More diaries of our favorite 18th-century Prussian diary-keeper have been unearthed and have been synopsized!
January 18th: Blessed be thou to me! Under your light, my Prince Heinrich was born!
January 18th: Blessed be thou to me! Under your light, my Prince Heinrich was born!
Re: Length of hair under wig
Date: 2022-09-25 08:14 pm (UTC)Most common, it seems, at least for wealthier men, was to visit a barber either once or twice a week to be shaved. Given the preference for the clean-shaven face from the late seventeenth century, this likely meant having the stubble scythed off, but might also include the head, to accommodate a fashionable wig.
The wig added an extra layer of complexity, in requiring the removal of the wearer’s own hair, and substituting it for the ‘dead’ hair of someone else.
An individual removed their own ‘natural’ hair and replaced it with something fashioned from the frowzy hair of the poor...Head hair was removed but the head re-covered by the wig.
My character is a 30-year-old British Army captain in 1745, and he canonically wears a wig
Ah, canon! Well, that is definitely a constraint. Unfortunately, the author above (who seems to be a legit scholar) presents short hair under the wig as at least a British norm (not sure if the Brits were also leaving it long in back or on the sides, as the continentals sometimes did).
Re: Length of hair under wig
Date: 2022-09-29 06:28 pm (UTC)Re: Length of hair under wig
Date: 2022-09-29 08:45 pm (UTC)The blogger has recently published a book on the history of beards in England, so the focus is to be expected! :)