♕ empress regnants of all russia
Show & Tell
art blog(derogatory)
Three Goblin Art
d e v o n

ellievsbear
tumblr dot com

PR's Tumblrdome
Peter Solarz
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
styofa doing anything
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

oozey mess
hello vonnie

No title available
No title available
Misplaced Lens Cap

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Hungary

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from Mexico
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@aethelfleds
♕ empress regnants of all russia
“The colour palette was inspired by two tapestries – one at Hampton Court Palace, and another at the V&A – that production designer Lucy [Spink] had found. Some parts of them have aged terribly, so the colours are very faded – beautiful but washed out – and then some bits are still quite acidic and bright. And then you’ve got all the dark shadow tones, so together they formed the basis of my colour palette.
The focus in this production is that for once, it’s not about Henry VIII, it’s not about the men: it’s about the women. So, the men are on the outside of our focus as an audience, almost. They are the black tones, the dark shadows, and their costumes are not really to be noticed at all. Anne has her in a circle of the women around her – her ladies in waiting – and they’re in these kind of faded, beautiful washed-out tones.
Then you’ve got these acidic bright jewel tones that capture the eye in Anne’s wardrobe: she needs to be the centre of focus. The idea is that the audience’s eye is always drawn to exactly where it needs to be.”
“The Unlikely Inspiration Behind Anne Boleyn’s Commanding Costumes”, Lynsey Moore interview with Bustle
Dancing “La Volta” in Tudor Films
The Sword and the Rose (1953) - Mary Tudor and Charles Brandon
Anne of the Thousand Days (1969) - Anne Boleyn and Henry Percy
Elizabeth R (1971) - Elizabeth I and Robert Dudley
Elizabeth (1998) - Elizabeth I and Robert Dudley
The Virgin Queen (2005) - Elizabeth I and Robert Dudley
The Tudors (2008) - Anne Boleyn and Henry VIII
Wolf Hall (2015) - Anne Boleyn and Thomas Howard
The Spanish Princess (2019) - Catherine of Aragon and Henry VIII
Anne Boleyn (2021) - Anne Boleyn and Henry Norris
I’m angry with myself? Why?
→ History meme: 4 Families/Dynasties : (¾) Tudor Dynasty (England)
Children of Henry VIII & Catherine of Aragon
man splaining isnt when a guy is excited and talking about something he likes thats just called sharing your interests with people man splaining was when one of my male coworkers started explaining storyboarding to me (a sequential arts major) because he “learned about it from a simpsons dvd extra”
Now Frida is a very interesting combination, because Frida will get dressed up, she will wear traditional garb in a non-traditional way. She had her own sense of style, and she celebrated herself. In her darkness, you could see that in her dress when she cut her hair off and wore a suit—we were shocked. But we understood, because the great thing about doing something like Frida is that you had proof within both her words and paintings. Your tools were there. You watched Salma become Frida, and you watched Salma as Frida.
Costume Design by Julie Weiss Salma Hayek as Frida Kahlo FRIDA (dir. Julie Taymor, 2002)
minor coding myself by having bangs
feel like pure shit just want thee/thou pronouns back
Tudor Week Day 6: Favourite Tudor Non Fiction Media/s - Documentary
David Starkey’s documentary on Elizabeth I
DISCLAIMER: David Starkey is a horrid, racist git who I denounce utterly as a decent human being. Nevertheless, this is - frustratingly - one of the best documentaries on Elizabeth out there with the most well-casted Elizabeth I’ve ever seen. Thankfully, the full thing is on YouTube so if you watch it there, you won’t be giving Starkey a penny for it.
art detail: blue & gold fashion
Tudor Week Day 7: Favourite Tudor Historical Event
The Kenilworth Festivities of 1575
Kenilworth Castle was granted to Robert Dudley by Queen Elizabeth I in 1563, a year before he was to be made Earl of Leicester. Leicester spent lavishly to expand the castle and turn it from a Medieval fortress to a Renaissance pleasure palace, complete with sumptuous gardens for Elizabeth’s use.
In 1575, Leicester invited the Queen to his castle for a sumptuous 19-day celebration of its completed renovation. Leicester had gone all out; there was music, feasts, dances, hunts, plays and pageants, acrobats and awe-inspiring fireworks - some were shaped like dragons and others could dive into the water and shoot back out, still burning. It was considered by some to be one of the most spectacular events of the century.
Most tellingly, many of the entertainments were centred around the theme of marriage. Some historians claim that this was Leicester’s grand, last attempt at a marriage proposal to the Queen, a sort of courtly swan song. Other argue that the heavy overtures of marriage are actually Leicester subtly asking the Queen to let him marry someone else since he wed Lettice Knollys soon afterwards. Whatever his true intention, the Kenilworth festivities went down as one of the most magnificent fêtes in English history.
ANNE BOLEYN (2021)
Costumes in Jane Eyre (2011) dir. Cary Joji Fukunaga, costume design by Michael O’Connor (½)
Katharine Hepburn. The Lion in Winter. Anthony Harvey, 1968.