which outfit would you rather wear? (1819)
left 🩶💙
right 🤍🩷
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Ukraine

seen from Netherlands
seen from Argentina
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from Singapore
seen from Canada

seen from Canada
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from China
which outfit would you rather wear? (1819)
left 🩶💙
right 🤍🩷
In January 1819, Captain William Hodgson steered the three-masted merchant ship "Transit" from Bristol down the River Avon, beginning a six-month voyage to the Mediterranean. Here are some of his incredible illustrations.
Journal des Dames et des Modes, 1819 💙
Evening Dress, probably English, 1818-20
From the Cincinnati Art Museum
The comet of 1819. The Earth : its physical condition and most remarkable phenomena. 1855.
Internet Archive
Antonio Canova: Monument to the Royal Stuarts (1819)
"Winter" Needlework Picture
Hannah Jane Robinson American
1819
"In February of 1819, when Hannah Jane Robinson (1807-1890) completed this needlework picture at her aunt Elizabeth Robinson’s school, she must have been longing for the arrival of spring in the way most people do in February. Above her charming composition of a dog standing in a bare field looking towards a snug house surrounded with leafless trees, Hannah has embroidered a verse that reads: “SEE, how rude winter’s icy hand/Has stripp’d the trees and sealed the ground;/ But spring shall soon his rage withstand,/And spread new beauties all around.” The verse is excerpted from a hymn entitled “Winter” that was published in England in 1779 as one of the Olney Hymns by well-known evangelical Christian minister John Henry Newton (1725-1807). In its entirety, the hymn speaks of the soul’s longing to accept Jesus. But Hannah has simply focused on a much more universal wish for spring to arrive after the long winter months."