The Citadel

The Archive of 'A Song of Ice and Fire' Lore

Concordance

2.7. Clothing
  • Sable furs are used as expensive trimmings (I: 2)
  • Moleskin is used for gloves (I: 2)
  • In the heat of the summer, women often wear little more than short gowns of silk or cotton, thinly cut (I: 34)
  • Silk of many hues (I: 27, 42, etc.)
  • Satin cloaks (I: 42)
  • Chokers (I: 42)
  • Embroidery (I: 42, etc.)
  • Velvet (I: 43, etc.)
  • Squires and servants wear livery according to the house they serve (I: 61)
  • Knights wear surcoats (I: 61, etc)
  • Fur cloaks (I: 91)
  • One hundred gold dragons are far too much for a wolf pelt (I: 131)
  • Vest of woven gold (I: 145)
  • Loose gowns of silk (I: 145)
  • Pointed slippers of soft velvet (I: 145)
  • Velvet doublets with embroidery (I: 161)
  • Cloth-of-gold half capes (I: 161)
  • Woolen scarves (I: 177)
  • Light linen undertunics (I: 231)
  • Doublets that lace up the back (I: 233)
  • Black velvet coats (I: 235)
  • Linen doublets (I: 265)
  • A doublet sewn with pearls (I: 285)
  • Slashed velvet doublets (I: 299. III: 291)
  • Cloaks trimmed with black fox (I: 299)
  • Trousers (I: 318)
  • Sachets filled with fragrances sewn to tunic sleeves (I: 324)
  • A surcoat with silver buttons (I: 337)
  • Fools wear motley (I: 362)
  • Women wear underskirts (I: 398)
  • Damask gowns (I: 398)
  • Hunting greens (I: 405)
  • Velvet tunics with puffed sleeves (I: 427)
  • Smallclothes (I: 449)
  • Dresses of wool, plainly cut but richly embroidered around collar and sleeves, might be worn by noblewomen (I: 453)
  • Mourning clothes are black (I: 455)
  • Robes of thick velvet with golden fastenings and fur collars, sleeves heavy with scrollwork (I: 517)
  • Velvet doublets sewn with scales (I: 519)
  • Greatcloak (I: 572)
  • Sleeved surcoats are used (I: 585)
  • Whores might wear wisps of painted silk (I: 604)
  • Doublet sewn with beads (I: 606)
  • Bedgowns (I: 621)
  • Felts (THK: 465)
  • Leather brigandine covered in silver studs (THK: 484)
  • Velvet doublet with long dagged sleeves (THK: 501)
  • Parts of horse barding: chinet and chamfron (THK: 515)
  • Jewelled hair nets (II: 29)
  • Cloth-of-silver garb (II: 113)
  • Samite (II: 114)
  • Oilskin pouches (II: 122)
  • A robe of heavy roughspun dyed in mottled greens and blues (II: 127, 128. IV: 19)
  • Lambswool breeches (II: 134. V: 52)
  • Bleached white leather belts (II: 134)
  • Sealskin robes (II: 134)
  • Codpieces (II: 198)
  • Red-dyed leather boots ornamented with black scrollwork (II: 199)
  • Quilted breeches (II: 225)
  • A doublet with sleeves and collar trimmed with vair (II: 237)
  • Ermine mantles (II: 237)
  • Wide, floppy hats, some of them made of straw (II: 261. TSS: 79)
  • Sheepskin jerkins (II: 264)
  • Bearskin vests (II: 280)
  • A bridegroom's mantle of miniver and velvet (II: 295)
  • A tunic or doublet of slashed red velvet with black silk undersleeves (II: 326)
  • Quilted doublets (II: 346. V: 52)
  • White fox fur (II: 394)
  • Bronze-colored horse trappings (II: 400)
  • A hairnet decorated with moonstones (II: 433)
  • A cloth-of-silver sash used to belt a dress (II: 466)
  • At least among noble women, a cloth is worn between the legs during menstruation (II: 554)
  • A low-cut gown baring the shoulders (II: 564)
  • A woven belt studded with gemstones (II: 564)
  • Fur-trimmed boots (II: 586)
  • A studded leather belt (II: 586)
  • A satin tunic striped black and gold (II: 586)
  • Felted black wool (II: 586)
  • A fine linen tunic worn by the son of a knight (II: 595)
  • A white linen dress with long dagged sleeves that show a lining of gold satin (II: 597)
  • Quilted jerkins (II: 653)
  • Gloves made of soft wolf-pup fur (II: 655)
  • A cloth-of-gold gown slashed in burgundy velvet (II: 662)
  • Lilac brocade (II: 662)
  • Gowns of turquoise silk and vair (II: 662)
  • Golden lace (II: 662)
  • A black mantle studded with rubies (II: 662)
  • Green velvet garb trimmed with sable (II: 663)
  • Calfskin boots (II: 679)
  • Gloves of black wool (III: 1)
  • Cruppers, crinets, and chamfrons are articles of covering for horses (III: 18)
  • A wide belt studded with nuggets of silver (III: 42)
  • Rosewater is used to scent the body (III: 65)
  • A wine-colored tunic and high boots of bleached white leather inlaid with silver scrollwork (III: 111)
  • Caps (III: 117)
  • A silver inlaid saddle (III: 124)
  • A checkered saddlecloth (III: 124)
  • Lemon is used as a scent (III: 132)
  • Tight satin breeches (III: 136)
  • A doublet of heavy black velvet, studded with lion's heads (III: 136)
  • Jasmine scent (III: 137)
  • A necklace of silver and jade with a matching pair of bracelets (III: 141)
  • A bright yellow greatcloak (III: 144)
  • Fingerless leather gloves (III: 144)
  • A gown of silk and Myrish lace, with satin linings (III: 181)
  • Hose for a woman (III: 182)
  • Kirtles and mantles (III: 182)
  • Double lambswool tunic (III: 196)
  • Thick quilted coat (III: 196)
  • A triple-thick cloak with a bone button fastening at the neck (III: 196)
  • Heavy fur mitts over thin wool-and-leather gloves (III: 196)
  • A tight-fitting fleece-lined cap to pull down over the ears beneath a hood (III: 196)
  • Wine velvet tunic (III: 208)
  • A girl's dress, of some lilac cloth, decorted with baby pearls (III: 256)
  • A brown doeskin jerkin studded with iron (III: 256)
  • Men wear rings (III: 291)
  • Jeweled cloak (III: 291)
  • A young noblewoman's hair is curled (III: 316)
  • A sharp sweet fragrance with a hint of lemon in it under the smell of flowers (III: 316)
  • Silken smallclothes (III: 316)
  • A gown of ivory samite and cloth-of-silver, lined with silvery satin. Long dagged sleeves almost touch the gown, and the bodice is slashed almost to the belly, the deep vee covered over with a panel of ornate Myrish lace in dove-grey. The skirts are long and full, and the waist very tight. It's clearly a gown meant for a woman, not a girl (III: 316)
  • Slippers of soft grey doeskin (III: 316)
  • A costly maiden's cloak, meant for a wedding ceremony, made of velvet heavy with pearls, embroidered in silver, and fastened by a silver chain (III: 317)
  • Black velvet doublet, covered with golden scrollwork (III: 318)
  • Thigh-high boots that add three inches to height (III: 318)
  • A huge and heavy crimson velvet marriage cloak, richly worked with lions and bordered with gold satin and rubies (III: 319)
  • Girdles and undersilk are worn under a noblewomans gown (III: 324)
  • Socks (III: 369)
  • Dornish lords wear silk and satin robes with jeweled belts and flowing sleeves (III: 431)
  • Swaddling clothes for infants (III: 435)
  • A pale blue gown with a lacy bodice (III: 561)
  • Splotchy green roughspun and a soot-grey mantle with a hood (III: 568)
  • Boots that lace up (III: 610)
  • A wedding gown of ivory silk and Myrish lace, skirts decorated with floral patterns picked out in seed pearls (III: 667)
  • A maiden cloak made of a hundred cloth-of-gold roses sewn to green velvet (III: 667)
  • A doublet of dusky rose (III: 667)
  • A gown of silvery satin trimmed in vair, with dagged sleeves that almost touch the floor, lined in soft purple felt (III: 672)
  • A doublet of crimson velvet with padded shoulders and puffed sleeves slashed to show a black satin underlining (III: 672)
  • Striped black-and-crimson breeches (III: 674)
  • A cloth-of-gold doublet with black satin sleeves and onyx studs (III: 674)
  • A gown of pale green samite with a tight-laced bodice, baring shoulders and the tops of the breasts (III: 674)
  • A dress of thick brown wool, its bodice decorated with freshwater pearls (III: 686)
  • Simple and sturdy shoes with flat heels and square toes (III: 686)
  • A Dornishman's flowing robe, striped orange, yellow, and scarlet (III: 740)
  • The winter raiment of the Kingsguard are a tunic and breeches of white wool and a heavy white cloak (III: 750)
  • A long yellow surcoat (III: 797)
  • A low cut white gown, baring shoulders and the tops of the breasts, decorated with swirls and spirals of tiny emeralds at the bodice and the ends of the wide sleeves (III: 822)
  • A dress of blue lambswool over a linen shift and silken smallclothes, a pair of hose, boots that lace to the knee, heavy leather gloves, and a hooded cloak of soft white fox fur worn by a young lady against the cold (III: 901)
  • A blue velvet robe trimmed with fox fur (III: 903)
  • A gold arm ring (III: 907)
  • A belt studded with moonstones (III: 907)
  • A fine tunic from Dorne, made of sandsilk and painted with heraldic achievments (TSS: 107)
  • Septas wear white robes (TSS: 117)
  • A gown of dark blue damask trimmed with Myrish lace, with long hems that trail on the ground (TSS: 117)
  • A horse's caprison and a woman's cape made up of silverly silk strands, to look like webs (TSS: 145)
  • A ring of onyx and gold, bearing a royal signet (TSS: 148)
  • A brooch shaped like a spider, of ivory and with legs of silver, with crushed garnets making spots on its back (TSS: 155)
  • A doublet of satin striped in green and gold, worn with a black silk half cape pinned at the shoulder with a jade brooch (IV: 7)
  • A sealskin clout (IV: 18)
  • A mottled sandsilk cloak of dun and gold worn in Dorne (IV: 31)
  • Worn riding clothes of brown leather (IV: 31)
  • A billowing cloak of dun-and-yellow sandsilk worn in Dorne (IV: 37)
  • Shimmering lilac robes and great silk cape of cream and copper worn in Dorne (IV: 38)
  • Snakeskin sandals laced to the thighs worn in Dorne (IV: 41)
  • A band of copper suns worn around the brow (IV: 41)
  • A jeweled girdle and loose layers of flowing purple silk and yellow samite, worn in Dorne (IV: 41)
  • A gown of pale blue samite with sleeves of Myrish lace (IV: 42)
  • A spiked doeskin jerkin (IV: 58)
  • A quilted doublet of charcoal-colored wool (IV: 112)
  • The robes of septons are belted with woven belts of seven plaits, each a different color (IV:124)
  • Brothers of the Faith wear robes of various hues, such as brown, butternut, dun, or even undyed roughen (IV: 124)
  • Sky blue breeches and a white tunic with puffed sleeves (IV: 153)
  • Layered linen robes worn in Dorne, the hooded outer robe of turquoise stripes and golden suns , and the lighter inner robe in orange. Beneath that, a striped silk undertunic is worn (IV:185, 192)
  • A winding bracelet shaped like a serpent, with gold and copper scales (IV: 189)
  • A plush yellow doublet worked with beads of lapis (IV: 241)
  • A simply cut gown of brown lambswool, with vine and leaf embroidery on the bodice, sleeves, and hem in golden embroidery, worn with a ribbon of autumn gold velvet about the neck (IV: 336)
  • A gown of alternating stripes of shining green satin and plush black velvet, and intricate, costly black Myrish lace above the bodice (IV: 356)
  • A gown of jade green silk with sleeves of silver Myrish lace (IV: 391)
  • A golden chain with an emerald the size of a pigeon's egg (IV: 391)
  • A Dornish noblewoman's most revealing garments, wisps of silk that covered everything and hid nothing (IV: 589)
  • A simple Dornish gown of ivory linen, with vines and purple grapes embroidered around the sleeves and bodice (IV: 597)
  • A young lady's winter garments: woolen hoose beneath skirts over a double layer of small clothes, a lambswool overtunic, a hooded fur cloak, a scarf, and a pair of fur-lined leather gloves (IV: 613)
  • A white bearskin cloak (IV: 614)
  • A quartered gown of silk brocade, featuring a house's quartered arms (IV: 632)
  • A soft woolen dress covering from throat to ankle, with a few small vines embroidered on the bodice and sleeves embroided in golden thread (IV: 647)
  • An ivory gown with freshwater pearls on the bodice (IV: 649)
  • A necklace of golden seashells (IV: 661)
  • Torn clothing as a mark of mourning (IV: 663)
  • A doublet of dark blue silk edged in gold satin (TMK: 654)
  • A cloak with a pocket large enough to hold half a roast capon (TMK: 675)
  • A white silk doublet with dagged sleeves lined with red satin, so long their points droop past the knees, and a heavy silver chain studded with huge, dark amethysts (TMK: 675)
  • A damask tunic (TMK: 692)
  • A boy's clothing consisting of burgundy breeches and a blue velvet doublet lined with cloth-of-gold (V: 25)