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== 🖼️ Secondary Sources ==
== 🖼️ Secondary Sources ==
[[File:TextileBase Q321 thumbnail.jpg|left|thumb|TextileBase contains references and previews of secondary sources, such as drawings, color plates or photographs of garments.]]We also host structured metadata and image previews of '''drawings''', '''prints''', and '''photographs''' that document traditional dress. They are important secondary sources, and they are usually find in different type of institutions and with different data curation methods; most surviving textile artefacts come from museums, but secondary sources often to be found in archives and libraries.
[[File:TextileBase Q321 thumbnail.jpg|left|thumb|TextileBase contains references and previews of secondary sources, such as drawings, color plates or photographs of garments.]]We also host structured metadata and image previews of '''drawings''', '''prints''', and '''photographs''' that document traditional dress. They are important secondary sources, and they are usually found in different type of institutions and with different data curation methods; most surviving textile artefacts come from museums, but secondary sources often to be found in archives and libraries.


Examples:
Examples:

Revision as of 07:47, 16 July 2025

TextileBase is a collaborative platform for exploring linked open data on historical clothing. Designed for dress history scholars, museums, and practitioners, it brings together structured data and digital media from garments, illustrations, and research sources.

—mainly from Latvia and southeastern Estonia, ca. 1820–1920.

🔍 Try it out! Browse garments, check source images, explore relationships between items and places—right here in our open Wikibase.

🧵 Example Dataset: Latgale Garments

Entry examples from Linked Open Datasets on Garments from the Latgale Region, from right to left: Q142, Q180, Q179, Q181.

Explore 19th-century traditional shirts and skirts from the Latgale region in Eastern Latvia.The first published dataset, Linked Open Datasets on Garments from the Latgale Region contains data on Latvian traditional shirts and skirts from the Latgale region in Eastern Latvia. The female and male shirts, and the skirts in the dataset are handmade and were worn in the 19th century. They represent both festive and daily wear of the local female and male peasants. The shirts are stored at the National History Museum of Latvia and the Ethnographic Open-Air Museum of Latvia. The data contain information on the locality of their origin, their approximate date of creation with various precisions, the materials they are made of, and the way of their fabrication, as well as their purpose of wearing (festive or daily wear) and wearer’s ethnicity and gender. They also include the name of the museum each shirt is stored at, supplemented with its unique inventory number. Data on some sample shirts also include a photo of the shirt.


👚 Female and male festive and daily wear

🏛️ From collections of the National History Museum of Latvia and the Ethnographic Open-Air Museum

📍 Includes data on material, function, locality, ethnicity, gender, and more

▶️ Sample entries: Q142, Q180, Q179, Q181.

🔗 All Items | ListProperties

🎯 What TextileBase Offers

  • Linked open data about garments, textile-related artefacts, and secondary sources
  • Structured metadata on material, technique, wear context, and museum provenance
  • Multimodal previews, including photographs and drawings
  • Direct links to RDF datasets, compatible with Europeana and EOSC standards; all data follow FAIR principles and are stored in RDF format (e.g., Q347.ttl).
  • Cross-institutional research with Seto, Livonian, and Latgalian textile data

🖼️ Secondary Sources

TextileBase contains references and previews of secondary sources, such as drawings, color plates or photographs of garments.

We also host structured metadata and image previews of drawings, prints, and photographs that document traditional dress. They are important secondary sources, and they are usually found in different type of institutions and with different data curation methods; most surviving textile artefacts come from museums, but secondary sources often to be found in archives and libraries.

Examples:

  • Khanty (Ostiak) ermine hunters in traditional winter clothing (color plate) (Q308) and Peasant Women in Traditional Dress from Ingria (color plate) (Q319), both taken from Illustration and Description of the Peoples and Tribes under the Benevolent Rule of the Russian Emperor Alexander (Q312)
  • Estonian Peasant Dance (drawing) (Q322) and Estonian Peasant Dance (drawing reproduction) (Q321)
  • Group Portrait of Johann George Schwartz, his Wife, and an Unknown Woman (drawing) (Q329) and its photographic reproduction (Q328)

Getting started