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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › VisardVisard - Wikipedia

    A woman wearing a visard, as engraved by Abraham de Bruyn in 1581. A woman wearing a moretta muta appears in this 1751 painting by Pietro Longhi. A visard (also spelled vizard) is an oval mask of black velvet which was worn by travelling women in the 16th century to protect their skin from sunburn. [1] The fashion of the period for wealthy ...

  2. Sep 4, 2022 · Made of black velvet, the mute mask is oval in shape with a prominent bulge to fit in the nose. It has round holes cut for the eyes and it covers the face from the middle of the forehead to just below the bottom lip and from the left temple to the right temple.

  3. The moretta mask, reserved exclusively for women, was a Venetian mask that was round and covered with black velvet. Also known as the 'muta', it perfectly concealed the features of the wearer's face and was very common in Venice in the 18th century.

    • Moretta Mask Became A Seduction Tool
    • Moretta Mask Could Be Used to Protect Skin Or Charges of Being Immodest
    • Long Tradition and Fascination with Masks in Venice

    Made of black velvet and hiding the woman's features, the Moretta mask was very popular in Venice in the 18th century. It was one of the most fascinating Venetian masks ever created. It may sound like a contradiction that hiding your face would attract attention. Women usually want to show how attractive they can be, but the Moretta mask concealed ...

    In France, women didn't always wear hats, and using the mask offered them protection against the sun. In those days, it was very fashionable to have pale skin safely. James H. Johnson, Professor of History at Boston University, said the Moretta mask helped a woman hide her identity and avoid slander. In Paris, upper-class ladies rarely walked alone...

    In his book, Venice Incognito: Masks in the Serene Republic, Professor Johnson writes that "starting in the late seventeenth century, Venetians wore masks in public for six months of the year, a practice they continued until the Republic's fall in 1797." The Venetian carnival tradition is most famous for its distinctive masks. Credit: Frank Kovalch...

  4. The Moretta was a small mask covered with black velvet (hence the name 'Moretta' because, in Venetian dialect, 'moro' means dark, black) of French origin and reserved exclusively for women.

  5. The moretta ("dark one" in English) or servetta muta ("mute servant woman" in English) was a small strapless black velvet oval mask with wide eyeholes and no lips or mouth worn by patrician women. It derived from the visard mask invented in France in the sixteenth century, but differed in not having a hole to speak through.

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  7. May 8, 2021 · The moretta is covered in black velvet, for the aesthetic advantages of both the dark color and the soft, expensive material. Masks such as the bauta and the moretta were also favored by gamblers, because of their ability to render the wearer indistinguishable.

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