#1
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Second Costume Doll 1595
Well, they certainly knew how to dress extravagantly way back in 1595, as this Spanish lady demonstates. She is wearing a French farthingale, a large bolster worn just below the waist or made of radiating spokes of whalebone. This device made possible the effect that you see here; the fabric speading out by as much as 60cm all round and dropping sharply to the floor. The circular frill above it was added in order to hide the hard line created by the farthingale.
Bodices ended in a long point. Heavily padded sleeves were buttoned and tied on with ribbons or laces at the shoulders or armpits. Folks were so fond of sleeves that they even added false, floating sleeves. The lady's stiff pose is held in place by that torture instrument, the corset, as serious devotees of fashion demanded tiny waists and flat bosoms. Goodness knows why but ruffs became a huge status symbol. The larger your ruff, the further distanced you were from the horny-handed sons of the soil. Doesn't make sense. I so enjoyed building the 1460 doll posted earlier that it was only a matter of time before I got round to building another one. She's 20cm tall and can be found in "Make Your Own History of Costume" by Rosemary Lowndes and Claude Kailer, Macdonald and Jane's Publishers Ltd., London, 1977.
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Give me a pigfoot and a bottle of beer. On Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/153077...57692694097642 |
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#2
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You do know how to find interesting models, sir
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A fine is a tax when you do wrong. A tax is a fine when you do well. |
#3
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That is extremely interesting. Very nicely done.
Gary
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"Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything" - Wyatt Earp Design Group Alpha https://ecardmodels.com/vendors/design-group-alpha |
#4
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Looks great.
I hope they had wide doors.
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~Doug~ AC010505 EAMUS CATULI! Audere est Facere THFC 19**-20** R.I.P. it up, Tear it up, Have a Ball |
#5
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Due to the way wool was treated, it was more like felt and so was possible to simply cut it without fraying it like would happen with modern cotton. This led to a fashion of cutting slits all over which an underlayer would be pulled through. The richest in this period would rarely wear these clothes repeatedly as they couldn't be washed without damaging them and also as a display of wealth, so they simply threw them away and had new ones made. 'Fast fashion' is nothing new.
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Currently in the hanger: Thaipaperwork Martin B-26 'Flak-Bait' In the shipyard: JSC barkentine 'Pogoria' Recently completed: TSMC F-16, S&P Kawanishi N1K1 Kyofu diorama |
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