It's rare that I get to have the joy of making garments entirely by hand, but this opportunity came up and I jumped at it.
The customer wanted a 16th century Irishman's Leine and Ionar. I have made quite a few of these over the years, and he decided that he was going to leave the details to me, beyond generally saying "Red Ionar" and "Green embroidery on the Leine". Otherwise, I had complete creative freedom with this outfit.
They are both cut as though the fabric was from a 23" loom, and were assembled using a combination of back stitches, running stitches, french seams, flat-felled seams, and seams that were tacked open, depending on the seam itself.
The Ionar is of a deep red wool twill, which I felted, and is lined in a green linen. The embroidery and construction seams are of cotton thread, as silk was prohibitively expensive for the amount of embroidery (the embroidery used up 500+ meters of thread). For the flowers in the front, I also used a metallic thread, forgoing the cost of true silver embroidery thread. The Leine is of a saffron-colored linen and is similarly constructed and embroidered with cotton thread.
This project is truly my favorite work to date, both in having creative freedom, and in working out some patterning issues that have plagued me regarding Leine construction for years.
Hope you enjoy it.
Jess


Front view of the completed outfit. NOTE: My male dress dummy is slightly larger than the customer, so it should fit him much better.