Saturday, 27 December 2025

During the Holy Days of Christmas

During this Christmas Season, the Saint Bede Studio is pleased to resume presentations of our festal vestments.

This set is made in the style now associated with Saint Philip Neri : the Italian style of the 16th and early 17th centuries.  The vestments were made from a brocade of gold silk and metallic thread and fully-lined in a taffeta muted-gold in colour.

This chasuble is ornamented in the well-known Roman style, being the TAU at the front and a column at the back, formed by a rich brocade in colours of ivory and golden thread, with an outlining galloon. 
 

The Saint Bede Studio

The vestments of the Saint Bede Studio are beautiful in design, sound in construction and distinctive in appearance.


Saint Philip Neri

Click on the images for an enlarged view.

The Saint Bede Studio : vestments made by Catholics for Catholics.

Enquiries : [email protected]

Information on placing an order.


Please note that posts on this blog are set-up for optimal viewing via a web-browser, not via a mobile phone.

AMDG


Wednesday, 24 December 2025

A Greeting on this Most Holy Feast

 

Image

To all friends, customers and readers of this Blog, 
sincere wishes for a Blessed Christmas.

Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill be made low; the crooked shall be made straight and the rough places, plain; and the Glory of the Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall see it together, for the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.
Isaiah 40:4-5.

Michael Sternbeck
The Saint Bede Studio
December 2025

Sunday, 21 December 2025

In the Season of Advent 2025 : 5

As Advent draws to a close, the Saint Bede Studio is pleased to present this simple violet dalmatic. 

The Saint Bede Studio : vestments made by Catholics for Catholics.


The Saint Bede Studio



Although there are many different shades used for Lenten and Advent vestments (none of which has a claim to being the correct colour), nevertheless, this particular shade of violet is closer to what was used during the mediaeval period and until the beginning of the 20th century.  It is a subdued colour, but not dark, closer to the shade of the flowers violets

Instead of the ubiquitous treatment of gold ornament, these vestments are ornamented with galloons of charcoal and silver and are lined in taffeta of silver-grey. The dalmatics are ornamented in a modified form of the Roman manner.

The vestments of the Saint Bede Studio are beautiful in design, sound in construction and distinctive in appearance.


Enquiries : [email protected]


Information on placing an order.


Please note that posts on this blog are set-up for optimal viewing via a web-browser, not via a mobile phone.

AMDG

Thursday, 18 December 2025

In the Season of Advent 2025 : 4


The Saint Bede Studio
As Advent continues, the Saint Bede Studio wishes to present this simple set of violet vestments.  It is part of our range of vestments, called Saint Anselm.

The vestments were made from silk in a lighter shade of violet and ornamented with a column, front and back.  The ornament was formed from silver dupion silk and one of the Studio's unique braids Saint Edmund (based on a design of AWN Pugin).

The Saint Bede Studio : vestments made by Catholics for Catholics.  

The chasuble is unlined, but faced at the neckline, helping it to sit well and not crumple.  

Click on the images for an enlarged view. 


The Saint Bede Studio


The vestments of the Saint Bede Studio are beautiful in design, sound in construction and distinctive in appearance.


Enquiries : [email protected]


Information on placing an order.


Please note that posts on this blog are set-up for optimal viewing via a web-browser, not via a mobile phone.

AMDG

Monday, 15 December 2025

A further set of Rose vestments

The Saint Bede Studio
The Studio is pleased to present a further set of Rose-coloured vestments.

The vestments depicted in this post were made for a Catholic Cathedral in Ireland and are according to a form of Gothic Revival which we designate Saint Benet.

These vestments were made from dupion silk in a dark and lovely shade, like to the petals of an actual rose.  The vestments were fully lined in a lilac-coloured taffeta.  


The Saint Bede Studio : vestments made by Catholics for Catholics.


Rose vestments

Click on the images for an enlarged view.


The ornament was formed from a braid from the range of the Studio's unique offerings, called Rosa Antiqua.  The braid is in a darker and a lighter shade of rose in a stylised floriated design.  


The vestments of the Saint Bede Studio are beautiful in design, sound in construction and distinctive in appearance.


The Saint Bede Studio


Enquiries : [email protected]


Information on placing an order.


Please note that posts on this blog are set-up for optimal viewing via a web-browser, not via a mobile phone.

AMDG



Saturday, 13 December 2025

Gaudete Sunday 2025


Rose vestments
Twice a year, the Church breaks the tone of its penitential seasons by the use of rose-coloured vestments. 

Rose-coloured vestments were never commonplace and they still are not.  Many different colours have been deemed by the Church as acceptable as liturgical rose.  Some of these are a salmon shade; some a silvery-pink, almost mushroom-colour; some close to what we would call Bishop's purple or fuchsia; and some red with overtones of gold.

The Saint Bede Studio : vestments made by Catholics for Catholics.

The vestments depicted in this post are according to a form of Gothic Revival which we designate Saint Benet.

These vestments were made from dupion silk in a quite lovely shade of rose.  This dupion silk is distinctive for having weaves of two complementary shades, which appear different at alternative angles.  The photographs accompanying this post shew these differing appearances.  The vestments were fully lined in a taup-coloured taffeta.  

Rose vestments


Click on the images for an enlarged view.

The ornament was formed from a braid from the range of the Studio's unique offerings, called Saint George.  The braid is in the colour of platinum and burgundy, upon a crimson background.  A narrow galloon outlines the perimeter of the chasuble.  Both these braids are derived from the designs of AWN Pugin.


The vestments of the Saint Bede Studio are beautiful in design, sound in construction and distinctive in appearance.


Enquiries : [email protected]


Information on placing an order.


Please note that posts on this blog are set-up for optimal viewing via a web-browser, not via a mobile phone.

AMDG

The Saint Bede Studio

Friday, 12 December 2025

A Rose by any other name but Pink


Pope Paul VI
Figure 1. Pope Paul VI in 1978
wearing a rose chasuble 
made from dupion silk.
Image: L'Osservatore Romano
Twice a year, the Church breaks the tone of its penitential seasons by the use of rose-coloured vestments.  Rose-coloured vestments were never commonplace and they still are not.  Nevertheless, you will find various pronouncements these days (usually on websites) about what the real or authentic shade of rose is which is to be used for vestments.

Newsflash: there is no official shade of Rose designated by the Church, nor has there ever been.  One reason for this is rather simple: only in the nineteenth century did the process of dyeing fabric become sufficiently sophisticated to ensure that much the same shade of a colour emerged from one batch of fabric dyeing to another.

Many different colours have been deemed by the Church as acceptable as liturgical Rose.  Some of these are a salmon shade; some a silvery-pink, almost mushroom-colour; some close to what we would call Bishop's purple or fuchsia.

Another thing is certain: Bubblegum Pink is not Rose, nor has it been a traditional variation for use on these days. Whilst not intending to get into the argument as to whether the use of pink (be it vibrant or subdued) is a fitting colour for a man to wear, Bubblegum Pink certainly manifests a lamentable lack of liturgical good taste. And yet we find so many pink vestments for sale from ecclesiastical suppliers etc.

Rose vestments
Figure 2. Pope Paul VI greeting a priest
after Mass in Saint Peter's on Laetare Sunday 1978.
Both are wearing rose 
chasubles made from dupion silk.
Image: L'Osservatore Romano
At an old post on the Blog, The New Liturgical Movement, we find a number of interesting vestments in that shade of Rose commonly found in Italy in centuries past: a salmon colour.  Go there and take a look.  But don't be mistaken about that particular shade of Rose being universal: it was used in Italy, but probably not much elsewhere.

Adjacent are two pictures of another shade of Rose.  These are sets of vestments worn by Pope S. Paul VI on Laetare Sunday, 1978. The vestments are made from dupion silk of a very subdued silvery-rose.  Ornamenting them is a column-orphrey almost fuchsia in colour.  Sadly, these vestments have not been seen in Papal Masses since :  lamentable sets of brighter pink vestments, of rather unimaginative fabric and design, have been used instead.

Below is an image of a set of Rose vestments made by the Saint Bede Studio of similar colour to the vestments of S. Paul VI.

The Saint Bede Studio

AMDG

Wednesday, 10 December 2025

Guadalupe

Marian vestments
On these adjacent Feasts of Saint Juan Diego and our Lady of Guadalupe, the Saint Bede Studio is pleased to present a set of vestments in honour of the Blessed Virgin.   

These vestments are ornamented is an adaptation of the well-known Roman style, a TAU at the front and a column at the back.

But they are ornamented in imitation of the beloved image of Our Lady of Guadalupe, being the colours of ivory, gold, blue and rose.  The orphreys are formed from a beautiful blue silk damask with an outlining galloon in old-gold and burgundy.  The lining is formed from taffeta in a subtle shade of rose.

These vestments are in the Studio's Saint Philip Neri style, which is the product of years of research into historical vestments and refinement of dimensions for comfortable use.  The Studio revived this more ample 16th century style of the Roman chasuble in 2007 and since then we have made many of them.  Beware of poorly-made imitations!

The vestments of the Saint Bede Studio are beautiful in design, sound in construction and distinctive in appearance.

The Saint Bede Studio


Click on the images for an enlarged view.


The Saint Bede Studio : vestments made by Catholics for Catholics.


Enquiries : [email protected]


Information on placing an order.


The Saint Bede Studio


Please note that posts on this blog are set-up for optimal viewing via a web-browser, not via a mobile phone.

AMDG

Monday, 8 December 2025

On the Immaculate Conception of BVM

Image
To commemorate this beautiful Feast of the Immaculate Conception, we are pleased to present these images of sets of vestments in honour of the Blessed Virgin.  

These vestments are in the Saint Bede Studio's Maria Regina style.  This was the first orphrey braid the Studio developed specifically in honour of the Blessed Virgin Mary.  Since then, we have designed several other unique Marian braids.


Click on the images for an enlarged view.

The vestments of the Saint Bede Studio are beautiful in design, sound in construction and distinctive in appearance.


The Saint Bede Studio

Enquiries.


Information on placing an order.


The Saint Bede Studio : vestments made by Catholics for Catholics. 


The Saint Bede Studio


Please note that posts on this blog are set-up for viewing via a web-browser, not via a mobile phone.

AMDG