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Fascinated with historical fashion? Treat yourself to a nonfiction Box Set on corsets, including Bridgerton and Jane Austen years. #Bridgerton #JaneAusten #Historicalfashion #Corset #nonfiction

Suzi Love Posted on March 1, 2026 by Suzi LoveFebruary 18, 2026

Fascinated with historical fashion? Treat yourself to a nonfiction Box Set on corsets, including Bridgerton and Jane Austen years. Corsets Box Set History Notes Book 22. This Box Set combines corset books 14-21 to give a complete picture of the progression of corset styles from 1700 through to the 1900s, including Jane Austen’s lifetime. These books show how body wraps, stays, and corsets were worn through the centuries to create a variety of fashionable silhouettes through various historical eras. Corsets flattened breasts and accentuated rounded hips or pushed up breasts and showed off the bust line depending on the fashions of the time and the desired silhouette. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveCorsetBook22

HN_22_Corsets Box Set History Notes Book 22 This Box Set combines corset books 14-21 to give a complete picture of the progression of corset styles from 1700 through to the 1900s, including Jane Austen's lifetime. These books show how body wraps, stays, and corsets were worn through the centuries to create a variety of fashionable silhouettes through various historical eras. Corsets flattened breasts and accentuated rounded hips or pushed up breasts and showed off the bust line depending on the fashions of the time and the desired silhouette. Box Set combining Corset books 14-21 to give a complete picture of the progression of corset styles from 1700 through to the 1900s, including Jane Austen's lifetime. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveCorsetBook22
Fascinated with historical fashion? Treat yourself to a nonfiction Box Set on corsets, including Bridgerton and Jane Austen years. #Bridgerton #JaneAusten #Historicalfashion #Corset #nonfiction https://books2read.com/SuziLoveCorsetBook22 Share on X
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Posted in 1700s, 1700s Womens Fashion, 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, 1900s, Australia, Bridgerton, Canada, Children, Corset, Edwardian Era, England, Europe, France, Georgian Era, Georgian Fashion, History Notes, Jane Austen, London, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Books, U.S.A, underclothing, Victorian Era | Tagged 1700s Women's Fashion, 1800s women's fashion, Book 22, Bridgerton, Corset, fashion accessories, Fashion Plate, History Notes, Jane Austen, Regency Fashion, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Books, underclothing, Victorian fashion

1826 January Green Promenade Or Walking Dress With White Zig-Zag Collar Edging, English. #RomanticEra #Fashion #Pelisse

Suzi Love Posted on February 27, 2026 by Suzi LoveJanuary 25, 2026

1826 January Promenade Dress, English. Green walking dress with wide lace hem, zigzag white collar edge, white buttons on front vertical, large fur muff with pink lining, large hat with pink ribbons and black bows on crown. Fashion Plate via Rudolph Ackermann’s ‘The Repository of Arts’, London, U.K.

Definition: Promenade Dress, Walking Dress, Pelisse Or Redingote. Woman’s long, fitted overdress or coat often worn open in front to show off the dress underneath. Sometimes cut away in front. Originally made with several capes and trimmed with large buttons. French word developed from English words, riding coat.  reefer. Single- or double-breasted, fitted, tailored, over-all coat usually made from sturdy fabric. In England, this sort of coat was generally called a pelisse, walking dress, carriage dress or promenade dress. In France, these coats were called a Redingote.

1826 January Promenade Dress, English. Green walking dress with wide lace hem, zigzag white collar edge, white buttons on front vertical, large fur muff with pink lining, large hat with pink ribbons and black bows on crown. Fashion Plate via Rudolph Ackermann's 'The Repository of Arts', London, U.K.
1826 January Green Promenade Or Walking Dress With White Zig-Zag Collar Edging, English. #RomanticEra #HistoricalFashion #Pelisse #Redingote https://books2read.com/suzilovePelisse Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, Coat or Pelisse Or Redingote, Dress Or Robe, England, Europe, fashion accessories, France, hats, London, Regency Fashion, shoes, Suzi Love Images | Tagged 1800s women's fashion, Dress Or Gown, fashion accessories, Fashion Plate, Hats And Hair, muff, Redingote Or Pelisse Or Coat, Regency Fashion, Romantic Era, Romantic Era Fashion, sewing, Shoes, The Repository Of Arts

1830 ca. Collection of Reticules, or Purses, as carried by ladies in Jane Austen and Bridgerton years. #RegencyFashion #bridgerton #JaneAusten

Suzi Love Posted on February 17, 2026 by Suzi LoveFebruary 17, 2026

1830 ca. Collection of Four Tiny Purses, or Reticules with drawstrings to close. via Ruby Lane Antiques. As would have been carried by ladies in Jane Austen and Bridgerton years.

Definition Of A Reticule; Bag or purse, often with a drawstring to pull closed and usually made of cloth or covered cardboard and often decorated with beading or embroidery. A reticule, or purse, or handbag, was usually carried by a woman during the Regency period to carry all their daily necessities. Earlier, women used pockets that tied at the waistline and were hidden in the folds of their skirts. Empire style, or early 1800s, high-waisted dresses made it impossible to either sewn in a pocket or to tie on a pocket, so women began carrying small, decorated bags called Reticules, or ridicules, which generally pulled closed at the top with a drawstring. These Reticules, or bags, were the forerunners of our modern day purses.

bag_1830 ca. Collection of Four Tiny Purses, or Reticules with drawstrings to close. via Ruby Lane Antiques.
1830 ca. Collection of Reticules, or Purses, as carried by ladies in Jane Austen and Bridgerton years. #RegencyFashion #Bridgerton #JaneAusten books2read.com/suziloveReticules Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, Decorative Item, England, Europe, fashion accessories, Reticule or Bag, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Images | Tagged 1800s women's fashion, decorative, fashion accessories, reticule or bag, Romantic Era, Ruby Lane Antiques

19th Century Early Women’s Cotton Caps With Hanging Tails, Or Flirtation Ribbons. #Regency #JaneAusten #Fashion

Suzi Love Posted on February 11, 2026 by Suzi LoveJanuary 24, 2026

19th Century Early Women’s Cotton Caps. Worn as morning caps, night caps, or under other hats. With lappets, hanging ties, or tails, which were also called ‘follow me lads’, or ‘flirtation ribbons’. via Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, U.S.A. mfa.org. via Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, U.S.A. mfa.org

Definition Caps: Worn as morning caps, night caps, or under other hats. Jane Austen and her family and female friends would have worn caps like these, sometimes during the morning at home, to bed to keep their long hair from becoming knotted, or under a bonnet to hold a hairstyle in place.
Caps sometimes had hanging ties, or tails, were also called ‘follow me lads’, or ‘flirtation ribbons’.

Definition Lappets: Two long strips of material, often lace, hanging from top of head down back or over  shoulders. Sometimes extensions of a headdress and a requirement for court dress.

19th Century Early Women's Cotton Caps. Worn as morning caps, night caps, or under other hats. Hanging ties, or tails, also called 'follow me lads', or 'flirtation ribbon's. via Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, U.S.A. mfa.org
19th Century Early Women’s Cotton Caps. Worn as morning caps, night caps, or under other hats. Hanging ties, or tails, also called ‘follow me lads’, or ‘flirtation ribbon’s. via Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, U.S.A. mfa.org
Posted in 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, Australia, Bridgerton, Canada, England, Europe, France, hats, Jane Austen, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Suzi Love Images, U.S.A | Tagged 1800s women's fashion, British history, europe, Hats And Hair, Jane Austen, Museum Of Fine Arts, Regency Fashion, Romantic Era, sewing, USA

Do you love historical fashion? Treat yourself to a nonfiction Box Set on corsets, including Bridgerton and Jane Austen years. #Bridgerton #JaneAusten #Historicalfashion #Corset #nonfiction

Suzi Love Posted on February 6, 2026 by Suzi LoveJanuary 21, 2026

Box Set combining Corset books 14-21 to give a complete picture of the progression of corset styles from 1700 through to the 1900s, including Jane Austen’s lifetime. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveCorsetBook22

This Box Set combines corset books 14-21 to give a complete picture of the progression of corset styles from 1700 through to the 1900s, including Jane Austen’s lifetime and the Bridgerton years. These books show how body wraps, stays, and corsets were worn through the centuries to create a variety of fashionable silhouettes through various historical eras. Corsets flattened breasts and accentuated rounded hips or pushed up breasts and showed off the bust line depending on the fashions of the time and the desired silhouette.

HN_22_Corsets Box Set History Notes Book 22 This Box Set combines corset books 14-21 to give a complete picture of the progression of corset styles from 1700 through to the 1900s, including Jane Austen's lifetime. These books show how body wraps, stays, and corsets were worn through the centuries to create a variety of fashionable silhouettes through various historical eras. Corsets flattened breasts and accentuated rounded hips or pushed up breasts and showed off the bust line depending on the fashions of the time and the desired silhouette. Box Set combining Corset books 14-21 to give a complete picture of the progression of corset styles from 1700 through to the 1900s, including Jane Austen's lifetime. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveCorsetBook22
Do you love historical fashion? Treat yourself to a nonfiction Box Set on corsets, including Bridgerton and Jane Austen years. #Bridgerton #JaneAusten #Historicalfashion #Corset #nonfiction https://books2read.com/SuziLoveCorsetBook22 Share on X
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Posted in 1700s, 1700s Womens Fashion, 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, 1900s, Australia, Bridgerton, Canada, Children, Corset, Edwardian Era, England, Europe, France, Georgian Era, Georgian Fashion, History Notes, Jane Austen, London, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Books, U.S.A, underclothing, Victorian Era | Tagged 1700s Women's Fashion, 1800s women's fashion, Book 22, Bridgerton, Corset, fashion accessories, Fashion Plate, History Notes, Jane Austen, Regency Fashion, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Books, underclothing, Victorian fashion

19th Century Taking Snuff and Pretty Snuff Boxes In Bridgerton and Jane Austen Years. #bridgerton #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #Antiques

Suzi Love Posted on February 4, 2026 by Suzi LoveJanuary 28, 2026

19th Century Snuff Boxes. Not only were boxes made to serve a purpose, but decorative boxes of all types were prized, especially in the 18th-19th Centuries when everything decorative and extravagant was in vogue and taking a pinch of snuff was fashionable. Snuff is made from ground or pulverized tobacco leaves and is sniffed from a pinch of snuff placed on the back of the hand.Flavorings were added to the tobacco to give a fast hit of nicotine and a lasting scent. Snuff began in the Americas and was used in Europe by the 17th Century.

Snuff became popular from the mid 1600s to the mid 1800s and was more popular than smoking. Inhaling snuff, or snuffing, was first seen by a European missionary in 1493 in Christopher Columbus’s new world within Haiti’s indigenous Taino. Until then, tobacco had been unknown to Europeans, but its use spread quickly throughout Europe during the 1500s.  By the second half of the 17th century, ornate boxes started being produced to keep the precious powder dry and an entire industry making accessories blossomed around the fashion of taking snuff.  Noblemen, and some women, carried extravagantly decorated snuff boxes with them at all times and would offer a pinch of their own particular blend to friends and family. Therefore, these boxes were always on display and so it became a competition to see who could have the most bejeweled or expensive box possible. By the mid 1800s, snuff taking was no longer popular so these exquisite and expensive snuff boxes became decorative, rather than functional.

19th Century Shoe Snuffbox. via suzilove.com and 1st Dibs Auctions 1stdibs.com
19th Century Shoe Snuffbox. via 1st Dibs Auctions 1stdibs.com
19th Century Engraved Horn Snuffbox. Heart surrounded by flowers and leaves, sides with dove, symbol of purity and peace, brass hinge and setting. via suzilove.com and 1st Dibs Auctions
19th Century Engraved Horn Snuffbox. Heart surrounded by flowers and leaves, sides with dove, symbol of purity and peace, brass hinge and setting. via 1st Dibs Auctions
Box_Snuff_19th Century Carved Boxwood Snuffbox. Horse with saddle for a lid. via 1st Dibs Auctions
19th Century Carved Boxwood Snuffbox. Horse with saddle for a lid. via 1st Dibs Auctions

1804-1809 ca. Snuffbox in the Shape of A Lion, Moulinie, Bautte and Cie, Geneva, Switzerland.via Victoria and Albert Museum.
1804-1809 ca. Snuffbox in the Shape of A Lion, Moulinie, Bautte and Cie, Geneva, Switzerland.via Victoria and Albert Museum.
1820 Snuffbox with scene of harvesting fruit. By Johann Wilhelm Keibel (master 1812; died 1862).  via suzilove.com and Metropolitan Museum New York City, U.S.A.  metmuseum.org
1820 Snuffbox with scene of harvesting fruit. By Johann Wilhelm Keibel (master 1812; died 1862). via Metropolitan Museum New York City, U.S.A. metmuseum.org
1810 ca. Jeweled Gold Snuff Box, Switzerland. Maker’s Mark Geneva. via Christie’s Auction Rooms. christies.com
1810 ca. Jeweled Gold Snuff Box, Switzerland. Maker’s Mark Geneva. via Christie’s Auction Rooms. christies.com
19th Century Taking Snuff and Pretty Snuff Boxes In Bridgerton and Jane Austen Years. #bridgerton #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #Antiques https://www.books2read.com/suziloveBoxesCases Share on X
HN_11_D2D_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
Posted in 1800s, Australia, Box Or Container, Bridgerton, Canada, Customs & Manners, Decorative Item, England, Europe, fashion accessories, France, household, Jane Austen, London, Pastimes, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Romantic Era, Russia, Suzi Love Images, U.S.A, Victorian Era | Tagged 1800s men fashion, 1800s Or 19th Century, 1st Dibs Auctions, antiques, Box Or Container, Bridgerton, Christie's Auction Rooms, decorative, fashion accessories, Jane Austen, Metropolitan Museum NYC, Regency Fashion, Romantic Era, Victoria and Albert Museum

1830-1850 Romantic Era Corsets Provided Support and Gave Fashionable Silhouette. #Corsets #RomanticEra #Fashion

Suzi Love Posted on February 3, 2026 by Suzi LoveJanuary 29, 2026

This book shows how corsets changed to both provide support and also fit well under clothing to give a fashionable silhouette. Corsets started being a fashion item, rather than simply underclothing to be hidden. Romantic Era women’s fashionable corsets. Corsets worn from 1830-1850, or the Romantic Era of fashion. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveCorsetBook18 Corsets 1830-1850 History notes Book 18

This book shows how corsets changed to both provide support and also fit well under clothing to give a fashionable silhouette. Corsets started being a fashion item, rather than simply underclothing to be hidden. Romantic Era women's fashionable corsets. Corsets worn from 1830-1850, or the Romantic Era of fashion. https://books2read.com/SuziLoveCorsetBook18 Corsets 1830-1850 History notes Book 18
1830-1850 Romantic Era Corsets Provided Support and Gave Fashionable Silhouette. #Corsets #RomanticEra #HistoricalFashion https://books2read.com/SuziLoveCorsetBook18 Share on X
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Posted in 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, Australia, Canada, Corset, England, Europe, France, History Notes, London, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Books, Suzi Love Images, U.S.A, underclothing, Victorian Era | Tagged 1800s women's fashion, Book 18, Corset, History Notes, Romantic Era, Romantic Era Fashion, Suzi Love Books, Suzi Love Images, underclothing, Victorian fashion

Know someone who loves Jane Austen and the Bridgertons? Treat them to music history from the 17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries. #Music #Bridgerton #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #GeorgianEra

Suzi Love Posted on February 1, 2026 by Suzi LoveJanuary 31, 2026

Music history from the 17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries. Pianos, pianofortes, harps, viols, violins played during Jane Austen’s times. Musical Instruments were so important in most of the more affluent households in history that large industries grew all around the world to manufacture instruments, musical accessories, and to print sheet music. Musical instruction and encouragement could be found everywhere and both young ladies and gentlemen were encouraged to have musical appreciation. And of course, playing music was on the list of social requirements for all young ladies desirous of becoming a wife and homemaker.

London became Europe’s leading centre for the manufacture of scientific instruments and this led to the manufacture of more musical instruments as well as factories developed and rail transport helped the faster distribution of goods to regional areas. One of the first places that music was used to tell stories and to share enjoyment was in Christmas music. Because music was such an integral part of households, music was always a feature in Magazines. There were advertisements everywhere for musical instruments for sale, for sheet music, and for music lessons.  And of course, of most interest to the ladies were the hundreds of fashion plates included in magazines where people were depicted with their musical instruments.

books2read.com/suziloveMusicGeneral

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books2read.com/suziloveMusicViolins

HN_6-7-8 Music General History Notes
HN_6-7-8 Music General History NotesHN_6 Music General History Notes, books2read.com/suziloveMusicGeneral
Know someone who loves Jane Austen and the Bridgertons? Treat them to music history from the 17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries. #Music #Bridgerton #RegencyEra #JaneAusten #GeorgianEra https://www.books2read.com/suziloveMusicPiano Share on X
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Posted in 1700s, 1800s, 1900s, Australia, Canada, Edwardian Era, England, Europe, furniture, Georgian Era, History, History Notes, household, Music, Pastimes, Quotations, Regency Era, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Books, Suzi Love Images, U.S.A, Victorian Era | Tagged Fashion Plate, furniture, Georgian era, History Notes, household, Jane Austen, music, pastimes, piano, Regency Era, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Books

1840 The York To London Royal Mail In The Village Of Bedale, England. #RegencyEra #BritishHistory #carriages #postage

Suzi Love Posted on January 25, 2026 by Suzi LoveJanuary 17, 2026

1840 ca. The York To London Royal Mail. By A. Anson Martin. Mailcoach in the village of Bedale, Yorkshire, U.K. Church at the end of the wide country road and thatched cottages behind the coach. Signed and Inscribed ‘(All Right)’. Via British Postal Museum, London, U.K. ~ postal museum.org

The dreadful condition of British roads caused great apprehension to all classes of travelers. Making a journey anywhere in the country was a big undertaking and often a gentleman composed his last will and testament before his departure.  Traveling in vehicles was only possible during the day or on the nights with very bright moonlight with few vehicles attempting road travel in winter and any travel on a Sunday was frowned upon. books2read.com/SuziLoveTravel

Description of Stage Coach Travel in England.  via 1815 Journal Tour of Great Britain. “The gentlemen coachmen, with half-a dozen great coats about them, immense capes, a large nosegay at the button-hole, high mounted on an elevated seat, with squared elbows, a prodigious whip, beautiful horses, four in hand, drive in a file to Salthill, a place about twenty miles from London, and return, stopping in the way at the several public-houses and gin-shops where stage-coachmen are in the habit of stopping for a dram, and for parcels and passengers on the top of the others as many as seventeen persons. These carriages are not suspended, but rest on steel springs, of a flattened oval shape, less easy than the old mode of leathern braces on springs. Some of these stage coaches carry their baggage below the level of the axletree.”

1840 ca. The York To London Royal Mail. By A. Anson Martin. Mailcoach in the village of Bedale, Yorkshire, U.K. Church at the end of the wide country road and thatched cottages behind the coach. Signed and Inscribed '(All Right)'.Via Suzi Love ~ suzilkove.com & British Postal Museum, London, U.K. ~ postal museum.org
1840 The York To London Royal Mail In The Village Of Bedale, England. #RegencyEra #BritishHistory #carriages #postage https://www.suzilove.com/wp-admin/books2read.com/SuziLoveTravel Share on X
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HN_10_D2D_RetailerBuyLink_Travel and Luggage By Suzi Love History Notes Book 10 #History #travel How did people travel in past centuries? What did they take with them to make their long journeys easier? books2read.com/SuziLoveTravel
Posted in 1800s, Carriage, England, History, London, postal, Regency Era, Suzi Love Images, travel | Tagged art, British history, carriages, England, google books, postal, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Images, travel, WikiMedia Commons

1800-1870 ca. Beaded Stocking Purses, British. #RegencyEra #RomanticEra #VictorianFashion

Suzi Love Posted on January 17, 2026 by Suzi LoveJanuary 17, 2026

1800-1870 ca. Stocking Purses, British. Beaded stocking purses crocheted in silk and steel beads,
with steel rings with tassels and fringes. via Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK. collections.vam.ac.uk.

Definition Miser or Long or Stocking or Ring Purses: Long, narrow, tubular shape, often wider at ends and narrow in middle, which had a short slit opening. Popular in England and France from the mid-18th century through the early 20th century.

From the Curator Victoria and Albert Museum, London: Stocking purses are also known as misers’ or wallet purses. The majority were netted, but some were knitted or crocheted, like this one. Once worked, the elongated tube was put on an expandable purse stretcher to shape it. It was then sewn up, leaving a central opening, and squeezed through a pair of rings known as sliders, which were used to secure and separate the different coins stored at either end. It could be carried in the hand, bag or pocket, or tucked over a belt. Many stocking purses were made as presents, and were thought a suitable object to give to a gentleman.
Crochet is a type of needlework with an open, lacy appearance, which is formed with a hook and single length of thread making a series of loops, chains and knots. The technique developed out of ‘tambouring’, a type of embroidery, after the tambour hook began to be used to create series of loops, free from a ground fabric. This could then be used as a separate trimming, like lace, or made to form items like this purse. Crochet was thus added to the varieties of fancy needlework available to ladies, and instructions for making it can be found in manuals from the 1820s onwards.

1800-1870 ca. Stocking Purses, British. Beaded stocking purses crocheted in silk and steel beads, with steel rings with tassels and fringes. via Suzi Love suzilove.com Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK. collections.vam.ac.uk.

1800-1870 ca. Beaded Stocking Purses, British #RegencyFashion #RomanticEra #HistoricFashion books2read.com/suziloveReticules

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Posted in 1800s, 1800s women's fashion, Australia, Decorative Item, England, Europe, fashion accessories, History, Regency Era, Regency Fashion, Reticule or Bag, Romantic Era, Suzi Love Images, U.S.A, Victorian Era, Victorian Fashion | Tagged 1800s women's fashion, France, Regency Fashion, reticule or bag, Romantic Era, sewing, Victoria and Albert Museum, Victorian fashion

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