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Love the fashions worn by the Bridgerton ladies and Jane Austen? Reticule, Spencer, Pelisse. #Bridgerton #RegencyFashion #JaneAusten

Suzi Love Posted on February 16, 2024 by Suzi LoveJanuary 2, 2024
What was fashionable outdoor wear for the Bridgerton ladis, Jane Austen, and their contemporaries? Reticules, Spencers, and Pelisses, or Walking Dresses, Or Redingotes. History Notes Books 3, 4, and 5 By Suzi Love.

What was fashionable for purses in past centuries? Call them what you like: purses, bags, handbags, reticules, ridicules, clutches, or pocket replacements. They all did the same job and they changed greatly with the prevailing fashions of time. books2read.com/suziloveReticules

What was fashionable in women’s jackets in the Regency Era? Call them what you like: Spencers, short jackets, or Regency jackets. They provided modesty and warmth and they changed greatly with the prevailing fashions of the time. Take a look at the jackets being worn by women in the early 1800s. books2read.com/suziloveSpencers

What sort of coats did women wear during the Regency years? them what you like: Coat, Pelisse, Redingote, Walking Dress, Promenade Dress. Take a look at what was being worn by women, men, and children. books2read.com/suzilovePelisse

HN_3-4-5_Fashion-accessories-reticules-spencers-redingotes.-regency-fashion-history-.-history-notes_books2read.comsuzilovesp
HN_3-4-5_Fashion-accessories-reticules-spencers-redingotes.-regency-fashion-history-.-history-notes_books2read.comsuzilovesp
Love the fashions worn by the Bridgerton ladies and Jane Austen? Reticule, Spencer, Pelisse. #Bridgerton #RegencyFashion #JaneAusten https://www.books2read.com/suziloveSpencers Share on X
HN_4_Spencers, Or Jackets. #Regency #Georgian #Victorian #Fashion History Notes Book 4 By Suzi Love. books2read.com/suziloveSpencers
HN_4_Spencers, Or Jackets. #Regency #Georgian #Victorian #Fashion History Notes Book 4 By Suzi Love.
Posted in 1700s, 1700s Mens fashion, 1700s Womens Fashion, 1800s, 1800s Mens Fashions, 1800s women's fashion, 1900s, Australia, Bridgerton, Canada, Coat or Pelisse Or Redingote, Decorative Item, Edwardian Era, England, Europe, fashion accessories, France, Georgian Era, Georgian Fashion, History Notes, Jane Austen, military, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Reticule or Bag, Romantic Era, sewing, Spencer, Suzi Love Books, Suzi Love Images, travel, U.S.A, Victorian Era | Tagged 1700s Mens Fashion, 1700s Women's Fashion, 1800s women's fashion, Book 3, Book 4, Book 5, Bridgerton, Edwardian Era, fashion accessories, Fashion Plate, History Notes, Jane Austen, Redingote Or Pelisse Or Coat, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Regency Life, reticule or bag, Romantic Era, Spencer, Suzi Love Books, Victorian Era

Jane Austen, the Bridgerton family and contemporaries used boxes of metal, leather, or silks, decorated with jewels and engraving. #Bridgerton #Travel #JaneAusten #RegencyEra #Antiques

Suzi Love Posted on February 1, 2024 by Suzi LoveDecember 30, 2023

Craftsmen created containers of precious metals, leather, and silks and decorated them with jewels and engraving. Jane Austen and her contemporaries would have used writing boxes, linen boxes when travelling, boxes to hold their food and drink supplies while traveling by carriage, and decorative boxes to keep letters, ribbons, gloves, hairpins etc. Boxes, Cases, and Necessaires By Suzi Love, History Notes Book 11. books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases.

HN_11_Craftsmen created containers of precious metals, leather, silks, and decorated them with jewels to make exquisite and expensive items as well as practical carrying cases. books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases
HN_11_Craftsmen created containers of precious metals, leather, silks, and decorated them with jewels to make exquisite and expensive items as well as practical carrying cases. books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases
Jane Austen, the Bridgerton family and contemporaries used boxes of metal, leather, or silks, decorated with jewels and engraving. #Bridgerton #Travel #JaneAusten #RegencyEra #Antiques https:/books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases Share on X
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Posted in 1700s, 1800s, 1900s, Australia, Box Or Container, Canada, Carriage, cartoon, Decorative Item, Edwardian Era, England, Europe, Food and Drink, France, Georgian Era, Google Books, Grand Tour, History, History Notes, household, Jane Austen, London, medical, military, Music, postal, Regency Era, Romantic Era, Russia, sewing, Suzi Love Books, Suzi Love Images, Suzi Love Writing, travel, U.S.A, Victorian Era, weapons, Writing Tools | Tagged Book 11, Box Or Container, Bridgerton, carriages, decorative, drinks, fashion accessories, Food, furniture, Georgian era, History Notes, Jane Austen, Regency Era, Romantic Era, sewing, Suzi Love Books, travel, Victorian Era, Writing Tools

1808 Richard Trevithick’s Steam Circus, Bloomsbury, London, U.K. Railway in Jane Austen and the Bridgerton times. #travel #JaneAusten #Bridgerton #railway

Suzi Love Posted on January 26, 2024 by Suzi LoveDecember 28, 2023

1808 Richard Trevithick’s Steam Circus, Bloomsbury, London, U.K. Site where Trevithick ran his locomotive ‘Catch Me Who Can’. Trevithick wanted to prove that traveling by train was faster than on horseback. Locomotive ran at top speed of 19 km per hour and people paid a shilling to sit in an attached car and be pulled around. Via Wikimedia Commons commons.wikimedia.org (PD-ART) This was the start of the railway expansions across England in Jane Austen’s time.

1808 Richard Trevithick's Steam Circus, Bloomsbury, London, U.K. Site where Trevithick ran his locomotive 'Catch Me Who Can'. Trevithick wanted to prove that traveling by train was faster than on horseback. Locomotive ran at top speed of 19 km per hour and people paid a shilling to sit in an attached car and be pulled around. Via Wikimedia Commons commons.wikimedia.org (PD-ART)
1808 Richard Trevithick’s Steam Circus, Bloomsbury, London, U.K. Site where Trevithick ran his locomotive ‘Catch Me Who Can’. Trevithick wanted to prove that traveling by train was faster than on horseback. Locomotive ran at top speed of 19 km per hour and people paid a shilling to sit in an attached car and be pulled around. Via Wikimedia Commons commons.wikimedia.org (PD-ART)
1808 Richard Trevithick's Steam Circus, Bloomsbury, London, U.K. Railway in Jane Austen and the Bridgerton times. #travel #JaneAusten #Bridgerton #railway books2read.com/SuziLoveTravel  Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, Bridgerton, Jane Austen, London, Regency Era, Suzi Love Images, travel | Tagged Bridgerton, British history, Jane Austen, railway, Regency Era, Regency Life, Regency London, travel, WikiMedia Commons
1816 Quilt Panel, English. Block printed cotton panel showing roses, lilies and lilacs. via collections.vam.ac.uk 3

1816 Block Printed Quilt Panel made to celebrate the Marriage of Princess Charlotte to Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg. #RegencyEra #Royalty #BritishHistory #Sewing

Suzi Love Posted on January 17, 2024 by Suzi LoveDecember 30, 2023

1816  Block Printed Quilt Panel made to celebrate the Marriage of Princess Charlotte to Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg.

Textile of block-printed white cotton in madder colours with pencilled blue. The cotton is printed with 9.5 octagonal panels intended to be cut out and applied to patchwork quilts. Each panels contains a bunch of flowers. Around the inner border is an inscription of Princess Charlotte of Wales married to Leopold Prince of Saxe-Coburg May 2, 1816. In the borders are three Prince of Wales feathers, the Royal Arms, and a crown on each side. At the end of the textile is printed a rectangular panel containing the manufacturers name and in a corner is the name ‘G. Swindels’.

This quilt has an excise stamp for 1816 and is inscribed ‘John Lowe and Co. Furniture Printers, Shepley Hall’, providing the name of the only identifiable manufacturer of these panels, although there are likely to have been others. John Lowe was a well-known firm of calico printers with large cotton factories and extensive bleaching grounds close to the River Tame near Ashton-under-Lyne in Lancashire.

Hand-quilting is done on a frame using needles called ‘betweens’. The stitches are executed with one hand; the other hand is kept underneath the quilt to feel for the needle. Small, uniform stitches (usually a ‘running stitch’) are taken through the three layers to form a decorative design. In ‘piecing’ or ‘patchwork’, small pieces of fabric are sewn together to produce a decorative design. The most enduring method in Britain is done by hand, and is known as ‘piecing over paper’. The pattern is first drawn onto paper and then accurately cut. Small pieces of fabric are tacked round each of the shapes, and then joined together from the back using overstitch. Most of the quilt top visible here has been pieced over paper, but in some areas the fabrics have been applied directly on to the earlier quilt that forms the wadding.

Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England.  

1816 Quilt Panel, English. Block printed cotton panel showing roses, lilies and lilacs. via collections.vam.ac.uk_1
1816 Quilt Panel, English. Block printed cotton panel showing roses, lilies and lilacs. via collections.vam.ac.uk_1
1816 Quilt Panel, English. Block printed cotton panel showing roses, lilies and lilacs. via collections.vam.ac.uk_2
1816 Quilt Panel, English. Block printed cotton panel showing roses, lilies and lilacs. via collections.vam.ac.uk_2
1816 Quilt Panel, English. Block printed cotton panel showing roses, lilies and lilacs. via collections.vam.ac.uk 4
1816 Quilt Panel, English. Block printed cotton panel showing roses, lilies and lilacs. via collections.vam.ac.uk 4
1816 Quilt Panel, English. Block printed cotton panel showing roses, lilies and lilacs. via collections.vam.ac.uk 5
1816 Quilt Panel, English. Block printed cotton panel showing roses, lilies and lilacs. via collections.vam.ac.uk 5
1816 Block Printed Quilt Panel made to celebrate the Marriage of Princess Charlotte to Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg. #RegencyEra #Royalty #BritishHistory #Sewing https://books2read.com/suziloveROver Share on X
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Posted in Decorative Item, England, household, peerage, Regency Era, Royalty, sewing, Suzi Love Images | Tagged household, Regency Era, Regency London, Regency Royalty, sewing

How did Jane Austen seal her letters? 1808 Silver Wax Jack With Coil Of Red Wax, Irish. #JaneAusten #RegencyEra #writing #postal

1808 Silver Wax Jack, Irish. By Robert Breading (active 1775–1822) Dublin. via suzilove.com and Metropolitan Museum New York City, U.S.A. metmuseum.org

How did Jane Austen seal her letters? Wax was melted by lighting the tip of a coiled wax length. This is called a wax jack. The melted wax blob was placed on the outside of a letter or document. A personal desk seal or a fob seal was pressed into the wax to identify the sender or owner of the document. Aristocrat families had their own coat of arms and others may have had their initials or their name on the seal.

1808 Silver Wax Jack With Coil Of Red Wax, Irish. #RegencyEra #writing #Jane Austen
How did Jane Austen seal her letters? 1808 Silver Wax Jack With Coil Of Red Wax, Irish. #JaneAusten #RegencyEra #writing #postal books2read.com/SuziLoveWritingTools Share on X
HN_13_D2D_WritingTools Book 13 What did the lady of the house use to pen notes? What sat on the desk of the man of the house when managing his accounts? #History #Nonfiction #travel books2read.com/SuziLoveWritingTools
HN_13_D2D_WritingTools Book 13 What did the lady of the house use to pen notes? What sat on the desk of the man of the house when managing his accounts? #History #Nonfiction #travel books2read.com/SuziLoveWritingTools
January 6, 2024 by Suzi Love Posted in 1800s, Canada, England, Europe, History, household, Jane Austen, postal, Regency Era, Suzi Love Images, U.S.A, Writing Tools Tagged 1800s Or 19th Century, household, Ireland, Jane Austen, Metropolitan Museum NYC, postal, Regency Era, Regency Life, Writing Tools

Jane Austen, the Bridgerton family and contemporaries used boxes of metal, leather, or silks, decorated with jewels and engraving. #Bridgerton #Travel #JaneAusten #RegencyEra #Antiques

Suzi Love Posted on January 2, 2024 by Suzi LoveDecember 30, 2023

Craftsmen created containers of precious metals, leather, and silks and decorated them with jewels and engraving. Jane Austen and her contemporaries would have used writing boxes, linen boxes when travelling, boxes to hold their food and drink supplies while traveling by carriage, and decorative boxes to keep letters, ribbons, gloves, hairpins etc. Boxes, Cases, and Necessaires By Suzi Love, History Notes Book 11. books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases.

Xmas_HN_11_Boxes
HN 11 Boxes, Cases, and Necessaires By Suzi Love History Notes Book 11 Craftsmen created containers of precious metals, leather, and silks and decorated them with jewels and engraving. books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases
Jane Austen, the Bridgerton family and contemporaries used boxes of metal, leather, or silks, decorated with jewels and engraving. #Bridgerton #Travel #JaneAusten #RegencyEra #Antiques https:/books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases Share on X
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Posted in 1700s, 1800s, 1900s, Australia, Box Or Container, Canada, Carriage, cartoon, Decorative Item, Edwardian Era, England, Europe, Food and Drink, France, Georgian Era, Google Books, Grand Tour, History, History Notes, household, Jane Austen, London, medical, military, Music, postal, Regency Era, Romantic Era, Russia, sewing, Suzi Love Books, Suzi Love Images, Suzi Love Writing, travel, U.S.A, Victorian Era, weapons, Writing Tools | Tagged Book 11, Bridgerton, carriages, Christmas, decorative, drinks, fashion accessories, Food, furniture, Georgian era, History Notes, Jane Austen, Regency Era, Romantic Era, sewing, Suzi Love Books, travel, Victorian Era, Writing Tools

“The more I know of the world the more I am convinced that I shall never see a man whom I can really love. I require so much!” Jane Austen ~ Sense and Sensibility (1811) #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #Quote

Suzi Love Posted on September 30, 2023 by Suzi LoveAugust 19, 2023

“The more I know of the world the more I am convinced that I shall never see a man whom I can really love. I require so much!” Jane Austen ~ Sense and Sensibility (1811)

Quote_JA_"The more I know of the world the more I am convinced that I shall never see a man whom I can really love. I require so much!" Jane Austen ~ Sense and Sensibility  (1811)
https://books2read.com/SuziLoveFashion1810-1814
“The more I know of the world the more I am convinced that I shall never see a man whom I can really love. I require so much!” Jane Austen ~ Sense and Sensibility (1811)
"…I am convinced that I shall never see a man whom I can really love. I require so much!" Jane Austen ~ Sense and Sensibility (1811) #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #Quote. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveFashion1810-1814 Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, England, Jane Austen, Quotations, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Suzi Love Images | Tagged 1800s Or 19th Century, 1800s women's fashion, Jane Austen, Quotations, Regency Era, Suzi Love Images

1820 ca. Brass Inlaid Writing Box, English, By William Dobson, London. #RegencyEra #Antiques #writing

Suzi Love Posted on September 25, 2023 by Suzi LoveSeptember 16, 2023

1820 ca. Writing Box, English. Rosewood and brass inlaid writing box by William Dobson, The Strand, London. Makers label, gilded candle holders, ink wells. via antiques-atlas.com. Portable boxes for writing materials existed for many centuries but in the last decades of the 18th century socio-economic circumstances in England necessitated the wide use of a portable desk in the form of a box which could be used on a table or on one’s lap. Hence “Lap Desk”.

1820 ca. Writing Box, English. Outside View. Rosewood and brass inlaid writing box by William Dobson, The Strand, London. Makers label, gilded candle holders, ink wells. antiques-atlas.com
1820 ca. Writing Box, English. Writing Slope. Rosewood and brass inlaid writing box by William Dobson, The Strand, London. Makers label, gilded candle holders, ink wells. antiques-atlas.com
1820 ca. Writing Box, English. Inside View. Rosewood and brass inlaid writing box by William Dobson, The Strand, London. Makers label, gilded candle holders, ink wells. antiques-atlas.com
1820 ca. Writing Box, English. Inside Wood View. Rosewood and brass inlaid writing box by William Dobson, The Strand, London. Makers label, gilded candle holders, ink wells. antiques-atlas.com
1820 ca. Writing Box, English. Label View. Rosewood and brass inlaid writing box by William Dobson, The Strand, London. Makers label, gilded candle holders, ink wells. antiques-atlas.com
1820 ca. Brass Inlaid Writing Box, English, By William Dobson, London. #RegencyEra #Antiques #writing books2read.com/SuziLoveWritingTools Share on X
HN_13_D2D_WritingTools Book 13 What did the lady of the house use to pen notes? What sat on the desk of the man of the house when managing his accounts? #History #Nonfiction #travel books2read.com/SuziLoveWritingTools
HN_13_D2D_WritingTools Book 13 What did the lady of the house use to pen notes? What sat on the desk of the man of the house when managing his accounts? #History #Nonfiction #travel books2read.com/SuziLoveWritingTools
Posted in 1800s, Box Or Container, Decorative Item, London, Regency Era, Suzi Love Images, travel, Writing Tools | Tagged antiques, Box Or Container, Regency Era, Regency London, Suzi Love Images, travel, Writing Tools | Leave a reply

1800s Early The Metropolitan Police In Jane Austen and Bridgerton Years, London. #JaneAusten #Bridgerton #BritishHistory #RegencyEra #police #London

Suzi Love Posted on August 30, 2023 by Suzi LoveAugust 15, 2023

The Metropolitan Police, London Before 1829

  • Policing in the 17th and 18th centuries – one unarmed able-bodied citizen in each parish a man was appointed or elected annually to serve for a year unpaid as parish constable. 
  • Worked in co-operation with the local Justices in observing laws and maintaining order. 
  • In towns, responsibility for the maintenance of order was conferred on the guilds 
  • Later conferred on other specified groups of citizens
  • These supplied bodies of paid men, known as The Watch
  • The Watch guarded the gates and patrolled the streets at night
  • Huge social and economic changes and increases in town populations meant parish constables and Watch systems couldn’t cope. 
  • In 1812, 1818 and 1822, Parliamentary committees investigated crime and policing. 
  • Impotence of the law-enforcement machinery was a serious menace
  • Conditions became intolerable and led to the formation of the New Police
  • The Metropolitan Police
  • Established by an Act of Parliament in 1829 by Sir Robert Peel
  • Peel appointed 2 Commissioners
  • Appointed 895 Constables, 88 Sergeants, 20 Inspectors and 8 Superintendents. 
  • Superseded the local Watch in the London area but the City of London was not covered. 
  • Numbers increased
  • Grew to include the Greater London area (excluding the City of London) 
  • Included parts of the Home Counties and all Royal Naval Dock Yards throughout the country. 
  • First officer was given the warrant number ‘1’ 
  • Today the service is reaching near to a quarter million
  • The warrant number is unique to the officer
  • Different from the shoulder number which changes as the officer moves stations.  Scotland Yard
  • Colonel Charles Rowan and Richard Mayne organized and designed the New Police
  • The two Commissioners occupied a private house at 4, Whitehall Place
  • The back opened on to a courtyard and used as a police station
  • This address led to the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police being known as Scotland Yard.
  • Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, (5 February 1788 – 2 July 1850) British Conservative statesman who served twice as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Home Secretary. Regarded as the father of modern British policing as he founded the Metropolitan Police Service. 

Other Police organizations

  • Some older police establishments remained outside control of the Metropolitan Police Office  
  • The Bow Street Patrols, mounted and foot, commonly called the Bow Street runners.
  • Police Office constables attached to the offices of, and under the control of, the Magistrates.
  • The Marine or River Police.
  • By 1839 all these establishments had been absorbed by the Metropolitan Police Force. 
  • The City of London Police was set up in 1839 and is an independent force to this day.
Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, (5 February 1788 ? 2 July 1850) 
Portrait by Henry William Pickersgill.
British Conservative statesman, twice Prime Minister of U.K., Chancellor of Exchequer, and Home Secretary. 
1829 Founded the Metropolitan Police Service. Via Wikimedia Commons
 commons.wikimedia.org
1800s Early The Metropolitan Police In Jane Austen and Bridgerton Years, London. #JaneAusten #Bridgerton #BritishHistory #RegencyEra #police #London https://books2read.com/suziloveROver Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, Bridgerton, History, Jane Austen, Legal, London, Suzi Love Images | Tagged 1800s, Bridgerton, Jane Austen, legal, London, police, Regency Era, Regency London, Suzi Love Images

What did an older lady do and wear in Bridgerton and Jane Austen’s Times? #Bridgerton #JaneAusten #RegencyEra

Suzi Love Posted on August 29, 2023 by Suzi LoveAugust 4, 2023

What did an older lady do and wear in the Regency Era? Information & pictures for readers and writers of early 1800s history, nonfiction and fiction. books2read.com/suziloveOLD The older lady’s day usually started with her toilette in her bedroom, where her maid helped her dress for the day and styled her hair. After that, she would join her family downstairs for breakfast unless she preferred a tray with either tea or hot chocolate in her bedroom as she prepared for her busy day. Her day would be made up of speaking with the housekeeper and the cook about the week’s menus, assuring that the servants were all available that day and no one was ill, and checking the list of foods needed.

What did an older lady do and wear in #RegencyEra? Information & pictures for readers and writers of #History #nonfiction #Regency books2read.com/suziloveOLD
What did an older lady do and wear in #RegencyEra? Information & pictures for readers and writers of #History #nonfiction #Regency books2read.com/suziloveOLD

She would also enquire if the laundry was up to date and that they had enough good linen to make up all the beds before extended family members and guests arrived. If she was in the country and hosting a weekend house party, she would assign rooms to the guests on her lists and query that all was in readiness for their arrival.

What did an older lady do and wear in #RegencyEra? Information and pictures for readers and writers of #History #nonfiction #Regency. https://books2read.com/suziloveOLD Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, bedroom fashion, Bridgerton, Coat or Pelisse Or Redingote, Corset, Customs & Manners, Dress Or Robe, England, Europe, fashion accessories, Food and Drink, Google Books, hats, History, Jane Austen, medical, Pastimes, Quotations, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Regency Life Series, Reticule or Bag, shoes, Spencer, Suzi Love Books, Suzi Love Images, underclothing | Tagged 1800s women's fashion, Book 5, Dress Or Gown, fashion accessories, Fashion Plate, Food, Hats And Hair, household, Jane Austen, pastimes, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Regency Life Series, Regency London, Shoes, Suzi Love Books

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