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What is worn under a kirtle?

What is worn under a kirtle?

A kirtle (sometimes called cotte, cotehardie) is a garment that was worn by men and women in the Middle Ages. The kirtle was typically worn over a chemise or smock, which acted as a slip, and under the formal outer garment or gown/surcoat.

What is the difference between a kirtle and a cotehardie?

The main garment worn by women was the cotehardie, a tightly fitted gown with a low waistline and a wide, scooped neckline. To showcase your wealth with multiple layers of clothing, wealthier women wore a kirtle, a tight fitting garment, underneath their cotehardies.

What is the purpose of a kirtle?

The kirtle was typically worn over a chemise or smock which acted as a slip and under the formal outer garment or gown/surcoat. Kirtles were part of fashionable attire into the middle sixteenth century, and remained part of country or middle-class clothing into the seventeenth century.

What is a Gunna and kirtle?

The cloak (mantle) was a half-circle, worn fastened on the shoulder with a brooch. Hair was usually long and worn loose. Women. The effect was layered, a full-length tunic with long sleeves (the kirtle) worn under a shorter tunic (just over knee-length) with shorter sleeves (the gunna). A girdle or belt was worn.

Is a kirtle a dress?

A kirtle can be both a tunic and a dress. So it is more of a language term than a specific garment. Dresses are basically what you think it is; long garments (for women in this post) worn in different fashions, styles and materials.

What does a stomacher look like?

A stomacher is a decorated triangular panel that fills in the front opening of a woman’s gown or bodice. The stomacher may be boned, as part of a corset, or may cover the triangular front of a corset. A stomacher may also be a piece or set of jewellery to ornament a stomacher or bodice.

What is an Elizabethan kirtle?

The kirtle was the basic woman’s dress of the 16th century. It can be used for all classes, depending on ornamentation and the garments layered over it. The bodice of the kirtle has a low, square neck. The back neck is also square, and dips to 3” below the nape of the neck. The waistline is slightly pointed in front.

What is the triangle piece for a corset?

stomacher
A stomacher is a decorated triangular panel that fills in the front opening of a woman’s gown or bodice. The stomacher may be boned, as part of a corset, or may cover the triangular front of a corset.

How was a stomacher attached?

The stomacher would be pinned to the lady’s stays or to the inside of the bodice to hold it in place. Some stomachers also have ties and silk tabs to help keep the stomacher in place.

What is a corset lace called?

Flat Shoelace These are ubiquitous – they’re easy to source, they’re often cheaper than ribbon, and they’re a “workhorse” lacing that will last you a long time. You will find flat shoelace most often in corsets (both OTR and custom waist training corsets).

What’s the difference between a kirtle and a dress?

A tight-fitting, short garment with the same function is called a jacket or doublet. A kirtle can be both a tunic and a dress. So it is more of a language term than a specific garment. Dresses are basically what you think it is; long garments (for women in this post) worn in different fashions, styles and materials.

What did medieval women wear other than a kirtle?

This garment is often referred to as the cote-hardie by modern dress historians which is more correctly the male garment from the same period. Very rarely is the woman’s gown referred to as other than the kirtle in documents, warderobe accounts and wills. When it is mentioned by another name, it is usually simply, gown or gowne.

What is the difference between a doublet and a kirtle?

A kirtle refers to the main (upper body) garment for both men and women, which should be long (and loose at the hem). A tight-fitting, short garment with the same function is called a jacket or doublet. A kirtle can be both a tunic and a dress. So it is more of a language term than a specific garment.

How big are the buttons on a medieval Kirtle?

The size of the buttons are probably greatly exaggerated. Extant buttons are 20mm or much less. This is commonly found in 15th century medieval art. This style of kirtle has pin on sleeves- regular sleeves for the working week and perhaps more decorative or more expensive fabric for Sunday best.

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Ruth Doyle