April: Procrastination (2016, 9th most popular): Complete a garment you have been putting off finishing. Or make something you have been avoiding starting.
I tried to find a post about it, but I am pretty sure that I started thinking about making a loose 17th century hood some time back in 2017 or 2018, when I was asked to dress historically at the annual Christmas fair at Falu Gruva. Most paintings and drawings of 17th century women show a tight hood, but I have always wanted to recreate this image from the margins of a map over Falun mine in 1683.
That loose hood or veil is quite distinct, the artist was local so he has probably used the local residents as models. I was also very happy when I found this extant example of a loose hood at the V&A museum. It is dated to 1610-1620, so earlier than the image of the map, but I still decided that they are so similar that I would use it as a model.I found that I had some very fine linen in my stash, but the main issue was finding insertion lace. All the laces for sale in the (few) craft stores here only had cotton lace for edging, so with points. I also only found lace that was too wide to look good.
I ripped off the lace border, and then I cut it in two to get a really nice and narrow lace that I could use.
Here I am midway in the project, and you can see the pieces of the hood. The original V&A hood only has the gore inserted in a slit, but I cut a separate front piece. I was sure that there was a seam all the way, so this is a lesson to actually look at images on the computer, and not just on your phone when doing decisions like that. So instead of just one piece with inserted gores I had a straight front piece, two gores and two curved back pieces that I sewed together to shape the hood. All the seams had lace insertions.
For the edging of the hood I was in a dilemma, I had a nice off white lace in my stash but it wasn't enough. And when I went to the craft store the only options was to buy either a bright white or ecru coloured lace. It was very good that I had brought the hood with me to hold up against the lace. I would probably have bought the white lace white, but when I held it to the hood it was glaringly white compared to the rest, so the ecru coloured lace was much nice. It was also daintier and more delicate than the white. Even if it isn't the same colour as the rest of the hood, the effect was quite nice and they went really well together.
When finished the hood was really soft and nice, so before wearing it I starched it, I am not sure yet if I prefer the look of the soft fabric or the starched, so I might destarch it before I wear it the next time.
This is me wearing the hood last Saturday at an event where my group demonstrated early 17th century.
So here are the HSM facts
How it fits the challenge: I had planned and talked about doing this style of hood for at least 5-6 years, and when I was finally getting the chance to attend a 17th century event it was time to make it.
Material: 1 m of fine linen, 1 lace edged table cloth, that I ripped the lace off to use as insertion lace in the hood
Pattern: My own, based on a hood in the V&A collections
Year: 1610-1690 (the hood is dated 1610-1620, I have based my costume on an image from 1683)
Notions: linen thread, 2,5 m of cotton edge lacing
How historically accurate is it? This is pretty close, both when it comes to materials and techniques so around 90%, (deductions for the machinemade edge lace and the quality of my stitches)
Hours to complete: 1 week
First worn: September 30th when celebrating the 400th anniversary of our local regiment
Total cost: linen from stash but $7 for the table cloth and $13 for the edge lace.
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