Page 2 THE TWG May e, 1983 Plans made for Medieval tunics All students'areEn couraged to design th^r own medieval tunlce this suirntid'-for the Medieval Festival to be h^d September 25-29. Each (SaSS will ham a designated color for' the tunic. (This color can be obtained tiy contacting the class presidents.) The medieval tunic Is relatively simple to make, according to these instructions from Eleanor Ide: Measurement a in fig. 1 is half the length of a loop of string that can pass over the head and shoulders one arm at a time. (Add seam and hem allowancestoall measurements.) Measurement b is from the top of the shoulders to the desired length. For a short tunic, put It on, belt it and bend over, marting the center back at a modest length. Measurement c is ftalf the distance from the shoulder' to the waist. If less clMh ' is allowed at the _a^hoie movement is restrictw: The diamet^' of tt^ neckhole d Is seldom greater than needed to pull over the head. Necldines are circular, square, boat or v-necked at different tintes. Tunics often have keyhole necklines (a circle with a silt at the fn^nt), fastened with a brooch or button. For t>est fit, cut most of the neckhole out of the front of the' garment. FESnm The material cut from under the arms (e) cand be used to lengthen the sieves. Fig. 1 shows a lady’s bell sleeve writh a dotted line showing a straight sleeve. Fig. 2 shows a lad/s angel sleeve. Both-.tt)^ sleeves end on the TweaTh, with the sean on the upper'arm. The measurement m shoxys how much material will hang below the sleeve end. An m of 18 inchee is still fairly easy to haxlle. Beyond that, i>ractice. Figure 3 ^>ows bell (h), angel (j) and close (f) sleeves reaching to the wrist. The long thin rectangle (g) is a tippet hanging from a close sleeve, circa 1350. A lady’s ami Is edways covered to the wrist by the close sleeve of her tunic or un- dertunlc. Recreatlonlsts In wann climates sometimes make fake close sleeve^nds to simulate an. undertunic. Cotton and linen are cooler than polyester blends. Wrinkles are authentic. Bell and angel sleeves are left c^n or sewn partly shut to make pockets for coins, lap- dogs, etc. In open sleeves the raw seam edges should be turned under like a hem, covered with trim, or the Continued on Page 3> c %> / i cr- -’1 (3/ ; \ 0 & Qa.rl> a.ni t)2efhois' Medieval Reading List Compiled ........liie following is a reading list suggested to prepare for the Medieval Festival at Meredith. September 25 • 29.1983. I. Books related to specific disciplines 501 B 78 S40.1 C 88 940.1 D 82 Bronowski, Jacob. The Ascent of Man. Boston: Little Brown. 1974. (Essays on architecture, chemistry, mathemat+cs; and astronomy) Crump, Charles George, ed. Legacy of the Middle Ages. Oxford: The Clarendon Press. 1926. (A series of lectures on various topics: architecture, education, science, law, economics, etc.) Drew, Katherine Fischer. Perspectives in Medieval History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 1963. (Essays on science and technology) 709.02 Focillon, Henri. The Ar1: of the West in the Middle Ages. 2 vols. F 68 Trans. Donald King. Rew York: PhalHorTTuFTi'^ers. 1963. 509^.'G25' Goldstein, Thomas. Dawn of Modern Science: From the Arabs to Leonardo G 57 901 T 21m 189.4'’'' C 76 780.9 C 39w de Vinci. Boston: Houghton Mifflin & Co. T980. Taylor, Henry Osborn. The Medieval Mind: A History of the Development of Thought and Emotion in the Middle Ages. Cambridge: Harvard Tlni v^rsitjs'.. Press'^ T959 Thomas a KempHs. Imitation of Christ. New York: The Modern Library. 1943. Wilkins, Niqel. Music in the Age of Chaucer. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer. 1979. (Introduction to the "flamboyant and colorful" world of the fourteenth century) II. Books about medieval life: 323.33 Bennett, H. S. Life on the English Manor. Cambridge: The University B 43 Press. 1937. 942 Coulton, C. G. Medieval Panorama. New York: The Macmillan Company. C 83m 1938. " (A delightful introduction to life in the town, on the farm, at the university, and in the church) 944.88 Le Roy Ladun'e, Emmanuel. Montaillou: The Promised Land of Error. L 56 New York; Vintage. 1979. (A delightful account of the resurrection of a fourteenth century town in southern France) (Continued on page 3