Linen Use in Tudor Garments
If you are planning to attend a Tudor era re-enactment, you will want to have the proper costume. Before you search for suitable costumes for your Tudor re-enactment, you need to decide exactly what it is you’re looking for, though. You might start by thinking about linen. It was a very important fabric in the Tudor era.
Another use for linen in the Tudor era was in the making of coifs, or head coverings. They were thought to protect a person from head lice and they were used as a sign of reverence, keeping one’s head covered in God’s presence.
The Tudors also used linen as a sign of social status. There were different grades of linen. Finer linen fabric was reserved mainly for richer classes. The better the quality of the linen, the longer it took to make and the more expensive it was. In some ways, that actually worked to the advantage of the poorer folk. Rough, heavy linen was warmer for doing field work. If you were very rich, in Tudor times, you might have been able to afford cotton or silk, instead. Linen was vital to the lower classes, though.
2 Comments
Ruth McCammon
Yes, there is an overlap since the Middle Ages covers the 5th to the 15th century and the Tudor period refers to the time in English history between 1485 and 1603. If you are working with a group that is a stickler about time periods you might need to concentrate on Henry VII rather than Henry VIII or his daughter Elizabeth I if you want to do Tudor. However, if you are working with a group that covers both the Middle Ages and the Renaissance there would be no problem.
hello
has this got anything to do with medieval times?