This hat I made to be worn sort of crashlanding on top of my Wulsthaube and to sport a lot of feathers. It was my first adventure into german 16th century hats other than the Wulsthaube.
This is how I made it:
First
I made a mockup in a stiff cotton fabric similar to those Indian
beadspreads. The first thing to get right was the top part: How big a
square would I need. Then it was the hole for the head. After a few
trial and errors I came up with a pattern that was likely to give me the
look I wanted. This is what I came up with:
Instructions:
- First cut two squares 33by 33 cm (add seam allowance) in two different colors. Mine are black and burgundy.
- The
black square will be the outer layer and in this I cut a hole to fit my
head (17 cm diameter). Then I proceeded to make the slashing. This is
what the black piece looked like after I hemmed the slashes:
- Then put your two squares together, right sides facing and sew them together all the way round. Turn and press.
- Fold each corner towards the middle so that they all meet and stitch them down.
- The top’s done, now onto the brim.
- With
a little experimentation I made squares 16 by 8 cm. One black and one
burgundy for each of the “flaps” for the brim. I needed 11 to go around
the hole.
- Sew
two squares together, one of each color, along the long sides. Turn and
press. When all are done pin them to the edge of the hole and secure
them by sewing
Cut
a long strip to cover the edge of the hole. Mine was ca 5 cm by 63 cm.
line the edge of the hole with this. Add ties if needed and you’re done!
And of course add a lot of feathers!