Well, One thing I know is that if you attend a faire in costume, the average patron thinks you must be part of the faire, moreso if they have been at the King's Budwieser all day. They will ask you where the bathroom/ATM/cheap food/Pub/bonfire etc.. is, a lot! I always help, but sometimes give them the most complicated directions possible! But, like most costumed faire goers, I'm not a Renaissance clothing or history expert. I will be pleasant to the mundanes if they talk to me about anything, but that's more my responsibility to the fair I love, to not run off the paying customers! If the danes are under the impression that the dress or existence of fairies, kilted clone troopers, Conan style barbarians, sayters, dragons, centaurs, live garden gnomes, the greenman, ol' Zardoz, or anything else they see at the average ren faire has anything to do with historical facts, I submit it is too late to help them education-wise!

In ren faire vernacular, there are basically 3 types of folks at the fair;

1. "Participants" someone who works at the faire, generally as Cast, Performer, Merchant or support personnel. At most faires the the Cast is expected to be dressed, and speak and act as accurate as is reasonable to the time period and area the fair represents. The Performers and Merchants, less so. They do represent the fair, their employer, to the patrons.

2. "Playtrons" the term "playtron" has been coined to describe patrons who come in costume and interact in varying degrees with cast and non-costume patrons. These are generally long time faire goers. Most faires encourage patrons to come in costume (however, rumors that patrons who come in costume don't have to pay admission or pay a reduced admission are generally urban legend). Being in costume changes the faire experience: a costume moves you from the observer side of the fence to the participant. Donning that costume, no matter how full of anachronisms, shows that you want to be part of the faire experience rather than simply watch it unfold around you.

3. "Patrons" these are the non costumed, unwashed ticket buying public, generally called "Mundanes" by the ren faire community. We often say it would be great hold a closed faire where the general public is not allowed, like Cajinscot said, but don't get the idea they are resented! The danes cash makes our faires possible.