Get Ready with Me: Early 16th Century Tudor Common Woman’s Clothing
Get ready with me as I dress in early 16th century Tudor clothing!
Most people are familiar with portraits of great Tudor lords and ladies and the exquisite clothing they wore. But what about the average, everyday woman in Tudor England? What would I have actually worn if I lived in the early 16th century? The short answer is ALL THE WOOL, but to learn about the individual garments and layers that go into an historically accurate outfit for a Tudor common woman, watch on!
Hair Taping Tutorials
• Hairlacing with curls!
• Solo hairlacing
Resources
I constantly referenced “The Queen’s Servants” and “The Tudor Child” books from the Tudor Tailor.
www.tudortailor.com
etsy.me/1kjpib2
There is also great info in “Clothes of the Common People in Elizabethan and Stuart England” from Stuart Press.
www.tudortailor.com
stuart-hmaltd.com
Materials
Burnley and Trowbridge: burnleyandtrowbridge.com
Renaissance Fabrics: www.renaissancefabrics.net
The Cloth Hall (on Facebook): / the-cloth-hall-lindy-p...
Dress hooks and brass pins from The Treasury: etsy.me/2KOBTQt
Music Attribution
Master of the Feast by Kevin MacLeod
Link: incompetech.filmmusic.io/song...
License: creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
Crunk Knight by Kevin MacLeod
Link: incompetech.filmmusic.io/song...
License: creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
Пікірлер: 196
Your photoshop skills at the end make this especially adorable
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Haha thank you! I'm totally a novice but it was satisfying to accomplish that!
@cruxivar6026
3 жыл бұрын
She blends in! Ahh! 🧡💕
@romystumpy1197
Жыл бұрын
Yes i agree very artistic
I love how the different solid blocks of colour provide quite a "jolly" and pleasing look. The clothing of a working Tudor woman looks surprisingly practical, with the attached purse and apron. The russet gown fitted you perfectly and looked great on you!
It’s funny how when you imagine that time you think every one dressed like Anne Bolyne lol, but you have to remember there were average people too
Lovely! That kirtle is to die for and I adore the black partlet - I've never seen one pointed in the back like that but it's so cool.
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! You see them in some Breughel paintings and Book of Hours illustrations.
@boredofmindgames4662
3 жыл бұрын
Jeez the wealth of knowledge you have to pull from is literally awe inspiring
This is such a beautiful ensemble. The turnback lined cuffs are kind of like the common woman's answer to the oversleeves lined with fur that you see on upperclass Tudor gowns, aren't they? That's so neat!
Absolutely love this video. Always been the most interested in the clothing of the common people, and I've always felt it was somewhat underrepresented, at least on youtube. You did an amazing job not only showing the garments and how to wear them, but covering their history and the why's and how's of their colors and materials. It's wonderful!
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Common people’s clothing definitely doesn’t get enough attention and I hope to change that. I have a brand new working class clothing video for the Regency period going up tomorrow!
I love that you reproduced the lady in the painting so incredibly accurately! Bravo!
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
I had a lot of fun with it! Thank you!
Truly these garments seem much more appealing, artistically, than brocades and silks. Just gorgeous, and I appreciate your work. Kiss the cat.
the detachable sleeves are very practical for a working woman; if they get wet or stained during work, you can quickly replace them with a new pair and you don't have to wash the entire garment just because a few stains on the sleeves. They are, in effect, like the apron: they catch most of the stains. In my language, we still say "there are always a few sleeves to fit that" when we mean "there are always a few ways for solving that problem", and it clearly goes back to this time of detachable sleeves, lol!
EEEEE I got so excited when I saw this! I cannot get enough of historical commonwear videos. There are so few, and it is such an important part of fashion history.
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Me too! I'll be posting a Regency working class video next Sunday!
@anna_in_aotearoa3166
Жыл бұрын
Definitely great to see - especially when you consider this would've been the vast majority of people at the time?
@CareenasAdventures
Жыл бұрын
@@anna_in_aotearoa3166 Yes indeed!
That photo at the end is hilarious! Love the outfit as well.
With your clothing and this video you made part of a famous Bruegel painting 'The Peasant Dance' come alive👏🏻. Thank you so much 👌🏻
It is really lovely to see the dress hooks and pins that I make actually being used in a video! The next time someone asks me how to use them, I will send them to this video! I always seem to get those questions when it is 98 degrees at an event, and I am wearing a Roman tunica. This was a great video!
I love seeing common people's clothing! Regarding the dress hook holding the wool partlet at the back, do you have a thread loop on the bodice for it to attach to, or is the hook just pushed into the fabric?
@ClueFinderDirtDigger
3 жыл бұрын
Came here to ask the same question! Such a cool detail.
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
It hooks directly into the fabric. This method works well for wool, but I don't think I'd try it on silk or something more tightly woven!
@thebookwyrmslair6757
3 жыл бұрын
@@TheCoutureCourtesan I would imagine on silk or linen that you'd add a little loop for it to connect to. :) (Not sure which materials the Tudor middle and lower classes would use for a summer-weight dress.)
Thank you for posting this! I loved this video, and I especially loved the outfit! All the layering and lining gives such a vibrant colour contrast. Even if you were a Tudor village woman who couldn't afford silk and velvet (and, I guess, couldn't legally wear it anyway with those sumptuary laws), I imagine you would still feel like the fanciest lady in the parish walking into church on Sunday wearing a dress like this-- and comfy too, from the look of it!
My goodness the quality of fit in your clothing is fantastic!! Well done 👏👏👏
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
Love it!! Every time you post these outfits, it makes me want to do pre-18th century again. 😆
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Do itttttttt... :)
I would love to see you take on Jacobean/ Stuart dress- from the insanely beautiful embroidery early on in the 17th c to the French-inspired block colour silks, lace & ribbons of the pre-English Civil Wars era
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Yes! That will definitely be coming in the future! One of my favorite periods!
@OcarinaSapphr-
3 жыл бұрын
@@TheCoutureCourtesan Cool- I will definitely keep a lookout!
You’re reawakening my desire to give Tudor sewing a try... This looks fabulous!
Beautiful kitty, I never can resist a calico or tortie.
Man, you are reaaaally makign me want to try out earlier period stuff...
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
DO ITTTTTTTT. You get to wear all the wool!
I love it, great video! Also interesting how much brighter the colors look in natural light, where they would have most often been viewed
I much prefer simpler dress like this. simple lines and colors are very appealing to me. Thank you for a lovely video!
I prefer working and lower class GRWM because it’s like a connection to the people most of us actually came from. It also shows how people didn’t just wear bland sacks just because they were poor or not royalty. Their clothes were also often very valuable to them, so they took great care to protect it and maintain it. Women often made their own clothes or at least many parts of their outfit. People in this position couldn’t document themselves like we can now, and some may have been lost in records. Seeing their clothes is like seeing a glimpse of them.
Love it! Tudor dress is what got me into historical costuming yet I've never made an outfit from the era. This really makes me want to bump it up the todo list. What shape are your skirt panels to get the shape and twirl like that?
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! They are sort of trapezoidal? Wedge shaped? lol
Partlets also protect the shoulder seams/fabric from anything carried over the shoulder like dairy yokes, grain sacks or drips of food just as the apron protects the skirt/kirtle (less fabric on wash days).
I do 15th Century Florentine, and I found the gap with the lace up kirtle a bit annoying, I noticed with your gown that you have a similar gap as with the kirtle. Do you find with cold weather that this can be an issue? Thank you for doing some earlier periods that don't seem to be quite as popular on Costube!
This video makes me want to return to Tudor garb..... haven’t made any since 1990!! But my maiden name is Boleyn & Tudor garb is my 1st love.....
@puckdefellow2987
3 жыл бұрын
It's destiny then 😊👍
I hope you come back soon. I enjoy your videos and always learn something. I hope you are well.
Uuuuuuh I love it, and I love more because it is cat approved; best consiglierie. At present I am in my first 2 m sewing ever with only the ZWIRN, needle and the slight yellow big piece of material (second opportunity after a job I did as I waitress - decoratiion light covering) I am longing for purchasing cuttings? garment and so on... So hopefully this site will still be available during spring and summer of 2024. I am pretty convinced for my purposes and sensitive skin and nervs and energy field - this dress will be a fine compagnion for a long long time... thank you and the lovely cat, bye bye Crissy
That grey gown! Beautiful. That fabric would be fun to spin and weave. Love the video.
You look so pretty without makeup on! I wish the fashion today was like that . . so nice and feminine.
I love the cameo of your cat!
Fantastic outfit and wonderful research as always!
I love seeing common people clothing
Absolutely wonderful!
Looks wonderful!
This is great to see, thank you.
THIS IS INCREDIBLE!
Oh my goodness, this is PERFECT!!! So, so well done!
I have a whole new appreciation for art from these periods. Thank you!
The back pleating on the back of that gown is outstanding!
I'm so in love with this outfit, it looks incredible!
Oohhhhh! That's amazing!
beautiful work. I really enjoyed this. Loved seeing the portraits during the video!
Stunning.
Very beautiful, I love the colors
Love this and your videos on working class garments!
I LOVE that parting shot where you join the dance! Beautiful gram -thank you !
This is great! Wonderful presentation! You are very talented and extremely creative. Can't wait to see more from you. Thanks for sharing your talents!!
Beautiful work
Beautiful garments that look very well made. I like your video and thanks for sharing.
Love it! 👸🏻💖💕
I really did enjoy this video I appreciate that new information I thought they stace at this time in history. I like watching videos like this thank you very much.
Wow, you are so skilled! And beautiful 😊
This is so pretty! 💕💕💕 I've always loved 16th c. working womens clothes. I would love to make an outfit like these some day! ❤🤗
Very informative, thanks so much! I love the colours and cleaver use of pins. I want to try out that veil thing just because I want my hair covered when gardening, might be a bit cooler than my hat.
SOOOO HELPFUL 💛thank you
I'm soooo late to this, but I just found your channel and been binging. I got so happy and surprised when you mentioned the hat is from Sally Pointer, it's so much fun when someone you recognize or follow pops up in someone else's video. Sally is so amazing, and so was this video!
Thanks for a great video and a very well put together outfit. I really love to see a well made common person's clothing.
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Well done common people's clothing definitely has its own beauty!
Love this video!
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Aw shucks
Wonderful
The black partlet is so sharp! I'm warm and cosy just watching you put on all this snug wool.
Your clothing is beautiful and the backs are especially lovely! Although, I think my favorite accessory is the cat.
Wonderful!
Lovely very much enjoyed watching your video. Thank you
stunning, and your kitty is a really good addition
Wow! Absolutely brilliant! You really look like you stepped out of a painting of this time period. And, then adding the cute photoshop at the end really solidified that. Very cool! Also, I love your cat! Your video on noble women attire brought me to this one. Looking forward to more great videos!
Great job
Very interesting video! Thank you for going over the names of the pieces of clothing and the materials used. Love the cat and the piano!
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I was quite surprised that Calimanco (the cat) stuck around for the whole filming but she seemed to want her time in front of the camera lol
Great video. Looking at costume for volunteers at Wollaton hall and this has really inspired me.
Thank you, fascinating!
Those seams in the back of your kirtle are amazing. It fits you so well. Wish I had your skill.
Looks comfy
I've watched many wonderful " getting dresed" vids. I absolutely live how informative yours was. I learned new things and I watch many, many of these. Love seeing commoner clothing too.
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
Good stuff
Beautifully executed and the research looks very careful and down to fine detail. Always nice to do pre-Elizabethan Tudor, with the whole world of Holbeins portraits and sketches to draw on. There is a great sketch of a woman thought to be Margaret Roper, Thomas More's daughter, in a wonderful executed ordinary daily gown.
I love this outfit! So much simpler to wear and work in, and it looks colorful for court too! Hmmm, maybe I can get some help in making this type of outfit.
Beautiful cat!!! Older Japanese Kimonos were also lined in red silk, to afford "protection" to the wearer. Was this a superstition? Like your videos very much, subscribed.
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
How interesting!
Your video is fantastic, i really hope that we will see more of you :) The only fault is it wasn't there 2 years ago, when i was struggling with my own Tudor gown :P
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I'm definitely hoping to do more! I have my 1530s elite gown to contrast with this outfit.
Tudor is probably my favorite historical dress. Especially for the working class. I think the style is very forgiving and simple and would look good on most peoples body types as well. I wonder what they wore in summer though, because it would be suffocating with all those layers I'd imagine.
So lovely to see working class clothing! (There tends to be quite a focus on more expensive garb in much of costube, so I really enjoy seeing people closer to my own situation represented?) Your final editing of yourself into the village festival painting was #chefskiss! 😄 I'm super-impressed by how perfectly fitted all your outfits are!! Such skill! The dress hooks are intriguing too - not something I'd heard of before, feel like I need to go Google & learn some more now? 😊
You’re awesome!! Make more videos!!!
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! That's the plan!
I never knew that the kirtles and gowns had the opening over the tummy.
I love this video! Thank you for making it. Please share where you got your adorable shoes. Thank you.
Quite a difference from my yoga pants and t-shirts. :D I can't imagine how they accomplished all their physical work in those tight layers. Beautiful job on the clothing!
Very pretty clothes. I love when common ordinary clothing is done so well.. Linen does take a variety of colors, but requires an alum, tannin, alum fixing bath to keep the color fast. So, 3 mordant baths to fix it. It just more work, not an impossibility. Documentation for your time period of course is important.
I absolutely love this! Is there a modern equivalent that can describe the weight/hand of russet?
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! The fabric I used was sold as "coarse broadcloth" but it's not nearly as heavy as a modern melton or anything like that. It also isn't fulled to the same extent as broadcloth. You should be able to still see the weave. I think of it more as a medium weight flannel? But again, not as brushed or fuzzy as a flannel. I hope that helps!! The Tudor Tailor sells reproduction russet but it is an investment lol
@GraciePattenSewing
3 жыл бұрын
@@TheCoutureCourtesan That's super helpful thank you!
Would you ever do a making-of video of this style of kirtle? I've got the book and the patterns and am slowly making mockup after mockup to get the bodice portion to fit right. I'm almost there! I reference this video and your making of the Anne Boleyn gown video any time I work on my project to help guide me in the direction. 🥰
I would like to see how you put on and draped that linen rectangle as a veil!
I love learning about the Tudor commoner and what their lives would've been like. Like you, I really like the plainer and simpler clothes, as well as the gorgeous gowns of the nobility. I really like that outer gown a lot, although not pinned up-all the colors seem to clash in my opinion. I wonder if I would ever look good in that mustard yellow color with my fair skin? Great video, thanks for uploading! Say, do you know any traditional sewing techniques and stitches?
i just realised 16th century is.. SHREK CORE LETS GOOOO
Great video! On the kirtle being sewed up, would you be able to undo and reuse the thread/string or is it one time only?
Wonderful! I love the black partlet! Where did you find the hooks and did you make your shoes? I would love to take a class or 6 with you!
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
I got my hooks from "The Treasury" on Etsy and my shoes are from a company that seems to no longer exist... But Boots by Bohemond also has Tudor shoes.
What kind of fabric and hat or headdress (is that the right term) would have been used in summer? I have been attending a ren fest since I was a teenager and am wanting to try some "realistic" costumes next year (ran out of time this year) instead of my closet of fanciful costumes (even though I still love them too) but wool in May in humid North Texas just sounds like the perfect way to get heat stroke.
I love watching this video. Do you have a pattern to make the woollen partlett please?
Many of the habits Catholic nuns wore up until the late 1960s were designed when an order of nuns was established, and remained unchanged , sometimes for centuries. And the habits were based on the clothing if common people. So you might get some tips about headwear by looking at old habits. One of the most famous was the linen head dress if the Daughters if Charity, which was modeled after the head scarves of french peasants.
this is amazing!! I wonder if there are any good costume design / Tudor books you refer to?
@TheCoutureCourtesan
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! There are a couple listed in the video description under Resources, but you can also check out Patterns of Fashion by Janet Arnold, In Fine Style by Anna Reynolds, and Dress at the Court of King Henry VIII by Maria Hayward.
I joined a Renn faire guild (before covid), but at every faire I would end up with heat exhaustion. I was dressed in 100% cotton (because it was my first costume and that was all I had) and dressed lower class, but no matter what, I would end up overheated and feel sick. I don't know how the other guild members managed, they said they were just used to it. You would have to be to be in the Renn faire when it is 90°F outside... Any tips for staying cool?
@mastersnet18
2 жыл бұрын
Linen is even better than cotton on the summer, as well as some lightweight wools. Also, make sure your face is covered from the sun and to drink plenty of water.
Amazing! Whats the relevance or purpose for the vertical opening of the curdle going so far from the "bodice" into the "petticoat"? Just for easier putting on and not visible due to the apron?