Breakfast Links: Week of September 26, 2016

• The amazing 19thc butter sculptures of Caroline S. Brooks.
• A humble skirt worn by an enslaved child finds a place in history.
• The mystery of the phantom page-turner .
• Native American captive Elizabeth Hanson, a Quaker mother in 1724 New England.
• Explore all the treasures of the Red Drawing Room at Blenheim Palace in 360 degrees.
• Skeleton of a teenaged girl confirms cannibalism at Jamestown.
• Image: Gold leaf on Coptic shoes , making a fashion statement while strutting the streets of ancient Egypt.
• Fingerspitzenformer , otherwise known as a late 19thc fingertip shaper. Really.
• Danger and the amorous woman: prostitution in 19thc Britain.
• An inspired pot.
• Many questions from the title alone of this 1892 advice book to read online: " How to Get Married Although a Woman, or, The Art of Pleasing Men" by a Young Widow.
• Image: Enchanting c1915 autochrome portrait of a lady happily surrounded by her books.
• Inside the old-fashioned world of New York's vintage girls .
• Benjamin Franklin's silver court sword is coming up for auction.
• Why John Hancock's signature was so big and other hands FAQs about the Declaration of Independence .
• Image: Bonnie Prince Charlie's stunning silver-hilted broadsword , found on the battlefield after the defeat at Culloden.
• Domestic and imported woolen cloth in a medieval town.
• The Wolf's Water , coming from a historic London pump.
• Queen's House , Tower of London: the most complete high-status, timber-framed building in London that predates the Great Fire of 1666.
• The Countess Greffulhe, Proust's fashion queen, reigns again in a new exhibition.
Hungry for more? Follow us on Twitter @2nerdyhistgirls for fresh updates daily.
Above: At Breakfast by Laurits Andersen Ring. Private collection.
Published on October 01, 2016 14:00
No comments have been added yet.