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16th November 25, 04:59 PM
#1
 Originally Posted by Pleater
I tend to use natural fibres for my clothes even though it means making them myself as to buy them ready to wear is either impossible or very expensive. In the colder months I am often asked 'aren't you cold' due to the different levels of insulation of man made fibre and wool or other fleece. Cotton, when wet, is cold, but still useful if it isn't being worn.
That property carries on into household things as I make cotton bags ever since plastic carrier bags began to disintegrate on purpose.
The only modern improvement in clothing I find really useful is waterproofing.
A lightweight waterproof with a hood makes a lot of difference to days of mixed weather and I have often enjoyed late afternoons with the landscape to myself when an hour or two of rain has sent most people back to their cars and off home.
Anne the Pleater
Kagoule, I am fairly sure, means hooded
Waterproofing ... Lanolin or some other animal fat that doesn't go off would have done the trick.
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16th November 25, 09:02 PM
#2
That's the trouble with historic (written) accounts: they tell us the when and where but they tell little about the what.
Then there are the (apparently) old objects in museums and private collections which tell us everything we could wish to know about the what but rarely tell us anything about the when, or indeed the where.
It's why I rely mostly on iconography. It doesn't tell us as much about the what as we might wish. But iconography alone places the object in situ, giving us the corresponding what, when, where, and even how.
Last edited by OC Richard; 16th November 25 at 09:08 PM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to OC Richard For This Useful Post:
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 Originally Posted by Canadian Vet
Waterproofing ... Lanolin or some other animal fat that doesn't go off would have done the trick.
I sometimes have to explain that the oil put onto smocks has rotted the fibres and that it is beyond saving. The oil waterproofed the fabric quite well, right up until it began to fail and fall apart, by which time another one would have been made.
Having visited several places where people act as though they were living in the exhibitions, I often see behaviour which is wrong.
My mother would wear a cardigan, slippers and apron in the house, and her purse was always kept in a particular place, but if she needed to go to the shop, which was the sixth door along the road from our house she would wash her face, comb her hair, take off the cardigan and apron and slippers put on leather shoes, a jacket and - back in the 50s and 60s, a hat and gloves. The handbag came out of the sideboard, the purse went in, along with a small folding shopping bag, then off she would go, out of the front door and back in again a few minutes later. The side door to the kitchen was only a few steps away, but she was brought up when such things were still significant and at that time the servants used the back door (which was often left unlocked in the daytime) whilst the mistress of the house had a key, and used it, or the door was opened for her.
I used to read old novels and the plot often turned on some aspect of behaviour or etiquette which either gave away the hero/heroine's superiority or betrayed the villain as not who he seemed!!
Anne the Pleater
I presume to dictate to no man what he shall eat or drink or wherewithal he shall be clothed."
-- The Hon. Stuart Ruaidri Erskine, The Kilt & How to Wear It, 1901.
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 Originally Posted by Pleater
I sometimes have to explain that the oil put onto smocks has rotted the fibres and that it is beyond saving. The oil waterproofed the fabric quite well, right up until it began to fail and fall apart, by which time another one would have been made.
Having visited several places where people act as though they were living in the exhibitions, I often see behaviour which is wrong.
My mother would wear a cardigan, slippers and apron in the house, and her purse was always kept in a particular place, but if she needed to go to the shop, which was the sixth door along the road from our house she would wash her face, comb her hair, take off the cardigan and apron and slippers put on leather shoes, a jacket and - back in the 50s and 60s, a hat and gloves. The handbag came out of the sideboard, the purse went in, along with a small folding shopping bag, then off she would go, out of the front door and back in again a few minutes later. The side door to the kitchen was only a few steps away, but she was brought up when such things were still significant and at that time the servants used the back door (which was often left unlocked in the daytime) whilst the mistress of the house had a key, and used it, or the door was opened for her.
I used to read old novels and the plot often turned on some aspect of behaviour or etiquette which either gave away the hero/heroine's superiority or betrayed the villain as not who he seemed!!
Anne the Pleater
Whale oil and shark oil were used for thousands of years as well as lanolin. I put Mink oil on my leather boots here in Canada where there is snow and road salt. My leather sporran is even preserved with mink oil.
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