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    • Image courtesy of revivalclothing.com

      revivalclothing.com

      • A wimple is a useful item of clothing for medieval recreationists. It covers modern hair, it covers the neck and upper chest (preventing sunburn), and it gives you something to pin a veil to.
      slumberland.org/sca/articles/how_to_make_a_wimple.pdf
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › WimpleWimple - Wikipedia

    Its use developed in early medieval Europe; in medieval Christianity it was unseemly for a married woman to show her hair. A wimple might be elaborately starched, creased and folded in prescribed ways. Later elaborate versions were supported on wire or wicker framing, such as the cornette.

  3. Mar 6, 2020 · Medieval artists lavished both time and love in their depiction. Why did they adore the wimple, and what does this mean for us today? Remove the wimple mentally from the collections they live in and each becomes a lightning bolt allowing us to consider contemporary culture.

  4. Wimple, headdress worn by women over the head and around the neck, cheeks, and chin. From the late 12th until the beginning of the 14th century, it was worn extensively throughout medieval Europe, and it survived until recently as a head covering for women in religious orders.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. May 21, 2018 · She also wears a diadem under her wimple at her forehead, which is a decorative accessory worn to hold her cap in place. Her maidservant next to her is clearly of lower class and appears to wear her uncovered hair pulled back possibly into a bun at the nape, or is cut very short.

    • Why do medieval artists wear a wimple?1
    • Why do medieval artists wear a wimple?2
    • Why do medieval artists wear a wimple?3
    • Why do medieval artists wear a wimple?4
    • Why do medieval artists wear a wimple?5
  6. The medieval woman had the answer. The wimple or gorget was widely worn by all medieval women of good breeding and it was only later in time that it was dropped for daily wear by the general populace and retained by nuns and holy women.

  7. Jun 9, 2013 · During the 13th century, women are almost never pictured without a barbette. It was required even with a crown. The barbette could be combined with the 12th century couvre-chef. But more often it went with a wimple, which was a white linen or silk cloth that passed under the chin, draping to cover the entire neck.

  8. Jul 20, 2018 · It is difficult to establish whether or not women wore their hair covered at home mainly due to the lack of art that depicts women in their home environments without wearing a wimple. If any of the images are to be believed, one would think that women wore their head covered even when giving birth, having sex, and whilst sleeping.

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