Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Chasing the Green Fairy on the French-Swiss Absinthe Route...

"Sherlock Holmes", - Irene Adler Returns...

How To Create Victorian Rag Curls In 10 Minutes!...

Grae Phillips, - Creating Victorian Hats & Hair Combs...

Old World Roses, - [Such as would be found in a Victorian garden]...









How To Make Victorian Nectar Drop Candy & Why Are Lemon Drops Called Drops?...

How to Make Ice Cream, - The Victorian Way...

10 Creepy Facts About Victorian London...

Living in the 18th Century – Woman Shuns Modern Technology for Victorian...

Monday, November 14, 2016

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Merle Streep, looking absolutely stunning and being brilliant in "The French Lieutenant's Woman"....

Taboos For Women in the 19th Century...

How to make Fish and Chips...

Queen Victoria's Children...

Victorian Ladies, - Part 2, [Princess Alice & Queen Victoria's Funeral]...

Victorian Ladies, - Part 1...

Staging Fashion, 1880-1920: Jane Hading, Lily Elsie, Billie Burke...

Lily Elsie~One of the Most Photographed Girls in Edwardian Times, [A little after the Victorian era]...

How to Sit in a Victorian Bustle...

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Gibson Girl Makeup Tutorial...

"American Eve", - Famous Jealousy-Murder Case Involving Gorgeous "Gibson Girl", Evelyn Nesbit...

Hmmm... Accused Murderer Harry Thaw's Family Had This Short Movie Made...

Evelyn Nesbit, - The Model For The Gibson Girl...

The Gibson Girl...

John Pemberton invents Coca Cola for the Soda Fountain, - [It was said to be wonderful for dispirited ladies. The original formula used coca leaves, having 9 grams of cocaine per glass.]...

The Ultimate Fashion History: The 1900s...

The Ultimate Fashion History: The 1870s - 1890s, - &, - [Ooo, the hard bustle!]...

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Do you want to look like the Corspe Bride= a ghostly pale, hollow-cheeked Victorian lady??? [Here's the make-up tutorial]...

How Bizarre, - Victorian Hair Jewelry For Mourning...

From My Gardens...














Traditional English Cooking: Bubble And Squeek...


[This delicious dish makes use of leftovers from a Sunday Roast Beef dinner.  It's called "Bubble And Squeek" because the butter or margarine makes the "bubble" and the "squeek" is made from the cabbage!]...  This is YUMMY, - especially for breakfast!!!]...

Take leftover slices of roast beef, carrots, cabbage or brussel sprouts and chop them coarsely.  You can use fresh cabbage or brussel sprouts, if you like.  Place them in heated butter or margarine in a large skillet.  Add leftover mashed potatoes and stir, stir, stir, to keep from burning.  When it's heated up thoroughly and the cabbage or brussel sprouts is cooked, spoon it onto a plate.  Add black pepper or hot sauce or brown gravy, if you like.

Mack the Knife, the musical, - The "Moritat" [Ballad of Mack the Knife]...

Mack the Knife, musical - Tango Ballad...

Squee, - the whole thing!!!... Sleepy Hollow, - wonderfully artistic, quirky & spooky movie, with Johnny Depp & Christina Ricci

Monday, July 4, 2016

Traditional English Cooking: Old Fashioned Black Raspberry & Currant Cake, - [Easy & So Delicious!]...

3 1/4 cups flour
3/4 pound margarine or butter
1 cup fresh black raspberries
3/4 black currants
1 cup sugar
2 eggs, mixed with 2 tbs. milk
1 tb. brown sugar

Mix margarine or butter into the flour with a fork.  Add all dry ingredients.  Add eggs mixed with the milk.  Fold in black raspberries and currants.  Place batter in a cake pan.  Sprinkle the top with the brown sugar.  Place in the top of the oven at 400 degrees and bake for 15 minutes.  Reduce heat to 325 and continue baking for 1 3/4 hours or till done.

Jack the Ripper, - [A new theory]...

Top 10 Jack The Ripper Suspects, - [In spite of a claim that DNA testing had revealed who he REALLY was, an error was made. So-ooo, we STILL don't know!]...

Saturday, July 2, 2016

Victorian Gown, - How to Put On Tutorial - [Putting on from chemise, corset... Whew!] ...

The French Lieutenants Woman 1981, - [WoW!... The whole movie, with 2 of my favorite actor's: Merle Streep & Jeremy Irons!]

Van Helsing The London Assignment Movie, - [enjoy this full animated movie!]...

He Terrorized Victorian London, - 5 Things You Didn't Know About Jack The Ripper

Hidden Killers of the Victorian Home - Full Documentary, - [ugh, ugh, - but so interesting!... :)]

The Mysterious and Stunning Irene Adler, - [a sort of lady super-spy from Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes novels and, now, the movies]...


She is like a lush red rose...

Irene is an adventuress and femme fatale played by the absolutely gorgeous Rachel Mc Adams in the Sherlock Holmes movies featuring Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law, but in the original books she is not a main character, and, sadly, she disappears from sight in the second Sherlock Holmes movie, "Sherlock Holmes: Game Of Shadows'.  Too, too BAD, --- the darling and sly Irene was given a swift and terrible case of T.B. by the dastardly and brilliant Professor Moriarty.  I certainly hope that Irene will re-appear in the next Sherlock Holmes movies...

Irene is Sherlock's erstwhile love interst, as Watson says: "Why is the only woman you've ever been interested in a world class criminal?"  Of course, it WOULD be that way...  Sherlock is a very odd duck...  And, to his dismay and secret delight Irene outsmarts and out plays him at every turn.  She is obviously a live-in-the-fast-lane sort of girl.  Irene is an American, born in New Jersey.  In the 1st movie she says she divorced her husband: "He was boring, and he snored!...", but he WAS, ---oh, yes, --- rich!  And, she comes to visit Sherlock wearing a fabulous diamond around her neck, - a gift, or, most likely, stolen, from a maharajah.  She brings him the delicious nuts that he favors and special olives. She casually cracks some walnuts with her bare hands, like the Godfather, a feat which would take a tremendous, TREMENDOUS amount of strength in the arms and fingers!

As I said, in Arthur Conan Doyle's books, Irene is not a main character.  In fact, she was featured in only one of his novels, - "A Scandal In Bohemia". in which he said of her, [quote] : "She has a soul of steel.  The face of the most beautiful of women and the mind of the most resolute of men."...  But, Irene fired the author's fan's imagination; they LOVED her!...  Author Carole Nelson Douglas gave Irene her own set of novels and in them she shows that she is very bit as brilliant and singular as Sherlock; she is a modern woman in Victorian times.  The novels are full of color and loaded with detail.  The delightful Irene, is positively, POSITIVELY fascinating!...  

Sherlock Holmes Chasing Irene Adler... [I just love her coat,dress and hat!]

Friday, July 1, 2016

Amelia Huber Hollister: An Upper Class Victorian Lady Readies Herself For The Evening...


Amelia Huber Hollister emerged from her ornate copper bath tub, placing the modesty sheet, that had been draped over the top of the tub and had covered her completely in the tub, to the side because, of course, it was sopping wet.  She patted herself dry.  She had used jasmine bath salts in the water and the whole bedroom smelled beautiful.  Amelia put on her midnight blue silk kimono and sat down at her dressing table.  She let down her honey colored hair and began to brush it.  She was very proud of her very wavy hair, even though she often had to put it though the absent crown of a wide brimmed straw hat and saturate it with lemon juice; then she went to sit in bright sunshine.  This was to keep her hair fashionably light.

Amelia next spread Lady Pomprey's Flower Facial lotion all over her complexion, which did not just stop at her jawline; she also worked the white stuff which was made of glycerine, rosewater, bergamot, lemon balm, vanilla, lavender oil and zinc oxide, into her neck.  Amelia was only twenty five, but she didn't want to end up looking like her Aunt Frances, with all that crepe-like skin!  Next, Amelia applied pearl powder to her face with a big wool puff and rouged her cheeks with puff on a wooden stick from a red powder, powdered amaranth, that she kept in a tiny gold compact studded with blue brilliants.  She colored her lips with pomegranate juice and picked up her crystal bottle of rosewater to spray herself with it by squeezing the big net covered rubber bulb.

She sighed.  She had instructed the cook Bertha May to make her husband Herbert's favorite dinner tonight: Roast beef with candied carrots and new potatoes, plus kidney pie and a dessert that she loved, - plum cake with raisin hard sauce.  Herbert would be coming home from his job at the bank soon.  Amelia made sure that she had plenty of Napoleon brandy ready for Herbert and also that there were enough of his specially crafted Cuban cigars.  Herbert's maroon satin smoking jacket with the black velvet lapels was laid out over the back of the bedroom chair...

Victorian realities - how did they use the toilet??!

"The Piano", an award winning movie set in New Zealand during the Victorian Era, - Beach Scene - song, - "The Heart Asks Pleasure First"...

Scandalous women of the 19th century

Victorian Values

Victorian Era - an introduction

It Was A Careful Age Of Manners And Propriety...


The Victorian Age, named for Queen Victoria Of England, was a most unusual time.  When I think of it I think of elegant women in long gowns made of silk, satin, velvet and bustles.  I think of gentlemen with top and bowler hats, dressed in three piece suits and carrying walking sticks with crystal or brass knobs on the top of them.  I think of tall and huge houses edged with what is called gingerbread.  In those houses were big families of sometimes seven to ten children.

The motor car was the newest thing, if it was seen at all on the streets.  Most upper class people rode around in carriages. If you had any big money at all you could hire servants, because people would work for very little wages.  Most large houses had upstairs and downstairs maids, butlers, drivers for the carriages, a groom for the horses, a whole staff to help the household to run smoothly.

Children were, of course, seen not heard.  Once they reached a certain age they often went to boarding school, if their parent could afford it, especially if they were boys.  Girls were expected to fill a traditional role, being wives and mothers.  [After 1823, a boy could marry as young as fourteen without his parent's consent, a girl as young as twelve, but most people married when they were in their twenties.] Some women became business owners, - few, or teachers, governesses, and were known as "bluestockings", and thought of as rather strange and radical.

It was during this time that some great literature was written, great novels:  "Jane Eyre", by Charlotte Bronte, and "Wuthering Heights", by Emily Bronte; Elizabeth Barrett Browning wrote her poems;  Lewis Carroll wrote "Alice's Adventures In Wonderland", and "Alice Through The Looking Glass";  Charles Dickens wrote his stories...