What I wrote in my documentation:
Based on the Jorvik excavation, this cap is made out of brown silk with buttercream silk thread stitches. The linen twill tape was used based on speculation within the archeology reports due to stitches showing that some sort of tie was at the bottom of the cap.
The original cap is made from a single rectangle and then shaped at the crown to give it a curve. I pieced my cap due to the limited amount of fabric I had that looked correct for the 10th Century. Brown color, achieved with madder among many other popular dyes in the 10th century, is plausible as well as the soft yellow from lichen. Silk was believed to be imported from the Byzantines at this time.
The cap I have presented to the A&S is entirely hand sewn and uses the closest possible materials to the original artifact.
You can read more about Norse dyes here and see the extant cap here. Since this particular competition was "Winner take all", I didn't want to have something that was completely awesome - since I might not win- but I did want something that was accurate, fun, small, and something that I wouldn't mind having in the garb closet but wouldn't mind loosing either. However, I - and everyone else- really didn't have a chance since someone made an accurate bone comb.
The only way to have competed with that would have been to enter a fully embroidered, hand woven apron with complete documentation on the embroidery style. Pretty much everyone else was wire weaving - which was cool but yeah, we never really had a chance. ;-)
Admittedly, the cap was out of scrap silk. The silk originally was used for lining of bell sleeves in another gown I made last year. However, I had enough to make a decent cap. I still have some and might do another cap - but with purple silk thread because that would be awesome. :-)
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