British poet Edward James, captivated by his wife, had the trail of her wet footprints from a bath woven into the carpet.

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British poet Edward James, captivated by his wife, had the trail of her wet footprints from a bath woven into the carpet.
Edward James, patron of the surrealists, was so besotted with his wife, the dancer Tilly Losch, that when he saw the trail of wet footprints she left up the stairs after her bath at Monkton House, he had them woven into the carpet.
"Staircase" ⊹ Monkton House (1930s) ~ Edward James ◇ Tilly Losch's footprints forever mid-step
Edward James
Magritte visited (his patron) James in London, he painted a version of his 1929 canvas "On the Threshold of Liberty" to install in the stairwell; he also photographed James in front of the painting.
The photographic description is so close to the painter’s realistic style, and James is so close to the painting, that he seems to stand on the threshold-evidently unaware that the potential liberty before him is threatened by the heavy artillery at his side.
“Tilly Losch Footprint” Carpet,’ 1950,
Monkton House, South Downs, West Sussex, United Kingdom,
The Surrealist British poet Edward James was so in love with his ballerina wife, Tilly Losch, that when he saw a trail of her wet footprints up the stairs after her bath, he had them woven into the carpet. He also created a stairwell lined in a carpet woven with his dog’s paw-prints.
So this is where King George hid his luvvvv letters
To AND from a certain Washington
Featuring Tallmadge getting a lecture 😫 (help him...please)
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I see what you did there, WASHIE!! SUBLIMINAL MESSAGES!/j
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"How much would Washington pay for a bust of the King" - some guy from Turn. I forgot his name.
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