Showing posts with label Muffin Cap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Muffin Cap. Show all posts

Saturday, 23 April 2022

Brown Wool Cap

This great cap is made from wool, typical of the muffin cap style used in the late medieval period and onwards.


Came as part of a pile of kit from somebody given up the LRP hobby.



Excellent hat, needs to get used


You can even change the look by pulling up the crown. 


 

Saturday, 26 February 2022

Rusty Red Wool Hat

A muffin style medieval hat. 


Made from wool fabric.


This hat is more rusty red in real life than in the photos.


This hat was a freebie from a friend who was downsizing his costume hoard he had to create house space.


Photos were taken using my mobile phone which create a little bit of fish eye look 


 

Friday, 18 February 2022

Fancy Posh Hat

 This brown hat has lots of decoration


In the style of a muffin cap, i.e. a headband with baggy loose crown.


The hat includes a decorative fabric headband, decorative badges/beads around the headband with a large broach badge in the same style at the front.


a bunch of orange feathers behind the main badge and a lace-like fabric decorating the join between the headband and loose crown.


This feel like a posh nobles hat or at least the hat of someone who wants to appear wealthy.


It's even comfortable to wear.

Friday, 11 December 2020

Muffin Bonnet

 This very bright magenta coloured hat is constructed like a muffin cap with a lot of access fabric fixed to a headband.


There is so much extra fabric however that the headband is hidden, plus it all crinkly and uneven so I can't really call it a muffin cap.


It kinda looks like a turban, also like a women slouchy baggy beanie, but it is none of those either


Maybe I could call it a Muffin bonnet.

But really this hat goes in the as yet uncategorised pile.


Worn with some equally bright colours to make it not look too ridiculous

Saturday, 27 April 2019

Brown Muffin Cap


This renaissance beret, muffin cap or whatever you wish to call this style of simple cloth cap.


Like a modern beret it as a brim the circumference of your head to which is fixed an abundance of fabric so overhang and droops over the brim, in the muffin cap this is much more extreme than a modern beret often involving the fabric being pleated onto the brim.









Monday, 9 July 2018

A Hat for Scholar

This is sort of brimless cloth hat is a bit odd, it could have been worn in any period from the 13th to 19th century, although I've grouped it in the so-called renaissance, 16th C period


The hat is made like a muffin cap with an abundance of material fixed to a smaller headband, this one is made so the headband becomes hidden when worn.



The fabric green in colour is slightly eccentric style make this something that could be worn by a medieval scholar or a poet


Found for £2 in the bargain bin at a lrp fair


Saturday, 9 June 2018

A Hat for a Medieval Steward


While this style of hat is mostly considered peasant wear, even a single small feather can enhance it, this cap as also been enhanced by fur trim around the headband.


Not quite posh enough for royalty, this is the short hat that could be worn by castellan, steward or wealthy merchant character.

Wednesday, 8 March 2017

Renaissance Hat


This hat is sometimes called a Muffin hat or cap, its of the same family as a modern chef hats, a popular lower class Renaissance period hat (15th to 17th Century Europe)


Made from basic usually lightweight fabric with no natural stiffness, with a access fabric sewn to 20 to 50cm wide headband that fits tightly around the head.

A very simple and easy to produce hat, the headband can sometimes be decorated.

This hat has no stiffened brim unlike renaissance flat caps or cow pat hats


I grabbed this off my friend Dave just as he was about to trade it, the hat did not make it to the bring and buy. 



Tuesday, 9 June 2015

The Artist

This hat made of lightweight fabric is made of the same design as chef 'tall boy' hat but the pattern on the fabric said to me, artist.

This hat has a head sized band to which the larger bonnet piece of fabric is pleated and attached. 


This hat was a very welcome and unexpected gift 


Cloth hats = Hats made from cloth/fabric.