Hoi!
Tumblr is de plek waar tientallen miljoenen creatieve mensen van over de hele wereld de dingen delen en volgen die ze te gek vinden.
Registreer je om nog meer gave dingen te vinden die je kunt volgenSome basic medieval fashion terms
- Dalmatic: t shaped tunic
- Cotehardie: fitted, full skirted surcoat, long or short for both men and women
- Surcoat: overdress often without sides
- Cyclas: sleeveless, overgown, decorated
- Plasteron: the strip that goes down the center of the cyclas
- Kirtle: underdress
- Doublet: short coat
- Mantle: cloak
- Chaperon: hat
- Liripipe: long tail on the cap
- Houpeland: large dress with large sleeves
- Veil Caul: fitted small cap like a babies bonnet
- Hennin: large extravagant hat with either one or two horns
- Horned Hennin: two horns
- Pattens: wooden clogs to get your shoes out of the mud
- Hose: worn by men and women
- Pair of legs: long hose that had a garter at the top
- Cod piece: worn to cover important bits
- Dagging: cut fabric decoration
Reading List: 21 Outstanding Stories from Women's Magazines and Websites

Are women’s magazines avoiding “serious journalism”? Guess it all depends on who’s deciding what’s serious.
The New Republic asks that question in a new article, and our biggest problem with this debate (and, to be honest, the term “longform journalism”) is that it can often run everything through a male-skewed filter of what counts as “serious journalism.” We’ve seen serious storytelling in both.
The other problem is that we’re still relying on National Magazine Awards and print-only publishers to reflect the zeitgeist. I’ve mentioned that 65% of all #longreads started out in print, but we also should spotlight the work of online publishers who are pursuing in-depth storytelling.
So, here’s a start: 21 stories from women’s magazines and sites that we’ve featured on Longreads. On Twitter, Rebecca Traister is curating some of her favorite serious work. And we’d love for you to add your favorite women’s magazine stories in the comments.
Allure
• The F Word, Jennifer Weiner
Marie Claire
• The Big Business of Breast Cancer, Lea Goldman
Tiger Beatdown
• The Percentages: A Biography of Class, Sady Doyle
O, The Oprah Magazine
• ‘I Will Never Know Why’, Susan Klebold
• ‘We Thought the Sun Would Always Shine on Our Lives’, Paige Williams
• Promises of an Unwed Father, Ta-Nehisi Coates
• Is Ecstasy a Viable Treatment for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder?, Jessica Winter
Rookie
• Higher Learning, Staff
XO Jane
• How A Gun-loving West Texas Girl Learned to Fear Assault Weapons, Haley B. Elkins
• It Happened To Me: My Parents Adopted a Murderer, Amity Bitzel
More
• How I Lost $500,000 for Love, Aryn Kyle
Vogue
• Notes on a Scandal: Jenny Sanford Vogue Interview, Rebecca Johnson
• Sheryl Sandberg: What She Saw at the Revolution, Kevin Conley
• Susan Rice: She’s Got Game, Jonathan Van Meter
Elle
• I’m For Sale, Genevieve Smith
The Hairpin
• My Brother, My Mother, and a Call Girl, Mara Cohen Marks
• He’s So Unusual, Jane Marie
• A Goodbye to Ambien in Dubai, Amy Schumer
• The Evolution of Ape-Face Johnson, Carolita Johnson
Glamour
• Relationship Violence: The Secret That Kills 4 Women a Day, Liz Brody
Jezebel
• What Can a Civilian Possibly Say to a Wounded Soldier?, Chloe Angyal
***
Share your picks in the comments
The list of things I love includes but is not limited to...
- Lana Parrilla
- Lana Parrilla’s legs
- Lana Parrilla’s ass
- Lana Parrilla’s lip scar
- Lana Parrilla’s voice
- Lana Parrilla’s eyes
- Lana Parrilla’s arms
- Lana Parrilla’s legs (yes, again)
- Lana Parrilla’s boobs
- Lana Parrilla’s tattoo
- Kittens
- and Lana Parrilla.