WOOL BREECHCLOTH
WITH WORSTED LACE
This is a new breechcloth I made last week from a nice wine colored wool with 4 rows of graduated white worsted lace wool striping (same lace as used by the 18th century military). 18th century traditional sewing techniques left the edging "raw" on most wool articles. This breechcloth measures 9 1/2 inches across and 53 inches in length. The front and rear panels are 16 inches in length until the tapper which cuts in to a width of 6 1/2 inches by 19 inches long in the middle. In the photos this is the white area. Basically I took the center of the breechcloth and tapered it so there was not such a large width of fabric passing between the legs. The lining material is a line fabric which is lining the inside area for a more "comforatable" wearing experience....wool can itch...and that may not be a pretty picture!!!
If you are reenacting a woodland Native or a Longhunter this beautiful breechcloth would make a nice addition to you impression. It also makes a beautiful decorative piece for any frontier motif in your home or office.Please email me any questions you may have, or for custom work. Also please view other woodland items on ebay’s MY STORE "Art of America Past Gallery". You can also view a wide selection of my eastern frontier artwork as seen on the covers of the National Muzzle Loading Rifle Association’s magazine MUZZLE BLASTS.
A short history of the breechcloth:
The breechcloth was the most basic of garments used by males from the eastern woodlands to the Great Lakes Region during the 18th century. Originally this garment was an animal skin fitted between the legs and held in place at the waist by a leather thong. This formed a front and rear flap. In the 18th century the form and function did not change, just the materials used. Wool replaced the animal skins and decoration began with wool braids or strips, silk ribbons, beads, and silver brooches. Among some of the Algonquin speaking tribes the leather waist thong was as important as the breechcloth itself. An old custom believed that if the waist thong was removed "The warrior would loose his manhood". That makes sense!!!!Very early 18th century painting suggest the breechcloth was quite small. This was due to the general fact that the fabric was difficult and expensive to obtain and fabric was basically about 9 inches in single width. In 1615 Samuel de Champlain write of his description of an Ottawa woman that she wore a leather breechcloth reaching to the middle of her thighs. The breechcloth was often decorated in the same manner and with the embellishments as that of women’s wrap-around skirts.