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Re: looking for pattern

by Wolf Whitewater <white_water_rapids@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Feb 26, 2008 at 05:40 PM

granpaw wrote:
> I'm trying to find a pattern for a men's ****rt on the style of the one
worn 
> in last of the mohicans, I do not know the correct name of it.
> please help, that is if anyone is ever here.
> SHeesh! rondeevoos are a wasteland on the internet...dead links
everywhere.


If you're spelling it 'rondeevoos' no wonder you're having trouble! Try 
the correct spelling -- 'rendevouz' and see what you get. Also, 
depending on where you are, it might be very hard to find anything 
locally -- rendevouz are typically associated with the Fur Trade Era 
(you might want to try searching for that in Google too) and the Fur 
Traders worked basically west and north, in 'Indian territory', from 
Illinois/Wisconsin/Michigan all the way to the Pacific Northwest, and 
into Canada. So, geographically, you'll likely have better luck finding 
the pattern you want if you search Google for Fur Trade re-enactment in 
that general geographical area.

Another thought -- War of 1812 re-enactor websites might have costuming 
links also, that could possibly have what you need. Try searching for 
that, too.

I am not familiar with the Last of the Mohicans (wasn't it a book?) but 
it should be pretty obvious which year -- give or take a decade -- the 
style is. I seem to recall that it was a book, and then a movie. If it's 
the movie, I'm guessing it's about Native Americans, probably pre Civil 
War, and in that case, finding a men's ****rt pattern will be pretty 
easy. Men's ****rts didn't change much from the mid 1700's through the 
end of the Victorian era in the mid to late 1800s, at which point the 
stiff collar and long tie became popular.

A typical men's ****rt of the late American colonial (1790's) to Western 
expansion period (1840's or so), covering the Fur Trade era, would have 
been long sleeved, white or offwhite, linen or muslin (or possibly flax 
or cotton), with simple cuffs and a yoked neck. There may have been one 
or two buttons at the neck, and at the cuffs. The ****rts were generally 
longer, with tails to the mid-thigh.

If nothing else you could always look at the men's costumes in the 
Simplicity or McCall's pattern books. A lot of them aren't very 
historically accurate, but they're fairly easy to sew. Some of them are 
more accurate than others. It's easiest just to go to your local fabric 
store and look through the books.


Hope this helps!

Whitewater
Clann Tartan, Scottish 30 Years War Re-Enactors
www.clanntartan.org, member, 10+ years.
 




 3 Posts in Topic:
looking for pattern
granpaw <granpaw@[EMAI  2008-02-25 11:08:46 
Re: looking for pattern
Wolf Whitewater <white  2008-02-26 17:40:03 
Re: looking for pattern
granpaw <granpaw@[EMAI  2008-02-28 00:30:49 

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