Misplaced in time⊠can she find her way home? A Home for Helena #Regency #timetravel #99¹ http://ow.ly/AR1A30a2Xus http://thndr.me/01WfTN
Three Goblin Art
Sade Olutola
AnasAbdin
hello vonnie
styofa doing anything
todays bird
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trying on a metaphor
RMH
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

romaâ

oozey mess

Product Placement
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Peter Solarz
art blog(derogatory)

Discoholic đȘ©
Xuebing Du

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we're not kids anymore.

seen from Singapore

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@qeisenart
Misplaced in time⊠can she find her way home? A Home for Helena #Regency #timetravel #99¹ http://ow.ly/AR1A30a2Xus http://thndr.me/01WfTN
I just supported A Home for Helena on @ThunderclapIt // @susanaauthor
Happy Halloween, Tumblr! Fall is in the air, and Crimson Peak is taking over. So, to celebrate the holiday, the movie, and also as a thank you to nearly twenty thousand (!!!) followers, Iâm having a Crimson Peak giveaway with some memorabilia of the movie!
Items
A Thomas Sharpe Pop! Funko Doll
American 16-Month 2016 Wall Calendar
Official Novelization of the movie by Nancy Holder
Spiral Notebook featuring art of the Sharpe siblings by @hiddles-and-a-cuppa-tea (from her Redbubble!)
A key to Allerdale Hall keychain with âCrimson Peakâ engraved on it
Rules
Entries will be counted until November 5th. Winner will be chosen shortly after.
Unfortunately, due to projected shipping costs and a lot of forms, Iâve made the hard decision to keep this giveaway to US entries only. Iâm very sorry, but I donât see it as feasible to afford to send it all. :â(
Please be following me, and please no giveaway blogs :)
Only reblogs will be counted. You can like to save it, but it wonât count as an entry. Reblog as many times as youâd like, though!
Winner will be chosen via a random generator
If You Win
Please make sure your askbox or submit is open so I can contact you.
Winner will have 48 hours to respond; if this window passes another will be chosen.
You must be willing to give me a valid shipping address; everything will come in a big box as one shipment.
Please let me know if you have any questions or concerns. Iâm so happy Iâm finally able to host this, and thank you all so much for your continued support of this blog, and also being a fan of Tom. Weâre a pretty great fandom. Happy Halloween, and good luck!
Poor Aquaman. Not even my 4yoâs Step Into Reading book can make you sound cool.Â
â Mademoiselle Harlay (late 1900s)
You can have the 1950s. I want to be an Edwardian girl.
Redingote ca. 1808-12 and pelisse ca. 1809-10
From Napoleon & the Empire of Fashion
Maude Fealy (March 4, 1883 â November 9, 1971) was an American stage and silent film actress who survived into the talkie era.
Born Maude Mary Hawk in 1883 in Memphis, Tennessee, the daughter of actress and acting coach, Margaret Fealy. Her mother remarried to Rafaello Cavallo, the first conductor of the Pueblo, Colorado Symphony Orchestra, and Fealy lived in Colorado off and on for most of her life. At the age of three, she performed on stage with her mother and went on to make her Broadway debut in the 1900 production of Quo Vadis, again with her mother.
Fealy toured England with William Gillette in Sherlock Holmes from 1901 to 1902. Between 1902 and 1905, she frequently toured with Sir Henry Irvingâs company in theUnited Kingdom and by 1907 was the star in touring productions in the United States.
Fealy appeared in her first silent film in 1911 for Thanhouser Studios, making another eighteen between then and 1917, after which she did not perform in film for another fourteen years. During the summers of 1912 and 1913, she organized and starred with the Fealy-Durkin Company that put on performances at the Casino Theatre at Lakeside Amusement Park in Denver and the following year began touring the western half of the U.S.
Fealy had some commercial success as a playwright-performer. She co-wrote The Red Cap with Grant Stewart, a noted New York playwright and performer, which ran at the National Theatre in Chicago in August 1928. Though she was not in the cast of that production, the playâs plot revolves around the invention of a wheeled luggage carrier ostensibly invented by Fealy herself. A newspaper article reporting on the invention may be genuine, or may be a publicity stunt created to promote the play. Other plays authored or co-authored by Fealy include At Midnight and, with the highly regarded Chicago playwright, Alice Gerstenberg, The Promise.
Throughout her career, Fealy taught acting in many cities where she lived; early on with her mother, under names which included Maude Fealy Studio of Speech, Fealy School of Stage and Screen Acting, Fealy School of Dramatic Expression. She taught in Grand Rapids, Michigan; Burbank, California; and Denver, Colorado. By the 1930s, she was living in Los Angeles where she became involved in the Federal Theatre Project and at age 50 returned to secondary roles in film, including an uncredited appearance in The Ten Commandments. Later in her career, she wrote and appeared in pageants, programs, and presented lectures for schools and community organizations.
In Denver, she met a drama critic from a local newspaper named Louis Sherwin. The two married in secret because, as they expected, her domineering mother did not approve. The couple soon separated, and a divorce in 1909 followed, with Fealy immediately marrying an actor named James Peter Durkin who became a successful silent film director withAdolph Zukorâs Famous Players Film Company. That marriage ended in divorce in 1917. Soon after this Fealy married James E. Cort. This third marriage also ended in a 1923 annulment and would be her last. She bore no children in any of the marriages.
Fealy died in 1971, aged 88, at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California. She was interred in the Abbey of the Psalms Mausoleum at Hollywood Forever Cemetery.
(Biography From Wikipedia)
Henrique Alvim Correa: War of the Worlds, 1906
Breloque was trembling all over.
Tony Johannot, from Histoire du roi de BohĂȘme et de ses sept chĂąteaux (Story of the King of Bohemia and his seven castles), by charles Nodier, Paris, 1830.
(Source: archive.org)
So Ola LOVED the Avengers. And after we'd bought our tickets and taken our seats, the manager of the theater found us and gave her a poster because "everyone thought she had the best costume."
Thank you, movie theater, for making one little girl really, really happy (and an even bigger Avengers fan than she already was).
(P.S. Robert Downey Jr. has got nothing on her.)
Here are some photos of me going to a bal in Switzerland. Oh what a lovely bal it was and so many lovely people. I even danced a bit that night an also did some sketches of the guests. The mademoiselle in the lavender dress is me by the way. I will also do a blog post about what I was wearing later on. Hope you enjoy the photos!
A Regency ball in Switzerland.
The 1st female gardeners were employed at Kew in 1896 & encouraged to wear menâs clothing so as not to distract! #TBT pic.twitter.com/Zp2xOYG5Pg
â Kew Gardens (@kewgardens) April 30, 2015
Also see âbifurcated girlsâ at http://my-ear-trumpet.tumblr.com/post/114270214715/publicdomainreview-vanity-fair-special-issue
Anna Selezneva as ballet instructor for Vogue Russia, October 2012. Photographer: Patrick Demarchelier.
Hardly a smile is cracked by Selezneva throughout the photoshoot. The Russian beauty is one strict teacher, but the students seem content. Surrounded by little versions of herself, Selezneva is not the star but merely the one wearing fashionable clothes.
the Legends of Charlemagne, illustrated by N.C. Wyeth.
by Thomas Bulfinch.
Hamda Al Fahim dresses
Ralph and Russo Spring/Summer 2015 Haute Couture