1st Edition

Period Reproduction Buckram Hats The Costumer’s Guide

By Crystal G. Herman Copyright 2016
    240 Pages 354 Color Illustrations
    by Routledge

    238 Pages
    by Routledge

    Whether you’re in a professional or a community theatre, part of a historical re-enactment, or teaching costume construction, a well-made hat provides a much-needed finishing touch to a costume. Period Reproduction Buckram Hats: The Costumer’s Guidebook is your one-stop resource for learning how to recreate historically accurate buckram hats. Each chapter is devoted to the construction of a particular hat, beginning with a historical image and followed by an list of the exact amount of fabric, tools, and materials needed and the estimated time to complete the construction. Every chapter contains a brief historical background on each hat, a pattern, step-by-step instructions, process photographs, and ideas for altering the pattern to fit your unique production. This book not only provides instruction for the exacting reproduction of historic hats, but it also guides and encourages you to alter patterns and techniques to create your own designs. The final chapters outline general millinery principles that can be applied to almost any hat, allowing you to customize your project.

    1. Preface
    2. Taking Accurate Head Measurements
    3. General Patterning Techniques
    4. Deshret
    5. Steeple Hennin
    6. Truncated Hennin
    7. Capotain
    8. Bergere
    9. Gainsborogh
    10. Poke Bonnet
    11. Mad Hatter
    12. Top Hat
    13. Romantic Bonnet
    14. Coal Scuttle
    15. Toque
    16. Pill Box
    17. Hand Stitches
    18. Covering and Trimming Techniques
    19. Altering and Using Feathers
    20. Methods of Securing a Hat

    Biography

    Crystal G. Herman has been the Assistant Professor of Theatrical Costume Design at the University of Texas at El Paso since 2008. She received her MFA in Costume Design from The Ohio State University. She has designed costumes professionally for nationally recognized theatres such as the Utah Festival Opera Company and the Weston Playhouse in Vermont. Over the past twelve years Crystal has designed and constructed costumes for a variety of other theatres in the Southwest. Her research and teaching concentrate on costume design, costume rendering, costume history, millinery, and costume crafts.