![]() (Anyone have a reference?) And there are many news articles about elderly ladies buried in a shroud made by their own hands decades earlier. I remember reading, but cannot find a firm source for the assertion that ladies from the 16th through the 19th century would sew their own burial clothes when making their wedding trousseaux because women were so likely to die in childbirth. ![]() I have always been interested in what the well-dressed corpse is wearing: a netted beadwork shroud, as worn by an Egyptian mummy the beautiful brocades found in the royal tombs at Las Huelgas a plain wool shroud tied at the head and foot, as modeled by John Donne in his funerary monument or the frilled-front white shrouds worn by some Victorian ladies, accessorized with a ruffled cap.īut who made dresses for the dead? We have records of commercial shipments of shrouds from 1770s America. Her costume history and social ephemera blog may be viewed at Mrs Daffodil Digresses She is the author of 11 books on historical and contemporary ghost-lore and blogs on the grim and gruesome at Killer Budgie. Her latest publication, The Victorian Book of the Dead, presents a myriad of Victorian funeral customs including such oddities as crape threats, tombstone censors, mourning cigarettes, and widow humor. ![]() But who made these dresses for the dead?Ĭhris is a writer, folklorist, and historian specializing in the popular culture of Victorian death, mourning, clothing history, and the spirit world. Chris Woodyard has always been interested in what the well-dressed corpse is wearing: a netted beadwork shroud, as worn by an Egyptian mummy the beautiful brocades found in the royal tombs at Las Huelgas a plain wool shroud tied at the head and foot, as modeled by John Donne in his funerary monument or the frilled-front white shrouds worn by some Victorian ladies, accessorized with a ruffled cap. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |