#victoriana

LIVE
Victoriana: Jewel of the Empire ~ Cubicle 7 (2010)

Victoriana: Jewel of the Empire ~ Cubicle 7 (2010)


Post link
model: Sonalii Castillo http://www.sonaliicastillo.comwardrobe designer: Kambriel http://www.kambr

model: Sonalii Castillo http://www.sonaliicastillo.com
wardrobe designer: Kambriel http://www.kambriel.com
set, wings, ivy wrangling: Tricia Saroya http://triciafountainedesign.com
photographer: Steve Parke http://www.steveparke.com

Cover preview of Faerie Magazine’s newest Autumn issue which I designed and created wardrobe for & helped style on their magical outdoor set in California with a wickedly wonderful, talented, and fun family of artistic collaborators (including my delightful friend Tanya who accompanied me that day & was immediately wrangled into modeling, so she’ll be making a surprise appearance in the editorial!).

The issue is arriving in bookstores now or can be ordered directly: http://www.faeriemag.com/products/issue-36-autumn-2016-print I’m excited for you to soon be able to see the entire set of glorious photos nestled within the issue (+ a little interview I did) ~ featuring a fantastically decadent woodland tea party with some truly enchanting & whimsical souls.

You can order a copy of the new Faerie Magazine Autumn issue directly here ~ http://www.faeriemag.com/products/issue-36-autumn-2016-print


Post link
It’s done! My 2020 project ❤️Okay I admit, the hat is still missing and I want to add some b

It’s done! My 2020 project ❤️
Okay I admit, the hat is still missing and I want to add some boning to the jacket. I might do another petticoat and a proper corset (right now I’m wearing bra+ underbust
BUT it is wearable and it’s the thing that took the most time to finish. Normally I rush things because I want something new for an upcoming event. This time I just wanted to do a bustle dress. (And I have no clue where to wear it ) I did a lot of handsewing and tried to make sure that there are no visible machine seams on the outside.
Historical accuracy was not my goal, but I had 1880s in mind as inspiration and if I can trust my limited knowledge I’d say it’s at least historical adequate Opinions?
✂️
Patterns used:
Jacket - Burda 7880 (highly modified front part and sleeves)
Underskirt - Truly Victorian TV261
Apron and Bustle - Truly Victorian TV365
Corset - Cosplay McCalls Shapeshifter by @anachronisminaction
___________
#bustle #bustledress #victoriana #victoriandress #vintageaesthetic #victorianfashion #steampunk #historicalsewing #historical #diy #trulyvictorian #burda #TV261 #TV365 #Burda7880 #apron #seamstress #tailor #handmade #steampunkfashion #costube #handsewing #burdahistory
https://www.instagram.com/p/CIdoZfpDRgd/?igshid=179cftpncgqs5


Post link
Silhouette - Does my butt look big in this? - GOOD! There’s a special kind of elegance about b

Silhouette - Does my butt look big in this? - GOOD!
There’s a special kind of elegance about bustle dresses. We often look at past fashions wondering: why the tell did they dress like this? And I’m honestly looking forward to find out at what we’re gonna look the same way when it comes to today’s fashion. (My best guess at the moment are eyebrows and bare ankles during winter)
➡️ What do you think will be mocked about today’s fashion in the future? ⬅️
___________
#silhouette #bustle #bustledress #historicallyadequate #historical #historicaldress #historicalsewing #victoriana #victoriandress #victorianfashion #sewing #costume #historicalcostume #costumer (hier: Ruhrgebiet)
https://www.instagram.com/p/CJvReP9Dsd-/?igshid=w6v8abpnu0zy


Post link
Some goofy ads from the March 1890 issue of Peterson’s Magazine.  Ask a librarian to see anything in

Some goofy ads from the March 1890 issue of Peterson’s Magazine.  Ask a librarian to see anything in our special collections.


Post link
More adorable embroidery patterns from Peterson’s Magazine, an American women’s magazine that was pu

More adorable embroidery patterns from Peterson’s Magazine, an American women’s magazine that was published between 1842 and 1898.  Ask a librarian to see anything in our special collections.


Post link
Max Ernst, Une semaine de bonté (A Week of Kindness), Third Book: Tuesday, Element: Fire. 1934.

Max Ernst, Une semaine de bonté (A Week of Kindness), Third Book: Tuesday, Element: Fire. 1934.


Post link

florid-fragments:

Were the girls in the 19th century ever not tripping balls just wondering

crappiness-patrol:My book is currently being processed on Amazon, but you can buy a paperback copy

crappiness-patrol:

My book is currently being processed on Amazon, but you can buy a paperback copy here

Kindle versions are expected to be available in the next day or so.

“ The continents of the Colossos are plagued by civil unrest. Affluence and hedonism are a plague on those impoverished, and with rumours of war brewing overseas, the elite Bokanthjian policing body RBK must pull their empire together and subdue allies who would rise against them. Seeking to restrain the mongrels of the Colossos, one of RBK’s heirs, Katra, is sent to the free port of Marana to bed with well connected night-stalkers and convicted criminals in search of rebel leaders. With alliances pushed to their limits and cataclysms approaching, it becomes clear that corruption runs deep. “

To summarise: 
Lads’ roadtrip. LGBT friendly. Victoriana chic. Corruption. Snarky lil’ shits.

bokanthjia.co.uk
Twitter

Normal service will now resume, apologies for the breakup in layout. These things have to be done.


Post link
The final of Morden Hall! Not quote on time for October, but that’s alright haha. Initially intendedThe final of Morden Hall! Not quote on time for October, but that’s alright haha. Initially intended

The final of Morden Hall! Not quote on time for October, but that’s alright haha. Initially intended to be a haunted Victorian manor, it ended up being a fun challenge in limited colours, and cohesive room designs and aesthethic. Thanks for tagging along!


Post link
The study.This little project is slowly but surely coming together. It went past October a bit as I

The study.

This little project is slowly but surely coming together. It went past October a bit as I took some time for other things, but it’s been fun designing and creating these interiors!


Post link
Continuing the tour, we have now reached the bedroom of the manor

Continuing the tour, we have now reached the bedroom of the manor


Post link
The kitchen at Morden Hall

The kitchen at Morden Hall


Post link
Shhhh! It’s Barry* the Redacted Horse.*Not his real name. His words are spoken by an actor (Richar

Shhhh! It’s Barry* the Redacted Horse.
*Not his real name.
His words are spoken by an actor (Richard Burton**).
** Not his real name.
#ephemera #vintage #vintageillustration #victoriana #illustration #horse #equine #design #typography #art #surrealism (at London, United Kingdom)
https://www.instagram.com/p/CdQLzhyI2-k/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=


Post link
tothewordgarden:“But his dreams were as gigantic as his surroundings were small.” -Thomas Hardy, Jud

tothewordgarden:

“But his dreams were as gigantic as his surroundings were small.” -Thomas Hardy, Jude the Obscure


Post link
#inktober day 7, yas I’m behind, is #drawloween prompt ‘haunted object’, & additional random pro

#inktober day 7, yas I’m behind, is #drawloween prompt ‘haunted object’, & additional random prompt from ‘The Woman’s Dictionary of Symbols & Sacred Objects’, which was ‘Fox.’ I was desperate to do something interesting, something I could use for a short ghost story down the line, especially with Fox being a psychopomp & trickster in folklore I thought it was worth more than a haunted statue or mirror or jewel, so I made haunted nail polish. You’re welcome.
.
.
.
.
.
#mabsdrawlloweenclub #inktober2018 #witchaesthetic #witchart #fox #victoriana #goth #ghost #ghoststories #haunted #victorianstyle #creaturefeature #ink #inkdrawing (at Houston, Texas)
https://www.instagram.com/p/Box5dmkF2J0/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=fnih2nsfcj5z


Post link

Star Ratings:

Characters: **** (4 stars)

Character Development: *** (3 stars)

Plot: **** (4 stars)

Writing: **** (4 stars)

Overall: ***½ (3 ½ stars)

Age range recommendation: 13 + (some scares, but nothing wildly inappropriate)

Originally posted at Morgan’s book review blog: Navigating The Stormy Shelves.  Review by Morgan.

A tenacious young Brit takes on a job as assistant to an awkward-but-brilliant private detective in 19th century New England. We’ve heard a similar story before. A supernatural menace is striking all over town, and the police are too closed-minded to accept the unbelievable and figure out how the macabre cases connect. We know how that is going to end. A clever and bored young lady finds herself swept away on adventures by an energetic man whose world is a lot bigger and more magical than what she had ever imagined before. That show’s been on since 1963. William Ritter has combined a bunch of rather recognizable themes; story lines; and characteristics into a novel which, without introducing anything terribly new, manages to be entertaining and atmospheric all the same.

When I started reading Jackaby, I was a little wary about just how Sherlockian the beginning was. Unorthodox detective gets a new assistant and they mislead the police in order to investigate a murder their own weird way. The police don’t like to admit that they need his help, but he knows better than they do. Tum de tum de tum. But then the mystery turned out to be grisly and saturated in folkloric horror. The dead man was a reporter, and the gaping, gory wound that killed him is worryingly short of blood. In the same apartment building, a man is tortured by the sounds of a woman weeping so bitterly it is driving him mad. No one else can hear the crying, but those of us who like our creepy Irish fairy-tales might recognize the Banshee’s ominous wail. Someone in the police force is hiding something important. And whatever creature has stalked the area around New Fiddleham for a while is now within the city’s limits, threatening to go on a rampage that will have many more people hearing their own death-songs soon enough. Jackaby and his new assistant have to keep their eyes open for clues in both the regular and spiritual worlds if they’re going to stop the mysterious murderer in time.

I liked the main characters, as recognizable as they seemed. Abigail Rook, our narrator, had run away from her stuffy home life to participate in a dig for dinosaur bones, only to find the work less exciting than she had hoped. Rather than slink home to her parents, she boarded a boat to America with no real plan. In need of a job, she answers an advertisement requiring an investigative services assistant. The ad specifies: “strong stomach preferred” and “do not stare at the frog.” And that’s how she comes to work with Jackaby. It should come as no surprise that Jackaby himself is the major show-stealer of the book, since it’s named after him and all. He’s gangly and peculiar, always sporting a giant coat with his pockets full of odd instruments. Jackaby is on a different wavelength than most other people, and he’s often lost in his own thoughts. This leads to some rather amusing outburst and misunderstandings. (His response, when asked if he’s just pulling someone’s leg, is that he hasn’t touched her leg. That sort of thing.)

He can also see the invisible world of supernatural creatures intermingling with our own, and that’s what makes him special. Jackaby is like the son of Sherlock Holmes (Conan Doyle’s original and the BBC series version combined) and the 11th Doctor.  (I haven’t seen very much Doctor Who, so apologies if I’m wrong about that.) It’s an over-used character type nowadays, one that I predict might get old soon enough. But there’s enough of a difference with the fantasy-as-science aspect of his abilities to keep me from rolling my eyes at the parallels, for now. Abigail even notes the similarities between him and the detective “who consults for Scotland Yard in those stories,” in a nod of recognition which I appreciated. Plus, it’s just too fun to watch frazzled men fail to explain the inexplicable to hardened policemen, while their harassed assistants/companions/friends try to make sense of the vigorous tirades.

A small-ish cast of minor characters, including a lovely ghost who shares Jackaby’s house and an ex-assistant who has been transformed into a “temporary waterfowl,” rounds out the story nicely. The police force contains a few men who break the skeptical brute model so common in these far-fetched detective stories. One young policeman, in particular, is remarkably understanding to Jackaby’s suspicions and catches Abigail’s interest right off the bat. (I was pleased to see that she didn’t fall for her eccentric employer after a day at his heels, which is so often the case when fictional ladies – usually written by men – meet such a figure.) Chief Inspector Marlowe isn’t a very inspired character: basically just a gruff-er Lestrade who doesn’t know how to behave when women faint. But there is an intimidating Commissioner to make procedures more tense, and even the bit-part jailer became memorable when he offers a bit of cake to the folks in custody. The judgmental women who keep rankling at Abigail’s life choices don’t add much to the story and come off as a half-hearted attempt to set Abigail apart from other women, which annoyed me. But, this being a mystery story, the characters who really matter are the detective duo and the various suspects. Abigail and Jackaby pulled their weight and kept me amused. And since the list of suspects/informants consisted of Banshees; small trolls; a mostly-invisible woman; a werewolf; and something even more horrifying, I was intrigued to find out how everyone fit into the deathly puzzle.

I also liked the setting: a fictional port town in snowy New England with plenty of ghosts and beasties hiding just out of sight. Jackaby’s office and lodging at 926 Augur Lane (oh, look, a street for supernatural detectives) had some nice little surprises hidden away. And I really appreciated the appearance of fairies, monsters, and spirits from various European traditions. Here’s hoping that if Jackabygets a sequel (and I think it deserves one, though the mystery was solved to satisfaction by the end), we will meet some creatures from folklores in other parts of the globe, as well.

The plot would have been a fairly typical murder mystery if it weren’t for the unearthly bent. Predictable, but the twists were exciting just the same, thanks to the spooky tension. It’s not all nerves and murder in this book, though. The dialogue and funny mishaps along the way kept things jolly enough, except in instances when characters find themselves battling for their lives in the winter darkness. I spent more time chuckling at witticisms while I read than I did in white-knuckled suspense.

I recommend Jackaby most fervently to members of particular fandoms who want more of the same: outlandish one-liners, magical gadgetry, and charged banter. I can’t help but wonder if Mr. Ritter had exactly that audience in mind when he was writing the book. For those of us who can’t keep up with SuperWhoLock enthusiasms, but still like a bit of magical weirdness in our Victorian mysteries, Jackaby is a quick and amusing read. Fans of Neil Gaiman’s story “A Study In Emerald” will see parallels here, too. Like I said before, there’s nothing incredibly new to be found here, but Jackabyis a satisfying addition to that genre. I’m interested to see if we get to revisit New Fiddleham anytime soon.

Similar books which I’ve reviewed:

The Quick by Lauren Owen

Lockwood & Co: The Screaming Staircase by Jonathan Stroud

Constable & Toop by Gareth P. Jones

The Haunting Of Alaizabel Cray by Chris Wooding

An ominous Thanksgiving scene found in an 1886 issue of Harper’s Young People. Wherever and however

An ominous Thanksgiving scene found in an 1886 issue of Harper’s Young People. Wherever and however you celebrate we hope it’s less forbidding.

#thanksgiving #turkeyday #turkeythebirdnotthecountry #library #harpers #victoriana #scary
https://www.instagram.com/p/B5YHBnPHYpA/?igshid=izpemsur3juu


Post link
loading