question about robe

This forum is for discussing all aspects of Druidry as a spiritual path.
Forum rules
This is a public forum, viewable by guests as well as members, and is cataloged by most search engines.

Re: question about robe

Postby Huathe » 04 Aug 2011, 05:39

Zylah wrote:I agree with the preponderance of opinion, it should be your own business what robe (if any) you wear to ritual. I have one that I love and feel exactly right in; it's reversible green with black knot pattern (which is how I've always worn it so far, except to Samhuinn, when the black goes outward) or black with green knot pattern. Here, I have a pic of it (although in this case I was at a costume party as Queen Maeve, not a ritual, and unfortunately you can't see much of the pattern; guess I need a better pic of it!):

Maeve & Caladin.jpg


As you can see, my husband's robe is black, but he usually doesn't wear his at ritual. He's more atheist than druid anyway, lol!



Zylah,

Beautiful robe. It fits you!

My " Cloak " is more of a light pull-over jacket made of an acrylic-cotton blend knit. The pattern is a natural toned grey, brown and white striped pattern. The hooded jacket goes just below my waist.

I have thought about getting a much better robe or cloak upon completing the Druid Course with NOD. As a " Rite of Passage " gift to myself. But that is some time away. I have plenty of time to think on it. Maybe a brown monk's cloak or robe. After all, I am a Christian Druid.
James E Parton
Bardic Course Graduate - Ovate Student
New Order of Druids

" We all cry tears, we all bleed red "_Ronnie Dunn

http://www.nativetreesociety.org/
http://www.druidcircle.org/nod/index.ph ... Itemid=145
http://www.burningman.com/
User avatar
Huathe
 
Posts: 678
Age: 48
Joined: 13 Sep 2010, 03:42
Location: Asheville NC USA
Gender: Male

My ceremonial robes

Postby Mick Hart » 04 Aug 2011, 11:43

It is very inspiring to see the difference of our ceremonial robes, and I would like to show you mine:

Image

Hawthorn Ent wrote: (…) Maybe a brown monk's cloak or robe. After all, I am a Christian Druid.

You may notice that my robes look a lot like Jedi-apparel, which can be described as a modified kimono. I'm not a huge fan of a Star Wars, but I find the design both beautiful and practical, and I feel it hints towards what kind of druid I am. I have found much spiritual resonance through the pages of Dao De Jing and the practice of Tai Ji Juan, and I cannot help but feel that Philosophical Taoism is a kind of "Asian Druidry". As such, I consider myself to be a Taoistic Druid, just like Hawthorn Ent considers himself to be a Christian Druid.

Our robes are a symbol of our spiritual development, and what a colorful symposium we all make!

Thank you.
Image
Mick Hart
User avatar
Mick Hart
 
Posts: 5
Age: 27
Joined: 21 Jul 2011, 10:10
Location: Roskilde, Denmark
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby fulbert-avebury » 04 Aug 2011, 14:57

This makes me wonder how people acquire their robes. Do people here tend to make them themselves or have them made?

Jeffrey
User avatar
fulbert-avebury
OBOD Bard
 
Posts: 276
Joined: 29 Apr 2009, 12:51
Location: New York City
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby Badger Bob » 04 Aug 2011, 15:05

I sat down with some white cotton material that I found in a skip and worked out the pattern, then consulted the sewing machine manual, gave up, came back to it and sewed it all together. After seeing the finished article I unpicked it, read the manual again and then sewed it all up again. This time it has all stayed together and I should be wearing it in public for this weekend's Pagan Pride parade in Nottingham.
User avatar
Badger Bob
OBOD Ovate
 
Posts: 1297
Joined: 27 Jun 2003, 20:17
Location: The Glorious Peak District of England
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby DJ Droood » 04 Aug 2011, 15:15

That is an impressive robe, Mick Hart!

I based my on a pattern I found on the internets for a Roman-style cloak...which, I suppose, makes it more of a cloak than a robe....underneath, I sometimes wear a Roman-style tunic...I think I got the design from the same site.

http://www.larp.com/legioxx/cloak.html
User avatar
DJ Droood
 
Posts: 5366
Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 18:52
Location: North Eastern North America
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby Huathe » 04 Aug 2011, 16:18

Mick,

That is an awesome robe! And I think the robes of the Jedi would work well with the Druids. The fictional order and the druids do have some commonalities. The " Force " is life energy that bonds all life together. The Jedi believe and use it on a universal scale. Druids believe in and use " the force " as natural magic or the life energy of Mother Earth ( Gaia or Dana ). So " May the force be with all of us "!

By the way, people have created a new religion based on the Jedi of the Star Wars Universe. Jediism.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jediism
http://jediorganization.addr.com/jedi/
http://members.tripod.com/jeff_west777/
James E Parton
Bardic Course Graduate - Ovate Student
New Order of Druids

" We all cry tears, we all bleed red "_Ronnie Dunn

http://www.nativetreesociety.org/
http://www.druidcircle.org/nod/index.ph ... Itemid=145
http://www.burningman.com/
User avatar
Huathe
 
Posts: 678
Age: 48
Joined: 13 Sep 2010, 03:42
Location: Asheville NC USA
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby Merlyn » 04 Aug 2011, 16:27

how people acquire their robes

At the time a friend was making them. She asked for some measurements and a small fee and sent it to me.
I'll post a picture when I get to the computer that has such.

Merlyn
Image :emerit:
Dyro, Dduw, dy nawdd;
ac yn nawdd, nerth;
ac yn nerth, ddeall;
ac yn neall, gwybod;
ac o wybod, gwybod yn gyfiawn;
ac o wybod yn gyfiawn ei garu;
ac o garu, caru Duw.
Duw a phob daioni.
User avatar
Merlyn
OBOD Druid
 
Posts: 9194
Age: 54
Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 23:56
Location: By candle light, penning the dragon's dream.
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby Heddwen » 04 Aug 2011, 17:46

I happened upon a crean linen dress in my local crystal/pagany shop. It was perfect and on special offer. I wrap a piece of Welsh woollen material around me and secure with a celtic brooch. My cloak is black velvet, but I only wear it to some occasions because it is so heavy.
User avatar
Heddwen
OBOD Druid
 
Posts: 1102
Joined: 26 Sep 2007, 16:06
Location: West Wales
Gender: Female

Re: My ceremonial robes

Postby Zylah » 04 Aug 2011, 19:34

Ent - yes, a monk's cloak would make a lot of sense, particularly if it feels right to you. :)

Thanks for sharing, Mick - really great pic overall, as well as a terrific robe. :tiphat:

Jeffrey - I would LOVE to be able to create a robe like this, but alas, I have no skill with a needle. :shrug: Knitting and crochet needles I do all right with, but not the regular sewing kind. :???: I was referred to a woman who DOES have such skill, who made several of these robes; I saw this one and it was just ... right.

Er, I did find a better pic of the robe, which was taken at the East Coast OBOD retreat last autumn equinox. You must all promise to believe that we did actually have very solemn ceremonies and profound experience, despite how it looks in this pic, which is of a moment of hilarity. Hilarity and mead. :oops:

horns o' mead.jpg
(59.56 KiB) Downloaded 595 times
Where the forest murmurs there is music: ancient, everlasting.
- Fiona MacLeod
ImageImage ImageImage Image Image
"I cannot speak well enough to be unintelligible." -- Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey
User avatar
Zylah
OBOD Ovate
 
Posts: 700
Age: 39
Joined: 06 Sep 2008, 16:39
Location: San Francisco Bay Area
Gender: Female

Re: question about robe

Postby Muddy Fox » 05 Aug 2011, 11:21

I had an inkling to knit a white wollen cloak and then stich white feathers, which I would collect from the ground onto it, so it would have been a white feather cape. Anyway i got the wool and had some swan feathers given to me, so I cast the wool onto the needles and started to knit but then I got disillusioned with the knitting. It took me back to when I was 7 years old and I spent months knitting a Panda and nobody could tell what it was and thought it was a black and white cat. I was so upset I think it has affected all knitting desires since. So I could post a picture of the white ball of wool.
Om Mani Padme Hum
Muddy Fox
 
Posts: 325
Joined: 30 Apr 2011, 22:34
Location: Away with the Fairies
Gender: Female

Re: question about robe

Postby DaRC » 05 Aug 2011, 12:54

DJ Droood wrote:I based my on a pattern I found on the internet for a Roman-style cloak...


That looks like the original hoodie, or hooded woollen cloak, that the Romans took to wearing after arriving here in Britain :grin: Something they adopted from the locals.
Most dear is fire to the sons of men,
most sweet the sight of the sun;
good is health if one can but keep it,
and to live a life without shame. (Havamal 68)
http://gewessiman.blogspot.co.uk
Image
User avatar
DaRC
OBOD Ovate
 
Posts: 2832
Age: 46
Joined: 06 Feb 2003, 17:13
Location: Sussex
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby DJ Droood » 05 Aug 2011, 13:37

DaRC wrote:
DJ Droood wrote:I based my on a pattern I found on the internet for a Roman-style cloak...


That looks like the original hoodie, or hooded woollen cloak, that the Romans took to wearing after arriving here in Britain :grin: Something they adopted from the locals.


well there you go...I am an authentic reconstructionist after all!
User avatar
DJ Droood
 
Posts: 5366
Joined: 02 Feb 2003, 18:52
Location: North Eastern North America
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby fulbert-avebury » 05 Aug 2011, 19:35

Mick Hart-

Wonderful robe; as a matter of fact, the entire picture has a wonderfully meditative quality about it. Not sure how I missed it at first when I posted!

Jeffrey
User avatar
fulbert-avebury
OBOD Bard
 
Posts: 276
Joined: 29 Apr 2009, 12:51
Location: New York City
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby Reyna » 05 Aug 2011, 23:39

Mick-I LOVE the robe. Looks comfy and warm.

Love this thread, its giving me so many ideas. Now if only I could sew, lol!
Let love drive you, guide you, burn in you.
User avatar
Reyna
OBOD Bard
 
Posts: 229
Age: 31
Joined: 04 Feb 2008, 03:25
Location: Oregon
Gender: Female

Re: question about robe

Postby Ffenics Y Feudwy » 28 Aug 2011, 22:40

my robes have always been white or off white.

here is the first robe I made in autumn 2007, by using a T shirt as a template and lengthening the arms and body. This was before I added gold and blue embellishment around the hems and neck.
Image

These are pictures of my newer robe, made in autumn 2009. Unfortunately I used a thin cheesecloth like material and my undies show through so I wear a white underskirt too.
ImageImage

I used this pattern from simplicity.com, using the main pattern from the pale blue dress and adding the front lacing from the burgandy dress.
http://www.simplicity.com/p-2621-costumes.aspx
I'm in the process of coming up with ideas for a new cloak too! And also a maternity robe!
The Weird has a name and refuses to be called Betty.

Always use "so's your face" and "only on Tuesdays" in as many conversations possible. I passed this gem onto my children!

To pronounce "LL" in welsh - pretend you're an angry cat or a vampire and force air along both sides of your tongue as you aspirate!

My Poetry eBook Free download 'cause I'm a nice person!
User avatar
Ffenics Y Feudwy
 
Posts: 31
Age: 31
Joined: 02 Nov 2006, 12:24
Gender: Female

Re: question about robe

Postby Huathe » 29 Aug 2011, 05:34

Feudwy,

You look absolutely beautiful in that robe. Very nice! It is simple but yet elegant. An excellent druidess robe.

Huathe
James E Parton
Bardic Course Graduate - Ovate Student
New Order of Druids

" We all cry tears, we all bleed red "_Ronnie Dunn

http://www.nativetreesociety.org/
http://www.druidcircle.org/nod/index.ph ... Itemid=145
http://www.burningman.com/
User avatar
Huathe
 
Posts: 678
Age: 48
Joined: 13 Sep 2010, 03:42
Location: Asheville NC USA
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby Crimson Stormfire » 30 Aug 2011, 01:19

as this thread grows i have found many wonderous ideas for a robe...my cloak i know now is a winter element as it is very very warm to wear...post pics of it soon....thank you for the many many wonderful posts and ideas about the druids robe...i do believe my ideas and imagery have come to focus that like any other tool the druids robe is there to offer protection and safety not only to the outside elements of nature but also that of the spiritual type and to create a safe place like a moving sacred space. I believe it reflects that of its job and use as does any tool.....thank you very much guys..
User avatar
Crimson Stormfire
 
Posts: 249
Age: 37
Joined: 23 Jan 2011, 14:14
Location: virginia
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby Kima » 04 Nov 2011, 18:30

I've been looking for a cloak but haven't yet found what I want. In the meantime I enjoy wearing anything with a hood. It's 2011, folks, and druids wear hoodies!

http://www.americanapparel.com/rsastfbl.html?cid=210
User avatar
Kima
OBOD Bard
 
Posts: 357
Age: 29
Joined: 18 Jun 2010, 15:14
Location: Naria's lands
Gender: Female

Re: question about robe

Postby jajohnson7809 » 18 Nov 2011, 20:10

I can't help but wonder how on earth you keep a white robe clean? I haven't worn white shirts in years because they usually get soiled one way or another, and who wants to wear a stained white shirt (or robe!)? My personal preferene would probably be one some earth tone color. Green would be fitting, I think, considering that it connotes nature and living green things, plus I love the color!

In the states, members of a racist organization which thankfully isn't as powerful as it once was wear white robes with pointed hoods, and I don't really care to be mistaken for one of them were I to wear my robe in public for a ritual.
jajohnson7809
 
Posts: 8
Age: 33
Joined: 14 Nov 2011, 20:01
Gender: Male

Re: question about robe

Postby Aengus » 18 Nov 2011, 20:57

In my humble opinion, your robes and/or ritual attire for that matter should reflect the wearer. I think the general idea of white robes has just been a staple for many years since the Druid revival and the days of Druid Brotherhoods (ie Masonic Druidry). The idea of ancient Druids wearing white is not too far fetched. Though it would have been more likely off white with the robes being of some sort of natural muslin.

In OBOD, (and many other Druid orders for that matter) there is no official dress code. Ritual attire is recommended as a way to separate oneself from the mundane and help get into the mindset of a special ceremony, but again it is not forced. It is, however an unsaid tradition if you will, to wear a grade designated tabard or cloak over ones robes. Blue for Bards, Green for Ovate and White and/or Gold for Druid.

All in all, wear what you feel is right to you (or nothing at all for that matter). When it comes down to it, YOU govern your spirituality. Its not likely that the powers that be are really paying attention to what we wear and we are not contestants on 'The Otherworld's Next Top Model'.

Cheers!
Sláinte!
Adam Mann
Image
http://valleyoakblog.wordpress.com/
http://www.facebook.com/aengusog

“Hear the voice of the Bard,
Who present, past, and future, sees;
Whose ears have heard
The Holy Word
That walk'd among the ancient trees; “

William Blake
Introduction to Songs of Experience
User avatar
Aengus
OBOD Ovate
 
Posts: 247
Age: 33
Joined: 12 Sep 2007, 05:48
Location: Turlock, Ca. USA
Gender: Male

PreviousNext

Return to Discuss Druidry

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest