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Hevva's
distinctive costume is based on the traditional working clothes worn by
people in the Penzance and Newlyn area of west Cornwall in the late 19th
century.
The
evidence for this costume comes from contemporary paintings from the
Newlyn School art colony, where painters such as Stanhope Forbes and
Walter Langley painted the ordinary, working folk around them.
One
of the most striking features of the costume is the ladies' headwear,
known as gooks. These pretty white bonnets have been extensively
researched and are the only authentically replicated set in existence,
incorporating over a dozen different designs, each from a particular
Cornish town or village. Gooks were worn to protect the women from
sun, wind and dust while working on the shoreline, at the mine surface or
in the fields.
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