I am a costume, not a reenactor. I make interesting historical costumes as accurately as I can – or not accurately at all, depending on why and when and what I want it for. I put the clothes on and wear them for an hour or an afternoon, and then I take them off again and put back on the twentieth century clothes that I wear every day. Playing dress-up in the 18th Century is always fun. The 18th Century aftermath on the other hand…. sometimes isn’t.
Yes, it is true that historical linens and wools are often more suited to dealing with actual climates than what we wear in those climates today. But sometimes an environment is just going to trump any fabric choices you throw at it, and sometimes modern solutions are just… they’re just better.
The shore in the Atacama desert where I took these photos was hot:
I mean, it was really really hot. The sort of hot you only get when the driest desert in the world happens to also exist in tropical latitudes where the sun hangs directly overhead in the sky like a big brass gong, and then you choose go out dressed up in multiple layers of linen and artificial whalebone during the hottest month of it.
That sort of hot.
When I got home, I dropped my 1750s linens where I stood, and sat on the floor to eat a frozen fruit juice popsicle in my shift.
Linens might wick sweat, but I like a good 21st century deep freezer, thanks.
The weather up at Tahoe in winter this Christmas was brisker, but it wasn’t any less disheveled.
In anticipation of the cold, below my 1790s cotton round gown, my underneaths were modern,
But my hair was…. well my hair was a wig. I didn’t have any bobby pins, and I was relying on a gauze chiffonet to keep the wig on my head. Unfortunately, the chiffonet was the remains of the silk I’d used on my 18th Century Brain Hat and it lived up to every bit of the reputation it had earned during that fiasco. There was a stiff wind up there on the mountain and with a little help from the enormous hood of my cardinal cloak, that chiffonet skidded right off my head – and took the wig right along with it!!
And after that – snow is slippery and so are leather slippers. Coming back down to Reno from the mountain, a heated car seat made all the difference, as did (a few miles further down the road) the hot air of a hand dryer in the ladies room of a Borders Bookshop pointed directly at my very own damp seat! A wool melton cloak is toasty, but thermal long-johns and electric heaters are… well, in the aftermath of a winter afternoon in the 18th Century, I just like them more, when my seat is turning blue!
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