Clothes of the Common People in Elizabethan and Early Stuart England 1558-1660:
the user’s guide. Stuart Peachey (ed.) Bristol: Stuart Press, 2014. ISBN 978 1
85804 288 6
The first
thing to say is that Stuart and his team have done a tremendous job of trawling
through a vast amount of information, which they have distilled down to this.
However as Stuart himself says in the introduction, “This book will make
simplistic, unsupported assertions of fact.” He then refers you to the other
books in the series for backup.
This
means there is no bibliography, a section will just come with a reference to
another book or two in the series, for example “see volumes 10 and 11 for
full details on doublets.” Since these volumes also don’t have bibliographies,
just abbreviated citations, you then have to go to the separate volume containing the bibliography, to work out where information came
from originally.
It also
means that there are frequently no captions giving the source of illustrations.
If you know the period and subject well you will be able to look at an
illustration and say CP1640s[1.17] is from a set of Cryes of London in the British Museum, and CP1602c[1k] is a detail
from the Montacute House
frieze. If you
don’t know the subject well you would again need to find this information in
one of the other books in the set. A full set of the series would cost well
over £300. One of these other books also contains justifications for why, for
example, he has used some Cryes of London, but not others, and presumably on the other hand why he has used the Nathaniel Bacon painting even though they are heavily derived from Dutch works.
The book
is arranged as follows: The Materials (fabrics, haberdashery, colours); Who
Wore What When; Men’s Doublets; Men’s Breeches and Hose; Men’s Undergarments
and Linens; Men’s Overgarments; Women’s Garments with Overbodies; Women’s
Waistcoats and Overgarments; Women’s Linens and Infant’s Garments; Accessories;
Construction of Replicas; Appendix 1 Short glossary, Appendix 2 The “Corpus” which
is about the illustrations used. The book covers 102 years, sometimes there is
an indication that a garment was only worn in the early years, or a garment was
only worn in the later years, but often there is no differentiation.
The
patterns and photographs of garments made from the patterns are in the body of
the work. If you are not used to pattern drawing you may find it difficult to
scale up from the patterns which have a 1 square to 1 inch, or a 1 square to 2
inch or a 1 square to 5 inch grid. Sometimes the pattern will indicate what
garment the pattern is based on, the Reigate doublet for example, but often
there is little indication whether the pattern is based on one or more
surviving garments or on conjecture. The construction of replicas section has
information on construction techniques of the period.
There
are quite a few areas where I would take issue with Stuart’s “assertions of
fact,” but I’m not going to do so here for fear of being labelled a “stitch
counter.” Other re-enactors will know what I mean. If you are using the
book to create garments of a particular period remember that the book covers
over 100 years, and make sure that you are happy that the garment is suitable
for your period.
Niggle –
I wish someone had proof read the book in full before publication, having for
example woolen and woollen and knit and knitt in the same table I find
distracting.
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