The League look and feel
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==Garments and Accessories== | ==Garments and Accessories== | ||
{{CaptionedImage|file=HazelKing.jpg|width=300|align=left}} League dresses, doublets and gowns are designed to be worn over shirts, blouses or chemises. These base layers can be any colour | {{CaptionedImage|file=HazelKing.jpg|width=300|align=left}} | ||
'''Shirt, Blouse or Chemise:''' League dresses, doublets and gowns are designed to be worn over shirts, blouses or [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemise chemises]. These base layers can be any colour, a simple white or coloured to contrast or compliment the outer garments worn on top. They tend to be loose and have baggy, voluminous sleeves gathered into a cuff or puffed down the arm at intervals. They can have lacing at the neck, or be low cut with a gathered neckline. | |||
The garment may have a higher neckline to keep out the cold, but it is less appropriate to have a pointed collar, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lapel lapels] or buttons all the way down in the way a modern formal shirt would. Likewise it is less appropriate for the sleeves should not trail or flare at the wrist in a ‘trumpet’ style (in the Dawnish style), or be straight like the sleeves of a T-shirt or tight to the arm. Leagueish shirts are not worn with cravats and do not have cascading lace at the throat in a ‘highwayman’ or Regency style. | |||
'''Doublet:''' A [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doublet_(clothing) doublet] is a short upper body garment, usually fastened at the front with lacing or buttons and worn over a shirt or blouse. A doublet can be sleeveless, with separate sleeves tied or laced on at the elbow, or the sleeves can be attached. In either case a doublet is likely to be richly decorated, perhaps with slashing. Most doublets come down to the waist or hips. Some have short skirting or tabs at the bottom. | |||
Revision as of 09:26, 13 February 2025
Overview
Lavish, opulent, mercantile, urbane, swaggering, flamboyant, ostentatious, panache, flourish, extravagant
The League look takes inspiration from European renaissance fashion. Garments and accessories from the Italian Renaissance, the German Renaissance, and early Tudor England can form a solid foundation provided they achieve the right silhouette. The League is a nation of city-states, where citizens love to compete for acclaim, social status and power. League fashions reflect this bustling urban world where ‘everything is on show’ and where citizens aim to experience ‘the best of everything’. Fashion is a prized way to express the role in the great game one has chosen to play.
Most outfits employ rich, bold colours, and where the owner can afford it, the material is slashed to allow the garment beneath to show through. The lower layer may be white or in a striking colour, chosen for a stark contrast with the outer garment. Brocade or jacquard fabrics are popular with those who can afford them, the better to show off the owner's wealth.
Every aspect of a Leaguer’s outfit is an opportunity to embellish and show off. Prominent, flashy jewellery is commonplace across the League. Rings are a key element of hearth magic, but jewelled or ornate necklaces, bracelets, brooches and hair accessories are widely worn - often with a ‘more is more’ mindset. Several strings of pearls worn together, or chokers worn at the same time as lower-slung necklaces, are a frequent sight.
Silhouette
- Achieving the right silhouette is the key to a great League costume
The League silhouette is also about creating a dynamic look with a contrast in shape: outfits with close fitting hose could be larger on the upper body, with puffy sleeves or a dramatic duelling cape; dresses with a smaller bodice and a higher waist have a wide, flowing skirt; waffenrocks or wams with a boxy upper half will be accompanied by extravagantly slashed sleeves and trousers. Below are some illustrated examples by Lampblack Art of archetypal League silhouettes. These are by no means definitive, but serve as an example of silhouettes you can aim for with League costume.
Garments and Accessories
Shirt, Blouse or Chemise: League dresses, doublets and gowns are designed to be worn over shirts, blouses or chemises. These base layers can be any colour, a simple white or coloured to contrast or compliment the outer garments worn on top. They tend to be loose and have baggy, voluminous sleeves gathered into a cuff or puffed down the arm at intervals. They can have lacing at the neck, or be low cut with a gathered neckline.
The garment may have a higher neckline to keep out the cold, but it is less appropriate to have a pointed collar, lapels or buttons all the way down in the way a modern formal shirt would. Likewise it is less appropriate for the sleeves should not trail or flare at the wrist in a ‘trumpet’ style (in the Dawnish style), or be straight like the sleeves of a T-shirt or tight to the arm. Leagueish shirts are not worn with cravats and do not have cascading lace at the throat in a ‘highwayman’ or Regency style.
Doublet: A doublet is a short upper body garment, usually fastened at the front with lacing or buttons and worn over a shirt or blouse. A doublet can be sleeveless, with separate sleeves tied or laced on at the elbow, or the sleeves can be attached. In either case a doublet is likely to be richly decorated, perhaps with slashing. Most doublets come down to the waist or hips. Some have short skirting or tabs at the bottom.