So I know I'm not the only one who changes or wants to change or has changed their persona, but I'm in a real pickle here. I've got eighteen thousand projects in various stages of development currently and they all seem to be from different eras and places. It really puts me in a bind as to who Gillian wants to be within the Society and what Melissa wants to spend her mundane time doing.
I've always had the goal in the SCA to avoid MPD--Multiple-Persona Disorder--because I think it's tacky if done wrong. But I also like being able to blend in with my surroundings and having a multitude of options. I have this sort of obsession for the accurate and documentable. It's not enough for me to know how things were done, I have to achieve it too. I guess it will help to list and describe the projects that are pulling me in these many directions.
Let's go in order of importance:
1.) Rework "Beyond the Wench: Mid-16th Century Garb on a Budget" to fit a 30 minute class time by the end of April, including my own sample researched Flemish outfit from the skin-out, including headgear with a budget of $30. I only have the research, drafting, and chemise finished (and the chemise isn't truly finished--HEMS!).
2.) Finish gambeson, surcote, chausses, braises, and other non-garb elements for my fighting kit.
3.) Finish test samples for toddler garb for eBay. I need the cash and I need to free up the space that my less historic fabrics take up for my new nest of delightfully expensive new textiles.
4.) Use some of the new wool flannel to make a winter peplos so I can play as a Celt sometimes.
5.) Use the new silk to make a simple 13th C. Persian-inspired garb for ME-themed events.
6.) Use new linen for making another 13th century gown, surcote, and ruffled fillet/barbette for summer courts.
7.) Use new wool and linen to make Viking dress and apron (and coif), respectively.
8.) Use new wool for making another 13th c. gown for winter courts.
9.) Make fabric stamps for sample 14th c. drawstring fabric pouches. That would preclude me actually making the sample bags as well.
10.) Make some simple Byzantine garb with research and extant examples/paintings/other art because I feel like it isn't well-represented in this area (or in the Midrealm for that matter).
11.) Repair and finish all garb in my wardrobe. This include hems, cuffs, and neck scyes.
12.) Organize sewing materials and notions and give them their very own area in the apartment, with a distinct sewing table. Go through fabric collection. Put aside fabrics for the Canton newbie garb event next Fall. Consolidate scrap bags. Sort fabrics by type into separate tubs. Sell fabrics with value, but are of no use to me. Use older/yuckier fabrics in my collection to make Pennsic junk garb that I can destroy without feeling guilty.
13.) Die of overwork and take 10-day vacation at Pennsic with all my garb finished AT LEAST 3 weeks beforehand. (HA!, yeah right.)
I'll stop there because it's my lucky number, ironically. Legend has it that Friday the 13th is considered unlucky because the Knights Templar were attacked en masse and destroyed on Friday, October 13, 1307 by King Phillip the Fair of France. There is no documented date of the incident though, so don't listen to what History Channel tells you as it is often very, very wrong.
YiStTD,
Gillian
Showing posts with label medieval. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medieval. Show all posts
Monday, March 3, 2008
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Yes, I know I just posted, BUT...
I wanted to gush about my toddler interpretations of period clothes. I'm not a mom, but I am an aunt. I spend countless hours with the girls (14 m/o twins!) and have always wanted to make them some garb just to see what period construction can do for ease of wear in kid's clothes. I've often thought modern clothes far too "cookie" cutter and unable to adapt to the wide range of shapes and sizes in kids and adults.
On eBay, at least, it's very hard to find simple, sturdy children's SCA garb that doesn't look like bargain bin junk. It is *especially* difficult to find garb that is cut to allow for expansion--which I suspect would have been a period practice, though I don't have hard proof. It's also hard to find children's garb that looks fairly authentic.
So I measured Boo Boo and Moo Moo (identities concealed with my nicknames for them) last week to see what I could mock up. I did three separate patterns from one mock of the same cut.
First of all, I worked on a girls t-tunic that was layerable and with extra seam allowance to let out (or take in) as they grow out and up. They currently wear 18 m/o and 24 m/o commercial clothing. I added an extra 3 3/4 inches to the hem, 4 inches to each front and back panel horizontally so that almost 8 inches can be taken out around the chest and waist. The hem will fall just below the knees.
Next, I made a simple coat that could pass through Byzantium to the Levant to the Mongolian steppes. I'm leaving everything plain so the new owner can add what he/she likes for the period they prefer. I left out the gores, but I cut them and am including them when I send them in case someone wants to add them in.
Lastly, I made a really simple peplos for the little female Celts/Romans/Greeks out there. When I decide on a male pattern for trousers and leg wraps that will fit diapers, I'll market them with the t-tunics for the Celt/Viking boys.
For the future of the line:
I also made a simple coif pattern based on my own. It's 16th century based (3 piece), but I'm going to do a pre-16th C. 2 piece pattern for the real authenticists (like me) out there. I'd also like to do a liripipe hood and a hood-less cape. I'm also a little bit interested in a simple middle class Flemish from the Tudor era.
I'm definitely investigating making basic muslin chemises in two styles: square neck with finished wrist cuffs for the later period, and regular round neck with open wrists for the earlier period tunics and peplos.
Any more ideas, leave them in the comments!
So hopefully, I'll have about 8 samples for sale (and pictures for an update here) on eBay by this weekend. I offer special free pickup for SCAdians who are attending the same events as me, so take a look and let me know if you're in the area and I can deliver at the event.
Yours in Service to The Dream,
Gillian
On eBay, at least, it's very hard to find simple, sturdy children's SCA garb that doesn't look like bargain bin junk. It is *especially* difficult to find garb that is cut to allow for expansion--which I suspect would have been a period practice, though I don't have hard proof. It's also hard to find children's garb that looks fairly authentic.
So I measured Boo Boo and Moo Moo (identities concealed with my nicknames for them) last week to see what I could mock up. I did three separate patterns from one mock of the same cut.
First of all, I worked on a girls t-tunic that was layerable and with extra seam allowance to let out (or take in) as they grow out and up. They currently wear 18 m/o and 24 m/o commercial clothing. I added an extra 3 3/4 inches to the hem, 4 inches to each front and back panel horizontally so that almost 8 inches can be taken out around the chest and waist. The hem will fall just below the knees.
Next, I made a simple coat that could pass through Byzantium to the Levant to the Mongolian steppes. I'm leaving everything plain so the new owner can add what he/she likes for the period they prefer. I left out the gores, but I cut them and am including them when I send them in case someone wants to add them in.
Lastly, I made a really simple peplos for the little female Celts/Romans/Greeks out there. When I decide on a male pattern for trousers and leg wraps that will fit diapers, I'll market them with the t-tunics for the Celt/Viking boys.
For the future of the line:
I also made a simple coif pattern based on my own. It's 16th century based (3 piece), but I'm going to do a pre-16th C. 2 piece pattern for the real authenticists (like me) out there. I'd also like to do a liripipe hood and a hood-less cape. I'm also a little bit interested in a simple middle class Flemish from the Tudor era.
I'm definitely investigating making basic muslin chemises in two styles: square neck with finished wrist cuffs for the later period, and regular round neck with open wrists for the earlier period tunics and peplos.
Any more ideas, leave them in the comments!
So hopefully, I'll have about 8 samples for sale (and pictures for an update here) on eBay by this weekend. I offer special free pickup for SCAdians who are attending the same events as me, so take a look and let me know if you're in the area and I can deliver at the event.
Yours in Service to The Dream,
Gillian
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Virgin post
Okie dokie I thought I'd tell you a bit about myself and about this project here. I'll try to keep this blog free of random whining about my normal life a focus solely on garb, garb history and research, and garb construction. Since everybody has one of these blogs if they are a costumer in the SCA, I'll join that illustrious group that I hope to join in apprenticeship if I can make some new friends soon. I'll be talking about that too, possibly, but only because I'd like to learn as much about garb and garb construction as possible.
About me, quickly, since I don't think you care too much:
My unregistered Society name (as of yet, I have to finish my documentation) is Gillian de (name soon to come).
I can be rather crude, and have a bit of a sailor's mouth so let me know if I am too free with my french. I like dirty jokes, innuendo (no, in-YOUR-endo!), and double entendres. That being said, I'm also well read and if I may toot my own horn, I have some rather insightful things to say.
Let's see...what else? Oh, I'm built like a Mack truck. Haha, no seriously, my ancestors were generous with the boob and hip genes--farm people, what can you expect? I come from a double line of Scandinavian/German/American Mutt people who married--oddly--French Canadians two generations ago. My stock is pretty old by American standards, with both sides of my family being settled in this country no less than 6 or 7 generations ago. That's a lot of time to lose my European heritage, but as an SCA member, I'm trying to gain that back with a lot of research and hard work.
Why is that important? I'm a big girl who's very short (5'4" on a good day), but I've also got considerable hourglass curves and a long-ish torso. This makes it hard for me clothe myself mundanely, let alone garb myself seemly and proper. So skinny girls may find techniques they can apply here, but not much sympathy for your costuming woes. No offense, but until you can hold one boob up with two hands and still have overflow, I don't have much in the way of understanding for you. On the other hand, I hope this page helps the bigger (and shorter) ladies among us garb themselves beautifully and simply.
Why this blog:
I'm interested in several time periods, but find that I have difficulty finding blogs about my particular persona period (middle to late 14th C English outside of London) even though it is highly popular. I find far too many late 15th and 16th C. garbers for my taste. Not only do those styles of garb make me look like a jolly fat Bavarian Frau (not my favorite thing to look like, since I'm already that way by ancestry--the lithe French genes seem to all have gone to my lithe, French-looking sister...damn her.) I prefer the simplicity of the chemise and kirtle and surcote look. I've been investigating the French influences on this and have concluded that if I lived in London, I'd have known about the latest fashions from France, including those soup-dipping tippets!
So either way, my garb consists of some really bad beginners garb right now (we're talking polyester and lame' here--really bad) and I'm starting a real kit beginning with my rather unwilling significant other. Making his garb first will give me the practice I need to make mine look better and allow me to perfect my fitting techniques, which at this point are stolen from the other blogs I've found, along with some previous mundane sewing experience.
Many of you out there are lucky enough to have a significant other who loves the Society and is a part of the goings on. I, however, do not. He's just not interested. He's a musician--I told him he could do that in the SCA, he said no way. He doesn't like to fight--I told him that he could learn to be a blacksmith or a costumer like me or a scribe or herald, he said no way. He likes computers and technology--I told him he could design and build huge war machines that actually work--he said no way. Apparently, he can like all the nerd things I do--D and D, Lord of the Rings, Star Wars, Star Trek, etc, but he really has no interest in the SCA. I don't know why, but he puts up with me fitting him with cloth and poking him with pins so that I won't have to go to events alone when my SCA buddy isn't in town. He's wonderful and I love him, so I don't complain too much.
Speaking of my SCA buddy, he's the one that introduced me to the Society. My first event was Baron Wars a few years ago. I had a blast and and did my first all-night pre-event sewing extravaganza at that time. That was it. I was addicted. Iohann (mka Dan) and I have been friends since high school and have always been able to connect on this history level. I'm excited for him to come with us this summer for Pennsic, since we haven't been for two years. The first time we went, everyone though we were married *shudder* and we aren't even close to anything like that so we're bringing my boy Bryan this year. He's already bitching about no running water, but he'll live and he might even have fun since I'll keep him well-fed and drunk most of the time we're down there.
Well this is dragging on for an introductory post, but more to come, probably after I get some pictures up this afternoon.
Blessings (of a general kind, not a Christian or otherwise kind...I'm not really into that sort of thing) ok so scratch that...
Well wishes! (How's that? Better? Good? Nah, we'll try again...)
Hail and well met! (That's more like it...)
--Gillian de (some small town around London yet to be determined)
About me, quickly, since I don't think you care too much:
My unregistered Society name (as of yet, I have to finish my documentation) is Gillian de (name soon to come).
I can be rather crude, and have a bit of a sailor's mouth so let me know if I am too free with my french. I like dirty jokes, innuendo (no, in-YOUR-endo!), and double entendres. That being said, I'm also well read and if I may toot my own horn, I have some rather insightful things to say.
Let's see...what else? Oh, I'm built like a Mack truck. Haha, no seriously, my ancestors were generous with the boob and hip genes--farm people, what can you expect? I come from a double line of Scandinavian/German/American Mutt people who married--oddly--French Canadians two generations ago. My stock is pretty old by American standards, with both sides of my family being settled in this country no less than 6 or 7 generations ago. That's a lot of time to lose my European heritage, but as an SCA member, I'm trying to gain that back with a lot of research and hard work.
Why is that important? I'm a big girl who's very short (5'4" on a good day), but I've also got considerable hourglass curves and a long-ish torso. This makes it hard for me clothe myself mundanely, let alone garb myself seemly and proper. So skinny girls may find techniques they can apply here, but not much sympathy for your costuming woes. No offense, but until you can hold one boob up with two hands and still have overflow, I don't have much in the way of understanding for you. On the other hand, I hope this page helps the bigger (and shorter) ladies among us garb themselves beautifully and simply.
Why this blog:
I'm interested in several time periods, but find that I have difficulty finding blogs about my particular persona period (middle to late 14th C English outside of London) even though it is highly popular. I find far too many late 15th and 16th C. garbers for my taste. Not only do those styles of garb make me look like a jolly fat Bavarian Frau (not my favorite thing to look like, since I'm already that way by ancestry--the lithe French genes seem to all have gone to my lithe, French-looking sister...damn her.) I prefer the simplicity of the chemise and kirtle and surcote look. I've been investigating the French influences on this and have concluded that if I lived in London, I'd have known about the latest fashions from France, including those soup-dipping tippets!
So either way, my garb consists of some really bad beginners garb right now (we're talking polyester and lame' here--really bad) and I'm starting a real kit beginning with my rather unwilling significant other. Making his garb first will give me the practice I need to make mine look better and allow me to perfect my fitting techniques, which at this point are stolen from the other blogs I've found, along with some previous mundane sewing experience.
Many of you out there are lucky enough to have a significant other who loves the Society and is a part of the goings on. I, however, do not. He's just not interested. He's a musician--I told him he could do that in the SCA, he said no way. He doesn't like to fight--I told him that he could learn to be a blacksmith or a costumer like me or a scribe or herald, he said no way. He likes computers and technology--I told him he could design and build huge war machines that actually work--he said no way. Apparently, he can like all the nerd things I do--D and D, Lord of the Rings, Star Wars, Star Trek, etc, but he really has no interest in the SCA. I don't know why, but he puts up with me fitting him with cloth and poking him with pins so that I won't have to go to events alone when my SCA buddy isn't in town. He's wonderful and I love him, so I don't complain too much.
Speaking of my SCA buddy, he's the one that introduced me to the Society. My first event was Baron Wars a few years ago. I had a blast and and did my first all-night pre-event sewing extravaganza at that time. That was it. I was addicted. Iohann (mka Dan) and I have been friends since high school and have always been able to connect on this history level. I'm excited for him to come with us this summer for Pennsic, since we haven't been for two years. The first time we went, everyone though we were married *shudder* and we aren't even close to anything like that so we're bringing my boy Bryan this year. He's already bitching about no running water, but he'll live and he might even have fun since I'll keep him well-fed and drunk most of the time we're down there.
Well this is dragging on for an introductory post, but more to come, probably after I get some pictures up this afternoon.
Blessings (of a general kind, not a Christian or otherwise kind...I'm not really into that sort of thing) ok so scratch that...
Well wishes! (How's that? Better? Good? Nah, we'll try again...)
Hail and well met! (That's more like it...)
--Gillian de (some small town around London yet to be determined)
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