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Episode details

Radio 4 Extra,06 Jun 2011,30 mins

Good In Vestments

Available for 28 days

Amidst the rustle of silk, the drape of damask and the questions over whether the green or the red lining is better, the Reverend Richard Coles explores the ancient tradition of ecclesiastical vestment-wearing. At a Royal Wedding, all eyes may have been on Catherine Middleton's dress, but the magnificent vestments worn by the Archbishop of Canterbury also caught peoples' attention. Why do clergy still wear these clothes, who designs and sews them and has the emergence of women priests made any difference to who's wearing what in church? Various members of the clergy and historians explain the traditions and developments and the way vestments have been adopted by Anglicans and Catholics. Richard goes to one of London's oldest vestment companies to meet priests being measured for their new clothes, and talks to the seamstresses who stitch the chasubles and stoles by hand. As well as hearing about the traditional designs, he investigates how some clergy are seeking out new pictures and patterns - and asks what that says about the role of vestments in an increasingly secular society. Producer: Emma Kingsley First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in June 2011.

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