tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4870839833241462336.post2371376528941412526..comments2011-10-06T22:51:52.693+01:00Comments on Rebecca White Jewellery & Metalwork: Project 3: ResearchBeccahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03766373905414252637noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4870839833241462336.post-33605326646546173892010-01-19T17:29:01.144+00:002010-01-19T17:29:01.144+00:00Wow thanks for that Jonathan!
I briefly looked a...Wow thanks for that Jonathan! <br /><br />I briefly looked at the colour laws so obviously didn't know the full story behind them. I never thought about the cost of materials and dyes... I don't know why that never crossed my mind that it may be because of that too.<br /><br />We are on to workshops and designs now, but would like to look into the Elizabethan or even Tudor times further as a personal project (perhaps in the summer when I have no other work).<br /><br />I will check out Blackadder :)<br /><br />(Sorry about my sentance structure...)Beccahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03766373905414252637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4870839833241462336.post-24439756756740528962010-01-19T14:19:32.300+00:002010-01-19T14:19:32.300+00:00Looks like you should be able to use some of the s...Looks like you should be able to use some of the skills you develped in Design Studies for this - loads of info out there on those times.<br />One thing: you said "royalty were only allowed to wear purple" but did you mean "only royalty were allowed to wear purple"?<br /><br />There's a social reason for this which we'll sort of cover in one of the lectures this semester, but part of the reason was also the cost. <br /><br />The process for dyeing cloth that colour was not only difficult, and the materials very rare, but the practice was protected by the guilds that existed at the time. They were basically like trades unions and anyone practicing dyeing who wasn't approved by the dyers guilds could be fined heavily. The laws were quite strict and related to trade. So we have a financial barrier to wearing particular colours, and a protectionist approach to the manufacture of textiles, metal, jewellery etc etc.<br /><br />Remember too that we were almost constantly at war (I say "we" - this is England I'm talking about! But blockades of Scotland by the English would have had an effect here) so that made things like dye, cloth, metals and spices even more expensive, as did the huge risks in importing things, and the time it took.<br />Nutmeg, for example, something we take for granted, was so expensive it was used as a currency. It's a fascinating period.<br />I recommend Blackadder II for all you need to know ;-)Jonathanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04982088638354238795noreply@blogger.com