I've been reading some threads on dyed jean wool and wanted to find out if natural color jean wool or vegetable dyed jean wool was more popular in the southern ranks. I'm thinking about going through Ben Tart for some material for an enlisted frock. Any ideas?
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Jean Wool
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Re: Jean Wool
"Popular" and "jeancloth" might not be best used in the same sentence.[B]Charles Heath[/B]
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Re: Jean Wool
Veg. dyed is the best way to go. (and the fade on most is killer and at times suprising!) Talk to Ben about how different jeans will fade out. He is very informative. Tarts stuff is first rate for sure. It is a single thread weave, so the weave is much tighter and uniform.
Take a look at Echoes of Glory(confederate) as that book had lots of frocks, and you can base your choice of fabric off the make and theatre you are portraying. Enjoy making the frock bro.
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Re: Jean Wool
First you may want to research the use of other fabrics. Jean was not the only fabric used for making CS uniforms and seems not to have been the most common in Southern ranks. Here would be a good place to start.
Jim Mayo
Portsmouth Rifles, Company G, 9th Va. Inf.
CW Show and Tell Site
http://www.angelfire.com/ma4/j_mayo/index.html
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Re: Jean Wool
http://kabar44.com/researchFabrics.htm#ca Try this link.
Just found some messed up links that I didn't know were on the web page.
Oh, by the way, I will be updating with more info. on Satinette at some point hopefully before the new year.
Best,Fenny I Hanes
Richmond Depot, Inc.
PO BOX 4849
Midlothian, VA 23112
www.richmonddepot.com
(804)305-2968
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Re: Jean Wool
I agree with Mr. Hanes. I have access to several newspaper articles and you begin to see Cassimere listed during the early months of the war. I've also noticed that jean is more often than not labeled "Kentucky jean". I might be mistaken, but I believe that stuff is undyed.
The one thing I've seen that I haven't heard an explanation of is an item listed as "Hickory Shirt". Maybe Mr. Hanes or some of the other fabric experts can answer me that one.John Spain
4th Tennessee / 25th Indiana
sigpic
"If you surrender, you will be treated as prisoners of war, but if I have to storm your works, you may expect no quarter." Forrest
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Re: Jean Wool
Originally posted by WestTN_reb View PostThe one thing I've seen that I haven't heard an explanation of is an item listed as "Hickory Shirt". Maybe Mr. Hanes or some of the other fabric experts can answer me that one.
Hank Trent
hanktrent@voyager.netHank Trent
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Re: Jean Wool
Originally posted by WestTN_reb View PostI agree with Mr. Hanes. I have access to several newspaper articles and you begin to see Cassimere listed during the early months of the war. I've also noticed that jean is more often than not labeled "Kentucky jean". I might be mistaken, but I believe that stuff is undyed.
In the VA ledger, there were 436 sales of yardages of jeans: 107 bleached, 95 brown (unbleached) [the bleached and unbleached were probably cotton jeans], 99 colored (unspecifed fabric content but probably woolen). 23 Kentucky (no color specified), 7 Virginia jeans (no color specified), 16 Rhode Island jeans (no color specified), 3 striped jeans, 6 woolen jeans, 4 corset jeans (this was a cotton jean), 1 twilled jeans (probably cotton), 3 plantation jeans, 7 white jeans, and 17 pairs of jeans drawers ( I expect that these were made from cotton jeans).
In the IN ledger the store owner purchased for resale mixed green jeans, 10 yardages of KY jeans (yardages ran from 33 to 48 yards in each piece), pieces of gold and blue KY jeans, jeans in buff, brown mixed, gray mixed, green mixed, striped jeans, Rhode Island jeans, Eagle jeans, and colored jeans. He also purchased Kentucky jeans pants.
In the VA ledger there were only 35 sales for cassimere yardages listed in the same time period, with 9 cassimere coats and 5 pairs of cassimere pants sold. In the IN ledger, the store purchased, for resale, 17 pieces of cassimere. He also purchased cassimere gloves, and a number of pairs of fancy cassimere pants.Virginia Mescher
vmescher@vt.edu
http://www.raggedsoldier.com
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Re: Jean Wool
In Brokenburn: The Journal of Kate Stone, 1861-1868, she talks about purchasing jean cloth, several hundred yards, to make the male slaves' clothes. She then mentions several years later of not being about to find it anymore. I have not gotten far enough into the book to see if she mentions using it for men going to war.Annette Bethke
Austin TX
Civil War Texas Civilian Living History
[URL="http://www.txcwcivilian.org"]www.txcwcivilian.org[/URL]
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Re: Jean Wool
Virginia,
Thanks for the additional information. Could you tell us a little more about the sources that you have quoted from ? Is this from a web site or book ? Also, would you happen to know the geographic region ?
Store inventory accounts are always interesting. I found some accounts from Store keeper Thomas Partridge in the VHS which dealt with Hanover County Va. but dated back to the 1750's or so. But was interesting for me to actually see what my own ancestors were purchasing. Rum seemed to be the primary purchase.......Fenny I Hanes
Richmond Depot, Inc.
PO BOX 4849
Midlothian, VA 23112
www.richmonddepot.com
(804)305-2968
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Re: Jean Wool
Originally posted by Richmond Depot View PostVirginia,
Thanks for the additional information. Could you tell us a little more about the sources that you have quoted from ? Is this from a web site or book ? Also, would you happen to know the geographic region ?
Store inventory accounts are always interesting. I found some accounts from Store keeper Thomas Partridge in the VHS which dealt with Hanover County Va. but dated back to the 1750's or so. But was interesting for me to actually see what my own ancestors were purchasing. Rum seemed to be the primary purchase.......
_Historic Accounts_ is available on our website in the Books, modern section. If you have any questions, you may contact me privately.
The VA ledger comes from Halifax Co. VA, which is in south central Virginia, just on the North Carolina line. The store was in the northern part of the county. The database contains almost 20,000 lines of data and most lines contains more than one item.
The IN ledger is a wholesale ledger from Independence, IN but little is know about the actual store.
I'm in the process of transcribing additional ledgers from ME, NY and have transcribed ledgers or household account books from NH, NC, VA, and several other states. In time, I hope to add more transcriptions to the CD-ROM.
I agree that ledgers are indeed fascinating and do provide additional insight to life in the 19th century but are only one research tool that can be used. Ledgers by themselves show an incomplete picture and do have their drawbacks.Virginia Mescher
vmescher@vt.edu
http://www.raggedsoldier.com
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Re: Jean Wool
Originally posted by WestTN_reb View PostThe one thing I've seen that I haven't heard an explanation of is an item listed as "Hickory Shirt". Maybe Mr. Hanes or some of the other fabric experts can answer me that one.
The 1900 edition of Cole's Encyclopedia of Dry Goods defines hickory shirting as "a variety of heavily starched and calendered osnaburg, the pattern of which is confined to small checks and narrow stripes of but two colors, generally blue and white or brown and white. So called from the alleged hickory-like toughness or superior wearing qualities of the shirting. Prior to 1885 the "hickory" shirt was universally worn by out-door laborers and particularly by farmers and farm-hands, but at present its popularity is limited to certain sections of the West and Southwest.”
Both the sixth and seventh editions of Fairchild's Dictionary of Textiles describe hickory cloth as a "strong, durable, striped, twilled cotton shirting and trousering. Colored and white yarns in the warp and white yarns in the filling produce the typically blue-and-white or brown-and-white warp stripes. Uses: work clothes. Similar to cottonade."
I found numerous primary sources that referred to hickory shirts. (Type it into the search engine on The Making of America sites and you'll get dozens of hits.) The only exception to the blue-and-white or brown-and-white stripe or check pattern is one published in 1877 that refers to a green-and-white check shirt. A number of secondary sources documenting men’s clothing worn in the West and Southwest during the mid- and late-nineteenth century also refer to blue or brown checked or striped shirts. To date I’ve only found one extant garment that is identified as a “hickory shirt”. It is in a museum in Bisbee, AZ. The fabric is consistent with the definition listed in Cole's, and is similar to the blue-and-white striped fabric used on the traditional railroader’s cap. Although well-worn, it still retains some of the characteristics of a highly starched and calendered fabric.Carolann Schmitt
[email]cschmitt@genteelarts.com[/email]
20th Annual Ladies & Gentlemen of the 1860s Conference, March 6-9, 2014
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Re: Jean Wool
I reference to the Hickory Cloth shirts. They are definitely durable and there are plenty of references to cite the fact they were issued to MO troops in the First brigade (CS). We aquired our material from the "Big Smith" overall factory, locally, some years ago and they have seen hard campaigning since 1992. They are still in great shape and pretty stiff. I can understand why they were a well issued item. Just a personal observation.Chris Houk
Van Buren Boys Mess
VIII
These were men-
Whom power could not corrupt
Whom Death could not terrify
Whom defeat could not dishonor
-Confederate Cemetery Marker at Fayetteville, AR
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Re: Jean Wool
While at the Wisconsin Veteran's Museum this past weekend, I observed a Federal bullseye canteen covered with a black wool/cotton blend fabric. The cloth itself was very finely finished wool on both sides with a natural cotton warp filling. I've never seen anything like this before and haven't run across a description of cloth like this in any period accounts or advertisements. Can anyone elaborate?
Brian White
Wambaugh, White, & Co.
Brian White
[URL="http://wwandcompany.com"]Wambaugh, White, & Co.[/URL]
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