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Throughout the very long medieval period, stonemasons dressed very much the same as carpenters, tailors, smiths, butchers, leather-workers and other craftsmen; their clothes changed to match the fashions of the day but were always fairly simple, plain and cheap compared with the bright clothes and expensive materials of the aristocracy.

A very rare 12th century image of a stonemason and a wall-painter can be seen via the link below, which is taken from a modern book cover. The original image is in the Dover Bible of around 1160.

The mason (on the right) wears a typical linen coif on his head, a brownish-red woollen tunic or cote, and black ankle boots of turnshoe style (leather boots sewn inside-out and then turned the right way so all the stitches are inside). These boots have a completely flat and smooth sole and are slightly pointed at the toe. Sometimes a leather belt was worn around the waist. He holds a mason's mallet in his right hand and an abrasive smoothing stone in his left, for finishing the completed stone block.

The other figure is a wall-painter, who would have specialised in painting the internal walls of palaces, churches, some monastic buildings and so on. He has a brush in one hand and a sea-shell containing paint in the other. His clothing is much the same as the mason, but he has a cap instead of a coif and also wears typical separate leg-coverings called hose of pale green woollen cloth.

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13y ago
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13y ago

Masons of the Middle Ages usually did the same things they do today, working with brick or stone. Medieval masons also carved stone, and many of them were sculptors.

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Q: What did masons look like in the middle age?
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