Susan and Ken Reed’s Life, Universe and Everything

Relative Frequency of Headdress by Type

These headdress-type definitions were used for quantitative analysis for my Master’s these and were written so that a person who was analyzing the headdresses in visual sources could place them either in one type or another. These classifications are completely artificial and meant to be mutually exclusive, to better conduct a statistical study. The classifications may have little to do with how people of the period would have named and defined the headdresses around them.

Example of a coif

Coif

A close-fitting cap that conforms to the shape of the head and covers most of the head excluding the face, but usually covering the ears.

Variations

  • Chin fasteners: ties, buttons, tabs
  • Covers to nape of neck
  • Cut high in the back and low over the forehead
Example of a hood

Hood

A loose-fitting covering of the head and shoulders with a face- and sometimes neck-opening. The hood has a face opening, a shoulder cape (and opening) and sometimes a tail (also called a liripipe or tippet).

Variations

  • Open or closed throat
  • Tippets may be nonexistent, short (chin-length or less) or long (chin-length or longer)
  • Shoulder cape may be of varying lengths (just covering the shoulder to covering most of chest)
  • Shoulder cape edge may be plain or have a decorative cut or applied edge
Example of a chaperone

Chaperone

A variation of the hood. In its earliest variation, the hood is worn with the face opening around the top of the head, the tippet often wound around the head, and the shoulder cape, also called a cockscomb, hanging from the top of the head. In later forms, the head opening is formalized into a brimmed or padded or twisted roll opening, and the tippet allowed to hang down. The roll or brim may be of a different color or material than the shoulder cape or tippet.

Variations

  • Length of Tippets
  • Length of Shoulder Cape
  • Shoulder Capes with plain or decorated edges
  • Tippet is worn down, wrapped around the chin, or wrapped around the head opening
Example of a sack hat

Sack Hats

A sack hat is similar to the chaperone, but the tippet was eliminated and the shoulder cape was converted into a sack-shaped crown.

Variations

  • Flat or rolled brims
  • Size of crown (from just covering the top of the head to voluminous sacks)
  • Configuration of crown (rounded to flattened at the top
  • Multiple brims (two or more flat brims or rolls, or combinations of flat and rolled brims)
Example of a chaplet

Rondelle/Padded Roll/Chaplet

A stuffed ring or roll of cloth or chaplet of flowers or of metal imitating flowers or other plants. These sometimes have a small headband around the head opening.

Rondelle

  • cloth roll

Chaplet

  • floral or plant, or metallic floral or plant wreath, including laurel wreaths.
Example of a caul

Caul

A net or cloth cap consisting of fabric gathered into a band to confine the hair and fit the head opening closely. One extant hat of this type has a rectangle of fabric gathered tightly into radiating pleats at either end and sewn to a band. This matches similar caps seen in visual sources of the time. Cauls are often worn under other types of headdress. Cauls consist of: net gathered into band (which may or may not be seen), cloth gathered along circumference of band (similar to a shower cap), or cloth gathered at front and back in radiating pleats.

Example of an acorn hat

Acorn Hat

A light hat that either fits the head closely, but does not cover the amount of head that the coif covers (the acorn hat rarely covers the ears). If the coif covers 75% to 100% of the hair-growing area the acorn hat covers 40% to 60% of the area. The hat could be stiffened or soft. The crown is either pleated or smooth. At no point is the crown of the acorn hat wider in profile than at the head opening (see drawing of silhouettes of acorn hats). For the purposed of this project, a hat of acorn design is so designated if the height/face ratio is 1.5 or less. The acorn hat is short and close to the head; taller versions in both crown types are here designated as sugarloaf hats. Brims on an acorn hat are turned up or down, but do not project approximately perpendicular to the head, even to eventually curve upward or downward. Brims on this type of hat are never taller than the crown.

Variations

  • A crown consisting of four to six curved wedge-shaped pieces giving a smooth crown
  • A crown consisting of a truncated cone that is pleated together at the top
  • A blocked felt smooth crown shape.
  • The head opening may be flat and continuous, or may be cut to better fit over the forehead and ears.
  • Brimless
  • Brims that go completely around the head opening
  • Partial brims
  • Split/slashed brims: these are found rarely
  • Overlapping split/slashed brims: these are found rarely
Example of a sugarloaf hat

Sugarloaf Hat

A light hat of similar design as the acorn hat but is much taller. The hat could be stiffened or soft. The crown is either pleated or smooth. At no point is the crown of the acorn hat wider in profile than at the head opening (see drawing of silhouettes of sugarloaf hats). For the purposed of this project, a hat of sugarloaf design is so designated if the height/face ration is higher than 1.5. Brims on a sugarloaf hat are turned up or down, but do not project approximately perpendicular to the head, even to eventually curve upward or downward.

Variations

  • A crown consisting of four to six curved wedge-shaped pieces giving a smooth crown
  • A crown consisting of a truncated cone that is pleated together at the top
  • A blocked felt smooth crown shape.
  • The head opening may be flat and continuous, or may be cut to better fit over the forehead and ears.
  • Brimless
  • Brims that go completely around the head opening
  • Partial brims
  • Split/slashed brims: these are found rarely
  • Chin fasteners: ties, buttons, tabs
  • Covers to nape of neck
  • Cut high in the back and low over the forehead
Example of a bonnet

Bonnet

A square-crowned hat, covering the head similarly to the acorn hat, but usually broader than tall. It if often constructed of four roughly truncated lozenge-shaped pieces of blocked out of felt. Some bonnets are knitted. Some bonnets have a pronounced ridge or two ridges running perpendicularly on the crown. Accept as bonnets all hats that have pronounced ridges whether the crowns are square or rounded. The crown generally widens from the head opening towards the top of the crown. The silhouette is usually pentagonal, but sometimes may be trapezoidal with a narrow base and broader top. Usually brimmed, but the brim may be continuous or partial, tall or short relative to the crown height. Brim heights may vary from very narrow to so high that the crown cannot be seen.

Variations

  • A crown consisting of four lozenge-shaped pieces giving a smooth crown
  • A blocked felt smooth crown shape.
  • A ridged crown whether square or rounded.
  • A square-crowned coif-like headdress that has the pentagonal/trapezoidal silhouette rather than a head-hugging shape.
  • Brimless
  • Brims that go completely around the head opening
  • Partial brims
  • Split/slashed brims
  • Overlapping split/slashed brims
Example of a flat hat

Flat Hat

A usually brimmed hat with a soft crown constructed as a circle pleated into a brim or knitted to shape. When the crown is made to lie flat on the brim, it looks like a pancake on a plate and has a roughly triangular silhouette. The brims project perpendicularly from the head opening, but a particular section of the brim may be folded up or down.

Variations

  • Crown lies flat on the brim
  • Crown is raised so that join between the brim and the crown can be seen
  • Brims that go completely around the head opening
  • Partial brims
  • Split/slashed brims
  • Overlapping split/slashed brims
Example of a stiffened hat
Example of a stiffened hat
Example of a stiffened hat
Example of a stiffened hat

Stiffened Hat

Hats of blocked felt, stiffened or supported fabrics, or straw or other plant fibers usually having brims; not classifiable as an acorn hat, sugarloaf hat, or bonnet; and often worn over other types of headdress. Stiffened crowns look as if they are perfectly smooth (or nearly so) without folds or pleats and able to support and retain their own shape. The exception is hats that can be classified as Acorn, Sugarloaf, or Bonnet according to their brim type. A brim is optional for stiffened hats, but usual. If the hat has a brim, it must project from the head opening at about a 90% angle (otherwise, it fits into one of the other categories) even if it curves up or downward towards the end of the brim.

For round or cone-crowned hats, if the brim projects perpendicularly to the head at the head opening, even if it eventually curves upward or downward, it is classified as a Stiffened hat, not as an Acorn or Sugarloaf hat. Also included are “Robin Hood”–type or Bycocket-type hats that have round or cone-shaped crowns and brims that turn up at the back but taper into a projecting brim in the front.

Variations

  • Cylindrical crowns
  • Cone or truncated cone crowns
  • Round or oval crowns
  • Inverted truncated cone crowns
  • Sectioned crown (crown is made of 4 or more conical wedge-shaped pieces)
  • Brims that go completely around the head opening
  • “Robin Hood” brims
  • Partial brims
  • Split/slashed brims
  • Overlapping split/slashed brims
  • Rolled stiffened brims (a flat brim curled up or down rather than a padded roll brim)

Stiffened hat 1

This refers to a crown which has the general shape of a round cookie tin or wheel of cheese. While the crown may have a shallow curve at the top, most of it will appear in silhouette to have two sides that rise from the head opening in two parallel lines.

Stiffened hat 2

This refers to a crown that is shaped like an inverted ice cream cone or an ice cream cone that has the point cut of it. In silhouette, most of the sides of the crown appear to converge (gets narrower) towards the top, but are straight and do not curve. There may be a shallow curve at the top of the crown.

Stiffened hat 3

This refers to a crown that is shaped approximately like a hemisphere or half an egg. The side of the crown will appear to converge (gets narrower) towards the top with curving lines.

Stiffened hat 4

This refers to a crown that is shaped like an inverted truncated cone. The sides of the crown will appear to diverge (gets wider) from the head opening towards the top. The sides may either be straight or curved.

Example of a draped headdress

Draped Headdress

A piece of fabric wrapped around the head in the style of Moorish headdress.

Example of a stocking cap

Stocking Cap

A soft cone or truncated cone shaped caps covering the top 1/2 to 2/3 of hair-growing area. The top of the crown is sometimes gathered at the top and there is often a tassel on top, as well. Include Phrygian-type hats (soft, cone-shaped caps with folded crown).

Example of an iconographic headdress
Example of a crown

Ceremonial/Iconographic

Headdress used for religious or secular ceremonies such as masses, coronations, addresses to parliaments, headdress used to denote social rank, or headdress used to denote stock figures such as fools, angels, allegorical characters, Magi, Moors, Jews, or Asian, African, or other exotic peoples (from the perspective of the person of these two centuries).

Ecclesiastical Headdress

Ceremonial headdress used in ritual; not headdress worn doing other daily activities. This includes miters and papal tiaras.

Crowns/Coronets/Fillets

Metallic rings, plain or decorated, hinged or solid, that show noble rank. Metallic chaplets are not included in this category.

Iconographic

Headdresses can include cone-shaped, truncated-cone-shaped, or cornucopia-shaped crowns with twisted roll brims. For these there may be more than one roll. Included are fools caps and headdress worn by obviously non-European men.

Military

Metal or mail helmets and coifs.