By May 1599, Sanderson received a monthly payment called an "outlivery" of £30 paid from Anne of Denmark's household account (now National Records of Scotland E31/17).
[8] Accounts of the fabrics supplied to Anne of Denmark and James VI in the 1590s by a Edinburgh merchant Robert Jousie survive in the National Records of Scotland.
][10]Sanderson, or possibly Peter Rannald, made a gown of "double burret" silk for Anne of Denmark in June 1597 loaded with jet passementerie and buttons.
It includes gowns with "stenting, stiffing, clasps and wire", a farthingale costing 20 shillings, and with a few items for her brothers and clothes for pages, totals £154 Scots.
[16] Another Scottish tailor, Patrick Black, was in the Prince's service in 1605, and Edinburgh town council allowed him to be a burgess despite his absence in London.
[17] Peter Rannald, who had been one of the queen's tailors, died in 1609, and his widow Jonnett Birs petitioned for payment of £1,300 Scots from a royal precept dating from 1595.