July 2024

  • Mini-Post | Charles-Antoine Coypel

    Mini-Post | Charles-Antoine Coypel

    I am obsessed with the luxury of the fabrics, bows, ruffles and utter GLOW of this piece in the Met’s collection: to me, it is so romantic, enhanced by the use of pastels. This is a Coypel portrait of Marie Elisabeth de Séré de Rieux and her husband François de Jullienne. Julienne was a collector… read more

  • What is a Cabinet of Curiosity?

    What is a Cabinet of Curiosity?

    One of my favourite things that I spotted in the second half of the third season of Bridgerton was the presence of cabinets of curiosity in Penelope and Colin’s sitting room. It seems the perfect set addition for our intrepid and intellectually engaged couple (I tried to find a still of the set, but couldn’t!):… read more

  • Balloon flight in the early nineteenth century

    Balloon flight in the early nineteenth century

    One of the marvels in the first part of season 3 of Bridgerton is an innovation fair with, at its centre, a balloon. During this era, people were fascinated by flight and the skies, and balloon flight was still very new. The first recorded flight in Europe happened at Versailles on 19th September 1783, when… read more

  • Visiting Gunter’s Tea Shop

    Visiting Gunter’s Tea Shop

    I don’t know about you, but one of my favourite things is to go out for tea (with croissants in the morning, and cake in the afternoon, if possible!), which is a hobby we share with our eighteenth- and nineteenth-century ancestors. One of the most famous tea shops in London during this time was called… read more

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