am I misunderstanding what you >mean by a veil? > >-- Jadwiga Zajaczkowa There certainly are different ideals of 'veils' depending on where you are, in time and place. To someone in Islamic lands, a veil frequently means that part if not all of the face is covered. And hair is always covered. OTOH, I know of no western European culture that covers the face. Covering the hair, yes, and sometime the neck (usually called a wimple). But not the face. Sooo, Anahita, what _did_ you mean by veils? 'Lainie To: Recipients of SCA-GARB digests Date: Fri, 2 May 2003 00:10:26 -0600 From: Sheridan & Shane Subject: Interesting Detail Possibly a secret revealed? http://gallery.euroweb.hu/art/w/weyden/rogier/05sevens/2sevens3.jpg If you look closely at both of the ladies in this picture you see a tightly wound piece of fabric, or perhaps a very close fitting cap *underneath* the nifty ruffled head cloth you see in so many of the paintings of this period (1445-50 is the date of this particular one) To me, this would make sense. A firm foundation to pin your veil to, to keep it sliding around... Thoughts anyone? Maiwen To: Recipients of SCA-GARB digests Date: Fri, 2 May 2003 12:49:30 -0400 From: Cynthia Virtue Subject: Re: Interesting Detail Maiwen said: <<< see a tightly wound piece of fabric, or perhaps a very close fitting cap >>> I'd think it is wound/bound fabric, based on the stress wrinkles, rather than a cap. It could be a very thin version of the white strip-linen turban headdress that middle class women wear about this time -- known technology and all that. -- Cynthia Virtue and/or Cynthia du Pré Argent From: Lisa Date: January 26, 2007 4:07:13 PM CST To: "Kingdom of Ansteorra - SCA, Inc." Subject: Re: [Ansteorra] OT (maybe?): Veil/Vail? Here's a good site regarding wearing a veil, I hope it may be of use to you. http://www.virtue.to/articles/veils.html Elizabeta of Rundel ----- Original Message ----- From: "Chelsea Williams" > I need some help. My lord and I are getting married March 17th, and I desire > to have the circle veil/vail (sp?) as we have in the Society, the type held > on with some kind of head piece be it a circlet or a crown. I don't know > what period it's from, or ANYTHING about the veils. Can someone send me > reference pictures so I can send them to my fiance's grandmother so she'll > know what I'm talking about so she can make it? Thanks! > > -Lady Grainne Kathleen NicPadraig MacDaniel From: "Elisabeth B. Zakes" Date: January 25, 2007 7:04:17 AM CST To: "Kingdom of Ansteorra - SCA, Inc." Subject: Re: [Ansteorra] OT (maybe?): Veil/Vail? On 1/25/07, Chelsea Williams wrote: > I need some help. My lord and I are getting married March 17th, and I desire > to have the circle veil/vail (sp?) as we have in the Society, the type held > on with some kind of head piece be it a circlet or a crown. I don't know > what period it's from, or ANYTHING about the veils. Can someone send me > reference pictures so I can send them to my fiance's grandmother so > she'll know what I'm talking about so she can make it? Thanks! > > -Lady Grainne Kathleen NicPadraig MacDaniel It all depends on what period of dress you're looking for. Veils were worn in many different ways as fashion changed over the centuries. Look through a good costume history book or talk with your local costume expert and see what you like and what suits the look you want for the day. It sounds like you're looking for a type common in the 1300s, but even then, styles did change a bit over time, and could vary according to country. Aethelyan Moondragon Bryn Gwlad Date: Sat, 23 May 2009 21:32:49 +1000 From: Zebee Johnstone Subject: [Lochac] veil geeks: thesis abstract To: "The Shambles, the SCA Lochac mailing list" http://m-silkwork.blogspot.com/2009/05/abstract.html Absolutely only of interest to those interested in veils to an extent more than is good for them. Just the abstract, the thesis will apparently be published later this year. Zebee From: "emma at huskers.unl.edu" Date: May 27, 2011 12:56:33 PM CDT To: CALONTIR at listserv.unl.edu Subject: Re: [CALONTIR] Veils, Turbans, and Headrails, Oh My! <<< This is the first time I remember hearing any controversy about square vs. round or oval veils. >>> I wouldn't call it a controversy, just a shifting of opinions. It's only relatively recently (within the last handful of decades) that costume history has really been treated as an academic subject. So we all have a lot of old assumptions to reevaluate. Personally, I'm remembering illustrations of women in veils which "read" as round or oval veils, but I'll admit I hadn't previously reconsidered the preexisting common knowledge that medieval veils were round. If I wanted to make a stronger argument one way or the other, I'd do a visual survey of veils that look rounded and examine for specific clues: either clearly curved edges (as opposed to just curved folds) or corners. Ideally, this would be augmented by experimentation with square and round examples, trying to duplicate the look as depicted (bearing in mind that artistic representations aren't always depictions of reality). Jane, wearer of oval veils, and a laurel who is sometimes wrong. From: otsisto Date: May 27, 2011 4:37:04 PM CDT To: CALONTIR at listserv.unl.edu Subject: Re: [CALONTIR] Veils, Turbans, and Headrails, Oh My! This one is debatable but leans towards oval. Sassetta (Italian). http://tinyurl.com/42szo9y This one appears to be a half circle but may be rectangle. http://tinyurl.com/3b2sd2r Of coarse for the non veil(?), This may have a silk wrap around the bun. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pisanello_016.jpg This actually has a veil that is possibly an elongated oval. http://tinyurl.com/3jna3gc The woman bottom left, is possibly oval because of the drape. http://realmofvenus.renaissanceitaly.net/wardrobe/CaterinaCornerAndLadies.jpg "Turban" Eyck/Netherlands http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hubert_van_Eyck_028.jpg Turbanesque/ a sibyl http://tinyurl.com/3pnhzu2 It really depends on era and culture. One may have oval and another none. Wish I had the time to do a thorough search but gotta get ready for the next round of storms. De Edited by Mark S. Harris veils-msg 9 of 9