V1.0 20 Jan 2019 New Plimmoth Gard Men’s Clothing Guidelines Introduction Our group portrays events involving the English settlers in Plimoth Colony between the years 1620-1645. Clothing in the group is “best effort” and our philosophy is inclusive. New members may rely on borrowed clothing, when available, for their first events. You can purchase some items from merchants who cater to the reenactment market, commission clothing from others knowledgeable in historic tailoring, or make your own. For our portrayals, we are looking at average people here in the colonies, not at high status lords and ladies in England. These guidelines are intended to help you select styles and fabrics that will help you with that. If you have any questions, check with us before making a major investment. Recommended Clothing Basic Shirt (shirt weight white linen) Breeches or Hose (trousers) (wool cloth) Doublet (jacket) (wool, linen, hemp cloth, thin leather) Stockings or cut cloth hose (knitted wool or wool cloth) Garters (knitted wool or wool cloth) Shoes (leather) Waist Girdle or Belt (leather) Hat or knit cap (felted or knitted wool) Coat or Cassock or Cloak (overgarment for cold) (wool, hemp or linen cloth) Additional Linen neck and/or wrist wear (shirt weight white linen) Points (laces for fastening) (leather, braided cord) Purse or pouch (leather or knitted wool) Gloves or mitts (leather, knitted wool) Description of Clothing Linens The basic garment for a man is a shirt. The shirt of this time is quite long, about knee length, and it served as all-purpose underwear and nighttime sleeping wear. For people in that period, a fresh shirt was critical to feeling clean. It absorbed sweat and body dirt, and was washed regularly, unlike woolen garments that are not normally washed, being typically brushed, aired, and spot cleaned. Like the smock for women, it would be made of the whitest and finest linen that a person could afford. It is a simple shape – there are no yokes, and it is all straight lines. V1.0 20 Jan 2019 Cuffs and collars were primarily joined by ties made of cords which were pushed through eyelets on either sides of the collars and cuffs. The collars and cuffs often seen on the outside of doublets are mostly separate pieces, often made of nicer linen, that are discussed in the section on “Ruffs and Cuffs.” Boy Peeling Fruit, Michelangelo Merisi de Caravaggio. Longhi Collection, Rome, 1592-1593. The youth in this portrait wears a moderately loose Linen shirt of King Gustavus Adophus fitting linen shirt. Note the long front slit. The slit of Sweden, Swedish Royal Armories could be joined by a cord passed through eyelets on Collection, 1624-1627. Yes, that’s a both sides of the collar. big blood stain on the side. Diagram of a shirt. All the com- ponents are made up of rectangles and squares. V1.0 20 Jan 2019 Breeches or Hose The term “hose” in this period does not only refer to stockings, but to everything a man wore from the waist down, including his pants. There were numerous words for various styles of hose – galligaskins, round hose, venetians, etc. In the 1620s, the style was for full breeches. They could end just above the knee or below it. Sensible working people like the Pilgrims would have worn middle of the road styles. The look that came into style in the 1630s was a longer, slimmer type of breeches, clearly coming below the knee, with very visible fly buttons. Before that, the style was generally fuller, shorter, and fly buttons are not very noticeable. Men’s breeches were usually lined with linen of a utilitarian type, and had outer fabric that could be various types of wool, linen, hemp, or thin leather. They might also be interlined, having a layer of clothing between the outer fabric and the lining, for extra body. All men’s breeches had pockets. The pockets A suit of wool serge, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1625-1635. This suit is an excellent were shaped like a square bag, attached to the example of middle class clothing from 1625-1630. waistband between the outer fabric and the Note the short- waisted, six tabbed doublet, and lining, with a slit that was stitched to an full breeches. opening in the outer layer of pants. Pocket bags were sometimes made of chamois leather. Doublets The doublet was a fitted short jacket which buttoned down the front and at the cuff and was worn my men over their shirts. They came to the natural waist (about the level of the bottom of your rib cage) with shoulder wings, and a peplum of small tabs around the bottom. They did not have yokes over the shoulders as are sometimes seen on modern interpretations. They could be made of wool, linen, hemp, or leather. They were interlined with linen which had a layer of springy wool pad stitched to it over the shoulders for shaping. They were lined with linen. Their sleeves were generally permanently sewn into the armscye. Doublets have a sturdy strip of linen worked with eyelets sewn to the waistline inside the garment behind the tabs. A critical aspect of doublets and breeches throughout the first half of the 17th century is that they are attached together at the waist V1.0 20 Jan 2019 either by laces or hooks. This attachment was very important to keep doublets from riding up and breeches from falling down. For a clear view of how a doublet hooks together with the breeches, see Ninya Mikhaila’s reconstruction at the Perth Museum, Scotland: http:// www.ninyamikhaila.com/gallery/17-century/men-and-boys/1620-suit A bricklayer's leather doublet worn by Although it belonged to a king and is jurist Hugo Grotius on his escape from covered in gold embroidery, the basic shape prison in 1618. Rotterdam Museum, ca. 1610-1620. It is typical of the sturdy of this suit is the fashionable line for the garments made of thin leather worn by laborers. An English engraving from mid 1620s, illustrating a broadsheet, “The Famous Sea- Fight between Captain Ward and the Rain-Bow” V1.0 20 Jan 2019 Stockings or Hose Hose are stockings. For men, they would be thigh- high, and might be pointed (tied) or even temporarily sewn onto the breeches. Garters are worn to keep them from sagging and bagging. Knitted stockings began to be worn in the second half of the 16th century. Before that time, and for some time after, stockings made of wool cloth cut on the bias (diagonal) for stretch were common. Knitted stockings cost about twice the price as those of cloth, and often retained the characteristic back seam and triangular gores at the ankles common to cloth hose. Wool twills are ideal for cut cloth stockings because they have a lot of natural stretch. Stockings are in solid colors, Detail of a man's knitted hose showing the not in stripes as sometime seen at re-enactor triangular gusset. Although this painting is from merchants. earlier than our period, this style of hose persisted to at least the middle of the 17th century. Military Company, Dutch, 1586. Shoes Shoes are the same for men and women. They are made of leather, typically brown or black. Common features of the era included a rounded, slightly almond-shaped toe (which gradually became more blunt as the 17th century wore on) and a very low heel or none at all. Right and left shoes are the norm for this time for people across social classes. (Straight lasts came in with higher heels.) They had a pair of straps which met over the tongue at the instep and were joined with a lace or cord. They featured a small decorative hole set into the side seam. These holes tended to be around the size of a quarter to half- dollar. In the 1620s they became very large in fashionable circles. Portrait of an 8-year- old boy (detail right), West Friesland School, Circle of Jan Claesz, 1616. Boy with a tennis racket, Cremonese School, In England, boots were uncommon for daily wear amongst regular people, except for certain occupations such as sea boots for fishermen, and low boots (like a work boot) for countrymen and farmers. Riding boots are mostly the properly of gentlemen and military cavalry. Boots of any kind are hard to document for women. V1.0 20 Jan 2019 The situation in Plymouth Colony seems to have been a bit different. William Mullins’ will from 2 April 1621 indicates there were definitely boots in the colony from early on, “Alsoe I have xxj [21 pairs] of shoes, and thirteene paire of bootes wch I give to the Companies hands for forty poundes at seaven years and if thy like them at that rate. If it be thought to deare as Overseers shall thinck good.” Many men’s probate inventories list a pair of boots along with one or more pairs of shoes. Three more details of Shoes from the period. A child from a genre scene by Jan Steen (left), Dutch mid-17th century. Short boots worn by a countryman in an English woodcut (top right), ca. 1580-1620. A detail from a painting of Constantine Huygens and his clerk (bottom right), Dutch, 1627. Ruffs and Cuffs, Bands and Falls Fine white linen at the neck and wrist was a point of pride for most people in the period. Possibilites varied by social class, but people of the middling sort would have worn the best that they could afford.
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