1 Red petticote
Writing up the information about 17th-century linen cloth got me thinking about Mary Ring’s probate inventory. Probate inventories of a deceased’s goods were taken for tax and inheritance purposes. In the early 17th century it was rare for a woman’s goods to be inventoried. It was rarer still for clothes to be itemized, man’s or woman’s; usually they were lumped together under ‘wearing apparel’, sometimes along with whatever cash was on hand. What we have here, in the inventory dated 1633, is a precious gem – a list of a woman’s possessions, including individual entries for items of clothes.
Here are a few notes from the inventory, which runs several pages. Particularly tonight I’m interested in the garments for which a color is listed. A few days ago I wrote about why we’re calling The Jacket a jacket but the interpreters describe the same item as a waistcoat. This inventory is one of the primary source documents I mentioned that leads us to say “waistcoat” in the 1627 English Village.
1 black Say kertle 12s
1 Red petticote 16s
1 violet coloured petticoate 5s
1 Wastcoat mingled coloured 3s
1 violet coloured wastcoate 1s 6p
1 pr blew stockins (no value listed)
1 mingled coloured petticoate 5s
Historical documents often raise more questions than they answer. This one makes me wonder if the violet colored petticoat and waistcoat were worn together as a suit. How about the mingled colored ones? Were they a suit? And why was the red petticoat assigned a higher value than the other petticoats?
One thing is certain, Mary Ring wasn’t wearing just black, white and grey like the stereotypical pilgrims of our school days.
Tags: , colors, inventory, Mary Ring, red petticoat, will



July 27th, 2007 at 2:39 pm
Red was expensive to dye. See \”A Perfect Red\”, a wonderful (and readable) book about red fabric dyeing by Amy Butler Greenfield.
July 31st, 2007 at 2:26 am
Hi
So do you have any idea what they ment by mingled?
Was it one color in the warp and another in the weft?
Woven from threads that were space dyed?
Thanks
Carol
August 1st, 2007 at 1:32 am
In the movie Pride and Prejudice that A $ E made, the main heroine wore a red petticoat in one scene that got very dirty with mud. The film pointed it out very clearly and a comment was made about how dirty she got it. This kind of makes sense to me after reading your comments about red being an expensive color to dye. It was also one of the first colors of intense color that paint was made. That’s why barns were painted red.