Your decision this week is rather simple: to decide which period fashions you like best. Edwardian, such as shown in Dowton Abbey, or Regency, as in the recently aired Emma, or both. You decide.
| Downtown Abbey Costumes |
| Emma 2009 costumes |
| Downtown Abbey Costumes |
| Emma 2009 costumes |
| Start of the hunt, Downton Abey |
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| Dancing the minuet |
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| Fashion plate with Regency dresses |
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| Couple on Bench |
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| Decorative Victorian scissor |
| Daria and Quinn |
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| Jane Austen's writing table in miniature. Image @Grace White |
I was commissioned to make replicas of the Chawton Cottage table and chair where Jane Austen did much of her writing. It was a very enjoyable endeavor! I hope the owner will be pleased when she receives them. I think I can say they're some of the finest things I've made.
The front legs of the chair and the turned pedestal of the table were adapted from existing miniature turned pieces, but everything else I made from scratch.Grace's miniatures are for sale in her Etsy shop, The Honeybee.
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| A gift for a friend: Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet. Image @Grace White |
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| Geoffrey Rush, Jennifer Ehle and Colin Firth in The King's Speech |
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| Maggie Smith as the Dowager Countess in Downton Abbey |
We plan to run a storytelling session one day every week for about three months next year. Each week’s chapter will be posted online and on www.AustenAuthors.com on Sunday. You don’t have to be a published writer to join in — you just have to love your Jane!
So what happens next? Throughout January, we’ll be inviting you to come up with the basic set-up for a new Austen story. We’d like you to use characters from the original books (so we all know who they are), though you can mix and match them from different novels as much as you like. You can also include up to two new characters of your own, as long as you tell us a bit about them.
We’ve included our own sample story ... Just email your outline to austenproject@gmail.com before January 20 to take part, and we’ll then run a poll in which we’ll be inviting people to vote for the story idea they like best. If your story idea wins you’ll get to kick it off when we go live!
| Lady Byron's wedding pelisse 1815. Image @Tracy Bylo Hitchings |
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| Lady Sybil, Lady Mary, and Lady Edith |
'Unsurprisingly, the lavish period drama has now been snapped up by an American network - although it seems the beautifully nuanced portrait of pre-First World War upper-class life could prove just a little too complex for the transatlantic audience.
For in the land of the notoriously short attention span, TV executives have taken a knife to the artfully crafted series, slashing its running time and simplifying the plotline for fear viewers will be left baffled.'HUH!!!!? Show us the full 8 hours, I say. We who view PBS not only have the stamina to view long shows, but the background and historical knowledge to understand the nuances of British primogeniture and inheritance laws.
Rebecca Eaton, an executive producer for the PBS network - which will be airing it from next week - admits that American audiences demand a 'different speed' to their shows.
As a result, Downton, which ran for eight hours on ITV, has been slashed to six for the States, while the storyline about the inheritance of the Abbey has been downplayed.Read more about this topic at the Daily Mail
Vic, unfortunately the Daily Mail reporter chose to ignore, when it was explained to him by an American tv reviewer, that the running time in Britain is ALSO 6 hours once you take away the commercials. I have the British episodes and can attest to that.
Speaking to someone who has seen the new edited version, she told me that some NEW scenes have been added and the scenes that had been cut were only of repetitious dialogue, etc. and she indicated that she liked the changes.
And with regards to Ms. Eaton mentioning the appearance of Matthew Crawley in the first episode, that would happen with the new format. In UK, the first episode was 65 minutes, so with the 90 minute episode for PBS we would see the arrival of Downton's heir sooner.
It's a pity that the Daily Mail chose to greatly exaggerate the edits.
"Those who tell their own story...must be listened to with caution." - SanditonOn prediction the popularity of plastic surgery:
"But people themselves alter so much, that there is something new to observed in them forever" - (P&P)