These make me wonder whether the supposedly square / rectangular waist
aprons, without a separate waistband, are extended in a similar way to
provide ties. You need an extremely large square to be able to just tie
the corners around your waist. But it does seem very wasteful if they
are cut in one piece as they seem to be.
Jean
Lauren Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
It looks like waist-height aprons were often a square of linen with
the top corners tied behind the back. In these Manesse Codex aprons,
the smiths' aprons look as if they could be tied like napkins around
the neck.
The seed-sower here in October of The Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Barry
http://humanities.uchicago.edu/images/heures/october.jpg is definitely
wearing some kind of simple square or rectangle tied round the neck.
But this seed-sower seems to have a more constructed version:
http://classes.bnf.fr/idrisi/grand/1_04.htm
(Peasants in the field in Le RĂ©gime des princes)
A woman blacksmith and a man in The Holkham Bible Picture Book c.
1327-1335, http://www.bl.uk/learning/images/medieval/year/
large2163.html, seem to have aprons where the napkin has been slashed
somehow to provide shoulder straps and waist ties.
Does anyone have any thoughts on how these bib aprons might have been
shaped or constructed?
Thanks for your thoughts.
Lauren
Lauren M. Walker
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Jan 13, 2007, at 3:51 PM, otsisto wrote:
And the Manesse Codex but men.
1340
http://www.tempora-nostra.de/tempora-nostra/manesse.php?id=203&tfl=124
But not the waist tie ones.
De
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Jean Waddie
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