Quote from: Sir Aiden on 2014-03-03, 20:12:33I noticed that in a lot of theses effigies it depicts people with wavy hair. In fact in a lot of medieval art work I see this. Is it the actual style or just an artistic way to draw hair? If it was the style did people make their hair wavy?I read somewhere that they got those curls by braiding their hair, washing it, then unbraiding it when it dried. I actually tried this not long ago with a small section of my hair, and it produced some pretty nice results, though my hair is naturally wavy to begin with. I just wish I could find where I read that; no idea if it's true or not.
I noticed that in a lot of theses effigies it depicts people with wavy hair. In fact in a lot of medieval art work I see this. Is it the actual style or just an artistic way to draw hair? If it was the style did people make their hair wavy?
Or, we could all wear hats, like people actually did in period. Seriously folks, get some hats out there. It's an odd circumstance when one is bareheaded in period.
Quote from: SirNathanQ on 2014-03-04, 05:45:25Or, we could all wear hats, like people actually did in period. Seriously folks, get some hats out there. It's an odd circumstance when one is bareheaded in period.I've got a woolen naalbound hat that should be arriving soon-ish.We see all sorts of wide-brimmed straw or wool hats in period artwork from almost every era in the medieval age, so I definitely agree that we should be seeing more of them! This Maciejowski Bible image provides some absolutely wonderful examples:
dude, you would get 3 thumbs up form me if you got one of those hats