
Sail maker Don Lucas at the South Australian Maritime Museum
As part of a new exhibit, Rough Medicine: Life and Death in the Age of Sail, at the South Australia Maritime Museum, sail maker Don Lucas was asked to sew a shroud for a child, actually a child-sized manikin, fortunately, to represent the preparations for a burial at sea. In a recent interview he talked about sewing the shroud:
“I did some research on how those shrouds were sewn at the time and I certainly couldn’t find anything,” Don said. Don believed the task of shroud making would lie in the hands of the ship’s sail maker, being the person most skilled at sewing, but doubted the shrouds would be made of sail canvas.
“When vessels had no other means of propulsion other than sails, one certainly wouldn’t cut a sail into little bits. From the research we have done, we believe it was most probably a bed sheet.”
A bed sheet? Really? With all due respect, I don’t think so. Continue reading
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