Monday, 23 April 2012

Thoughts on breastfeeding in medieval kit and bump support while pregnant: solving the leeking boob issue

I was talking to a friend of mine on the phone last night I was telling him about the ideas I've had for Kit and Caboodle. During this conversation I came up with the idea of making the plastron/stomacher for the bump into a bump support, similar to the ones you can get out of jersey to support your bump during pregnancy. I've had an idea that uses elastic as well as an idea that uses all natural fabrics. I've managed to get them down in my notebook this morning, plus drawings (when the scanner is working I shall copy them and post them up here.)

I've also managed to get the variations of breastfeeding shifts down. I've got three so far. I'm meeting a fellow re-enacting Mum this afternoon; we're taking the children to the park for a picnic, so I' shall run them past her and see if we come up with anything else.

I'm rather enjoying getting my ideas drawn and written down on paper. The next step will be to make toiles for fit and then make mock-ups/ trial runs. I think I'll have to size them by breast size as well as height.

Friday, 20 April 2012

Playing around

I've been playing around with the layout. I hope you like!

Speaking of playing around I've been helping a friend with her husband's hose for the past couple of weeks. We've made a new pair (almost finished bar the bod piece and point holes) plus I've repatched the two old pair and darned them. I think when I have time I'm going to have to borrow a camera (found mine then smallest one broke it) and show people how to darn wool cloth properly!

I've started a note book for the craft ideas and I've bought the yarn for a tickle spider.

Right, I'm off to bed. Speak soon! Cx

Tuesday, 17 April 2012

medieval kit, pregnancy and breast feeding

I recently started a group on facebook called re-enactment babies:
 https://www.facebook.com/groups/417762901587073/418526614844035/?notif_t=group_activity
 It's for friends who have kids and other members of the re-enactment crowd

We've got quite a few new Mums in the group asking about breastfeeding. I breast fed Bella but finding contemporary evidence was hard. I'm not massively well endowed and was able to lift mine over the neck line of my shift to feed Bella. However some of the new Mums are extremely buxom and it's proving challenging.




Not the most flattering picture of me but you can
see that my kirtle isn't massively low cut;
my shift comes just below the neckline of my kirtle.

You can see on this also not flattering picture how high my shift
comes as it's the white just above the burgundy on the neckline



This has inspired me. I've come up with some thoughts for expecting Mums and breastfeeding Mums. One friend said she'd got contemporary evidence for shifts with splits in, so I've asked for the evidence. But I thought why not make plastrons to fit inside the opening of a front fastening kirtle with extra long laces. That's what I had to do while pregnant and it meant little alteration to kit. A side fastening over kirtle I have evidence for, and the lacing on that could be loosened off  as the bump expands.
I'm front row right in orange, less than two months off having Bella. Although my kirtle fit on my chest my bump was massive, so I made a white wool plasteron to cover the gap. Looking at this picture, maybe I should have used a better colour, or even some spare fabric left over from the kirtle (though I didn't have any for this particular one)

Thursday, 5 April 2012

Back home with inspiration

I am back from London feeling rested (mentally) though tired (physically). I had a fabulous time with two of my best and closest friends. We didn't go anywhere apart from Ella's house but we did needle crafting and I finished my knitting.

Ella is my best friend and fellow crafter. While we were there I introduced her to needle felting. She's hooked (excuse the pun)  Ella is a fabulous crafter and theatre designer (wardrobe and props) and costume maker.
 
Ella has made the most awesome quilt cover I think I've ever seen. It's made from her partners old T-shirts. He has a passion for T-shirts with funny, witty or cool designs on. He wasn't wearing them any more so she up-cycled them. I challenge anyone to walk through his "Man-cave" and not stop to read the quilt, which is covering his sofa. 
My awesome Maid of Honour, Ella, Left and Benji, also known as Jen on the right.
Ella made the bridesmaids hats for our wedding

Ella's house is amazing. She's so eclectic. It's got steamlings, fairies, gnomes, a dessicated rat, bats, old toys, Dr.Who memorabilia, Harry Potter memorabilia, pretty ornaments and random stuff everywhere. There is a large rubber snake under their bath and a gong on the wall in there, and a full size skeleton in shirt and tie in their dining room. But as it's Ella's home, it just works and suits her perfectly. 



She's helped me clear my head and come up with some great new ideas. Though I'm not sure how popular a tortoise cosy will become! (She wants me to knit one for her tortoise!)

Monday, 2 April 2012

Well I didn't make it up to the castle yesterday as Bella and I spent the afternoon in Mum's back garden. I haven't had such a chilled afternoon for ages!

So last night I was in fine fettle for going round to see my friend Lindsay to help make her husband's hose. We're making joined Fifteenth Century Hose. We'd already done the body block and cut out the wool. Last night we did the lining and fittings. He might have new hose by the end of April! We have to join the lining and the outer together and put the gusset in, followed by point holes to point it to the doublet.

Pete, my beloved husband (and king numpty as he spend the entirety of last night playing Angry Birds) needs a new pair of hose for the weekend. I'm away tomorrow and Wednesday, I'm off to London to spend time with two of my best friends. Pete needs to be in Leeds for Good Friday. That doesn't really leave me any time to make them. I'm good, but I'm not that good!

Sunday, 1 April 2012

Thinking and pondering

It seems I've caught the blogging bug! Smallest (Bella) and Biggest (Pete) are asleep having naps as we've had another restless night. However, as it was my turn to stay in bed this morning and they were a noisy pair it's given me time to think and ponder. I've come up with the following ideas:

  • steampunk: knitted fingerless mittens with cogs woven in. My fab book on knitting has some gorgeous lacy knits in it and I thought they would be rather fab.
  • knitted wire. Nothing new here but would be fab if I can give it a steampunk twist. A knitted brass wire hat would be fab!
  • knitted medieval hats: I've got to spin the wool first, and for as much authenticity as possible I should spin our rare breed  fleece on my drop spindle as it spins differently to on a wheel. I want to make Pete one first. I'll need wooden double ended needles that are rather fine as it seems from the research I've done the knitting was very fine. I then need to wet felt/full the hat once it's done. I want to try doing a "henin" (the one that looks like an upturned flowerpot) and see if that works as it would stay on my head a lot better!
  • mobiles based on nursery rhymes: in multi-media, so knitted, crochet, felted and sewn. I got a needle felting kit for Christmas that I haven't used a massive amount as I caught the knitting bug (plus it's easier to knit when Bella is up, I don't trust her around a felting needle!)
  • Pete came up with an idea for the tickle spider, that is add three legs that are joined to the thumb. Only trouble is I'd have to add at least the base of the fingers on the glove. I think having the legs separate from the fingers gives more ease of movement. I could do different bugs too and make hats to go with them!

Stafford Castle as seen from Doxey Marshes, just over the road.
I'd have almost this view from my bedroom except a tree has grown in the way!
View from the castle on a clear day across to the Wrekin near Telford, Shropshire.
My favourite view of the castle, seen from Billington Bank to the west of Stafford.
You can see the traffic on the M6 Motorway, you can see the castle from there, but it is a blink and you'll miss it if you don't know what you're looking for
.
My Nan lived in Haughton,, a village about 4miles outside Stafford, for many years and this was the view on the way home.
The street lights on Castle Bank would look like a Swan's neck at n
ight and the castle would be basking in a faint golden glow.
Growing up next to this it's no wonder I ended up being passionate about history and becoming a re-enactor!
I'm off to see my parents today and as it's a wonderful day I may, if we have time, go up the castle. It's  an amazing place and I'm so lucky to have grown up next to it. It's given me so much inspiration and let me day dream as well as enjoy the nature up there over the years. It's one of my favourite places. The weather is gorgeous today so we might be able to see past Telford and the Wrekin across to Welshpool and the surrounding hills. You can just about see Birmingham when it's this clear and up to Leek as well. If it's hazy we can have a nose at the reconstruction of the castle walls. Last time we went up there were stone masons there mending the walls as they had started to become a potential hazard. I may get some more ideas while we're up there, whether it's from the seclusion of the wood, the amazing vistas or the warmth of the sun is anyone's guess, but I always leave there feeling calm and rejuvenated.

Saturday, 31 March 2012

Craft ideas and some of the things I've made

I've been thinking for a while about setting up a small business making medieval clothing. I did start a while back with the name "CW clothing" but my depression and anxiety got in the way and I ended up putting it on hold. I've made medieval clothing for friends and partners, as well as taught classes. I'd like to find a way to do it that no-one else does at the moment. I've got good friends who make 'kit' and I don't want to stand on anyone's toes, especially as the people I'm friends with are very good at what they do.

Bella and I in kit, Stafford Castle September 2011
I made everything Bella and I are wearing with the exceptions of my belt and shoes and Bella's drinking pot
Bella on a medieval wheelbarrow, Stafford Castle September 2011

I'm the one on the right, Spinning. I made everything I'm wearing except the leather belt, though I did alter it.
The tablet weaving lomb on the table is mine. Barley Hall 2009
Necklace I made for a friend for her wedding. It's made from freshwater pearls and semi-precious stones and based on the necklace worn by the child in the below picture
(Sts Margaret and Mary Magdalene with Maria Portinari (detail) 1476-79 Oil on wood Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence: By Hugh van Der Goes)



I made the kit worn by the lady on the right and the doublet and hat on the left
However, since having Bella, I've noticed that apart from Sarah Thursfield's patterns, there isn't a lot out there for children. People tend to make their own children's clothes, and maybe they'll be passed on within a re-enactment group, but there's no-where to buy them off the peg. So Pete and I thought about maybe making them ourselves, to sell. I've got enough sewing experience and have done a lot of research, especially with having Bella. I've thought of ways to adapt the clothes to make them last longer (and it does help if you don't do what I did and forget to wash the wool cloth before using it so it shrinks the first time it needs washing!)
Me, with only a couple of months to go, and Pete at the Warwick Castle Easter even 2010.
I made the clothes I'm wearing and helped Pete with the doublet he's wearing.


Front view of my gown. You can see my kirtle underneath. Uttoxeter 2009
Pete, Bella and I are on the left of the Tardis.
Apart from Pete's hose and straw hat I made or help make everything the three of us are wearing.
Most of us inour re-enactment group or DrWho fans or Whovians, so this was a must. Avoncroft Musuem, 201
0

We've thought about schemes where if you've got a baby who is growing at a vast rate of knots you can put a deposit down and get the next size up at a reduced rate (this came about when I had to make Bella a couple of sets of kit for a single season as she grew so quickly!). There's already a scheme with a shoe maker, so why not with clothes as well? We've even thought of doing a couple of price ranges: one where it's all machine made, one where it's hand finished, and one where it's completely hand sewn.



I made this dress for a 70's night we had at Blore Heath Farm Event in 2009.
I didn't know I was pregnant at the time. The children belong to friends!
I had bought thte fabric but hadn't used it for a long time, but it spoke MAXI DRESS to me.
It was made without a pattern and inspired by  the character Margo from the BBC series the Good Life and my Mum. I was able to wear this for our engagement party while heavily pregnant 7 months later! I was pregnant when this was taken, but I didn't find out until the following Thursday!

Our re-enactment group, The Clarence Household at Warwick Castle Easter event 2011.
I made the blue doublet three in from the left on the back row. Made the clothes under the livery coat (but not the hat, on the chap sixth in from the left on the middle row, have assisted the lady in green on the front sitting row on the left and helped/instructed on body blocks for the two chaps in the centre on the same row. I've helped the lass in the purple hood with the blue gown she's wearing and made a body block for the lass in pale pink sitting on the floor.... and that's just in our group!


We've already got the fabric and I've got the time now I'm not working. We've considered selling from etsy to start with and the Living History Forum, before we try out a fair or market. We think there is a market out there, it's just tapping into it. The biggest thing though is finding a name! We need one that will apply to other era's when we get to the stage where we can start to expand. We also need a name that will relate to both boys and girls clothes.

An LRP mock medieval gown I made for some friends


Me in some LRP mock medieval gear

a maids outfit I knocked up in a week for a Rocky Horror Picture Show Theatre trip
Some of my closet goth wear! The picture doesn't do it justice
From this I also want to make clothing for children for themed weddings. We had a themed wedding last year. We went with Steampunk as we had friends who do LRP and who just love dressing up as well as re-enact. We didn't want to do medieval as we do that anyway and as a closet Goth and lover of the Victorian and Edwardian eras it appeals greatly. When I mentioned it to Pete he was delighted! The only problem was the flowergirls dresses (the bridesmaids we had made bespoke by our friend Jane Ramsey, (https://www.facebook.com/pages/Janes-Wardrobe/90480871633) who has experiance with Steampunk as well as tailor made historical dress (She also made Pete's outfit) I wanted something for our flowergirls  that was something akin to Alice's dress in the original Alice in Wonderland illustrations. As my Mum was helping we ended up with the following (it took us an age to get her to agree on anything as well as to come to terms with having the wedding themed. At the end of the day though Mum and Dad said it was one of the best and most enjoyable weddings they'd ever been to. Yay!) So to make sure people get what they want, I thought it would be good to do an on request service for anything historical or themed.

My fabulous neices, Holly, Emma, Grace and Ellie, in shop-bought cardies, but home-made dresses and bags.

My wonderful nephew Harry. He didn't have a specific role in the wedding so I made him a waistcoat out of the silk
left over from Pete's waistcoat and Bella's christening Gown.

Pete wants to look at doing something with fleece, especially rare British breeds. It would be great to be able to source, spin and weave the fleece, or at least be able to pass it on to others who would spin or weave it. We've got contacts already, it's just finding out where to start! And being sure of the market, which we're not at the moment. We've got a name: Cloven Hoof, as we could then deal with Alpaca as well as sheep fleece. We want to promote the British Wool industry as well as provide historically correct fleece to re-enactors and historians.

The last craft idea I've got is, well it's ideas really. I've recently caught the knitting bug and want to make things to sell. I've found some books on how to knit flowers, birds, leaves etc. and thought about knitting stuff for kids and babies; things like mobiles and cot blankets. I've also had a brilliant idea for a tickle spider; basically a fingerless glove/mitten with a knitted/crafted spider on the back in fun bright colours. That way the spider is less scary and it enables the person wearing it to tickle their child. I already do the tickle spider with Bella (Inspired by incy wincy and by round and round the garden nursery rhymes) and thought a puppet type glove would work well. Something for me to ponder on anyway.


Well I think two blogs is enough to start with and my wrists are beginning to hurt as I've not typed this much in one go for a while! At least it's got my ideas down. Time for tea and toast (and probably a dose of  game playing on Facebook) before bed.

 PS: Going through the pictures to find stuff I've made has made me realise I've got very few pictures of things I've made! I've made frock coats, a cardinal's outfit, various bits for LRP including tabards to a firebird type outfit. I've made various necklaces based on originals and medieval kit until it's coming out of my ears as well as fancy dress outfits. It's made me realise I really need to take pictures of things I make! Hopefully now I have this blog that will change!