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#TheVictorianBookoftheDead
Mourning walking costume, 1824, Petit Courrier des Dames
1824 bonnet, although no mourning provenance
Mourning bracelet of similar pattern; the ones in the print are possibly hairwork.
https://t.co/gZ2b3yKW94
https://t.co/wImJh9vu5v
#FolkloreThursday "Pearls mean tears" also applies to the tears of mourning. Pearls are used to symbolise grief in mourning jewels.
https://t.co/mzUXtIDY8D
Cowans Auctions
Skinner Auctions
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead Early 1880s all-crape mourning bonnet. 1883 mourning costume
https://t.co/gGtOg2Ojm8
#DíadeLosAngelitos A white-draped Mexican street-car hearse used for children, Mexico City, 1912
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead
Executed #OTD in 1915, nurse Edith Cavell, who cared for German and Allied soldiers alike. Her murder inspired many grim images.
The Red Cross nurse holding German and British flags is said to be an image of Cavell.
https://t.co/uNZl4PK31Y
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead "Mary Stuart" mourning bonnets with ruche, c. 1897 and c. 1911. The illustration shows nun's veiling; the extant example's veil is crape.
https://t.co/84tUKhaYbX
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead "Lost," W.J. Perry, engraved by C.M. Jenkin, 1871-72.
#TheVIctorianBookoftheDead #LaborDayWeekend The Consumptive Seamstress
from "How to Keep Well," by Dr. Evans, 1917
And The Wretched Sewing Girl, c. 1860
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead What the Cemetery Superintendent Sees: 1896: Flower Thieves, Grave Charms, Grief Arithmetically Measured, Repentance and Black Stockings, Is the Grave Secure?
https://t.co/hboDanbb6l
#TheVIctorianBookoftheDead Hearse feathers. Variations among hearse plumes.
1867 funeral feather tray or hearse plumes
1870 hearse plume
Belgian mourning plume.
Horsehair hearse plume
https://t.co/h3Px0kNfMr
https://t.co/JyTRqAjamo
For #ForteanFriday, fearing the Reaper: A fight to the death--with Death. Plus other visits from the hooded King of Terrors.
https://t.co/IF42oFG7xA
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead #Death #GrimReaper
#TheVIctorianBookoftheDead 1881
A young wife lost her husband, who was about 70 years old.
“But how did you come to marry a man of that age?” asked her friend.
“Why,” said the young widow, “you see, I only had the choice between two old men, and, of course, I took the oldest.”
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead Hist! Went the Corpse: 1889 A cunning plan to shake off a mother-in-law who, to quote the corpse, is a "holy terror. Worse than ten parrots and the hydrophobia."
https://t.co/aHeFINPMm2
Death's best Olympic events: Wrestling, boxing, dressage (on a pale horse)
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead #Olympics
Death Giving George Taylor a Cross Buttock, William Hogarth, c. 1750
1827 Death in the ring defeats all comers.
Mid-17th c lindenwood carving
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead Dame en Deuil, Romaine Brooks, c. 1910 https://t.co/PaQIUDGQJs
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead 1871 A little ten-year-old miss told her mother the other day that she was never going to marry, but meant to be a widow, because widows dressed in such nice black, and always looked so happy.
https://t.co/r17M0nMdz4
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead 1878 second mourning costumes.
Personal collection.
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead #InternationalNursesDay During the Great War, the nurse facing down death or murdered by the enemy was a popular theme in art, inspired both by Nurse Edith Cavell and the heroism of thousands of unnamed nurses in the field.
Former eBay listings
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead #BirdDay Doves were a popular addition to funeral flowers. Could be bought or hired for the occasion.
#BatAppreciationDay #TheVictorianBookoftheDead
Long-eared bat flying over a churchyard, J.W. Whimper
https://t.co/gX3wFP6YyR